Netanyahu acknowledges India’s use of ‘battle-tested’ Israeli weapons against Pakistan — Indian media

Israeli Prime Minister Banjamin Netanyahu speaks during a meeting with Indian Ambassador to Israel J.P. Singh in Jerusalem on August 7, 2025. (Handout/X/@IsraeliPM)
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Updated 08 August 2025
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Netanyahu acknowledges India’s use of ‘battle-tested’ Israeli weapons against Pakistan — Indian media

  • The India-Pakistan aerial combat during the conflict in May offered first real glimpse into how advanced Chinese military technology performs against Western hardware
  • Indian military used Barak missiles, jointly developed with Israel, and Tel Aviv’s HARPY drones to repel waves of Pakistan missiles over the 96-hour conflict, report says

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has acknowledged India’s use of “battle-tested” Israeli weapons in a recent conflict with Pakistan and said all of them had “worked well,” Indian media reported this week.

India and Pakistan engaged in a four-day military standoff, sparked by a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, leaving nearly 70 people dead on both sides before agreeing to a United States-brokered ceasefire on May 10.

The conflict, the worst between the neighbors in over two decades, saw the use of Chinese-made beyond-visual-range (BVR) missiles, French-made Rafale jets, Israeli and Turkish drones and sophisticated air and ground warfare technologies.

Speaking to Indian journalists in Jerusalem on Thursday, Netanyahu said the military equipment supplied to India by Israel had performed well during ‘Operation Sindoor’ against Pakistan and that defense ties between New Delhi and Tel Aviv were on an upswing, The Telegraph newspaper, published in India, reported.

“Israel supplied military equipment to India before [Operation Sindoor]. All of them worked well. Israeli equipment used during Operation Sindoor were battle proven,” Netanyahu was quoted as saying.

“We don’t develop them in labs, but in battlefield. So they are battle-tested. We have a robust defense cooperation. It is on a pretty solid foundation.”

Netanyahu met Indian journalists after his meeting with India’s ambassador to Israel, J P Singh, the Israeli PM’s office said.




Israeli Prime Minister Banjamin Netanyahu shakes hands with Indian Ambassador to Israel J.P. Singh in Jerusalem on August 7, 2025. (Handout/X/@IsraeliPM)

“The Prime Minister and the Ambassador discussed the expansion of bilateral cooperation, especially on security and economic issues,” it said in a statement. “Prime Minister Netanyahu then met with senior Indian journalists and answered their questions.”

The four-day India-Pakistan clash marked the first time New Delhi and Islamabad utilized unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) at scale against each other.

The Indian military used Barak missiles, jointly developed with Israel, and Tel Aviv’s HARPY drones, in addition an impressive array of domestically manufactured weapons systems, to repel waves of Pakistan missiles over the 96-hour conflict, according to the Times of India newspaper.




Israeli Prime Minister Banjamin Netanyahu (4L) meets a delegation of Indian journalists during a meeting with New Delhi’s envoy J.P. Singh in Jerusalem on August 7, 2025. (Handout/X/@IsraeliPM)

“Israel is among India’s largest supplier of weapons and weapons systems,” the read said. “India has imported military hardware worth $2.9 billion from Israel over the last decade, including radars, drones, and missiles. Tel Aviv has ensured a steady supply of weapons to Delhi.”

On May 7, Pakistan and India fought in the air with some 110 aircraft involved, experts estimate, making it the world’s largest air battle in decades.

Pakistan declared a victory in the standoff, saying its air force used Chinese J-10C aircraft to shoot down six Indian fighter jets, including three French Rafales, and the army targeted several Indian military installations during the recent flare-up. While Indian officials have acknowledged losses, they have not specified the number of jets downed by Pakistan.

The hour-long fight, which took place in darkness, offered the world a first real glimpse into how advanced Chinese military technology performs against proven Western hardware, with Chinese defense stocks surging in its wake.

Over the past five years, China has supplied 81 percent of Pakistan’s imported weapons, according to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). Those exports include advanced fighter jets, missiles, radars and air-defense systems.




Israeli Prime Minister Banjamin Netanyahu meets a delegation of Indian journalists during a meeting with New Delhi’s envoy J.P. Singh in Jerusalem on August 7, 2025. (Handout/X/@IsraeliPM)

Some Pakistan-made weapons have also been co-developed with Chinese firms or built with Chinese technology and expertise. Beijing is also investing over $60 billion to build infrastructure, energy and other projects in Pakistan as part of its China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

India was planning to invest heavily in local industry and could spend as much as $470 million on UAVs over the next 12 to 24 months, roughly three times pre-conflict levels, Smit Shah of Drone Federation India, which represents over 550 companies and regularly interacts with the government, was quoted as saying by Reuters.

Netanyahu noted that Israel had developed “advanced technologies” and mentioned ongoing cooperation with India during his meeting with Indian journalists, WION, an English-language Indian news channel, reported on Friday.

“Israel was keen to finalize mutual defense and economic agreements with India at the earliest,” he was quoted as saying.


World Wetlands Day: Pakistan renews concerns over India’s handling of Indus Waters Treaty

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World Wetlands Day: Pakistan renews concerns over India’s handling of Indus Waters Treaty

  • President says suspension of treaty mechanisms risks water security in climate-stressed region
  • Zardari links wetland protection to climate resilience, flood control and livelihoods

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday renewed concerns over India’s handling of the Indus Waters Treaty, marking World Wetlands Day with a warning that water must not be used as a tool of coercion.

World Wetlands Day marks the 1971 adoption of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, to which Pakistan is a signatory. The convention promotes the conservation and sustainable use of wetlands, which experts increasingly view as cost-effective defense against climate shocks. Pakistan is among the countries least responsible for global emissions but among the most vulnerable to climate impacts.

In a statement issued on the occasion of the UN-designated day, President Asif Ali Zardari said wetlands were critical to Pakistan’s ability to withstand floods, droughts, heatwaves and sea-level rise, while cautioning that disruptions to river flows posed serious risks to millions of people in a country heavily dependent on the Indus Basin.

“Water security in our region depends on responsible and lawful transboundary cooperation,” Zardari said in the statement. 

“Pakistan remains concerned over unilateral actions by India affecting the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960, a legally binding agreement that has governed equitable water sharing in the Indus Basin for decades.”

The Indus Waters Treaty, brokered by the World Bank in 1960, governs the sharing of six rivers between neighbors India and Pakistan and is widely seen as one of the most durable agreements between the two nuclear-armed rivals. Under the treaty, Pakistan relies on the western rivers of the Indus Basin for the bulk of its agriculture, drinking water and hydropower, while India controls the eastern rivers.

In 2025, India announced it was suspending its participation in treaty mechanisms after accusing Pakistan of involvement in a deadly attack in Indian-administered Kashmir — an allegation Islamabad strongly denies. Pakistan has said the unilateral suspension undermines a legally binding international agreement and heightens water security risks in a region already facing climate-driven volatility.

“The suspension of [Indus Water] treaty mechanisms, including the sharing of hydrological data, undermines trust and predictability when climate pressures require greater cooperation,” Zardari reiterated, adding that “water must never be used as a tool of coercion.”

Islamabad has also long objected to India’s construction of hydropower projects on western rivers, arguing that inadequate consultation and reduced data sharing further weaken trust and predictability under the treaty. India rejects the accusations and maintains its actions comply with treaty provisions.

Zardari said Pakistan’s wetlands function as “frontline climate defenders,” noting that healthy wetlands reduce flood risks, protect coastlines, sustain livelihoods and help cut emissions, while their degradation multiplies climate-related losses.

Pakistan’s wetlands range from alpine and glacial lakes in the north to riverine floodplains, inland lakes and mangrove ecosystems along the Arabian Sea. The president said these systems were under mounting pressure from erratic monsoons, glacial melt variability, prolonged heatwaves, pollution and shrinking flood buffers.

Zardari singled out the southern Sindh province that his Pakistan Peoples Party rules as bearing a disproportionate burden due to historical water stress and sea-level rise, warning that the Indus Delta and mangrove forests, once among the world’s richest, now face salinity intrusion, coastal erosion and the loss of fish breeding grounds. Inland wetlands such as Keenjhar, Haleji and Manchar, he said, were experiencing reduced freshwater inflows and concentrated pollution, affecting fisheries, drinking water supplies and migratory bird routes.

For millions of Pakistanis, wetlands are central to daily life, providing fish, grazing land, reeds for shelter and fuel, and natural protection during extreme weather, the statement said. Their degradation, Zardari warned, leads to income loss, rising food costs, unsafe water and greater exposure to floods and droughts.

The president urged citizens, policymakers and local communities to integrate traditional and indigenous knowledge into wetland management, saying sustainable protection of these ecosystems was essential not only for biodiversity but for public welfare, economic stability and national resilience.