Pakistan's own dossier exposes India’s devastating deep strikes
July 13, 2025
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Home Bharat

Pakistan’s own dossier exposes India’s devastating deep strikes during Operation Sindoor: 8 secret targets hit by IAF

Pakistan’s leaked Operation Bunyan un Marsoos dossier reveals that India’s Operation Sindoor struck eight additional deep targets, including Peshawar, Jhang, and Hyderabad, beyond official disclosures. The scale of these precision strikes forced Pakistan into a ceasefire, exposing Islamabad’s false claims of minimal damage

by WEB DESK
Jun 4, 2025, 07:00 am IST
in Bharat, World
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Post-Operation Sindoor, a classified Pakistani military dossier has exposed a game-changing truth: India struck deeper and harder than it publicly admitted during Operation Sindoor, launched in retaliation for the brutal April 22 terror attack on Hindu pilgrims in Pahalgam.

Titled Operation Bunyan un Marsoos, the leaked Pakistani dossier—accessed by multiple international outlets and confirmed by Organiser through defence sources—maps at least eight previously unacknowledged Indian airstrikes in core Pakistani urban and military zones, some as far west as Peshawar and south as Hyderabad, Sindh. The document shatters Islamabad’s posturing and points to the psychological, military, and strategic masterstroke of India’s evolving counterterror doctrine.

Map in Pakistan dossier

While the Indian Air Force (IAF) and Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) acknowledged precision airstrikes on nine terrorist targets in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), the Bunyan un Marsoos dossier reveals additional strike locations, including:

  • Peshawar (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa)
  • Hyderabad (Sindh)
  • Gujrat (Punjab)
  • Jhang (Punjab)
  • Bhawalnagar (Punjab)
  • Gujranwala (Punjab)Attock (Punjab)
  • Chor (Sindh)

These cities are not typically associated with terror training camps. However, intelligence reports suggest many of these zones house dual-use military-civilian facilities, clandestine radicalization centers, and sleeper-cell coordination hubs. The strategic targeting of these locations suggests a doctrine shift: not just a punitive counterterror strike, but a full-spectrum decapitation strike on Pakistan’s state-backed jihadist infrastructure.

From Pahalgam Massacre to Precision Retaliation

The chain of events began on April 22, when 26 Hindu pilgrims were mercilessly killed in a terrorist attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir. The Indian government accused Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT)—two UN-designated terror groups with deep state links in Pakistan.

India’s response was swift and layered. Operation Sindoor, launched on May 7, was a carefully calibrated aerial and missile strike campaign, with India initially confirming hits on:

  • Jaish-e-Mohammed HQ, Bahawalpur
  • Lashkar-e-Taiba Training Centre, Muridke
  • Muzaffarabad, Kotli, Rawalakot, Bhimber, Chakswari, Neelum Valley, Jhelum, Chakwal

These locations were verified through satellite imagery by Maxar Technologies, which showed widespread destruction and crater patterns consistent with high-yield munitions. But now, Pakistan’s own leak expands the theatre of destruction dramatically.

Why India stayed silent on the full list

Sources in the Indian defence establishment indicate that India’s deliberate decision not to reveal all strike locations was part of a psychological operation (psy-ops) to force Pakistan into a credibility crisis.

“If we say we hit only nine, and they scream about others, they’re admitting we got deeper than they claimed. If they stay silent, their public and military lose trust in their own defence narrative,” said a retired senior Air Marshal, requesting anonymity. India thus turned Pakistan’s information warfare doctrine on its head—by weaponising silence.

Soon after the three-day escalation, Pakistan sent backchannel messages requesting a mutual ceasefire. While Islamabad initially boasted about tit-for-tat retaliation, including drone and missile strikes on Indian civilian zones, the sheer damage from Indian counterstrikes left the Pakistani military in disarray.

India had bombed eleven key air bases deep inside Pakistan:

  • Nur Khan (Rawalpindi)
  • Rafiqui (Shorkot)
  • Murid (Jehlum)
  • Sukkur (Sindh)
  • Sialkot (Punjab)
  • Pasrur (Punjab)
  • Chunian (Punjab)
  • Sargodha (Punjab)
  • Skardu (PoK)
  • Bholari (Sindh)
  • Jacobabad (Sindh)

This list alone makes it clear: India was not just retaliating—it was escalating with surgical precision, targeting command-and-control hubs, radar installations, and air defence nodes. Pakistan’s desperate plea for a ceasefire was not borne out of diplomacy, but military exhaustion and strategic paralysis.

From Surgical Strikes to Full-Spectrum Deterrence

Operation Sindoor marks a doctrinal shift in Indian military policy, moving beyond symbolic “surgical strikes” to multi-domain warfare, combining:

  • Precision air power
  • Satellite intelligence (ISRO-DRDO real-time targeting data)
  • Deep cyber penetration
  • Media and narrative control

The unacknowledged targets disclosed in the Pakistani dossier demonstrate India’s capacity to hit hardened targets in urban zones far beyond the traditional conflict arc of PoK or border areas.

New Delhi’s strategic messaging is now clear: any future terror attack on Indian civilians will be treated as an act of war. India reserves the right to retaliate across air, land, and cyber domains. And crucially, India may or may not disclose it.

This information warfare model appears to have blindsided Islamabad, which is accustomed to quick propaganda wins and fast denials. The fact that Pakistan’s own intelligence community leaked the full extent of Indian strikes shows a fracture within its military-intelligence narrative control.

Topics: Pakistani militaryOperation SindoorOperation BunyanISRO-DRDOIndia-PakistanIAF
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