
At 5 AM today, India’s air defence units destroyed multiple Pak drones hovering over Khasa Cantt, Amritsar—just 30 km from the Pakistan border. These hostile UAVs weren’t just surveillance tools; they were armed, and their targets were clear: military installations and civilians.
The Indian Army released a video of one such drone being blown out of the sky. Their response? Unambiguous. “Unacceptable,” they said. But the real message came later—with steel, fire, and precision.

For people in border towns like Amritsar, Ferozepur, and Jammu, it means waking up to the sound of air raid sirens, not alarms. It means that peace is being tested by a neighbour that refuses to abandon terror as policy.
This isn’t just about borders anymore. It’s about lives, sovereignty, and the price of silence.
OPERATION SINDOOR
Pakistan’s blatant escalation with drone strikes and other munitions continues along our western borders. In one such incident, today at approximately 5 AM, Multiple enemy armed drones were spotted flying over Khasa Cantt, Amritsar. The hostile drones were… pic.twitter.com/BrfEzrZBuC
— ADG PI – INDIAN ARMY (@adgpi) May 10, 2025
Drones Over Civilians: A New Low for Pakistan
According to army officials, Pakistan launched a swarm of drones at over 26 locations from Leh to Sir Creek. One drone attack in Ferozepur left a family injured—one member critically. Over Rajasthan’s Barmer and Jaisalmer, sirens wailed through the night.
Pak’s drones weren’t the only threat. Shelling continued across the Line of Control. In Rajouri, a senior Indian official was killed after a Pakistani shell hit his home. In Kupwara, authorities enforced a blackout to shield civilians.
India Strikes Back—Loud and Clear
You don’t poke a sleeping lion—especially not when that lion just launched Operation Sindoor. The Indian Army responded swiftly, targeting and destroying terror launchpads and military outposts across the border.
Among the destroyed targets was a facility used for tube-launched drones—proof that Pakistan isn’t just flying drones, it’s militarizing terror tech. Sources say India’s response included strikes on airbases near Rawalpindi, Chakwal, and Jhang—shaking up even Pakistan’s prized Nur Jahan Air Base.
Also ReadWhy India Targeted These 3 Pakistani Air Bases: Nur Khan, Murid, and Rafiqui
Op Sindoor: Not Just a Response, A Statement
Operation Sindoor began after the Pahalgam terror attack on April 22, where 26 civilians lost their lives. The Indian retaliation is not just about revenge—it’s about deterrence. It’s about showing that India won’t play nice when lives are at stake.
This mission also gave India concrete proof: terror launchpads aren’t some conspiracy—they’re real, operational, and backed by Islamabad’s military regime.
Global Silence, Indian Resolve
Here’s the absurdity: While India defends its borders, the IMF just approved a $2.3 billion loan for Pakistan. India opposed it, of course. After all, why should the world fund a state that funds terrorism?
As Pakistan hides behind civilian air traffic to avoid Indian retaliation—a tactic India openly called out—it finally shut down its airspace. Too little, too late.
Pakistan’s Game Is Old. India’s Playbook Is New.
Pakistan still plays the same card—terror by proxy. But India’s no longer the quiet neighbour taking the hits. From downing Pak drones to exposing Islamabad at global forums, New Delhi is shaping a new narrative: Enough is enough.
This is not the India of 1999. It’s the India that crosses borders, calls out global hypocrisy, and answers drone strikes with firepower and footage.
Let’s be clear: Pakistan fired the first shot. India fired the last word. As world powers pretend neutrality, India’s message is louder than ever: We will defend. We will expose. And we will strike.
Also Read Pakistan Attacked 26 Locations in India At Night, Indian Troops Respond Along LoC