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After Aerial Humiliation, Panicked India Bombed Its Own People

Panicked India Bombed Its Own People

Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : In one of the most stunning and deeply troubling incidents of modern military conflict, the May 2025 India-Pakistan escalation has not only exposed the weakness of Indian air superiority but has also brought to light a catastrophic failure in India’s missile command and control infrastructure. In an unprecedented embarrassment, several ballistic missiles fired by the Indian military reportedly landed within its own territory—specifically in Indian-administered Kashmir and East Punjab—causing damage, death, and widespread panic.
While Indian media outlets initially attempted to blame these explosions on Pakistani strikes, independent intelligence sources, local reports, and even intercepted communication within Indian military channels revealed the horrifying truth: these were Indian missiles, misfired or misdirected due to systemic failures in guidance systems, lack of coordination, or possibly human error. It is a stark reminder that the world’s largest democracy, which possesses over 170 nuclear warheads, operates with a missile infrastructure plagued by flaws that could have global consequences.
The story doesn’t end with missiles gone rogue. Earlier in the week, Pakistan successfully downed five Indian fighter jets, including three Rafale aircraft—France’s pride, and India’s most advanced multirole fighters. But the embarrassment did not stop at the downing itself; what shook global military experts was the fact that these Rafales were shot down not by any American stealth technology or Russian SAM systems—but by Chinese-made J-10C and JF-17 Thunder jets, operated by Pakistani pilots with surgical precision.
A French defense analyst, when asked how the technologically inferior Chinese platforms could destroy such advanced jets, offered a brutally honest assessment: “We provided the platform. But platforms require skill to operate. That we could not supply to Indian pilots.”
The statement encapsulates the broader dysfunction in India’s military command. Despite heavy investments in advanced platforms, India’s air force continues to be undermined by under-trained personnel, politicized promotions, and insufficient real-combat exposure—particularly compared to Pakistan, whose forces are battle-hardened from two decades of asymmetric and conventional warfare.
The gravest development, however, is the recent missile misfires that have turned India’s own weapons on its people. At least two ballistic missiles, reportedly launched during retaliatory salvos aimed at Pakistani positions, veered off course and exploded within Indian territory. In the immediate aftermath, chaos erupted across Indian-controlled Kashmir and East Punjab, with local hospitals overwhelmed by casualties. Indian media, in a desperate attempt to save face, labeled these attacks as Pakistani provocations—but those claims quickly unraveled.
Pakistan, for its part, categorically denied launching any such strikes and emphasized that its military doctrine does not target civilian populations, especially in areas where it shares deep religious and political sympathies, such as among Kashmiri Muslims and Khalistani Sikhs. More importantly, Pakistani intelligence intercepted and traced the origin of the misfires back to Indian launch sites—corroborated by eyewitness accounts, trajectory tracking, and analysis by third-party observers.
This is not the first time India has humiliated itself through missile mishandling. In 2022, an Indian missile accidentally landed in Pakistan during a “routine maintenance error,” prompting a major diplomatic protest. Then too, India failed to notify its own neighbors in real-time—highlighting a command structure fraught with negligence and poor oversight.
Now, with multiple self-inflicted missile strikes during an active war, the stakes are no longer regional—they’re global.
India’s nuclear capability places it in a high-stakes category where even a minor miscalculation can trigger regional or global catastrophe. Its inability to ensure missile accuracy and its failure to maintain control over its ballistic arsenal demands urgent international scrutiny.
Global watchdogs, including the United Nations Security Council, should urgently convene to impose technical and procedural safeguards on India’s missile testing and deployment systems. Countries like the United States, Russia, and China—regardless of their rivalries—must agree on inspection protocols for South Asia’s missile networks, particularly India’s, to prevent an unintentional nuclear escalation.
If a ballistic missile designed to hit strategic enemy targets instead kills civilians within India, what assurance is there that a future “mistake” won’t hit Karachi, Kabul, or even Moscow?
In stark contrast to India’s series of disasters, Pakistan’s armed forces have demonstrated remarkable professionalism, agility, and strategic foresight throughout the ongoing conflict. The Pakistan Air Force, employing advanced Chinese PL-15 long-range air-to-air missiles, showcased its superior targeting capabilities by neutralizing India’s Rafales—arguably the crown jewel of its air fleet.
Despite being outnumbered and often underestimated, Pakistan’s JF-17 Thunders and J-10Cs have shown tactical supremacy due to better coordination, superior training, and modern Chinese integration protocols. The F-16 fleet, backed by American avionics and enhanced radar systems, played a pivotal role in electronic warfare, disrupting Indian communications and reducing the efficacy of their missions.
Pakistan’s missile corps has remained restrained, precise, and strategically calibrated. No misfires. No civilian casualties. No violations of its own sovereignty. Its restraint has earned it not only strategic ground but also diplomatic credibility.
This war has become a revealing lens through which to judge the operational readiness and ethical responsibility of two nuclear-armed neighbors. India, despite its vast military budget and foreign acquisitions, is now viewed with suspicion and concern—not just by its enemies, but by its allies.
Its Air Force, once touted as a regional juggernaut, has been humbled. Its missile command, often paraded as indomitable, is now a subject of memes, diplomatic concern, and potential UN scrutiny. And its leadership, in attempting to outgun and outmaneuver Pakistan, has stumbled into self-inflicted chaos.
On the other hand, Pakistan has played a calculated hand—militarily and diplomatically. By combining indigenous innovation, foreign partnership with China, and disciplined strategy, it has not only defended its sovereignty but also earned a moral and tactical upper hand.
India’s air strikes and missile barrages may have been intended to send a message to Pakistan—but the only recipients of its destruction so far have been its own citizens and its international reputation.
As missiles rained down on Indian soil—fired not by foreign hands but its own—the world must now reconsider the narrative of regional responsibility. The future of South Asian stability will not be secured through unchecked military parades, but through accountability, training, and respect for the immense power nations wield.
The missile that strikes your enemy may start a war. But the missile that strikes your own heart may end your credibility forever.

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