Ajai Shukla
After 40 days of tension in South Asia, during which Indian and Pakistani officials exchanged claims and counter-claims over their clashes in early May, India’s top-ranking military official, General Anil Chauhan, injected a note of clarity.
In interviews to Reuters and Bloomberg news agencies on May 31, on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, Chauhan, who is the chief of defense staff (CDS) of the Indian armed forces, admitted that India’s military had been forced to modify its tactics after an unspecified number of Indian Air Force (IAF) fighter aircraft were shot down by Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighters and missiles.
India has provided scant evidence to rebut expansive PAF claims of IAF losses. Talking to the media in Singapore on May 31, Chauhan admitted that the IAF had suffered an unknown number of casualties, but again offered no details.
IAF versus PAF
The confrontation between the two South Asian neighbors began on April 22, when a group of heavily armed terrorists from Pakistan shot down and killed 26 unarmed civilians – 25 tourists and one local – in Pahalgam, a scenic high-altitude meadow in the territory of Kashmir, which remains contested between India and Pakistan.
Then, on the night of May 6-7, India launched Operation Sindoor, missile strikes that initially targeted terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and Pakistan. Strikes and counter-strikes followed over the next few days.
The four-day armed confrontation between the IAF and PAF, which some aerospace analysts refer to as the 100-hour war, has been carefully studied by air power experts worldwide. For others, this has been an invaluable opportunity to compare, in a live air combat environment, the surveillance architecture, command and control structure, and flying skills of Eastern Bloc and Western Bloc pilots and aircraft.