BREAKING NEWS- Operation Sindoor: India strikes terror camps in Pakistan to avenge Pahalgam

Targeting terrorist camps inside Pakistan and Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK), the Indian Armed Forces have launched Operation Sindoor, to avenge the Pahalgam terrorist attack, in which 26 people, mostly Hindu tourists, were killed on April 22.
India launches Operation Sindoor, targeting terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and #POK from where Pahalgam attacks and had been planned and directed. #PahalgamTerroristAttack #OperationSindoor #Terrorism #Pakistan #JammuKashmir #IndianArmy pic.twitter.com/3XeQziC4ZZ
— India Blooms (@indiablooms) May 6, 2025
"A little while ago, the Indian Armed Forces launched ‘OPERATION SINDOOR’, hitting terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir from where terrorist attacks against India have been planned and directed" the Ministry of Defence said in a media release.
According to a statement by the Press Information Bureau (PIB), the operation was carried out a short while ago and aimed at neutralizing terror camps actively involved in planning and executing attacks against India. A total of nine sites have been hit during the strike.
Officials said the strikes were focused, measured, and non-escalatory, deliberately avoiding any Pakistani military installations. “India has shown significant restraint both in the selection of targets and the method of execution,” the statement added.
“India stands by its commitment that those responsible for this heinous act will be held accountable,” a government spokesperson said.
Pakistan Vows To Hit Back
Pakistan said it will respond to the strikes by India at a time and place of its own choosing, adding that the attack by India “will not go unanswered”.
In a statement, Pakistan's Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said that India's “temporary pleasure will be replaced by enduring grief”.
Pahalgam Attack
Twenty-six people, including 23 Hindu male tourists, were killed by terrorists in Baisaran meadows, a popular destination in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam, on April 22.
The terrorists- belonging to The Resistance Front (TRF), which is an offshoot of Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT)- asked the victims to chant Islamic verses (kalma) and made them pull down their pants to be sure of their their non-Muslim religious identities (read circumcision) before gunning them down before their families, including wives, children and daughters.
The massacre triggered a nationwide outrage and escalated India-Pakistan tensions as New Delhi vowed to avenge the killings.
In an immediate response India suspended the landmark Indus River water-sharing treaty and closed the Attari-Wagah road border which acts a lifeline of Indo-Pak trade and people-to-people ties, besides expelling diplomats, downsizing high commissions and issuing a 48-hour deadline to Pakistani visa holders present in India to leave.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on April 29 gave the armed forces 'complete freedom to decide on the mode, targets, and timing' of India's military response to the Pahalgam terror attack.
PM Modi took the decision at a meeting with Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, and Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan.