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'Enemy missiles neutralised': Army shares another Operation Sindoor video, calls Indian military 'impregnable wall of fire'

'Enemy missiles neutralised': Army shares another Operation Sindoor video, calls Indian military 'impregnable wall of fire'
NEW DELHI: Indian Army on Sunday released another video of Operation Sindoor on social media platform X, praising the Army as an “impregnable wall of fire.”The Army's Western Command posted a video on X saying “Enemy missiles neutralised” and praised the Indian Army as an “impregnable wall of fire.”The video opens with footage of the May 7 missile attacks by Pakistan, which were successfully intercepted by India’s Pinaka multi-barrel rocket launcher system.
It also shows Pakistan’s drones and unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) being thwarted by the advanced S-400 missile defense system. The visuals include Pakistani missiles that missed their targets and debris found in agricultural lands.The video then shifts to India’s swift and precise retaliation, displaying the destruction of Pakistan’s terror infrastructure. The closing message of the video emphasises India’s strength and determination with words such as “Ruthless, Precision, Raw Power, Fierce and Pride.”Earlier the same day, the Western Command had posted another video on X with the caption “Planned, trained & executed,” underscoring the meticulous preparation behind the operation and reaffirming, “Justice served.”In the video shared by the Army's Western Command, a security personnel can be heard saying that Operation Sindoor was a lesson for Pakistan, one it had not learned for decades.
The Army personnel can be heard saying, "It all began with the Pahalgam terrorist attack. The anger was like molten lava. There was only one thought in mind - this time, we will teach such a lesson that their generations will remember. It wasn't an act of revenge, it was justice. On the night of May 9, around 9 PM, any enemy post that violated the ceasefire was destroyed by the Indian army. Operation Sindoor was not just an action; it was a lesson for Pakistan, one it had not learned for decades."India had launched Operation Sindoor on May 7, targeting nine terror-related sites in Pakistan and Pakistan-Occupied-Kashmir. This was in response to a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pahalgam last month, which claimed the lives of 26 people, mostly tourists.Following India’s strike, Pakistan retaliated with shelling across the Line of Control and Jammu and Kashmir, along with attempted drone attacks along the border.After Pakistan's incursion, India escalated its response, targeting and reportedly destroying key Pakistani military and air infrastructure, including the Nur Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi and the Rahim Yar Khan airbase. Both countries reached an understanding to end hostilities on May 10, an initiative that reportedly came from Islamabad.
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