
88-Hours War
India-Pakistan War of May 2025
Helion & Company (Publisher)
Published on 7. January 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
96 pages
978-1-80672-085-9 (ISBN)
Description
India's May 2025 clash redefined strategic balance, revealing decisive showdowns that reshaped Indo-Pakistani military dynamics for decades.
Often downplayed or misrepresented, the short but intense military confrontation between India and Pakistan in early May 2025 was one of the sharpest clashes the two nuclear-armed rivals have fought in decades. Lasting less than four days, the conflict saw the combat debut of several of the most advanced weapon systems currently in service. Widely dismissed in much of the international media as a mere extension of the Kashmir dispute, a "large-scale cross-border skirmish," or simply a "drone battle," it culminated in both sides claiming victory--before being shepherded into a ceasefire through hurried diplomatic pressure from the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. Yet behind these narratives lies a confrontation that will shape Indo-Pakistani relations for decades to come.
The crisis began on 22 April 2025, when a terrorist attack outside Pahalgam in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir killed 26 civilians, mostly Hindu tourists. A Pakistan-based, UN-designated terrorist organisation first claimed responsibility, then denied involvement, while Islamabad--having engineered the attack to draw global attention to Kashmir--dismissed the massacre as an Indian "false flag operation." New Delhi responded with a series of calibrated countermeasures and, armed with irrefutable evidence of Pakistani complicity, launched precision strikes on multiple terrorist camps in the early hours of 7 May.
Determined to dictate India's responses through nuclear threats and long-standing myths of military invulnerability, Pakistan escalated. Mortars, artillery rockets and armed unmanned aerial vehicles were fired at civilian, military and religious targets inside Indian territory. India, however, reacted with a tightly planned and proportionate operation that systematically dismantled Pakistani air defences. Over the next 48 hours, Pakistan intensified its "drone war," only to see the majority of its systems destroyed mid-flight.
In desperation, Islamabad ordered ballistic missile strikes on 26 targets across India. New Delhi's retaliation was swift and overwhelming. In just 90 minutes, Indian missiles crippled key Pakistani command centres, closed runways at several major PAF bases, destroyed critical aircraft hangars, and--most significantly--struck at least one, possibly two underground nuclear weapons storage sites. The message was unmistakable: India now held the upper hand.
Though rooted in the long-standing Kashmir dispute, the India-Pakistan War of May 2025 represented something far more consequential. For the first time in 80 years of hostility, India not only responded directly to a Pakistan-sponsored terrorist attack, but openly called Islamabad's nuclear bluff, neutralised its ability to retaliate and forced Pakistani aircraft away from the international border--placing the IAF in a decisive offensive posture. Despite Islamabad's subsequent efforts, aided by Chinese disinformation and familiar Western misconceptions, to mask the scale of its defeat and even claim victory, the strategic balance between the two nations has been irrevocably altered.
Richly illustrated with custom-drawn diagrams, detailed colour profiles and in-depth technical analysis, 88-Hours War provides the first full account of this fast-moving but poorly understood conflict. Combining background, context and a blow-by-blow narrative of the fighting from 7 to 10 May 2025, it is an indispensable reference for defence professionals, analysts and military history enthusiasts alike.
Often downplayed or misrepresented, the short but intense military confrontation between India and Pakistan in early May 2025 was one of the sharpest clashes the two nuclear-armed rivals have fought in decades. Lasting less than four days, the conflict saw the combat debut of several of the most advanced weapon systems currently in service. Widely dismissed in much of the international media as a mere extension of the Kashmir dispute, a "large-scale cross-border skirmish," or simply a "drone battle," it culminated in both sides claiming victory--before being shepherded into a ceasefire through hurried diplomatic pressure from the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. Yet behind these narratives lies a confrontation that will shape Indo-Pakistani relations for decades to come.
The crisis began on 22 April 2025, when a terrorist attack outside Pahalgam in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir killed 26 civilians, mostly Hindu tourists. A Pakistan-based, UN-designated terrorist organisation first claimed responsibility, then denied involvement, while Islamabad--having engineered the attack to draw global attention to Kashmir--dismissed the massacre as an Indian "false flag operation." New Delhi responded with a series of calibrated countermeasures and, armed with irrefutable evidence of Pakistani complicity, launched precision strikes on multiple terrorist camps in the early hours of 7 May.
Determined to dictate India's responses through nuclear threats and long-standing myths of military invulnerability, Pakistan escalated. Mortars, artillery rockets and armed unmanned aerial vehicles were fired at civilian, military and religious targets inside Indian territory. India, however, reacted with a tightly planned and proportionate operation that systematically dismantled Pakistani air defences. Over the next 48 hours, Pakistan intensified its "drone war," only to see the majority of its systems destroyed mid-flight.
In desperation, Islamabad ordered ballistic missile strikes on 26 targets across India. New Delhi's retaliation was swift and overwhelming. In just 90 minutes, Indian missiles crippled key Pakistani command centres, closed runways at several major PAF bases, destroyed critical aircraft hangars, and--most significantly--struck at least one, possibly two underground nuclear weapons storage sites. The message was unmistakable: India now held the upper hand.
Though rooted in the long-standing Kashmir dispute, the India-Pakistan War of May 2025 represented something far more consequential. For the first time in 80 years of hostility, India not only responded directly to a Pakistan-sponsored terrorist attack, but openly called Islamabad's nuclear bluff, neutralised its ability to retaliate and forced Pakistani aircraft away from the international border--placing the IAF in a decisive offensive posture. Despite Islamabad's subsequent efforts, aided by Chinese disinformation and familiar Western misconceptions, to mask the scale of its defeat and even claim victory, the strategic balance between the two nations has been irrevocably altered.
Richly illustrated with custom-drawn diagrams, detailed colour profiles and in-depth technical analysis, 88-Hours War provides the first full account of this fast-moving but poorly understood conflict. Combining background, context and a blow-by-blow narrative of the fighting from 7 to 10 May 2025, it is an indispensable reference for defence professionals, analysts and military history enthusiasts alike.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Solihull
United Kingdom
Target group
Adult education
Illustrations
84 colour photos, 51 colour profiles, 5 b/w photos, 6 b/w diagrams, 4 colour maps, 1 b/w map, 8 tables
Dimensions
Height: 291 mm
Width: 205 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
370 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80672-085-9 (9781806720859)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Tom Cooper is an Austrian aerial warfare analyst and historian. Following a career in worldwide transportation business - during which he established a network of contacts in the Middle East and Africa - he moved into narrow-focus analysis and writing on small, little-known air forces and conflicts, about which he has collected extensive archives. This has resulted in specialization in such Middle Eastern air forces as of those of Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and Syria, plus various African and Asian air forces. Except for authoring and co-authoring more than 30 books - including about a dozen of titles for Helion's @War series - and over 1000 articles, Cooper is a regular correspondent for multiple defense-related publications.