Firstly I am glad that you all believe that India has the ability to intercept supersonic Pechora missiles which fly at Mach 3.5- Mach 4 with other Surface to air missiles in its arsenal. If that is true that does not bode well for your Fateh 3 series.
Since you are moderator and you are choosing to engage in this discussion on this thread, I hope you will not cry "trolling" and ban/speed limit when I respond to this.
I would have responded yesterday itself, unfortunately you have speed limited my account, limiting the number times I can respond.
So here we go...
Indian MEA said no such thing.
Here what Stimson Centre on Policy Research based out of Washington has written about this event.
An early assessment of available evidence on what transpired in the recent India-Pakistan crisis and its implications
www.stimson.org
Shortly after midnight on May 10 (India time), there appears to have been an air intercept near Sirsa, India, approximately 130 kilometers from the India-Pakistan border. Some Indian press accounts suggest this was an Indian intercept of a Pakistani Fatah-II short-range ballistic missile, which has a reported range permitting such a flight.
Infact what are you are quoting are the bizzare claims by your own ISPR. That India is shooting missiles on its own Punjab.
An early assessment of available evidence on what transpired in the recent India-Pakistan crisis and its implications
www.stimson.org
In a bizarre and unsubstantiated claim, around 1:45 am Pakistan time, Pakistan’s chief military spokesperson alleged that India had fired six missiles—all of which landed in Indian Punjab (one on the town of Adampur and five on the city of Amritsar). There does not appear to be any evidence that this occurred.
One possibility is that Pakistan had decided to launch a ballistic missile attack of its own and was attempting to provide a pretext for escalating from drones to longer-range (though still short-range) ballistic missiles. It is notable in this regard that in the official Indian briefing of the following morning, Indian officials claimed there were “several high-speed missile attacks noticed subsequently after 0140 hours in the night at several air bases in Punjab. Thus, the Indian alleged timing of the missile strike’s onset is within an hour of the Pakistani broadcast of their missile allegation. Another possibility is that Pakistan had some indications of an imminent Indian attack but mistook those indications.
Around 2:30 am Pakistan time, India struck the Nur Khan airbase, which is part of the large Chaklala military cantonment near Rawalpindi. The blasts were sufficiently loud to wake residents in the nearby Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
The Nur Khan attack was just one of at least eleven sites struck the evening of May 9-10. As the Indian Director-General of Air Operations Air Marshal Bharti explained in a post-crisis press conference on May 11, following “relentless attacks” by Pakistani drones, Indian leadership concluded it “was time to convey some message to our adversary” through a “strike where it would hurt.”
Here is a third video of the same Fateh 2 intercept over Sirsa from a different angle, look at the time stamp of May 10th 00:15 Hrs on CCTV footage.
Here is another CCTV videos, which I have posted previously, notice the time stamp of May 10, 00:15 hrs in both.
Here is a video of the wreckage. Watch from 1:55 the tail fin section of the Fateh 2 missile.
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