India’s government used a special session of Parliament on Tuesday to disclose new details of recent security operations against Pakistan-linked militants and military targets. Home Minister Amit Shah told the Lok Sabha that Indian forces had killed Suleiman, Jibran and Abu Hamza—three men accused of carrying out the April attack on Hindu tourists in Pahalgam, Kashmir. Shah said two of the militants were Pakistani nationals and that their deaths, achieved under “Operation Mahadev,” closed the investigation into the assault that helped trigger May’s brief war with Pakistan. Addressing the same debate, Prime Minister Narendra Modi outlined the scope of May’s retaliatory “Operation Sindoor,” claiming Indian strikes left Pakistani airbases “in the ICU.” Modi added that on 9 May Pakistan launched about 1,000 missiles and drones at India, all of which were intercepted by Indian air-defence systems. He said the campaign demonstrated that “nuclear blackmail” no longer deters India and has boosted demand for domestically produced weapons.
India's operation Sindoor has spurred the demand for India made defence equipments says PM Modi https://t.co/SEAAVf5EiD
India made weapons played a key role in operation Sindoor, says PM Modi https://t.co/SEAAVf5EiD
"On 9th May, Pakistan launched a massive attack with 1000 missiles, drones on India, but Indian Air Defence Systems destroyed them", points PM Modi during Parliament debate https://t.co/SEAAVf5EiD