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India strongly rejected Pakistan's "false and self-serving" allegations regarding Operation Sindoor at the United Nations.

Published On Tue, 27 Jan 2026
Varun Mehta
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In a fiery exchange at the United Nations Security Council, India has dismissed Pakistan's narrative on Operation Sindoor as "false and self-serving," accusing Islamabad of peddling propaganda to mask its support for cross-border terrorism. India's Permanent Representative to the UN, Parvathaneni Harish, fired back during Monday's session, labeling Pakistan's claims a blatant distortion of the military operation launched in May 2025. The trigger was a deadly terror attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, on April 22, 2025, claiming 26 civilian lives— an outrage universally condemned, including by the UN itself. Harish underscored that Operation Sindoor was a targeted strike on nine terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), designed to neutralize militant infrastructure without broader escalation.

"Pakistan's single-point agenda remains to harm India," Harish stated, revealing how Islamabad's military sought a ceasefire just days after the operation began on May 10, 2025—despite initial saber-rattling. Satellite imagery of cratered Pakistani air bases and damaged hangars further exposes the gap between Pakistan's "victory" boasts and reality.

Pakistan's envoy attempted to frame the events as part of a so-called "freedom struggle," but India categorically rejected any locus standi on Jammu and Kashmir, deeming it India's internal affair. Harish also addressed ancillary issues like the Indus Waters Treaty, attributing India's protective steps to decades of Pakistani belligerence. This isn't new territory for the rivals. During the 2025 crisis, Indian fact-checkers swiftly debunked viral falsehoods—from fabricated attack footage to inflated casualty figures—highlighting how misinformation fuels South Asian flashpoints.

As President Donald Trump's administration navigates U.S. foreign policy in 2026, the UN spat signals persistent volatility. India's message is unequivocal: terrorism cannot become the "new normal," and defensive actions will continue against state-sponsored threats. Experts note this exchange could influence upcoming bilateral talks, with India pushing for global accountability on terror financing. Stay tuned as diplomatic ripples unfold.

Disclaimer: This image is taken from NDTV.