‘Must reflect’: India on China’s support to Pakistan in Operation Sindoor
China's state broadcaster CCTV aired an interview confirming that a Chinese engineer from AVIC's Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute provided on-s...
What Happened
- China's state broadcaster CCTV aired an interview confirming that a Chinese engineer from AVIC's Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute provided on-site technical support to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor — a public acknowledgement by Beijing of its direct military-technical assistance to Pakistan during the four-day armed confrontation.
- India issued a pointed diplomatic response, stating through official channels: "It is for nations who consider themselves responsible to reflect whether supporting attempts to protect terrorist infrastructure affects their reputation and standing."
- India characterised Operation Sindoor as "a precise, targeted, and calibrated response to the terrorist attacks in Pahalgam, aimed at destroying state-sponsored terrorist infrastructure operating out of Pakistan and at its behest."
- Operation Sindoor was launched on the night of May 6–7, 2025, targeting nine terrorist infrastructure sites in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), including locations linked to Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) at Bahawalpur, Muridke, Muzaffarabad, and Kotli.
- The operation was triggered by the April 22, 2025 Pahalgam terror attack in which 26 civilians — mostly tourists — were killed.
Static Topic Bridges
India–China Relations: Historical Framework and the Border Dispute
India and China share a 3,488 km disputed boundary, divided into three sectors: the western sector (Ladakh — where China controls Aksai Chin), the middle sector (Himachal Pradesh/Uttarakhand), and the eastern sector (Arunachal Pradesh — which China claims as "South Tibet"). The Line of Actual Control (LAC) — not a formally demarcated boundary — serves as the de facto border. The term "LAC" was first used by Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai in a 1959 letter to Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and the current LAC took shape after the 1962 Sino-Indian War. The two countries have no settled boundary and maintain the Special Representatives Mechanism (SRM), established in 2003, for border negotiations.
- 1962 Sino-Indian War: led to current LAC configuration; India lost Aksai Chin
- Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence (Panchsheel): signed 1954, India-China; provides diplomatic framework
- 1993 Agreement on LAC maintenance: bilateral agreement to maintain peace along LAC
- SRM (Special Representatives Mechanism): established 2003 under "Declaration on Principles for Relations and Comprehensive Cooperation"
- 2020 Galwan Valley clash: 20 Indian soldiers killed; triggered four-year disengagement process
- October 2024 patrolling agreement: India and China reached an agreement on LAC patrolling resumption, resolving the 2020 standoff
- China's "salami-slicing" strategy: incremental territorial occupation along disputed borders
Connection to this news: China's acknowledged support for Pakistan during Operation Sindoor introduces a new and explicit dimension to the India-China-Pakistan triangular dynamic. India's diplomatic response — framed around "responsible nations" — signals that Beijing's actions during the conflict will factor into the broader bilateral relationship.
India–Pakistan: Cross-Border Terrorism and India's Doctrine
Cross-border terrorism from Pakistan has been a persistent challenge to India's internal security since the late 1980s. State-sponsored non-state actors — particularly Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), founded in 2000 by Masood Azhar, and Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), founded in 1986–87 — have been designated as terrorist organisations by the UN Security Council (UNSC), the United States, the European Union, and India. India's articulated doctrine — particularly after the 2016 Uri surgical strikes and the 2019 Balakot air strikes — distinguishes between the "new normal" of responding to terrorism on Pakistani soil and traditional escalatory concerns. Operation Sindoor represents a continuation and escalation of this doctrine, with strikes on a wider set of targets including locations in Pakistan's Punjab province (not just PoK).
- Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM): founded 2000 by Masood Azhar; UN-designated terrorist organisation; responsible for 2001 Parliament attack, 2016 Pathankot and Uri attacks, 2019 Pulwama attack
- Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT): founded 1986–87 by Hafiz Saeed; UN-designated; responsible for 2008 Mumbai attacks
- 2016 Surgical Strikes: across LoC in PoK targeting launch pads (first publicly acknowledged cross-LoC action)
- 2019 Balakot air strike: first Indian air strike inside undisputed Pakistani territory since 1971
- Operation Sindoor (May 7, 2025): nine sites targeted in Pakistan and PoK; escalatory step — included strikes in Punjab province (Bahawalpur, Muridke)
- India's position: cross-border terrorism constitutes an act of aggression, justifying the right of self-defence under Article 51 of the UN Charter
Connection to this news: China's acknowledgement of direct military-technical support to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor — including to systems that may have been deployed against Indian forces or used to protect the targeted infrastructure — places Beijing in the position of having actively supported a state that India is engaged with in an active anti-terror operation.
China–Pakistan Strategic Partnership and Military-Technical Cooperation
China and Pakistan describe their relationship as an "All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership." China is Pakistan's largest arms supplier, accounting for approximately 82% of Pakistan's arms imports over the 2019–2023 period (SIPRI data). Key Chinese defence transfers to Pakistan include the JF-17 Thunder (jointly produced combat aircraft by AVIC's Chengdu Aircraft Corporation and Pakistan Aeronautical Complex), the HQ-9 air defence system, and various naval platforms including Type 054A frigates. China is also the primary financier of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) — a flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) project involving approximately $62 billion in investment through roads, railways, energy infrastructure, and the development of Gwadar Port on the Arabian Sea.
- China-Pakistan "All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership": phrase used since 2015
- China's share of Pakistan's arms imports (2019–2023): ~82% (SIPRI)
- JF-17 Thunder: jointly produced fighter aircraft; AVIC Chengdu Aircraft Corporation + Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC)
- AVIC (Aviation Industry Corporation of China): Chinese state-owned aerospace and defence manufacturer
- CPEC: ~$62 billion investment; flagship BRI project; Gwadar Port — strategic access to Arabian Sea
- HQ-9 air defence system: long-range surface-to-air missile system supplied to Pakistan
- Chinese engineer admitted to providing technical support — related to JF-17 or associated systems [Unverified — specific platform not confirmed]
Connection to this news: China's on-site technical support during Operation Sindoor, admitted publicly by Beijing, demonstrates that the China-Pakistan military-technical partnership extends to active support during armed confrontations with India — moving beyond arms transfers to real-time operational assistance, a qualitative escalation in India's threat calculus.
Key Facts & Data
- Pahalgam terror attack: April 22, 2025; 26 civilians killed; perpetrators linked to LeT
- Operation Sindoor launched: night of May 6–7, 2025
- Targets: 9 sites in Pakistan and PoK (Bahawalpur, Muridke, Muzaffarabad, Kotli and others)
- Groups targeted: JeM (Jaish-e-Mohammed), LeT (Lashkar-e-Taiba)
- JeM founded: 2000, by Masood Azhar
- LeT founded: 1986–87, by Hafiz Saeed
- China admitted to providing on-site technical support to Pakistan via CCTV interview (May 2025)
- AVIC: Aviation Industry Corporation of China — state-owned aerospace/defence conglomerate
- China's share of Pakistan arms imports (2019–2023): ~82% (SIPRI)
- CPEC investment: ~$62 billion
- India–China LAC: 3,488 km, three sectors (western/middle/eastern)
- 1962 Sino-Indian War: led to current LAC; India lost Aksai Chin
- SRM (Special Representatives Mechanism): established 2003
- 2020 Galwan clash: 20 Indian soldiers killed
- October 2024: India-China patrolling agreement on LAC