For the first time, India’s military has publicly acknowledged the loss of fighter jets during its recent armed clashes with Pakistan, marking a significant moment in the ongoing fallout from the most serious hostilities between the two nuclear-armed neighbors in decades.
India’s Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Anil Chauhan, confirmed that Indian Air Force (IAF) aircraft were downed during the May conflict, which erupted on May 7 following a deadly terror attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. Speaking to Bloomberg TV during the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on Saturday, Gen. Chauhan said: “What is important is not the jet being downed, but why they were being downed.”
He acknowledged that tactical missteps led to the losses, adding that the IAF quickly addressed its operational shortcomings. “The good part is that we were able to understand the tactical mistake we made, remedy it, rectify it, and then implement it again after two days and fly all our jets again, targeting at long range,” he stated.
Chauhan’s comments come after Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif claimed earlier this month that Pakistani forces shot down six Indian jets. Until now, India had remained silent on those claims. However, Gen. Chauhan refuted the Pakistani figure, calling it “absolutely incorrect” but did not specify how many Indian aircraft were actually lost.
The air skirmishes formed part of a broader escalation that included drone, missile, and artillery exchanges along the Line of Control and marked the most intense conflict between the two nations since the 1971 war. The flare-up was triggered by a brutal attack on April 22 near the resort town of Pahalgam in Kashmir, which killed 26 tourists, including one Nepali citizen.
Indian defense analysts say the IAF may have underestimated the capabilities of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF). “Initially, Indians were surprised. Maybe they underestimated the capacity of the Pakistani Air Force,” said Bharat Karnad, emeritus professor at Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research. He also noted that India failed to use key airborne early warning systems such as NETRA during the early stages of the conflict.
Retired Air Vice Marshal Kapil Kak added that Pakistan’s advantage was bolstered by advanced Chinese-made weaponry. “India was not fighting just Pakistan, but Pakistan and China together,” Kak said. “That must concern us — about the kind of force structure and capabilities we must develop.”
The revelations are likely to intensify debate within India’s defense establishment as the country reassesses its preparedness amid shifting regional alliances and the growing nexus between Pakistan and China.
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