Pakistan Emulating China to Expand EEZ; Pakistan’s SEA JIHAD explained

By Levina

We noticed a pattern– Pakistan trying to emulate China’s style of expanding Exclusive economic zone by creating artificial islands and martime militia.

This article is a transcirpt of our video:

Will it make sense to you if I say: “Sir Creek area plus sea jihad is equal to Pakistan’s exclusive economic zone”?

Pakistan is making some sinister plans to increase its exclusive economic zone by thousands of square kilometers in the sea. Let me tell you that Pakistan has been preparing for this since at least 2019.

On 23rd March 2026, Pakistan’s Naval Chief visited the Sir Creek area to celebrate Pakistan Day. It looked like a simple patriotic event, but this visit once again highlights how important this muddy stretch of coastline has become for Pakistan. This is the second important visit to the Sir Creek area by Pakistan’s Naval Chief since October 2025. The previous visit was marked by a substantial upgrade to Pakistan Navy’s operational capability.

Now join the dots: terror groups preparing deep-sea divers, swimming classes for proxies of Lashkar-e-Taiba, and Lashkar commander Saifullah declaring that “Pakistan will rule the sea by 2026.”

Hello everyone, welcome to Resonant News.

On 1st February 2026, we had posted a video of Lashkar training its men in deep-sea diving. We had associated it with limpet mines. Today, we are joining it with a bigger cause. Now we know why Pakistan is preparing its terror groups in swimming and deep diving. Pakistan is looking to increase its exclusive economic zone in the sea. All those videos of terrorists in water bodies now make sense.

Just today, we posted an article about a Pakistani army veteran training Lashkar-e-Taiba men. Why would a veteran help Lashkar-e-Taiba? This is the Pakistan Army joining hands with terrorist groups against India — in the sea.

Sir Creek area is what Pakistan is eyeing at this time. In this video, we’ll explain what Pakistan is planning, the history of the Sir Creek area, and what can be expected.

In October 2025, when Pakistan’s Naval Admiral Ashraf visited the Sir Creek area on the Pakistan side, Pakistan Navy officially inducted three state-of-the-art hovercrafts into its fleet. These new platforms represent a crucial operational step, offering a unique operational advantage to the Pakistan Navy — or so it believes. The hovercrafts are specifically designed to navigate a variety of challenging terrains simultaneously, including shallow waters, sand dunes, and the marshy, boggy littoral zones that characterize the Sir Creek area — environments where conventional craft are rendered ineffective.

Sir Creek is a 96-kilometer-long tidal estuary full of mangroves and marshland. It sits on the disputed border between Pakistan’s Sindh province and India’s Gujarat. At first glance, it looks like nothing more than a wet, muddy inlet emptying into the Arabian Sea. But for Pakistan, it is much more than that. The real prize is what lies beyond the Sir Creek in the sea.

The exact position of the border at Sir Creek decides where the maritime boundary starts. A small shift of just a few kilometers can give thousands of extra square kilometers of ocean territory under international law. Pakistan claims the entire creek belongs to it and wants the sea boundary drawn from the eastern bank. India, on the other hand, wants a line to run through the middle of the creek.

If Pakistan gets its way, it could gain a much larger exclusive economic zone (EEZ), bringing valuable rights to oil, natural gas, minerals, and rich fishing areas. Energy-hungry Pakistan sees this as a potential economic jackpot. The seabed around the Sir Creek area is believed to hold untapped oil and gas reserves — something the country desperately needs right now.

But Pakistan’s interests lie way beyond economics. Sir Creek is also close to Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and main commercial port. Pakistani military leaders worry that the area could become an entry point for Indian forces. That is why Pakistan has been steadily increasing its military presence here since 2019 — adding new creek battalions, coastal defense boats, radars, bunkers, and hovercrafts.

The Naval Chief’s visit on Pakistan Day (23rd March), along with the recent build-up of troops and equipment, sends a clear message: Pakistan is serious about strengthening its control over the area.

This growing activity has already drawn sharp warnings from the Indian side, including from Defense Minister Rajnath Singh late last year. The marshy creeks are also difficult to patrol, raising old fears of infiltration and smuggling into India. Both sides remember how the 2008 Mumbai attacks were launched from the sea, and India doesn’t want this disputed zone to be used for covert operations again.

At its heart, the Sir Creek dispute is about national pride and power. Neither country wants to look weak by giving up even a small piece of territory. The row also blocks any final agreement on the full maritime boundary between Pakistan and India. As sea levels rise and tides keep shifting, the muddy landscape itself is changing, making the old claims even more complicated.

For Pakistan, Sir Creek is no longer just a forgotten swamp. It has become a strategic obsession — a place where mud, oil, greed, military muscle, and national ego all mix together. Pakistan will go to any extent to get this — be it through terrorists or its own Navy. Pakistan will use both to target India around the Sir Creek area.

This isnt surprising!

Freinds of a feather flock together. China’s startegies of creating maitime militia and dredging new islands where there were none just to reinforce China’s claims in SCS– is a strategy that Pakistan is emulating.

Till we meet again, stay resonant. If you like this video, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe to Resonant News.


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