10/07/2025
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Remember how in the Mahabharata, Krishna arranged a duplicate Bhima to embrace Dhritarashtra? A similar strategy was reportedly used by Modi during ‘Operation Sindoor’.
Recent reports suggest that when Pakistan fired missiles, it was not at real Rafale jets but at decoys—AI-generated duplicates created by India using advanced Israeli technology.
These 'duplicate Rafales' were essentially electronic illusions based on fiber optic technology, capable of confusing enemy radars and missiles. The system, known as 'X-Guard', weighs around 30 kilograms and is designed to emit signals identical to the original Rafale, misleading hostile detection systems.
So, how exactly does this tactical marvel work?
From the tail of a real Rafale, a fiber optic cable—roughly 100 meters long—is deployed. Attached to the end is the X-Guard device. This device, powered by AI, generates electronic signals that mimic a real fighter jet. While the actual Rafale switches off its radar signature, the X-Guard becomes the decoy, emitting strong, convincing signals. Enemy radars lock on to this false signal, and missiles home in on the decoy rather than the real aircraft.
Reports claim that this is exactly what happened during the recent Pakistan incident. The missiles fired by Pakistan, believed to have hit Indian jets, in reality, struck only the X-Guard devices—tactical illusions hanging off the back of the real Rafales.
According to American fighter pilot Ryan Borden Heemer, this is one of the most effective deception strategies ever deployed in modern air warfare. Pakistan's Chinese-made PL-15 missiles reportedly locked onto and destroyed only the X-Guards, not the actual jets.
Pakistan claimed to have shot down three Rafales, but evidence suggests otherwise. Electronic warfare data and a report from Jane’s Defence Weekly indicate that India, with help from Israel, successfully executed a battlefield illusion. The real jets remained untouched—Pakistan had fallen for a brilliant act of warcraft.