IAF shot down five Pakistani fighter jets, one large aircraft during Op Sindoor, says Air Force Chief; Pakistan denies

Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh hails Op Sindoor as a landmark in air warfare; Islamabad rejects claims, calling them implausible and ill-timed

Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh hails Op Sindoor as a landmark in air warfare; Islamabad rejects claims, calling them implausible and ill-timed
Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh hails Op Sindoor as a landmark in air warfare; Islamabad rejects claims, calling them implausible and ill-timed

IAF hails record air kills, Pakistan calls it fiction

Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh on Saturday said the Indian Air Force (IAF) shot down five Pakistani fighter jets and a large aircraft during Operation Sindoor, describing it as the largest-ever recorded surface-to-air kill by India. The remarks were made at the 16th Air Chief Marshal L M Katre Memorial Lecture in Bengaluru. Within hours, Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif countered that no aircraft of the military was hit or destroyed by Indian armed forces during the conflict.

“We have an indication of at least one AWC in that AWC hangar, and a few F-16s, which are under maintenance there. We have at least five fighters confirmed killed and one large aircraft, which could be either an aircraft or an AWC, which was taken at a distance of about 300 kilometres. This is actually the largest ever recorded surface-to-air kill that we can talk about,” he said. The operation also resulted in a large number of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), drones, and some of their missiles falling into the Indian territory.

Based on specific intelligence, Singh said, the IAF decided to attack the airfield. “So the airfield was attacked and the main building where the planning goes on, which was also used as the civil terminal building at times. As far as the Sukkur airbase is concerned, we attacked the UAB hangar and radar site,” he said.

“You have the visuals available here — this is the hangar, which is flattened, this is the radar site before and after. The AWC hangar was attacked again. Here we have very clearly an aircraft inside where the attack took place,” he said. Regarding Sargodha, the IAF chief said, “We have grown up in our Air Force dreaming about days like this. Someday we will get a chance. Just so happens that I got a chance before my retirement. We attacked the airfield that had the very hard info on the F-16s,” he added.

According to the Air Chief Marshal, the S-400 air defence system, which India had recently procured, has been a game changer. “The range of that system had kept Pakistan’s aircraft and UAVs away from the Indian defence system. Because of the S-400 system, Pakistan has not been able to penetrate the Indian air defence system,” he noted.

Singh also said the post of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) has made a difference in military operations. “The CDS was always there to get us together and iron things out. Whenever we required it, we used to go to the senior leadership and discuss things,” he added. The Air Chief Marshal highlighted National Security Advisor Ajit Doval‘s role in Operation Sindoor, helping bring other agencies and forces together. When the operation began, military chiefs discussed in detail the eventualities, possible outcomes, and how India should react, he underlined.

On the takeaways from Operation Sindoor, Singh said, “The biggest takeaway of the operation has been that the primacy of air warfare has come to the forefront once again. People have realised that air warfare is the first responder that any country has, and air warfare is one that can actually react in a quick time, attack deep inside with precision, and just achieve its objective without any collateral damage.

“The Pahalgam terror attack on April 23 this year was one of the deadliest in Jammu and Kashmir in recent years. Armed terrorists opened fire on a group of tourists, killing 26 people and injuring several others. Operation Sindoor was launched in early May as part of that response. The IAF carried out precision strikes on multiple targets in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir linked to terror groups. The operation was aimed at destroying terror infrastructure, neutralising key operatives and sending a clear message that cross-border terrorism would invite decisive retaliation, said the IAF Chief.

Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif claimed that “not a single Pakistani aircraft was hit or destroyed by the Indian side,” Asif said in a post on social media. “For three months, no such claims were voiced – while Pakistan, in the immediate aftermath, presented detailed technical briefings to the international media…,” he added.

He said the belated assertions made by the Indian Air Force Chief regarding destruction of Pakistani aircraft during Operation Sindoor “are as implausible as they are ill-timed.”

Asif claimed that the losses on the Line of Control for the Indian armed forces were disproportionately heavier as well. “If the truth is in question, let both sides open their aircraft inventories to independent verification—though we suspect this would lay bare the reality India seeks to obscure,” he added.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. After the detailed presser with illustration, was it really necessary for the CDS, A defence attache and the Air chief to comment on the operation in any which way that could lead to controversy. Was it a mike in hand syndrome, indiscretion, peddling a narrative at the behest of someone or plain stupidity?

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