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The Indian military leadership is finally beginning to slowly accept its losses in its unprovoked attack on Pakistan that it called "Operation Sindoor". It began with the May 31 Bloomberg interview of the Indian Chief of Defense Staff General Anil Chauhan in Singapore where he admitted losing Indian fighter aircraft to Pakistan in an aerial battle on May 7, 2025. General Chauhan further revealed that the Indian Air Force was grounded for two days after this loss.
General Chauhan was followed by Navy Captain Shiv Kumar, the Indian Defense Attache in Jakarta, Indonesia, who explained last month that the Indian Air Force losses occurred due to "constraint by (the Indian) political leadership" imposed on the Indian Air Force. He said the Indian forces had been directed not to target Pakistan’s military infrastructure or air defenses. “Only because of the constraint given by the political leadership to not attack the military establishment or their air defenses,” he said, explaining why the IAF suffered the loss of fighter jets.
Yesterday, Lieutenant General Rahul Singh, India's Deputy Chief of the Army, blamed the losses on Chinese help for Pakistan. He said India faced three enemies: Pakistan, China and Turkey based on the equipment used by Pakistan in the latest round. By this logic, Pakistan faced four or more enemies: India and its arms suppliers France, Israel and Russia whose equipment was used by the Indian military in Operation Sindoor against Pakistan.
General Singh said the Pakistanis were closely watching the Indian military's moves in real time. “When the DGMO-level talks were going on, Pakistan actually was mentioning that ‘we know that your such and such important vector is primed and ready for action. I would request you to perhaps pull it back’. So he was getting live inputs … from China,” he added.
Using a homegrown datalink (Link-17) communication system, Pakistan has integrated its ground radars and satellite links with a variety of fighter jets and airborne early warning aircraft (Swedish Erieye AWACS) to achieve high level of situational awareness in the battlefield, according to experts familiar with the technology developed and deployed by the Pakistan Air Force. This integration allows quick execution of a "kill chain" to target and destroy enemy assets, according to experts. This capability was demonstrated recently in the India-Pakistan aerial battle of May 7-8 that resulted in the downing of several Indian fighter jets, including the French-made Rafale.
In an earlier statement, Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told Newsweek: “I was in the room when the US vice president spoke to Prime Minister Modi on the night of May 9, warning that the Pakistanis would launch a very massive assault on India if we did not accept certain things". “That night, Pakistan did launch a large-scale attack,” Jaishankar said. India sought and accepted the ceasefire immediately after the "large-scale attack" launched by Pakistan.
These statements by the Indian military brass lead to only one conclusion: Not only is there an implicit admission of India's failed "Operation Sindoor", but also a litany of lame excuses for the losses incurred by the Indian military. The fact is that the Indian leadership clearly underestimated Pakistan's capacity for a strong military and diplomatic response to the Indian provocation labeled "Operation Sindoor". New Delhi was caught unprepared for it.
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Parvin Sawhney x Arfa Khanum | Pakistan’s Real Power & India’s Fear Exposed Full Interview Analysis
(In essence, Sawhney said Pakistan won against India in Modi's Op Sindoor
https://youtu.be/fHWQGUB2l48?si=8tptw8UTdjWH-Ln1
In this powerful interview with journalist Arfa Khanum Sherwani, defence expert Parvin Sawhney shares bold insights about South Asia’s military balance — from Kargil to today’s modern battlefield. She explains why Pakistan’s army stays confident and why India’s forces hesitate before any major action.
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BJP Governments Show of Force Has Weakened India's National Security
https://youtu.be/XXK5N_hBSaE?si=zvV-d1AFx0l4TVo9
Sushant Singh
@SushantSin
The Delhi blast matters not only because it represents a security failure, but because it reveals the deeper failure of Modi’s strategic approach.
I write in
@thecaravanindia
on why Modi did not go on a Pakistan-bashing spree after the Delhi blast.
https://x.com/SushantSin/status/1993966922547831004?s=20
https://caravanmagazine.in/politics/modi-pakistan-delhi-blast
On 28 November 2008, Narendra Modi, then Gujarat’s chief minister, stood outside the Oberoi Trident hotel in Mumbai, ready to deliver a clear message. Terror attacks had unfolded just days ago. Modi blamed Pakistan, well before any evidence was available. He argued that “the country needs a government that takes decisive action, not one that watches while terrorists strike at will.” He spoke of himself as the man who saw conspiraciesothers missed. Throughout his career, this would be a key pillar of Modi’s political identity: the promise to target and punish Pakistan. As prime minister, he did so after Uri in 2016, Pulwama in 2019 and Pahalgam in April 2025.
But this November, when a car explosion near Delhi’s historic Red Fort killed at least fifteen people, something was different about Modi’s script. The prime minister spoke of conspirators. He spoke of justice. He promised that those responsible would not be spared. Yet conspicuously absent from his remarks was any mention of Pakistan.
This omission is not an accident, or a moment of tactical recalibration or restraint. There have been some leads bringing up the possibility of Pakistani involvement. In a video, now viral on social media, Anwarul Haq, the former “Prime Minister” of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, is heard saying that terror groups linked to Pakistan carried out attacks “from the Red Fort to the forests of Kashmir.” An Indian Express report has also noted that one of the handlers of the Delhi blast fled to Pakistan. Where the Modi government has previously pounced on Pakistan on far less evidence, it has so far held back even in the face of these new developments.
In one sense, this represents an admission that Operation Sindoor—the military operation of May 2025 after the Pahalgam attack, when triumphalist claims of destroying terrorist headquarters inside Pakistan—has failed to eliminate the threat of terrorism in India. By characterising the Delhi blast’s perpetrators as self-radicalised rather than Pakistan-backed, the government has tacitly confessed that eleven years of Modi’s Hindutva regime have produced the ideological and social conditions that can induce people to embrace extremist violence, without requiring any external support. Most critically, Modi’s stance reflects a converging set of geopolitical constraints. It is a reckoning of US President Donald Trump’s transactional pivot toward Pakistan, Asim Munir’s consolidation of unprecedented control over Pakistan, Pakistan’s new defence pact with Saudi Arabia, and India’s own vulnerabilities.
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