Claim: A video shows the Pakistan Army moving military equipment from Balochistan to the Indian border after the November 2025 blast in New Delhi.

Fact: The video predates the November 2025 New Delhi blast and surfaced online as early as April 2025.

On 12 November 2025, X (formerly Twitter) account @AsiaWarZone posted (archive) a video showing military equipment being moved, allegedly by the Pakistan Army, from the western province of Balochistan to the eastern border with India.

The accompanying caption reads:

“BREAKING 🚨: Pakistan Army is moving troops, Arms and ammunition from Balochistan to the Indian border.”

The video emerged shortly after a major bombing in India’s capital, insinuating — as evident in another X post — that Pakistan decided to move the military equipment owing to fear about possible retaliation from New Delhi.

Explosions, bombings in India, Pakistan

Two days before that, a blast near the Red Fort metro station in New Delhi on 10 November killed 13 people and injured 20. The Indian government said it was treating the explosion as a “terror incident”, invoking “Sections 16 and 18 of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, or UAPA, along with provisions of the Explosives Act”.

According to India’s National Investigation Agency (NIA), the vehicle that exploded was “registered to a Kashmiri man” and the suspected suicide bomber was identified as a doctor named Umarun Nabi.

However, while the Indian government does not appear to have officially blamed Pakistan for the explosion, Islamabad alledged that New Delhi-sponsored groups were responsible for two suicide blasts in a court complex in the federal capital and a military college in South Waziristan on 11 and 10 November 2025, respectively.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the explosions, which he said were carried out by “India-sponsored Fitna al-Khawarij and Fitna al-Hindustan”, the former of which he stated was “operating from Afghanistan”.

Fitna al-Khawarij” and “Fitna al-Hindustan” are terms the government uses to refer to the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, and the “terrorist organisations in Balochistan”, respectively.

The Islamabad explosion left 12 people dead, with Defence Minister Khawaja Asif saying it forced Pakistan into a “state of war”. On the other hand, the attack on Cadet College Wana started when “an explosive-laden vehicle rammed its main gate”, with police saying two of the attackers were killed.

Later, a report quoting security sources said all terrorists involved in the Cadet College attack were killed. Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said 550 students were safely evacuated, the publication added.

Fact or Fiction?

Reverse-searching keyframes from the viral video led us to this post (archive) from 25 April 2025 by TikTok user @mrbeast…66, with the caption, “Junghhh hony wali Hain . indai ko ab pta lagye ghaa [War is about to start, India will get a taste now]”.

@mrbeast…66 often posts train-related content, according to their profile.

The clip was also posted here (archive) on 27 April 2025, alongside the caption, “The Pakistan Army has deployed a large number of tanks on the Indian border.”

While the train does match those in Pakistan, Soch Fact Check could not confirm if 25 April 2025 was the first time the video emerged, nor did we find the exact location or its destination.

However, it likely could be from the same date as that instance was just three days after 22 April 2025, when a terror attack in Pahalgam, a popular tourist destination in Indian-administered Kashmir, killed 26 people, mostly tourists.

Indian officials had linked the attack to Pakistan, but Islamabad has denied the claim. Shortly thereafter, a war between the two nations began but ended in a ceasefire after four days.

Virality

The post by @AsiaWarZone has been viewed over 60,300 times so far.

Soch Fact Check found multiple Indian accounts and users falsely posting the video; some examples can be found here, here, here, here, and here.

Conclusion: The video predates the November 2025 New Delhi blast and surfaced online as early as April 2025.


Background image in cover photo: Wikimedia Commons via Al Jazeera English


To appeal against our fact-check, please send an email to appeals@sochfactcheck.com

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