Produced by: Mohsin Shaikh
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Forget propaganda—satellite images from Maxar and Planet Labs stripped away the noise, revealing India's strikes hit deeper, harder, and cleaner than Pakistan’s loud claims suggested.
While both nations traded fiery rhetoric, the real war unfolded in eerie silence from space, where the craters, shattered hangars, and blackened runways at Pakistan’s bases told the untold story.
India’s precision strike on Nur Khan Airbase, near Pakistan’s nuclear command nerve center, stunned analysts—showing India’s willingness to challenge Islamabad’s most sensitive military sanctuaries.
At Bholari, near Karachi, India’s missiles ripped through an aircraft hangar. High-res images confirmed the damage, while Pakistan downplayed the strike, hoping the proof wouldn’t pierce its narrative.
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Sargodha—hit again after 60 years—bore fresh wounds as India’s missiles cratered its runways, a brutal echo of the 1965 raid that once shattered Pakistan’s air might.
Pakistan’s own NOTAM admission of Rahim Yar Khan’s closed runway inadvertently confirmed India’s strike—silence speaking louder than bluster.
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Pakistan claimed to have ravaged Indian bases like Udhampur. But satellite imagery showed little damage—raising questions over Islamabad’s exaggerated battlefield boasts.
India’s Operation Sindoor wasn’t a flood—it was a scalpel. Each strike focused, each hit surgical. The imagery proved it wasn’t showmanship—it was strategy.
This wasn’t just war—it was a showcase of 21st-century warfare, where satellites, drones, and missile strikes are judged not by speeches—but by what the orbiting eyes record.