Pakistan Said She Was ‘Captured’, But She’s Now Standing With The President of India: This Is How India Silenced Islamabad’s Lies

by · TFIPOST.com

Once again, imagination of Pakistan has outflown its Air Force. Just months after Islamabad’s propaganda machinery claimed that Squadron Leader Shivangi Singh, the first Indian woman to fly the Rafale, had been “captured” during Operation Sindoor, India has given the perfect reply not with words, but with a picture worth a thousand roars.

On Wednesday, President Droupadi Murmu met Squadron Leader Shivangi Singh at the Ambala Air Force Base before taking a sortie in a Rafale fighter jet. The image of the President standing beside a smiling Singh strong, confident, and very much on duty has shattered yet another pile of Pakistani lies. The same pilot they claimed was shot down and taken prisoner is now proudly briefing the Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Armed Forces. That’s not just irony that’s poetic justice, served at Mach 2.

Pakistan’s Falsehoods Fall Flat

During Operation Sindoor, launched by India in retaliation to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack, Pakistan’s media ecosystem went into overdrive, churning out fabricated stories. It claimed that Shivangi Singh’s Rafale jet had been shot down near Sialkot and that she had been “captured” as a prisoner of war.

But the Indian Air Force immediately dismissed these stories as baseless fiction. The IAF released official images of Squadron Leader Singh, not only safe and sound but also being felicitated for her professional excellence. Just a few days after the so-called “capture,” she was awarded the Qualified Flying Instructor (QFI) badge at the Flying Instructors School in Tambaram.

While Pakistan’s state media was scripting fantasy films, Singh was earning one of the most prestigious designations in the IAF an honour reserved for the finest pilots who train the next generation of air warriors.

President Murmu’s Historic Rafale Sortie

President Murmu’s sortie from the Ambala base was not merely a ceremonial flight; it was a statement. It marked another milestone in India’s journey of empowering women in the forces and showcased the precision and professionalism of the IAF’s Rafale squadron the ‘Golden Arrows’.

The Rafale aircraft, built by French aerospace major Dassault Aviation, were formally inducted into the IAF in September 2020, and have since become the sharpest spear in India’s aerial arsenal. During Operation Sindoor, these jets played a key role in destroying terror infrastructure located deep inside Pakistan-controlled territory.

Murmu’s sortie makes her the third Indian President to fly in a fighter jet, following A.P.J. Abdul Kalam and Pratibha Patil. However, her flight aboard the Rafale the same aircraft that rattled Pakistan’s nerves carries a symbolism far deeper than any ceremonial event. It’s a visual declaration of India’s confidence, capability, and unbothered strength.

When Lies Meet Reality

Pakistan’s obsession with spinning fake narratives about India’s military operations is nothing new. From “ghost pilots” to “downed aircraft,” the country’s propaganda playbook hasn’t changed in decades. But each time, reality lands harder than a Rafale touchdown.

Pakistan can keep shouting; India keeps soaring. The image of Squadron Leader Shivangi Singh standing proudly beside President Droupadi Murmu is not just a rebuttal it’s a message. While Pakistan manufactures fake victories, India creates real milestones.

Operation Sindoor was not just about neutralising terror camps; it was about showing that India’s response will be firm, precise, and unapologetic. And now, as Pakistan’s propaganda factory burns in the light of truth, the message from Ambala is clear India doesn’t engage in blame games it answers with strength, skill, and dignity.