India launched multiple Israeli-made Harop drones targeting Pakistan overnight and into Thursday, with one damaging a military site and wounding four soldiers, a Pakistani army spokesman said.
Pakistani forces downed 25 of the drones, Pakistan army spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmad Sharif told The Associated Press. Debris from a downed drone that fell into the Sindh province killed one civilian and injured another.
A drone damaged a military site near the city of Lahore, injuring four soldiers, and another went down in Rawalpindi, which is near the capital, Sharif said.
“The armed forces are neutralizing them as we speak,” Sharif said on the state-run Pakistan Television early on Thursday afternoon, the outlet reported.
INDIA LAUNCHES STRIKES ON TERRORIST CAMPS IN PAKISTAN
India’s government said Thursday that overnight, “Pakistan attempted to engage a number of military targets in Northern and Western India… using drones and missiles.”
“These were neutralized by the Integrated Counter UAS Grid and Air Defense systems. The debris of these attacks is now being recovered from a number of locations that prove the Pakistani attacks,” it added.
“Indian Armed Forces targeted Air Defense Radars and systems at a number of locations in Pakistan” this morning, it continued, noting that “it has been reliably learnt that an Air Defense system at Lahore has been neutralized.”
“Pakistan has increased the intensity of its unprovoked firing across the Line of Control using Mortars and heavy calibre Artillery in areas in Kupwara, Baramulla, Uri, Poonch, Mendhar and Rajouri sectors in Jammu and Kashmir,” India’s government also said. “Sixteen innocent lives have been lost, including three women and five children, due to Pakistani firing. Here too, India was compelled to respond to bring Mortar and Artillery fire from Pakistan to a halt.”
Both India and Pakistan are among the handful of world powers that possess nuclear weapons, making tensions between the two nations particularly troublesome on the world stage.
TRUMP OFFERS TO HELP INDIA, PAKISTAN AMID GROWING CONFLICT: ‘I WANT TO SEE THEM STOP’
President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he wants the conflict between the two nations to “stop,” noting, “if I can do anything to help … I will be there.”
Some American lawmakers have also weighed in on India and Pakistan.
PAKISTAN CALLS INDIA’S STRIKES AN ‘ACT OF WAR’ AND CLAIMS IT SHOT DOWN INDIAN FIGHTER JETS
U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said in a Wednesday post on X, “I urge Indian and Pakistani leaders to find a path towards de-escalation, and to ensure accountability for those responsible for the horrific April 22 terrorist attack in Kashmir. For the sake of innocent civilians in India and Pakistan—now is the time to lean into diplomacy.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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