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‘Precise, proportionate': Pakistan says only targeted Indian facilities involved in civilian killings

‘Precise, proportionate': Pakistan says only targeted Indian facilities involved in civilian killings

Arab News11-05-2025

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan exercised restraint and only targeted Indian military facilities and entities that were involved in the killings of Pakistani civilians in this week's incursions, a Pakistani military spokesman said on Sunday, a day after the United States (US) brokered a truce between the nuclear-armed neighbors.
Tensions between India and Pakistan over an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir escalated on Wednesday, when India struck multiple Pakistani cities with missiles, quickly followed by what Islamabad said was the downing of five Indian fighter jets.
Both neighbors continued to attack the other's territory with fighter jets, missiles, drones and artillery until Saturday evening, when US President Donald Trump announced a surprise ceasefire that has largely held, except for a few alleged violations in Kashmir.
Briefing the media about operational details, Pakistani military spokesman, Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, said Pakistan hit 26 Indian military facilities and dozens of its drones hovered over major Indian cities, including India's capital New Delhi, in their counter-offensive against India.
'Pakistan's military response has been precise, proportionate and still remarkably restrained,' Chaudhry said, sharing details of 'Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos.'
'It was carefully calibrated to avoid civilian casualties and it exclusively targeted those entities and facilities which were directly involved in orchestrating and executing cold-blooded killings of Pakistani civilians.'
Four days of fighting, the worst conflict between the neighbors since 1999, has killed nearly 70 people on both sides, with some residents of border villages still waiting to return to their homes.
Diplomacy and pressure from the United States helped secure the ceasefire deal when it seemed that the conflict was spiraling alarmingly. But within hours of its coming into force, artillery fire was witnessed in Kashmir, which has been divided between India and Pakistan but claimed in full by both.
A top Indian army officer said on Sunday the Indian military had sent a 'hotline message' to Pakistan about violations of a ceasefire agreed this week and informed it of New Delhi's intent to respond if it was repeated.
'Sometimes, these understandings take time to fructify, manifest on the ground,' Lt Gen Rajiv Ghai, India's director-general of military operations, told a media briefing, referring to the truce. 'The [Indian] armed forces were on a very, very high alert [on Saturday] and continue to be in that state.'
The hostilities were triggered by the attack in Indian-administered Kashmir's Pahalgam resort town that killed 26 tourists on April 22. India accused Pakistan of backing the assault, Islamabad has denied it and called for a credible, international probe.
The Pakistani military spokesman said Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos had been a 'great example' of coming together of all elements of Pakistan's national power to effectively counter the threat to national sovereignty and integrity, warning of a similar response to any such attempt in the future.
'No one should have any doubt that whenever our sovereignty would be threatened and territorial integrity violated, the response would be comprehensive, retributive and decisive,' he said.
Pakistan and India have a history of bitter relations and have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir, since gaining independence from British colonial rule in 1947.
On Sunday, Trump said he would try to work with both India and Pakistan to see if they can resolve their dispute over the Kashmir territory, vowing to 'substantially' increase trade with both nations.
'While not even discussed, I am going to increase trade, substantially, with both of these great Nations,' Trump wrote on his social media platform, Truth Social, referring to India and Pakistan.
'Additionally, I will work with you both to see if, after a 'thousand years,' a solution can be arrived at concerning Kashmir,' he added.

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