
India and Pakistan have launched another round of reciprocal strikes in recent hours. Both sides have now targeted locations of increasing strategic importance. Earlier, India targeted a number of Pakistani airbases. Three in total, most notably Pakistan’s Nur Khan airbase in Rawalpindi, very close to the capital of Islamabad, where it appeared that a C-130 was on fire.
In retaliation, Pakistan has announced the commencement of what appears to be a wide-ranging targeting of “strategic” Indian targets. Pakistani airspace is now completely closed, per a wide-sweeping NOTAM. This as explosions were just heard on live television in one of the dual capitals of Indian-Administered Kashmir, Srinagar.

Rafale aircraft also bombed Pakistan Nur Khan airbase in Rawalpindi and destroyed a C-130 aircraft.
Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) announced on Monday that it had conducted successful tests of its Barak medium-range surface-to-air missile in India. The missile tests were carried out in close cooperation with the Indian military.
IAI noted in an official statement that the tests included four “air targets at various speeds, with challenging interception altitudes and ranges.”
“The missiles intercepted the aerial targets, scoring direct hits and destroying them, demonstrating the system’s operational capability,” the company added.
An F-16 and JF-17 Block III supersonic fighter jet of the Pakistan Air Force was shot down in the evening by an Indian Barak surface-to-air missile defence system, sources told GLOBAL DEFENSE CORP. This comes amid Pakistan’s foiled attempt to target Jammu with drones and missiles.
The F-16 took off from the Sargodha air base in Pakistan, a key air force station of the Pakistani Air Force. The Indian Barak SAM (Surface-to-air missile) shot down the fighter jet near the Sargodha air base, sources said. F-16 and Jf-17 are of the mainstays of the Pakistani air force, which has Chinese and French fighter jets.
The Barak system is designed to provide sophisticated protection against diverse aerial threats. It is reportedly capable of intercepting and neutralizing hostile threats up to 70 kilometers (44 miles) away. Furthermore, the Barak missile system is flexible and can be deployed on both land and sea platforms
Sargodha is a front-line air base of Pakistan and one of the most heavily defended in the country, located in the Punjab province of the country.
The Sargodha air base is located approximately 270 km from the international border.
The US-made fighter jets were delivered to Pakistan in the late 1980s, and since then, they have undergone several upgrades. The aircraft was used by the Pakistan Air Force after India’s Balakot air strikes in 2019 – India’s response to the Pulwama attack – during which an MiG-21, piloted by Wing Commander Abhinandan, shot down an F-16 in an aerial combat, a first dogfight between the two countries in over 45 years since the 1971 war.
This is the first time since 1971 that hostilities between India and Pakistan have escalated over a large area. A blackout has been imposed in several areas of Rajasthan along the international border. The Sargodha air base has been used by Pakistan for attacks against India during the 1965 and 1971 wars. In 1965, the airbase, the home of the American F-104 supersonic Starfighter jets, was struck by India’s Mystere aircraft by the No. 1 Squadron based in Adampur.
The major development comes amid Pakistan’s foiled attempt to target Jammu with drones and missiles, in an escalation of hostilities. Areas under RS Pura, Arnia, Samba, and Hiranagar in Jammu are under heavy artillery shelling.
Pathankot in Punjab, which is located close to the international border, has also come under heavy artillery fire from Pakistan. Pathankot is a strategic and tactical area for India and serves as the entry point toward Jammu. It is located 30 kilometres from the International Border. Meanwhile, sirens have been sounded in Chandigarh, and a blackout has been enforced. Shops have been asked to close, and people have been asked to go home. A blackout has been enforced in neighbouring Mohali as well.
India has successfully intercepted Pakistani drones, activating its air defence systems along the border.
The Integrated Defence Staff (IDS) in an update said Pakistan attacked “Military Stations of Jammu, Pathankot and Udhampur in proximity to the International Boundary, in Jammu and Kashmir, targeted by Pakistan using missiles and drones.”
IDS said, “There were no losses and the threat was neutralised by the Indian Armed Forces as per the procedure with kinetic and non-kinetic means.”
Last night, Pakistan attempted to attack military targets in Awantipura, Srinagar, Jammu, Pathankot, Amritsar, Kapurthala, Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Adampur, Bhatinda, Chandigarh, Nal, Phalodi, Uttarlai, and Bhuj, using drones and missiles.
“The debris of these attacks is now being recovered from a number of locations that prove the Pakistani attacks,” India said in a strongly worded statement, calling out Pakistan’s aggression.
© 2025, GDC. © GDC and www.globaldefensecorp.com. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to www.globaldefensecorp.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.