Addressing a press conference, Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Asif Ghafoor also said that India blamed Pakistan for the Pulwama attack "without due investigation" and New Delhi has not yet accepted the "reality of partition".
"We have a 72-year history. The partition happened in 1947 and Pakistan was liberated. India still hasn't been able to accept that," the Army spokesman said after the terror strike by Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad terror group in Jammu and Kashmir's Pulwama district on February 14.
"We are not preparing for war, you (India) are issuing threats...we have right to respond to the threats. We are not preparing to initiate but planning to defend and retaliate which is our right, the Army spokesman said.
He further said: Should you (India) initiate any reaction first, you would never be able to surprise us...we will surprise you."
He said when it comes to India, "Pakistan has singleness of conception. We have will and determination."
Ghafoor warned that military response this time will be different in case of war.
We are not the army of past, we are a battle-hardened army. We have fought against an unseen enemy and won, he said.
The army spokesman said that we can respond to full spectrum threat and warned I hope you (India) get (the message) and do not mess with Pakistan.
To a question about nature of preparations, he said, We are not preparing for war but we are preparing for response and whatever response is needed, we have prepared for it.
He alleged that the Pulwama attack shows the "failure" of Indian security forces. "From the Line of Control onwards, Indian security forces have layered defences...So the Pulwama attack shows failure of Indian forces," he said.
Asserting that India needs "introspection" on Kashmir, he said, "The Pulwama attack happened miles away from the LoC. The explosives that were used were local, the vehicle used was local and the youth who did it was also local."
We are saying let us talk about the attack, let us talk about militancy and peace. The biggest issue is Kashmir and let us talk about it," he said.
"We are two democracies, and democracies do not fight," he said.