Three Pakistani jets unsuccessfully targeted key Indian military installations in Kashmir: Sources

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Three Pakistani fighter jets entered into Indian air space at 9:58 AM on Wednesday targeting key military installations in and Naushera in Jammu and Kashmir, as they sought to retaliate India's pre-dawn counter-terror strike a day earlier deep inside Pakistan, official sources said.

Though three Pakistani jets violated Indian air space, the package of the aircraft deployed by Air Force for the operation was "significantly large" as it comprised a fleet of JF-17 and combat aircraft, the sources said.

Sources said the Pakistani jets targeted the bases in Krishna Ghati and Nangi Tekri and an ammunition point in Narian. However, the bombs dropped by the Pakistani jets fell in un-inhabited areas.

Minutes after Pakistani jets violated the Indian air space, the IAF's Combat Air Patrol (CAP), comprising and other jets engaged with the enemy aircraft, successfully thwarting their attempts to bomb a number of key military installations in Naushera and Rajouri, they said.

In the ensuing engagement, a Bison of the IAF shot down a Pakistani jet, firing an R-73 air-to-air missile before being hit. It was not clear whether the IAF jet was fired from a Pakistani jet or was brought down by a missile attack by ground-based air defence, the sources said.

They said the jet lost was an aircraft. has denied losing any jet.

confirmed that an IAF pilot has been captured by Pakistan during the fierce engagement. IAF sources identified him as Wing

Sources said all Indian personnel, except one pilot, returned to their bases after the engagement ended at around 10:45 AM.

The sources said that two parachutes were sighted -- one was of the Indian pilot of the Bison and other was of the Pakistani pilot of the downed jet.

The Pakistani retaliatory strike came a day after Indian warplanes struck inside Pakistan for the first time since a 1971 war, destroying the biggest terrorist training camp of the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) in Pakistan.

The Indian air strike came after the February 14 terror attack carried out by the JeM in Pulwama, Jammu and Kashmir, in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, February 27 2019. 21:20 IST