Produced by: Mohsin Shaikh
India destroyed a Pakistani air defence unit in Lahore, a key radar site monitoring airspace along the border, marking a strategic first strike in the counter-escalation.
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This was a classic SEAD (Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses) mission. Indian forces used precision munitions to disable radar and missile systems that shield Lahore’s air corridor.
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India’s military confirmed its response was “in the same domain” as Pakistan’s—meaning it hit back with equivalent intensity, specifically targeting air defence infrastructure.
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Taking down the Lahore system opened a safe aerial corridor for future Indian strikes—reducing the risk to its aircraft from ground-based missile systems.
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Neutralising the radar site created a temporary blind spot in Pakistan’s surveillance network, disrupting early-warning coverage for critical airbases in the region.
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Military analysts suggest India likely used a mix of loitering munitions, possible EW support, and stand-off missiles launched from aircraft outside Pakistani airspace.
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Striking an air defence site—often located away from population centers—allowed India to degrade military capability while avoiding civilian targets or collateral damage.
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The counterstrike was launched early Thursday morning, hours after India repelled Pakistan’s overnight drone and missile wave—indicating rapid intelligence processing and readiness.
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The attack sends a clear message: India is capable of precision, escalatory retaliation without crossing thresholds—forcing Pakistan to rethink airspace confidence.
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