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Indian Air Force Shares Unseen Footage Of Attack On Terror Camps During Op Sindoor
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Stating that "IAF responded with precision, speed, resolve", the video showed aerial strikes by the Indian fighter jets on terror sites in Pakistan and PoK.
Showcasing the success of Operation Sindoor, the Indian Air Force (IAF) on Sunday shared a video showing a glimpse of an attack on terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).
IAF posted a video of about 6 minutes on X showcasing its power and strength in safeguarding the country. The clip shows how India avenged the April 22 Pahalgam attack, in which 26 civilians lost their lives.
Stating that 'IAF responded with precision, speed, resolve", the video showed aerial strikes by the Indian fighter jets on terror sites in Pakistan and PoK. It also featured clips and pictures that showed the 'decimated" terror camps.
Indian Air Force -Touch the Sky with Glory #IndianAirForce #YearOfDefenceReforms @DefenceMinIndia @SpokespersonMoD @HQ_IDS_India @adgpi @IndiannavyMedia @indiannavy @CareerinIAF — Indian Air Force (@IAF_MCC) August 10, 2025
The video also showed fighter jets in action during the 1971 war with Pakistan. It also mentioned the Kargil war and Indian strikes in response to the Pulwama attack in 2019.
'When the skies grow dark and danger looms across land or sea, there's one force that rises. Vast, fearless and precise. The Indian Air Force."
The Indian armed forces launched Operation Sindoor on May 7 after and struck multiple terror camps in Pakistan and PoK, killing over 100 terrorists. In response, to India's action, Pakistan then launched a massive missile and drone attack, which India intercepted. In retaliation, Indian forces struck airfields in Pakistan.
Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh last Saturday said the IAF shot down five Pakistani fighter jets and a large aircraft during Operation Sindoor.
'We have an indication of at least one AWC in that AWC hangar, and a few F-16s, which are under maintenance there. We have at least five fighters confirmed killed and one large aircraft, which could be either an aircraft or an AWC, which was taken at a distance of about 300 kilometres. This is actually the largest ever recorded surface-to-air kill that we can talk about," he said during an event in Bengaluru.
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First Published:
August 11, 2025, 13:09 IST
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