A few disagreements based on my understanding
I actually kept downloading both the forum posts from those days, rss feeds and X posts to create a timeline then cross referenced it with accounts to feed it into a notebook llm project.
So based on that.
7 May 2025 – Opening strikes and largest air battle
00:00–04:00 PKT
In the very early hours, India launches
Operation Sindoor, a coordinated set of missile, artillery, and air strikes against
nine targets in Pakistani-administered Kashmir and Punjab. The targets are described by India as infrastructure linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed, and Hizbul Mujahideen, with care taken—according to Indian statements—to avoid Pakistani military bases and dense civilian areas.
- Ground element: Indian Army artillery employs M982 Excalibur precision rounds and loitering munitions against sites close to the Line of Control (LoC).
- Air element: Indian Air Force (IAF) Rafale aircraft fire SCALP cruise missiles and AASM Hammer precision bombs against deeper targets in Pakistani Punjab and Azad Kashmir, while Indian air defence provides cover. The Indian side later claims it “bypassed and jammed” Chinese-supplied Pakistani air-defence radars during the operation.
Within hours, a
massive beyond-visual-range (BVR) air engagement develops over and near the LoC. Around
114 aircraft are involved—roughly
72 IAF and
42 PAF—in what becomes the largest recorded BVR engagement between the two air forces. Neither side crosses the international boundary or LoC; all shots are taken from standoff ranges.
Pakistan claims up to
six Indian fighters downed. Independent investigations later confirm
at least three crash sites inside India and strong evidence for
up to four aircraft lost, including at least one
Rafale and one other type not operated by Pakistan. Debris of
PL-15 long-range air-to-air missiles is recovered in India, confirming their combat use by Pakistan’s Chinese-origin fighters.
04:00–08:00 PKT
As the air battle winds down, both sides shift to
damage assessment and search-and-rescue. Indian teams move to crash locations in Jammu & Kashmir and Punjab; Pakistani units check targeted areas in Azad Kashmir and Punjab, logging initial military and civilian damage.
Along the LoC, the
2021 ceasefire effectively collapses. What begins as sporadic exchanges quickly grows into
sustained small-arms, mortar, and artillery fire along multiple sectors. This pattern will continue throughout the crisis, causing a significant share of overall casualties, especially among civilians in frontline villages.
08:00–12:00 PKT
Daylight over the subcontinent brings a
relative lull in long-range strikes. Both capitals weigh next steps. The Stimson reconstruction notes that by comparison with the dramatic early-morning events,
“the daylight hours of May 7 were marked by comparative quiet.”
- The IAF and PAF maintain combat air patrols (CAPs) on both sides of the border.
- Ground forces dig in along the LoC and Working Boundary, improving bunkers and ammunition stocks; civilians begin moving away from exposed villages where they can.
12:00–16:00 PKT
International reactions gather pace. Statements from major powers call for
restraint and warn against escalation, especially toward a nuclear confrontation. Quiet diplomatic outreach begins, but both governments signal that they will pursue their military objectives for now.
Operationally, both sides focus on:
- Force protection: dispersing aircraft, moving high-value assets (aircraft, SAM batteries, radars) away from obvious target points.
- Air-defence readiness: Pakistani HQ-9 and other systems, Indian S-400 and Akash batteries remain on high alert.
16:00–20:00 PKT
Fighting along the
LoC intensifies through the late afternoon and evening:
- Both armies employ mortars, artillery, and occasionally tanks / ATGMs against each other’s posts.
- Neither side attempts to seize and hold new ground; the violence remains in the mold of high-tempo but positional warfare.
India keeps long-range aviation on alert, while Pakistan continues to integrate ground and air sensors, with an emphasis on understanding the
electromagnetic environment after the morning’s jamming experience.
20:00–24:00 PKT – First drone wave into India
During the night of
7–8 May, Pakistan begins a
drone and missile campaign against targets in western and northern India—about
15 locations, according to later Indian briefings.
- The strike package mixes basic, inexpensive drones (serving as decoys and “flying chaff”) with more capable armed UAVs and loitering munitions, probing Indian radar coverage and response patterns.
- Targets include infrastructure and military facilities around cities such as Amritsar and other Punjab / Rajasthan locations; the aim is to test and saturate Indian air defences rather than cause decisive physical damage.
Indian air defences respond vigorously, firing
S-400 interceptors, other SAMs, and anti-aircraft artillery, creating a visible “umbrella” of tracers and launches captured in numerous videos. India later describes Pakistan’s effort as a “raid” conducted in
waves to saturate its defences. Damage on the ground appears limited.
8 May 2025 – SEAD duels and narrative split
00:00–04:00 PKT
The
first night’s drone raids and Indian defensive fire continue into the early hours. India afterwards reports
hundreds of drone incursions over this and the following night, largely aimed at probing and mapping its air-defence network.
India also states that its
S-400 system based at Adampur plays a role in negating Pakistani strikes, marking the
first combat use of the system. Pakistan officially denies having attacked India at all in this phase, setting up a major narrative gap.
04:00–08:00 PKT – Indian SEAD strike on Lahore radar
In the morning, India launches a
“proportionate response” SEAD/DEAD operation against Pakistani air-defence sites.
- India uses Harpy and Harop anti-radiation drones plus Banshee target drones as decoys.
- Pakistani officials later acknowledge attacks on 11 sites and confirm that four soldiers were injured and equipment partially damaged, including at least one air-defence radar in Lahore effectively neutralised.
Pakistani air defences claim to have shot down
two dozen-plus drones, with debris scattered around several locations. One civilian is reported killed.
08:00–12:00 PKT
Public messaging
diverges sharply:
- India presents the morning operation as a calibrated counter-strike in the same domain (drones/air-defence) and of similar intensity to what it says were Pakistani drone raids the night before.
- Pakistan continues to deny any preceding drone strikes on India and portrays the Indian SEAD mission as unprovoked aggression against Pakistani cities, especially Lahore and Karachi, thereby hardening domestic opinion.
On the LoC, heavy
small-arms and artillery exchanges continue. Civilians on both sides increasingly shelter in basements, schools, or improvised bunkers.
12:00–16:00 PKT
The ground picture remains static but violent:
- Static, hardened positions dominate; both sides avoid large maneuver operations while continuing to trade fire.
- Many of the eventual 50+ fatalities in Kashmir during the crisis are later attributed to this continued cross-border shelling, including deliberate or collateral fire striking villages.
At sea, the two navies maneuver in the
Arabian Sea, staying outside firing range but clearly signalling coercive options.
16:00–20:00 PKT – Nuclear concerns surface abroad
As the second day wears on, international attention shifts explicitly to
nuclear risk.
Other states, including China and European countries, issue statements urging
immediate de-escalation and increased dialogue.
20:00–24:00 PKT – Second drone wave
The
night of 8–9 May sees a
second, somewhat larger drone campaign against India, attributed by India to Pakistan.
- Swarms of “poor-quality, basic drones” are mixed with a smaller number of surveilling and armed platforms, an apparent attempt to saturate radars and SAMs.
- India claims again that damage is minor; images support the view that most drones are either intercepted or fall without major effect.
India retaliates with another limited
drone-based SEAD strike; Pakistan, for its part, claims to have shot down
dozens of Indian drones over this period, announcing a cumulative tally of over
70 drones downed.
9 May 2025 – Drone duels, cyber war, and escalation calculus
00:00–04:00 PKT
The
second night of drone engagements continues into the early hours. Air-defence batteries on both sides remain active, with bursts of fire as drones or suspected drones appear on radar. Much of this activity serves
intelligence purposes, mapping adversary sensors and doctrine under stress.
Along the LoC, fire remains heavy but still bounded by the line; neither side attempts a ground offensive beyond limited raids.
04:00–08:00 PKT – Further Indian SEAD strikes
In the morning, India conducts
another SEAD-focused operation, sending armed drones against
four Pakistani air-defence sites.
- India claims at least one additional radar is destroyed.
- Pakistan claims that between the previous evening and midday of 9 May it has shot down 48 Indian drones, reinforcing the narrative that it is blunting Indian unmanned operations.
From the Indian perspective, these attacks are part of a cross-service
“escalation control mechanism” that prioritizes
suppression of enemy air defences (SEAD) so that, if needed, manned aircraft can operate with reduced risk in later phases.
S
08:00–12:00 PKT
Information operations peak:
- India publicly identifies specific Pakistani drones, including Turkish-origin Songar systems, and characterises many others as crude platforms used to clutter radar.
- Pakistan continues to stress its success in intercepting Israeli-origin loitering munitions and notes that it has limited casualties and damage from Indian attacks so far, aside from admitted radar losses.
Social media and news outlets circulate extensive footage of
air-defence fire over Indian cities and drone debris in Pakistan, reinforcing the image of a
two-night “drone war” layered on top of artillery duels in Kashmir.
12:00–16:00 PKT – U.S. posture hardens
By this window, U.S. internal assessments reportedly shift in response to
“alarming intelligence”, leading to more active
behind-the-scenes pressure on both New Delhi and Islamabad to move toward a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, firing along the LoC continues, and later reporting suggests
over 50 deaths in Kashmir across the crisis, many from shells landing in or near villages.
16:00–20:00 PKT – Operation Bunyun Marsoos (cyber)
Pakistan opens a major
offensive cyber campaign known as
Operation Bunyan al Marsoos.
- Targets reportedly include Indian military networks, government agencies, state-linked companies, and thousands of surveillance cameras.
- Pakistani reporting claims that databases at organisations such as Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, the Border Security Force, and India’s Unique Identification Authority (UIDAI) are accessed or disrupted; multiple websites are defaced or taken offline.
- Indian authorities record over 1.5 million intrusion attempts and scramble to contain and eject intruders, patch vulnerabilities, and restore services.
20:00–24:00 PKT – Preludes to broader Indian strikes
On the night of
9–10 May, Indian media report
another barrage of drones and missiles incoming from Pakistan.
This is follow up from Pakistan which claims to have
In response, India’s political and military leadership authorise an
expanded conventional strike against Pakistani military installations, building on the SEAD groundwork laid on the 8th and 9th. Planning for these strikes focuses on:
- Air bases and air-defence nodes judged critical to Pakistan’s ability to threaten India in a prolonged air campaign.
- Maintaining a narrative of “calibrated” and domain-matched responses, to deter further attacks without crossing red lines that could trigger nuclear risk.
10 May 2025 – Indian expanded strikes and move toward ceasefire
00:00–04:00 PKT – Indian strikes on Pakistani air bases
In the early hours, the Indian Armed Forces carry out
multiple air-strike operations using
Su-30MKI fighters armed with BrahMos missiles and other standoff munitions against selected
Pakistani military installations, especially air-defence sites and air bases.
According to Indian accounts and later analysis:
- These strikes disable or damage additional radars and air-defence systems at several locations.
- Pakistan acknowledges that soldiers are wounded, equipment suffers “partial damage”, and at least some air-defence radars are neutralised, though it stresses that core combat capability remains intact.
Pakistani sources also claim successful air defence against part of this raid, but details remain less documented than the earlier SEAD duels.
04:00–08:00 PKT – Pakistani Bunyan al Marsoos strikes and pause toward negotiations
In this same early‑morning window, Pakistan launches the principal kinetic wave of Operation Bunyan al Marsoos, combining air‑launched and ground‑launched stand‑off weapons against a set of Indian military targets. Pakistani and later regional analyses refer to the use of CM‑400AKG anti‑ship/anti‑surface missiles, land‑attack cruise missiles such as Babur and Ra’ad variants, and loitering munitions aimed at Indian airbases, BrahMos‑related sites (frequently including Bhuj in open‑source reconstructions), and supporting infrastructure.
Islamabad presents this as a comprehensive but still conventional‑limited strike package, announcing hits on multiple Indian airbases and claiming damage to runways, fuel and ammunition storage, air‑defence systems, and at least one BrahMos launcher location. The Pakistani line is that by the morning of 10 May, this wave has achieved its objectives: demonstrating that Pakistan can match long‑range precision strikes, impose costs on key Indian military assets, and yet keep the conflict inside a controlled envelope.
Pakistan however is unable to provide any visual proof to its claims as India starts providing visuals of Pakistani airbases hit.
As news of these exchanges spreads, both sides avoid immediately launching even larger follow‑on packages. Indian airspace restrictions and Pakistani airspace closures continue, with dozens of Indian airports in the north and west operating under severe constraints and Pakistan keeping its skies tightly controlled for roughly two days, affecting civil aviation and logistics. Around this time, according to multiple accounts, India signals willingness to enter ceasefire talks; Pakistan, having executed the main BM kinetic wave, is also open to negotiations, seeing its primary deterrence goals as met