Pakistan Vows to ‘Settle the Score’ Against India After Missile Attack: What to Know

Pakistan has vowed to “settle the score” against India after a missile attack it labeled an “act of war.” Here’s what to know.

May 7, 2025 - 09:15
 0
Pakistan Vows to ‘Settle the Score’ Against India After Missile Attack: What to Know
Pakistan India

The long-simmering tensions between India and Pakistan are on the cusp of boiling over.

India launched a series of missiles into Pakistan-controlled territory around midnight local time, late Tuesday, early Wednesday, killing at least 26 people and injuring dozens of others, according to Pakistani officials.

It’s the most extensive missile strike by India on Pakistan during official peacetime, though Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called it an “act of war” and warned of a “befitting reply.”  [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

The strike “will not go unanswered,” Pakistan’s ministry of information and broadcasting announced. “The temporary pleasure of India will be replaced by enduring grief.”

Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told AFP: “The retaliation has already started. We won’t take long to settle the score.”

‘Operation Sindoor’ and the Pahalgam attack

India’s attack—which struck at least six locations in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province across a total of 24 strikes, according to Pakistani officials—came amid escalating conflict in the contested Kashmir region since an April 22 attack by a Pakistani militant group on tourists in the town of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir.

India accused Pakistan of being involved in the Pahalgam attack, which killed 25 Indian nationals and one Nepalese national and injured dozens more. The Pakistani government denied involvement and called for a neutral investigation. Since then, there have been tit-for-tat escalations from both sides, including exchanges of gunfire between Indian and Pakistani troops along the border, the expelling of diplomats and nationals on both sides, the closing of airspace to each other’s airlines, and suspension of trade. India has also said it will stop the flow of water from India to Pakistan—a move that Pakistani officials previously warned would be considered an act of war.

The May 7 airstrikes were dubbed “Operation Sindoor” by Indian officials, after the Hindi word for the vermilion powder mark that Hindu women apply as a dot to their foreheads and in apparent reference to those left widowed after the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack.

India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar posted on X, “The world must show zero tolerance for terrorism” alongside an image of the words “Operation Sindoor.”

“India has credible leads, technical inputs, testimony of survivors and other evidence pointing towards the clear involvement of Pakistan-based terrorists in the [April 22] attack,” the Indian Embassy in Washington said in a Tuesday statement.

Minutes before the missile attack was confirmed, the Indian army posted on X a video of Indian forces’ tanks and ammunition with the caption “Ready to Strike, Trained to Win.” Shortly after, the army posted, “Justice is Served. Jai Hind!”

India’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that its missile strikes were targeting at least nine sites “where terrorist attacks against India have been planned.” The statement added: “Our actions have been focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature. No Pakistan military facilities have been targeted. India has demonstrated considerable restraint in selection of targets and method of execution.”

Pakistan’s response

The locations hit in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir include its capital Muzaffarabad, Kotli, and Bagh, and in the Punjab province include Bahawalpur, Ahmedpur Sharqia, and Muridke. Pakistani officials told broadcaster Geo that India targeted civilian sites, including mosques, and labeled India’s claim of targeting terrorist infrastructure “false.” Pakistani officials said a three-year-old girl was among the civilians killed by the strikes. India’s strikes also hit infrastructure at a hydroelectric dam in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, according to Pakistan’s Armed Forces, which called the shelling a “clear violation of international law.”

Pakistan closed schools in Kashmir and the Punjab province in the wake of the attack. Several flights were cancelled or diverted out of Pakistan’s airspace, including flights under Korean Air, Air France, Lufthansa, Air India, and Qatar Airways.

Pakistani officials said that Pakistan’s air force shot down five Indian jets in retaliation to the attack, two of which hit buildings including a school in India-controlled Kashmir villages. India’s Press Information Bureau said social media posts claiming that Pakistan destroyed the Indian Brigade Headquarters were false.

Indian officials also said Wednesday that at least seven civilians were killed and dozens injured by “arbitrary firing” by Pakistani troops across the Line of Control. Pakistan said another five of its civilians had been killed Wednesday from artillery fire along the Line of Control, the AP reported. India’s army said its forces were “responding appropriately in a calibrated manner.”

Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement that “Indian leadership has once again used the bogey of terrorism to advance its sham narrative of victimhood, jeopardizing regional peace and security. India’s reckless action has brought the two nuclear-armed states closer to a major conflict.”