The night Indian TV forgot how to do its job

Pakistan brokers ceasefire between major powers, averting global crisis as markets stabilise

The writer is a Harvard Project Zero–trained educator and internationally published writer and journalist

Something historic happened this April 2026, and the word "historic" is not being used loosely. Pakistan pulled off something that seasoned diplomats will be studying for years. It stopped a war between two of the most powerful and heavily armed countries on the planet, two countries that were already shooting at each other, and whose conflict was pulling the entire world toward a crisis nobody was prepared for.

Yes! Insurance companies were refusing to cover ships. Fuel markets were panicking. Governments were quietly drawing up contingency plans. The world was not on the edge of something bad. It was already in it.

And then Pakistan picked up the phone, worked its contacts on both sides, and brought the two countries to the table in Islamabad. They talked. They agreed to stop. The missiles stopped flying. Oil prices dropped. Ships started moving again. The world stepped back from a catastrophe that would have affected every country on earth, including India.

Let me press this point again, because some people in certain studios apparently missed it in the first go-round. An actual, missiles-flying, markets-crashing, world-holding-its-breath war was stopped. And the country that stopped it was Pakistan.

India watched too. It was twelve miles from the story, had the best seat in the house, and was somehow the furthest from understanding it. The closest audience member and the loudest denier.

And then there was Indian television.

Oh, Indian television.

Where do we even begin?

What followed on Indian news channels was not analysis. It was not even a good-faith disagreement. It was something more embarrassing than that: a panel of voices falling over each other to explain why this did not count, why Pakistan's role was exaggerated, why a country they have spent years calling a failed state should not be given credit for preventing a regional catastrophe. The same anchors who demand that India be taken seriously on the world stage spent the evening ensuring that India's own discourse was not taken seriously at all.

Anchors who cannot find Iran on a map were screaming about Pakistani conspiracies. Panels of retired generals and career outrage professionals were explaining with total confidence why the ceasefire was fake, why Pakistan's role was invented, and why the whole thing was a plot of some kind.

Nobody asked what kind of plot results in lower oil prices and open shipping lanes. That question was not welcome. The graphics flashed. The music thundered. The panels overflowed. And the actual story, that a war had been prevented and the region was safer, was nowhere in the coverage at all. Not even in the small text at the bottom of the screen.

And Indian television? It lost its mind.

Completely. Loudly. Publicly. On camera. In front of everybody.

Think about what that looks like to the rest of the world. Every serious global outlet, from Bloomberg to CNN to Al Jazeera, was praising Islamabad's diplomatic courage. And India's news channels were throwing a tantrum because it was not India doing the talking.

That is not journalism. That is not a political opinion. That is not even good television. That is something closer to a medical situation. A very public, very loud, very televised medical situation.

It is just a disturbingly expensive, visibly frantic, carefully produced way of keeping an entire country in the dark. Night after night after night. With pension funds and prime-time slots and graphics departments, and not a single functioning fact-checker in the entire building.

And the clown makeup does not write itself. In this case, it was applied live, on air, in high definition, for the whole world to see. And somewhere in a studio right now, an anchor is calling it a conspiracy.

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