Pakistani students won a landslide victory in the India-Pakistan debate at the Oxford Union, defeating the Indian side by a landslide. The debate was held on the resolution that “India’s Pakistan policy is actually a strategy to incite public sentiments, which is being presented as a security policy.” India had initially nominated high-profile speakers such as General Naravane, Dr. Subramanian Swamy and Sachin Pilot for the debate, but they refused to participate, after which India fielded a relatively low-profile panel consisting of Jay Sai Deepak, Pandit Satish Sharma and Devarchan Banerjee. In contrast, Pakistan generously decided not to include its high-profile representatives and confidently represented Pakistani students studying at Oxford—Musa Hiraj, Israr Khan Kakar and Ahmed Nawaz Khan. During the debate, Pakistani students challenged the Indian delegation’s narrative with effective arguments based on logic, law and statistics. The Pakistani position won by a two-thirds majority in the voting, even though the number of Indian members in the Oxford Union was higher. According to experts, this success of Pakistani youth at a global forum like Oxford is proof that Pakistan’s narrative based on arguments and facts is stronger and more credible, while the refusal of high-level speakers from the Indian side and the defeat of the second-tier panel show the weakness of India’s intellectual stance.