Popular Indian YouTuber Ranveer Allahbadia, known online as BeerBiceps, confronted Pakistan’s stance on terrorism during a heated discussion on Piers Morgan’s talk show. The debate was focused on the recent ceasefire between India and Pakistan following four days of military escalation.
As the discussion progressed, Allahbadia displayed two images to make a striking point. “This is the truth the global audience needs to see,” he said while holding up a photo of Osama bin Laden, describing it as the face the world associates with terror. He followed it with a picture of Lashkar-e-Taiba commander Abdul Rauf receiving a funeral attended by Pakistani military officials. “This,” he said, “is the face India recognises.”
Allahbadia, joined on the panel by Indian journalist Barkha Dutt, Pakistan’s former foreign minister Hina Khar, and podcaster Shehzad Ghias Shaikh, challenged the narrative often projected by Pakistan. “This man is a UN-listed terrorist being honoured by the Pakistani military. That’s not a version of events Americans or the global community hear,” he argued.
Speaking about India’s recent military action under Operation Sindoor, Allahbadia stressed the country’s defensive stance. “Our strikes were calibrated, limited, and in response to terror — as always. India has never initiated aggression. We send out vaccines, engineers, and thinkers — that’s why our economy is eleven times larger than Pakistan’s,” he said.
Pushing back against claims that India is seeking international sympathy, Allahbadia turned to Morgan and asked, “Piers, now that you’ve seen the facts, what is your view?”
He added, “The world recognises bin Laden. We in India know many more like him.”
On being questioned about a social media post he had shared — and later deleted — where he had referred to Pakistanis as “brothers and sisters” after the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 people, Allahbadia said his views had shifted after Pakistan violated the ceasefire again.
“I removed it because Pakistan responded with betrayal, asking us where the evidence of the attack was. How do you engage in dialogue with a country that questions such horrors?” he said.
He challenged Pakistan's representatives directly: “Have you looked at what the world says about your country? Have you seen your economy?”
He reiterated that India's military actions were defensive and based on necessity. “We’re not trying to push propaganda. We are confronting terrorism, and Pakistan is exporting it. India is defending its people — in truth, we’re defending humanity itself.”
In closing, Allahbadia stated emphatically, “Pakistan has become the epicenter of global terrorism. This isn’t just India’s story. It’s what the world must acknowledge.”