ISLAMABAD :
INDIA’S swift and precise retaliation against Pakistan following the April 22 Pahalgam terror
attack not just rattled the
country militarily but also
instilled fear among its top leadership, with its President admitting he was advised to take shelter in a bunker during the May
escalation.
Speaking during an event on
Saturday, Pakistani President Asif
Ali Zardari revealed that during
New Delhi’s retaliatory strikes in
May, his Military Secretary
urgently advised him to move to
a bunker for safety, highlighting
the intense fear gripping
Pakistan’s top leadership amid the
Indian operation.
The escalation in May is
referred to as India’s Operation
Sindoor, which came in retaliation for the Pahalgam terror
attack, which killed 26 civilians.
India’s Armed Forces carried
out strategic precision strikes on
Pakistani military installations
in May, following operations that
targeted nine terror camps in
Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied
Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK).
Despite a warning from
Zardari’s Military Secretary, the
Pakistani President offered only
rhetoric, stating that he had
refused to enter the bunker.
“My MS (Military Secretary)
was there. He came to me and
said, ‘Sir, the war has started.’ I
had actually told him four days
earlier that a war was going to
happen. But he came to me and
said, ‘Sir, let’s go to the bunkers.’
I said, ‘If martyrdom is to come,
it will come here.
Leaders don’t
die in bunkers. They die on the
battlefield. They don’t die sitting
in bunkers’,” Zardari said.
The Indian Armed Forces
launched Operation Sindoor in
the early hours of May 7 as a
retaliatory response to the April
22 terror attack in Pahalgam,
Jammu and Kashmir.
Following India’s operation,
the conflict between India and
Pakistan deepened, which
resulted in increased cross-border shelling from Pakistan and
retaliatory action from the
Indian Armed Forces.
A surprising sequence of
events unfolded as Pakistan’s
Director General of Military
Operations (DGMO) proposed
a ceasefire to India’s DGMO,
which was accepted.
Pakistan’s DGMO called
India’s DGMO to propose a
ceasefire, which India accepted.
The contact from the
Pakistani side was also confirmed by Foreign Secretary
Vikram Misri, who noted that
the two sides agreed to halt all
military operations - on land,
at sea, and in the air.