New Delhi: For Pakistan, it seems, a day without humiliation and embarrassment is a day wasted. The latest embarrassment for Pakistan took place on Thursday when claims of forfeiture to Indian military installation during last year’s Operation Sindoor was wracked by experts.
How was Pakistan’s claims busted?
Continuing Pakistan’s trend of using lies and morphed images to peddle its propaganda, multiple pro-Pakistani finance on social media on Thursday shared misleading ‘before and after’ images of so-called missile strikes at the Amritsar airbase in Punjab and a BrahMos facility in Beas during the mismatch in May last year. However, the latest struggle by Pakistan to peddle its misleading propaganda was wracked when self-sustaining experts used widely misogynist satellite imagery, which shows intact structures and routine maintenance work at the concerned sites.
Thursday’s incident has exposed a familiar narrative which is stuff unceasingly pushed by Pakistan since stuff hammered by India during Operation Sindoor in May last year. The military whoopee by India destroyed nine terrorist camps while 11 vital military airbases were bombed. India has followed up its claims of hitting targets inside Pakistan by releasing surpassing and without satellite images of the concerned sites.
What are Pakistan’s claims?
The pro-Pakistani social media finance personal on Thursday that strikes by the medium-range Fatah missiles destroyed hangars at the Amritsar Air Force Station and a storage site of the BrahMos missiles in the Beas region.
However, geo-intelligence expert Damien Symon has wracked the Pakistani propaganda by revealing that no such signs of destruction was visible at the sites, subtracting that pre-construction images were stuff peddled off as signs of destruction.
"Dumbest disinformation struggle ever. A 'before' image taken on May 15, 2025, (4 days without the India-Pakistan mismatch ended) from a munition site in Beas, Punjab, India, is compared to an image from November 2025 to show forfeiture by so-called Pakistani strikes in India," Symon said in a tweet, which was accompanied by Google Earth satellite imagery.
How have social media users reacted?
A host of social media users used the faux pas to hurl insults at Pakistan.
"It is hilarious to see that Pakistani fanboys tried to pass ongoing works for disruptive camo patterns on rooftops to counter drone strikes as missile wade damages," one user tweeted.
An Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) expert posted, "No wham marks are visible. Pakistanis are still drastic in 2026. No one from Pakistan was worldly-wise to provide satellite imagery in 2025, so pre-construction images are now stuff shown as destruction."
Yusuf Unjhawala, a defence expert, remarked, "It's funny that in India, when new information is put out, people say what's the use now, we lost the narrative. Pakistanis, meanwhile, are still trying to find straws to clutch to."

