'Won't show restraint next time': Indian Army chief warns Pakistan
He said the Indian military hit nine targets inside Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, of which seven were hit by the Army and two by the Air Force.
PTI
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The Chief of Army Staff (CoAS) also urged Indian soldiers to remain poised for action. (PTI)
Anupgarh/Jaipur, 3 Oct
In a stern
warning to Pakistan, Indian Army chief General Upendra Dwivedi said on Friday
that the neighbouring country should stop sponsoring terrorism on its soil if
wants to retain its place on the world map.
The Chief
of Army Staff (CoAS) also said the restraint shown by New Delhi duringOperation Sindoor would not be repeated in case of a future military conflict
and urged Indian soldiers to remain poised for action.
"India,
as a country, is fully prepared this time. And this time, it will not show the
restraint that it showed during Operation Sindoor 1.0. This time we will take a
step forward and act in a manner that will make Pakistan think whether it wants
to remain on the world map or not," General Dwivedi said in a
sternly-worded address to soldiers at Anupgarh in Rajasthan's Sriganganagar
district.
He asserted
that if Pakistan wants to retain its place on the world map, it will have to
stop state-sponsored terrorism.
The Army
chief told the soldiers to stay prepared. "Keep yourselves fully prepared
now, if God wants, the opportunity will come soon," he said.
Gen.
Dwivedi said India has given evidence to the world of the presence of terrorist
hideouts in Pakistan during Operation Sindoor. Had India not unearthed this
evidence, Pakistan would have hidden all of it, he said.
The Army
chief said the entire world stood with India when it launched Operation Sindoor
in the wake of the 22 April Pahalgam attack. He said the Indian military hit nine
targets inside Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, of which seven were hit by
the Army and two by the Air Force.
"We
had identified the targets because we only wanted to harm the terrorists. We
had aimed to strike their bases. We have no complaints against ordinary
Pakistani citizens, so long as their country does not sponsor terrorists.
Because terrorists were being sponsored, those terrorist targets were
hit," Gen. Dwivedi said.
Replying to
a question about his appeal to those living near the international border, he
said, "We consider the border population not as ordinary civilians but as
soldiers. That means they stand shoulder to shoulder with us in the battle.
This is crucial because the coming struggle is the nation's struggle, not just
the Army's."
The Army
chief said history bears witness that during the 1965 and 1971 wars, ordinarycitizens stood shoulder to shoulder with the soldiers.
"We
would want them to join us in the days ahead as well. I want to thank them --
their zeal boosts the morale of our soldiers," he said.
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