
Ajit Doval challenges foreign media to ‘show one photo' of damage on Indian side
on Friday challenged the foreign press 'to show even one image' of the damage on the Indian side during
. Speaking at the 62nd convocation of IIT Madras, Doval said India chose the nine targets across Pakistan and hit all of them, missing none.
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The operation took 23 minutes, starting at 1.05am and ending at 1.28am on May 8.
'Some foreign press said Pakistan did this and that ... The New York Times put out images and wrote things ... You tell me one photograph, one image, which shows any damage to any Indian structure, even a glass pane being broken ... The images showed 13 air bases in Pakistan before and after May 10, whether it was in Sargodha, Rahim Yar Khan, or Chaklala.
We are capable of doing that,' Doval said.
Talking about contactless warfare during Operation Sindoor, he said, 'We are proud of how our indigenous systems worked ... BrahMos, integrated air control and command systems, radars and battlefield surveillance.'
Without mentioning the Galwan attack by Chinese army on Indian troops, Doval said, 'Something happened in 2020, and it was a slightly bad experience, and we had a little fight.
Certain decisions were taken, and one of them was indigenising our communication systems.' Doval said, 'We decided not to import 5G technology from anywhere. It was necessary for our data protection, communication and security reasons.'
At the same time, the country could not afford to lose the technology battle and remain behind, the NSA said. The Chinese took more than 12 years and spent about 300 billion dollars developing 5G.
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We didn't have that sort of time or money. We had a talk with Kamakoti (present IIT Madras director). In two-and-a-half years, we had a completely indigenous communication system,' he said. AI and quantum computing would be great game changers, he added.
Doval called on graduating IIT engineers to make India great by 2047 in military, economy, science and technology. He also inaugurated a centre for Indian Knowledge Systems at IIT Madras.
As many as 3,227 students, including 529 PhD students and 820 BTech students received graduation certificates at the convocation. Bharatanatyam dancer Padma Subrahmanyam handed over admission letters to six students who joined IIT-M under 'cultural quota'.
B S Anirudh received the
Prize and the M Visvesvaraya Memorial Prize for the highest CGPA among BTech and dual degree students. Anish Anand Pophale received the Institute Merit Prize for the highest CGPA in dual degree. IIT-M director V Kamakoti and its board of governors chairman Pawan Goenka spoke at the event.
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