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Time of India
9 hours ago
- General
- Time of India
Services Preparatory Institute to get full-time director soon
Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar: Services Preparatory Institute (SPI) is expected to get a new full-time director soon. The post was vacant since Nov 2022. SPI authorities said on Tuesday that Maharashtra Public Service Commission (MPSC) has finalised the name of a Pune-based retired colonel as the new director. "MPSC recommended the name of a new director after following the laid down procedure. The general administration department is expected to make the formal appointment in the next one or two weeks," officials said. SPI, under whose aegis Girls SPI at Nashik also functions, has shown stellar performance by placing a relatively higher number of cadets in govt defence institutions compared to many other Sainik schools. SPI also witnessed the formation of a revamped governing council, with the appointment of retired senior officials from the Army, Navy, and Air Force along with the divisional commissioner of Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar. Lieutenant General (retd) Rajendra Ramrao Nimbhorkar is now the chairman of the governing council, whereas the divisional commissioner will be the ex-officio vice-chairman. Brigadier (retd) Hemant Mahajan, Rear Admiral (retd) Ashish Kulkarni, and Air Vice Marshal (retd) Nitin Vaidya are the members of the council, which will also have the director of Sainik Welfare, Pune, and SPI director as designated members. Set up in 1977, SPI provides personalised coaching for UPSC (NDA) written entrance examination and interviews of the SSB, besides building physical and mental abilities of cadets. The girls' SPI at Nashik came up in 2023 and emerged as one of the most sought-after military schools.


Time of India
07-05-2025
- Politics
- Time of India
Operation Sindoor vs 2019 Balakot airstrikes vs 2016 surgical strikes: How India's latest attack marks a strategic shift
Live Events JeM headquarters at Markaz Subhan Allah in Bahawalpur LeT's main base at Markaz Taiba in Muridke Hizbul Mujahideen-linked sites in Muzaffarabad, Kotli, Sialkot, Barnala, and Tehra Kalan (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel In a bold and unprecedented move, the Indian armed forces launched Operation Sindoor , executing precise missile strikes on nine terrorist sites across Pakistan and Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK). The operation was carried out in retaliation for the Pahalgam terror attack that claimed 26 lives — including 25 Indian civilians and one Nepali national — two weeks Operation Sindoor marks India's most extensive cross-border military action in five decades, surpassing the scale and depth of both the 2016 surgical strikes and the 2019 Balakot airstrikes Here are the key differences:Strikes on multiple high-value targets across a wider area: In 2019, India attacked a single site. This time, it targeted nine terror penetration into Pakistani territory: According to official briefings, India targeted terror infrastructure almost 100 km beyond the Line of execution and advanced weaponry: The Indian armed forces deployed loitering munitions, precision-guided missiles, and adopted a tri-service strategy involving the Army, Air Force, and analyst Aadil Mir told ANI, 'India crossed two significant thresholds — hitting multiple sites and targeting Pakistan's heartland. This goes far beyond 2019.'Key terror infrastructure targeted included:The name 'Sindoor' — referring to the vermillion worn by Hindu married women — is also a symbolic tribute to the widows of the Pahalgam Sindoor showcased India's ability to conduct rapid, simultaneous strikes using standoff weapons, thereby minimizing the risk of airspace also clearly communicated its limited intent to the international Brigadier Hemant Mahajan praised the mission, stating: 'A world-class precision strike. We hit them when they least expected — and hit them hard.'