Satellite
Imagery Shows India Missed Target in Pakistan Airstrike – Reports
6
March, 2019
India
announced last week that it had destroyed a suspected Pakistan-based
terror camp in its first airstrike on its neighbour since 1971. This
led to a brief spike in tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad,
which peaked on Wednesday in a dogfight over the disputed Kashmir
region.
High-resolution
satellite images cast doubt on India's claims that it flattened a
militant training camp inside Pakistan, Reuters reported on
Wednesday.
According
to images produced by the US-based company Planet Labs, which
operates a commercial satellite network, the structures belonging to
the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terror group appeared to have suffered no
visible damage after India's reported air raid.
Satellite
data analysis is said to have revealed no signs of a militant camp
but a madrasa (religious school) allegedly affiliated with JeM.
Reuters
reporters have found no evidence of damaged infrastructure or
casualties at the site; unnamed Western diplomats were quoted as
saying that there was a military camp there a few years ago, but it
had been moved.
This
discovery directly contradicts the account of Indian officials, who
announced last week that Indian jets dropped a payload on a JeM camp,
killing "a very large number" of militants — at least
300, according to a top government official.
New
Delhi said the move came as a pre-emptive measure and was based on
intelligence data about upcoming terrorist activities against India.
Pakistan
insisted that the raid was a failure that saw Indian jets strike a
largely empty hillside without hurting anyone. Pakistani Prime
Minister Khan claimed the attack was carried out to garner more
public support for the Indian government ahead of the forthcoming
elections. India later refuted these claims.
The
airstrike followed a suicide bombing in the India-controlled part of
Kashmir, which killed 40 paramilitary police on 14 February.
It
led to an escalation of tensions in Kashmir, with the two
nuclear-armed arch-foes engaging in an aerial dogfight over the Line
of Control, which divides the former princely state.
Pakistan
opted to scale down the conflict by releasing the captured Indian
pilot, but tensions still persist in Kashmir, with the two sides
reportedly exchanging fire across the border.
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