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The Milli Dialogues

Podcast by The Milli Chronicle

English

News & politics

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About The Milli Dialogues

The Milli Dialogues is the official podcast of The Milli Chronicle, offering sharp, unfiltered conversations on politics, national security, governance, global affairs, and the ideas shaping India and the world. Each episode breaks down complex legal battles, geopolitical flashpoints, ideological debates, and media narratives—cutting through propaganda, performative outrage, and selective activism.

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9 episodes

episode China-Pakistan Narrative Warfare After Pahalgam: Inside South Asia’s Cognitive Battlefield artwork

China-Pakistan Narrative Warfare After Pahalgam: Inside South Asia’s Cognitive Battlefield

In this episode, we examine how the April 22, 2025 Pahalgam terror attack in Kashmir triggered a parallel conflict beyond the battlefield — one fought through narratives, perception and digital influence. Drawing on a detailed ThinkFi analysis, the discussion unpacks how China and Pakistan amplified coordinated information campaigns around water treaties, fabricated documents, missile credibility and social media manipulation to reshape global discourse and strategic outcomes. The episode explores how modern conflicts increasingly blur the lines between kinetic warfare and cognitive operations, revealing the growing role of information dominance in South Asia’s evolving security landscape.

23 Feb 2026 - 21 min
episode Foreign Scapegoats for Pakistan’s Own Terror Problem artwork

Foreign Scapegoats for Pakistan’s Own Terror Problem

In this episode, Europe-based human rights analyst Michael Arizanti (@ColdBrief) examines one of South Asia’s most enduring and uncomfortable contradictions: Pakistan’s persistent habit of blaming foreign adversaries for a crisis rooted at home.Using the February 6, 2026 suicide bombing at Islamabad’s Khadija-tul-Kubra mosque as a starting point, the discussion traces how decades of treating militant groups as instruments of state policy have steadily eroded Pakistan’s internal security. From the early use of irregular militias in Kashmir to the long-standing patronage of UN-designated terrorist organizations, Arizanti argues that today’s violence is not an external imposition but the predictable result of strategic choices made over generations.The episode also explores recent developments that have sharpened international scrutiny, including the public Jaish-e-Mohammed rally in Rawalakot, allegations of continued state tolerance toward extremist networks, and the growing backlash from within Pakistan itself. A viral confrontation between a Shia cleric and army officers underscores a deeper social rupture, as communities once expected to remain silent now openly accuse the state of nurturing the very ideologies that threaten them.As Islamabad once again gestures toward India, Afghanistan, or distant conspiracies to explain away terrorism, this conversation asks a harder question: what happens when the “foreign hand” narrative no longer convinces either the world—or Pakistan’s own citizens?A sobering analysis of militancy, denial, and the high cost of strategic illusions.

13 Feb 2026 - 15 min
episode Islam Didn’t Ban Women Leaders—Jamaat Islami Did artwork

Islam Didn’t Ban Women Leaders—Jamaat Islami Did

In this episode, we unpack the controversy surrounding women’s leadership in Islam, sparked by recent remarks from a female leader of Jamaat-e-Islami who cited Qur’an 4:34 (“Men are qawwamun over women”) as evidence of prohibition. We take a closer look at the verse’s textual meaning, historical context, and classical interpretations, revealing that it addresses household responsibility during marital conflict—not political authority or governance.The discussion moves beyond scripture into Islamic history, examining why the Qur’an presents Queen Bilqis as a wise and consultative ruler, and how women like Aisha, Khadijah, and Shifa bint Abdullah exercised religious, economic, and administrative authority in early Islam.We also explore the Qur’anic language of partnership between believing men and women, and the contradictions that arise when modern political movements oppose women’s leadership while simultaneously relying on women in organizational and spokesperson roles.This episode argues that the debate is less about clear divine prohibition and more about how texts are interpreted, framed, and deployed. A balanced reading of the Qur’an, Islamic history, and contemporary realities suggests that women’s leadership is not only permissible—but deeply rooted in the Islamic tradition.

4 Feb 2026 - 14 min
episode Revisiting Operation Sindoor | Post Fog of War artwork

Revisiting Operation Sindoor | Post Fog of War

In this episode, we revisit Operation Sindoor after the fog of war has lifted to understand how escalation was managed, how air power was leveraged, and why the conflict ended when it did. Moving beyond early narratives and headline claims, the discussion draws on emerging evidence, independent assessments, and delayed admissions to unpack what actually shaped the outcome. The podcast explores how modern deterrence functions under nuclear overhang, the limits of denial and information warfare, and how short-duration air superiority can generate coercive leverage without triggering a protracted conflict. It also examines the strategic implications for South Asia, where conventional pressure is increasingly reshaping escalation dynamics. 📌 Focus: Military strategy, air power, escalation control, South Asia security 🔔 Follow: @MilliChronicle Listen in for a sharp, evidence-based analysis of one of the most consequential crises in recent India–Pakistan history.

3 Feb 2026 - 14 min
episode Pakistan’s ISI Gambit: Using ISKP to Checkmate the Taliban and Bleed China artwork

Pakistan’s ISI Gambit: Using ISKP to Checkmate the Taliban and Bleed China

As ISIS-K resurfaces across Afghanistan and Pakistan’s western frontier, a troubling pattern is emerging—one that places Chinese nationals, infrastructure projects, and regional stability squarely in the crosshairs. This episode examines the growing security risks facing Chinese investments in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, and the uncomfortable geopolitical questions they raise for Beijing, Kabul, and Islamabad alike. ISIS-K has openly named Chinese citizens as legitimate targets, framing its violence as retaliation for Beijing’s policies toward Uyghur Muslims and its expanding economic footprint in Afghanistan. But beyond ideology lies strategy. Attacks on Chinese engineers, workers, and projects do more than spread fear—they place direct pressure on the Taliban, exposing its inability to guarantee security and complicating its search for international legitimacy. The episode also explores allegations that Pakistan’s security establishment continues to play a double game along the Durand Line: publicly positioning itself as a counter-terror partner, while militants exploit sanctuary, logistics, or tolerance within Pakistan’s border regions. Incidents such as the Tirah Valley attack in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa—where Chinese nationals were killed and responsibility was disputed—highlight how blame is often deflected toward Baloch separatists, even as evidence and intelligence reporting point toward Islamist networks aligned with ISIS-K’s agenda. By unpacking ISIS-K’s motives, Pakistan’s strategic anxieties over a Taliban-led Afghanistan, and China’s growing exposure in an unstable theater, this episode asks a central question: is militancy once again being used as leverage in regional power politics? And if so, how long can China afford to treat Afghanistan as an economic opportunity rather than a security quagmire? A deep dive into proxy warfare, plausible deniability, and the rising costs of doing business in one of the world’s most volatile regions.

28 Jan 2026 - 15 min
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