
PM to chair council of ministers meet on June 4, first since Op Sindoor launch
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will hold the first meeting of the council of ministers on June 4 at 4.30 pm, sources said. The meeting this week will be the first since India responded to the April 22 Pahalgam carnage and launched Operation Sindoor as a retaliatory measure. India targeted nine terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (POK) and subsequently retaliated against all Pakistani offensives under this operation.advertisementAddressing a gathering in West Bengal, PM Modi confirmed that Operation Sindoor was currently ongoing and reiterated the government's stance that India has set a "new normal" in its response to terrorism.Meanwhile, the Opposition has been demanding a special session of Parliament to discuss Operation Sindoor and the Pahalgam terror attack. The demand for a special session was fuelled even more after Chief of Defence Staff, General Anil Chauhan, while in Singapore, admitted that India made "mistakes" early on during Operation Sindoor, but clarified that the mistakes were "rectified".
For the first time, General Chauhan admitted that India lost an unspecified number of jets during the operation.In an interview with Bloomberg on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue, General Anil Chauhan, however, dismissed the Pakistan Prime Minister's claims that it shot down six Indian jets, including four Rafales, as "absolutely incorrect".advertisement"What is important is that, not the jet being down, but why they were being down... Why they were down, what mistakes were made - that are important. Numbers are not important," General Chauhan said.Taking cudgels against the Centre, Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge said that the government should take a cue from Pakistan and hold a special session to hold deliberations on Operation Sindoor. The veteran Congress leader also accused the government of "misleading the nation" in response to General Chauhan's admission in Singapore.Further intensifying his attack, Kharge alleged that instead of offering clarity on US President Donald Trump taking credit for the ceasefire between India and Pakistan, Prime Minister Modi was "on an election blitz, taking personal credit for the valour of the armed forces".Donald Trump has on several occasions taken credit for brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan. The US claimed that it used trade and tariffs to strong-arm both India and Pakistan into reaching an immediate ceasefire, a claim that India has denied as "false".Tune InMust Watch
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