On the night between May 9th and 10th, around 1 AM, an aircraft flying at an extremely high altitude—nearly 80,000 feet or above—entered Islamabad’s airspace from an unknown direction and loitered within Pakistani airspace for several hours.
Neither the Pakistani public could see it nor sense its presence. However, by the time the Indian Air Force’s command and control system detected it, it was already too late. Within the first hour of the aircraft’s presence in Islamabad’s airspace, multiple Indian missile sites began malfunctioning.
But that wasn’t the end of it. During the second hour of the aircraft’s presence in Pakistani airspace, India’s nuclear command and control systems started failing. Communication with several sites was lost, and Indian weapons—both nuclear missiles and warheads—began going dead.
Indian engineers reported that India’s nuclear arsenal had been severely compromised by a cyberattack. Within two hours, over 70% of India’s missiles and nuclear weapons had been rendered useless, and the software of the remaining systems was so corrupted that neither targeting nor launching was possible.
This was a kinetic attack, supported by an unexpected yet powerful system that India still fails to comprehend.
The Indian Prime Minister was awakened at 3:30 AM and informed that not only was India no longer capable of launching an immediate nuclear strike, but its second-strike capability had also been nearly neutralized.
He was told that the attack was so severe that it would take months, if not years, to restore the functionality of all the missiles and weapons. The Indian PM was also informed that an unidentified aerial vehicle had been present in Islamabad’s airspace for several hours, and by the time India attempted to trace or locate it, the aircraft had vanished. But in those two to three hours, India had suffered irreparable damage.
The Indian PM was further informed that certain systems were suspected to have been hacked for several months, lying dormant until the right moment—either to be destroyed at their launch sites or targeted mid-flight within Indian airspace.
Upon hearing this, the Indian PM was left stunned and demanded a full damage assessment report from relevant agencies within 24 hours. The reality, however, is that this report remains incomplete to this day because neither the unidentified aircraft nor its malicious role has been traced, nor have the hackers and saboteurs behind the system failures been identified. As a result, since May 9th, India has been busy relocating all its disabled nuclear assets from old sites to new locations.
Remember, after Pulwama, India was repeatedly warned: “We will surprise you from where you least expect it.”
Long live the Pakistani Armed Forces.
Long live the passengers of the unidentified aircraft.
Long live Pakistan.
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