Operation Sindoor and Aftermath

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Among the most significant strike was the assault on Pakistan’s Bholari air base, where a hangar housing a Saab 2000 AEW&C aircraft and several fighter jets was obliterated. According to sources, the debris from the destruction still had not been cleared days later that is an indication of the magnitude of the damage.
 
A detailed long comprehensive piece by Christopher Clary of stimson.org.

It mentions all the events of the four day war with references.

It's the most detailed piece which has come out of western world nd clearly states how india achieved it's strategic objectives. Worth reading..

He is married to an isi agent niolufer siddiqui all his works are just pakistani propaganda larping as neutral .


View: https://x.com/__phoenix_fire_/status/1920489337474445650?t=_vbm6EHbXiDBLDJXLZ4G8A&s=19
 

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So, the missiles cost more than the terrorists they eliminate—how unfair! Pakistanis will say, ‘We only lost a few salwars, and you blew millions of dollars on missiles.
cost of rebuilding the airbases and assets is probably in the billions?? Along with the
damage done to the nukes?? which india denies.
 
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So, the missiles cost more than the terrorists they eliminate—how unfair! Pakistanis will say, ‘We only lost a few salwars, and you blew millions of dollars on missiles.


View: https://x.com/VivekSi85847001/status/1923237454640804242

View: https://x.com/grok/status/1923239526052606051

Additional gains for us :
  • Invaluable war experience for our IAF warriors. It is pertinent to note that ONLY IAF, PAF and USAF has real time experience of active BVR engagement and SAM evasion since the last decade.
  • Validation of indigenous weapon systems (Akash, Radars, EW, and many more). These experiences will be used to sharpen and improve our wartime strategy.

  • Experience dealing with Chinese weapons and then defeating them. Our next decisive war will be with China, not Pakistan.
 
Digital Domination of Warfare: Is India Ready?


India in 2025, after the Operation Sindoor paused, it finds itself at a critical juncture in strategic defence. Once again, it faces coordinated threats from China and Pakistan—this time with tacit encouragement from the United States. While their motives may differ, all three share a strategic goal: to check India’s rise on the global stage. The recent triumph in Operation Sindoor, where India decisively outmaneuvered Pakistan, has only intensified these efforts to contain India. India’s emergence as a regional power has unsettled both East and West. Preparing for future provocations, particularly from Pakistan, is now an urgent national priority.

The recent Operation Sindoor conflict was a “mini-war,” fought primarily through drones and missile strikes—areas in which India had a technological and tactical edge. But the next war will be different. It will be fought in the digital domain. Cyberattacks, laser weaponry, satellites aided attacks and electronic jamming systems will dominate the battlefield. While traditional forces—soldiers, tanks, and artillery—will remain vital to secure ground, the true aim of future warfare will be to paralyze the enemy’s decision-making and cripple their economic foundations.

India must now invest in homegrown digital defence and offence capabilities. Just as our engineers and scientists built advanced systems to neutralize Pakistani drones and missiles, we now need a similar leap in cyber innovation. Our multi-layered missile defence systems, our upgraded guns, missiles, and surveillance assets have already impressed global observers. The next frontier is a digital shield—and a digital sword.

On the offensive front, India must develop systems capable of penetrating enemy cyber defences, disabling critical infrastructure, and neutralizing satellite networks. On the defensive side, we must be ready to repel sophisticated digital strikes from adversaries with far greater resources and technical prowess—especially China.

During Operation Sindoor, Pakistan attempted a rudimentary cyberattack on India’s military communications. It failed—but the next attempt might come from a more advanced actor like China. If China were to succeed in such an attack, the consequences could be catastrophic: compromised command-and-control systems, economic paralysis, and national chaos.

The message is clear: India must be future-ready. Strengthening our cyber warfare capabilities is no longer optional—it is as vital as] procuring fighter jets, tanks, or artillery. The battles of tomorrow will be fought in code, not just in combat—and India must lead, not lag, in this digital domain.
 
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