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Pakistan's Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar has confirmed that India attacked two important airbases in Pakistan during Operation Sindoor. The strikes hit Noor Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi and Shaukat Airbase. Dar revealed that the attack occurred just as Pakistan was preparing to strike back, indicating India acted faster and caught them off guard. This admission contradicts Pakistan's earlier claims of victory in the recent escalation between the two countries.

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India Gazette
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Defence Secretary calls BrahMos a game-changer in Operation Sindoor
New Delhi [India], June 20 (ANI): Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh has said the Indian Armed Forces effectively used a mix of foreign-origin and indigenous weapons during Operation Sindoor that targeted terror sites in Pakistan. He called the supersonic cruise missile BrahMos a game-changer in the operation. In an exclusive interview with ANI, the Defence Secretary said, 'We were using a mix of foreign-origin and indigenous weapons effectively. And the indigenous weapons that were used did very well, and BrahMos, in fact, was probably, you could even call it a game changer.' He said that during the operation, there was a good fusion of different types of weapons, and the armed forces had done it in a very cohesive and coordinated manner. 'Indian origin weapons, some of them worked very well. I mean, BrahMos did amazing. Akash also did very well. Also, our ability to retrofit some of our older Air Defence systems with radar to improve their capability, upgrade their capabilities, particularly against things like drones and other types of low-flying threats. Those all worked very well,' he said. The Defence Secretary said the Indian Armed Forces were well prepared for Operation Sindoor. 'I think the services were very well prepared. They were very confident in terms of their capacity and their ability to access the precision standoff weapon we needed for this operation,' he said. India launched Operation Sindoor early on May 7 to hit at terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and PoJK in response to the terror attack in Pahalgam in which 26 people were killed. Indian Armed Forces also effectively repelled subsequent Pakistani aggression and pounded its airbases. The Defence Secretary pointed out that the defence modernisation budget has been growing at a rate of about 7 per cent in the last 10 years, but the difficulty has been absorbing some of those outlays. 'If you're talking in general about whether there are still capability gaps that we need to fill and resource gaps that need to be plugged, I would say that at least in the recent past, in the last 10 years or so, you would find that our budget has been growing at a rate of about 7 per cent. I'm talking only about the modernisation (in) capital budget. That's been growing at about 7% a year,' he said. The Defence Secretary laid emphasis on absorbing defence outlays. 'The difficulty has been in terms of absorbing some of those outlays. And in many years, we've ended up surrendering money. This year, we actually fully utilised our revised estimate. But at the RE (Revised Estimates) stage, we did have some reduction because the trend in expenditure was not adequate. More importantly, we signed contracts worth 2 lakh crores this year, which is double what has ever been done any time earlier. The highest that was ever achieved earlier was about 1 lakh crores in 2023-2024,' he said. 'So, unless you speed up procurements, unless you do the contract signings, then get after the vendors to ensure that those contracts are fulfilled, unless you complete those steps, your absorptive capacity itself is a bigger constraint than the budgetary constraint because now that we've fully utilized RE last year, we can ask for a higher share this year,' he added. India's defence production has grown at an extraordinary pace since the launch of the 'Make in India' initiative, reaching a record Rs 1.27 lakh crore in FY 2023-24. A robust defence industrial base includes 16 DPSUs, over 430 licensed companies, and approximately 16,000 MSMEs, strengthening indigenous production capabilities. (ANI)


India Gazette
an hour ago
- India Gazette
We achieved almost 100% objectives in Operation Sindoor, sequence cleary shows Pakistan capitulated: Defence Secy Rajesh Kumar Singh
New Delhi [India], June 20 (ANI): Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh has said that the strategy behind continuing Operation Sindoor is to maintain 'escalation dominance' and make terrorists realise that the magnitude and timing of future responses will be entirely in India's control. Singh, in an exclusive interview with ANI, said that India will decide the time and place of the future responses and not let it be up to the terrorists to decide. He also said said that India achieved almost 100 per cent objectives in Operation Sindoor and the sequence shows clearly that Pakistan capitulated. 'I think the intent is to keep everybody on their toes, but in terms of deployment, of course, we have sort of withdrawn a bit. And I don't think there is any immediate sort of posturing that is going on, which is meant to be very aggressive. But I think the intent is to be aggressive. The idea is that India will maintain what they call, in strategic terms, escalation dominance. We will decide the time and place. We are not leaving it to the terrorists to decide time and place. We will sort of change the script and make sure that they are never sure what we will do,' Singh said. 'The surprise is always on the side of the terrorist, but by establishing this escalation dominance on our side, we are ensuring that they should realise that there will be a response, its magnitude and its timing and everything else - time, place, everything - would be in our hands. So that new normal is to be normalised and sort of internalised by them and thereafter, if they still want to, come up with provocations; the assumption is or the hope is that they will think a few times,' he added. Singh pointed out that Operation Sindoor, which was launched on May 7 following a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam, which claimed 26 lives, involved meticulous amounts of intelligence gathering and coordination among the different services and the intelligence agencies. 'Obviously any such operation involves a meticulous amount of intelligence gathering, coordination among the different services and the intelligence agencies and thereafter, you try to come up with precise targeting after identifying targets. Now, the operational details I will not be able to share because that is not even my domain. That is really for the services and the CDS to look at. But I can tell you that this particular operation was characterised by tremendous tri-service synergy, as well as synergy with the intelligence agencies,' he said. 'And that is why, if you were, I'm sure you were watching the first night strikes on the nine identified targets went off so well. We achieved, I would say, almost 100% of what we set out to do. So yes, it was the result of a lot of coordination and planning, and that was what took us about 15 days. But the intent always was that this particular barbaric atrocity would be answered and answered in such a way that we will not, as the Prime Minister has mentioned, we will not be confining ourselves to the foot soldiers or to some remote camps. We will be going after the headquarters, going after the leaders,' he added. India had said that perpetrators of the Pahalgam terror attack will face severe punishment. India launched Operation Sindoor early on May 7 to hit at terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and PoJK. Indian Armed Forces also effectively repelled subsequent Pakistani aggression and pounded its airbases. Following India's strong response, Pakistani DGMO approached his Indian counterpart for cessation of hostilities. 'They did respond to our limited calibrated strikes only on their terrorist quarters and infrastructure by trying to hit our military establishment. In a sense, they took ownership of the terrorists as being one of their assets. And they responded by trying to hit our military assets. Most of their attacks failed, but there were a few which got through with minimal damage and minimal casualties. But once they did that, we had no option but to respond in kind. And our response was sufficiently severe to make them sort of quickly come forward,' the Defence Secretary said. 'On the first night after the strike, they refused even to talk to our DGMO, to have a discussion at all. They only said to just wait for our response. It was a very terse kind of a rebuttal. On the day after strikes on their airfields, they were the ones who came forward asking for time, asking whether we would be willing to meet them and talk to them. And thereafter, of course, asking for a cessation of the hostilities. So that sequence should be very clear that they were the ones who capitulated,' he noted. 'But yes, transcripts of some kind as well as a record of discussions are available. I think you can take it from me and you can rest assured that the sequence I mentioned is correct. They are the ones who came forward, who asked for time and thereafter essentially asked for a ceasefire,' Singh added. He also hinted about significant losses of Pakistan during Operation Sindoor: 'The fact that we were able to hit their most important air bases, including the one at Noor Khan, itself should make it very clear that these were fairly significant losses that they suffered. Many of those airfields are still out of commission. There are other assets that have been damaged as well as significant casualties as well. So I don't think anybody who has any expertise in this area has any doubt.' (ANI)