After Rahul Gandhi's 'Pak Informed' Post, Centre's 'Early Phase' Reply

Sharing a statement by Foreign Minister S Jaishankar, the Congress MP said informing Pakistan at the start of Operation Sindoor was a "crime".

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The BJP has accused Mr Gandhi of spreading fake news.

New Delhi:

Slamming Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi for his claim that informing Pakistan at the start of Operation Sindoor was a "crime", the BJP has accused him of spreading fake news. 

The Ministry of External Affairs has also said that a statement on the timing of Pakistan being informed was being falsely represented. 

On Saturday, Mr Gandhi took to X and shared a video of S Jaishankar in which the External Affairs Minister said that at the start of Operation Sindoor, which was carried out on the intervening night on May 6 and 7, a message was sent to Pakistan that only terror bases were being struck, and not military installations. 

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"At the start of the operation, we had sent a message to Pakistan, saying we are striking at terrorist infrastructure and we are not striking at the military. So the military has the option of standing out and not interfering in this process. They chose not to take that good advice," Mr Jaishankar can be heard saying in the video. 

The Congress MP wrote that informing Pakistan at the start of the attack was a "crime". 

"EAM (External Affairs Minister) has publicly admitted that GOI (Government of India) did it," Mr Gandhi said, asking who had authorised the sharing of the information with Pakistan. 

Alluding to claims of Indian planes being shot down during the strike on the terror bases, Mr Gandhi also asked: "⁠How many aircraft did our air force lose as a result?"

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BJP Hits Back

BJP Spokesperson Pradeep Bhandari hit back less than an hour later, sharing a fact check by the Press Information Bureau (PIB) and accusing Mr Gandhi of spreading fake news.

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The PIB, in a post on Thursday, had fact-checked a claim by a journalist in which he alleged that Mr Jaishankar had said India informed Pakistan before the start of Operation Sindoor that it would be hitting terrorist infrastructure in the country. 

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"The social media post falsely implies from External Affairs Minister @DrSJaishankar's statement that India informed Pakistan before the start of #OperationSindoor. EAM is being misquoted and he has not made this statement. Remain vigilant and avoid falling for deceptive information," the PIB said in the post.

Centre's Statement

The Ministry of External Affairs also issued a statement on Saturday evening and said facts were being misrepresented.

"The External Affairs Minister had stated that we had warned Pakistan at the start, which is clearly the early phase after Op Sindoor's commencement. This is being falsely represented as being before the commencement. This utter misrepresentation of facts is being called out," the ministry said.

The ministry also pointed to a briefing in which Director General of Military Operations Rajiv Ghai had said India had attempted to communicate with Pakistan "in the wake of" Operation Sindoor. 

"Even though we did attempt to reach out and communicate our compulsion to strike at the heart of terror to my counterpart, in the immediate wake of Operation Sindoor, the request was brusquely turned down, with an intimation that a severe response was inevitable and in the offing. We were, of course, prepared," Lieutenant General Ghai had said.

Operation Sindoor 

India had struck terror bases in at least nine locations in Pakistan - including the headquarters of the Lashkar-e-Taiba in Muridke and Jaish-e-Mohammed in Bahawalpur - as part of Operation Sindoor, which was a response to the April 22 terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam, in which 26 people were killed.

Pakistan responded by attempting to attack Indian military installations and civilian locations by launching drones and missiles on three successive days, but was thwarted by India's air defence systems. India, in turn, first took out some of Pakistan's air defence systems, including in Lahore, and then struck key military bases like the all-important Nur Khan airbase, also known as the Chaklala airbase.

Pakistan then sought a ceasefire last Saturday and India agreed to a pause in hostilities. India has made it clear, however, that it will respond decisively to any terror attack which has its origins in Pakistan.

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