ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has unveiled a detailed dossier outlining the course and outcomes of Operation Bunyanum Marsoos, describing it as a decisive and measured response to alleged Indian aggression, including the controversial Pahalgam incident, missile strikes on Pakistani territory, and drone incursions.
The dossier, presented on Sunday through official sources and state broadcaster Radio Pakistan, includes satellite imagery, certified international media reports, and what Pakistan terms as clear evidence of Indian provocations.
The document asserts that India launched a false flag operation in Pahalgam, located nearly 200 kilometers from Pakistan’s border. According to the dossier, Indian authorities hastily registered an FIR against Pakistan within ten minutes of the incident, without conducting any credible investigation or forensic analysis.
Pakistan had reportedly offered to conduct a joint investigation under the supervision of a neutral third party, but India rejected all such proposals, raising questions about the transparency and intentions behind India’s accusations.
According to the dossier, the Pahalgam incident was orchestrated as a pretext by India to justify escalating military actions against Pakistan. Following this, the dossier states, India launched missile strikes on multiple Pakistani locations including Muridke, Bahawalpur, and Muzaffarabad, the capital of Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK).
The report claims that over 100 Indian drones infiltrated Pakistani airspace during the escalation. It describes missile attacks on religious sites, including mosques in Muridke and Muzaffarabad, resulting in the deaths of innocent civilians, including women and children.
Pakistan’s military response, detailed in the dossier, was characterized as “brutal but measured,” strictly adhering to international laws of self-defense. The operation focused solely on military targets within Indian territory and deliberately avoided civilian areas, the report emphasizes.
The dossier reports that Pakistan successfully shot down at least five Indian fighter jets — including three Rafale jets, one MiG-29, and one SU-30 — along with 84 Indian drones. The report also highlights successful strikes against Indian S-400 missile battery systems located at Adampur and Bhuj, effectively neutralizing these advanced defense assets. Furthermore, storage facilities for BrahMos missiles at Beas and Nagrota, from where Pakistan alleges missiles were launched targeting Pakistani civilians, were destroyed.
The report further outlines that military logistic and support facilities implicated in India’s attacks were targeted, including a Field Supply Depot in Uri, a Radar Station in Poonch, and major military command headquarters such as the 10 Brigade and 80 Brigade at KG Top and Naushera. The dossier alleges these were centers involved in planning and directing operations against Pakistani civilians.
Pakistan’s response reportedly took place despite 57 commercial flights, including international carriers from Qatar, UAE, Saudi Arabia, China, Korea, and Thailand, being in Pakistani airspace, which the dossier says raised the risk to civilian lives.
The operation utilized a combination of precision-guided Fatah series missiles (F1 and F2), loitering munitions, precision artillery, and Pakistan Air Force assets to strike 26 military targets spread across Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) and mainland India.
The dossier accuses India of a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign, orchestrated by Indian media and intelligence-linked social media accounts, aimed at blaming Pakistan and stirring war hysteria. However, the report points out that international independent media outlets exposed multiple cases of fake news and propaganda from Indian sources. It adds that several YouTube and Twitter channels critical of the Indian narrative were banned, suppressing voices that contradicted India’s official version.
Within India, the dossier states, many civil society members, politicians, and citizens themselves criticized the government’s handling of the Pahalgam incident, branding it a “grave security failure.” Rather than addressing these concerns, the report says, India imposed restrictions on media channels exposing its false narrative, further fueling doubts about the government’s claims.
The report also describes India as a long-term perpetrator of state-sponsored terrorism targeting Pakistan through proxy groups, an allegation Pakistan has repeatedly brought before international forums. It describes the recent airspace violations, missile attacks, and strikes on religious sites as part of a dangerous pattern of escalating hostilities.
Despite these provocations, Pakistan emphasizes that its military conducted itself with professional restraint and exercised escalation control throughout the operation. The dossier states that conventional military capabilities were employed carefully without stressing Pakistan’s forces on the western front or escalating beyond necessary levels.
Pakistan calls on the international community to objectively review the facts and hold India accountable for violations of international law, sovereignty breaches, and attacks on civilians. It underscores Pakistan’s continued commitment to regional peace and stability, while affirming its resolve to respond decisively to any aggression.
The dossier concludes by stressing that Pakistan remains a guardian of peace but will firmly defend its territorial integrity and sovereignty. It warns that no provocation will deter Pakistan’s security and sovereignty, and any imposed conflict will be met with a swift and appropriate response.