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发表于 2026-2-7 19:04
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limyae2009 发表于 2026-2-7 18:53
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Yes, there is credible evidence that the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) shot down Indian fighter jets during the brief India-Pakistan conflict in May 2025 (often referred to as Operation Sindoor or the four-day crisis).The conflict erupted on May 7, 2025, after India launched missile and air strikes into Pakistan in response to a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir (the Pahalgam incident in late April). This triggered intense aerial engagements, primarily on the first day, involving over 100 aircraft in beyond-visual-range combat—the largest such engagement in recent history along the border.Key Details on LossesPakistan's claims: Pakistan asserted it downed 5–6 Indian fighter jets (and sometimes a drone/UAV) on May 7, including 3 Dassault Rafale fighters (India's advanced French-made jets), 1 MiG-29, 1 Su-30MKI, and possibly others like a Mirage 2000. They credited Chinese-made J-10C fighters equipped with PL-15 long-range air-to-air missiles for at least some successes.
India's position: India initially avoided confirming any losses but later acknowledged them indirectly. On May 31, 2025, Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan admitted India suffered "initial losses" in the air (including fighter jets) but called Pakistan's claim of 6 downed jets "absolutely incorrect." India's Air Force Chief later claimed India downed 5–6 Pakistani aircraft (F-16s, JF-17s, and surveillance planes) using S-400 systems, while rejecting exaggerated Pakistani claims.
Independent and third-party assessments:Neutral analyses (e.g., Wikipedia summary drawing from multiple sources, The Washington Quarterly, Stimson Center reports) indicate India likely lost at least 3–4 fighter aircraft, possibly up to 5, with at least one confirmed Rafale among them.
U.S. officials (cited in Reuters) confirmed Pakistan's Chinese J-10C downed at least one (possibly two) Indian Rafales.
French officials examined evidence of Rafale losses.
Satellite imagery, crash site reports (e.g., in Indian Kashmir and Punjab), and debris (including PL-15 missile fragments) support multiple Indian aircraft going down inside Indian territory.
Some reports describe it as a surprise victory for Chinese tech over Western hardware in certain engagements.
Both sides heavily propagandized their narratives—Pakistan emphasized "victory" via Chinese systems, while India highlighted deeper strikes and Pakistani infrastructure losses—but mutual aircraft losses occurred, with India's aerial setbacks more prominently acknowledged over time.The conflict ended with a ceasefire on May 10, 2025, after U.S. mediation (including statements from President Trump referencing 5–8 total jets downed across both sides, without specifics). No full, undisputed public tally exists due to classified details and ongoing disinformation, but the consensus from diverse sources (Western media, think tanks, officials) is that yes, PAF did shoot down Indian fighter jets, likely including at least one Rafale, marking a notable combat debut for certain Chinese platforms.
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