A decisive victory in MODERN WARFARE

John Spencer

INDIA has not declared Operation Sindoor completely over. What exists now is a sensitive halt in operations – some may call it a ceasefire, but military leaders have deliberately avoided that word. From a warfighting perspective, this is not merely a pause; it is a strategic hold following a rare and unambiguous military victory.

After just four days of calibrated military action, it is objectively conclusive: India achieved a massive victory. Operation Sindoor met and exceeded its strategic aims – destroying terrorist infrastructure, demonstrating military superiority, restoring deterrence, and unveiling a new national security doctrine. This was not symbolic force. It was decisive power, clearly applied.

Swift and calibrated

India was attacked. On April 22, 2025, 26 Indian civilians, mostly Hindu tourists, were massacred in Pahalgam, Jammu & Kashmir. The Resistance Front (TRF), an offshoot of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), claimed responsibility. As has been the case for decades, the group is backed by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). But unlike previous attacks, this time India didn’t wait. It didn’t appeal for international mediation or issue a diplomatic demarche. It launched warplanes.

On May 7, India initiated Operation Sindoor, a swift and p r e c i s e l y c a l i b r a t e d military campaign. The Indian Air Force struck nine terrorist infrastructure targets inside Pakistan, including headquarters and operational hubs for Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba. The message was clear: terror attacks launched from Pakistani soil will now be treated as acts of war.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made the new doctrine unmistakable: “India will not tolerate any nuclear blackmail. India will strike precisely and decisively at the terrorist hideouts developing under the cover of nuclear blackmail.”

More than a retaliation, this was the unveiling of a strategic doctrine. As Modi said, “Terror and talks can’t go together. Water and blood can’t flow together.”

Phased execution

Operation Sindoor was executed in deliberate phases: May 7: Nine precision strikes were launched deep into Pakistani territory. Targets included key terror training camps and logistics nodes in Bahawalpur, Muridke, Muzaffarabad, and elsewhere.

May 8: Pakistan retaliated with a massive drone swarm across India’s western states. India’s multilayered air defense network – domestically built and augmented by Israeli and Russian systems – neutralised nearly all of them. May 9: India escalated with additional strikes on six Pakistani military airbases and UAV coordination hubs.

May 10: A temporary halt in firing was reached. India did not call it a ceasefire. The Indian military referred to it as a “stoppage of firing” – a semantic but deliberate choice that reinforced its strategic control of the situation.

This wasn’t just tactical success. It was doctrinal execution under live fire.

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