logo
No more a soft state: Bharat's strategic turn after Operation Sindoor

No more a soft state: Bharat's strategic turn after Operation Sindoor

First Post4 days ago
Operation Sindoor, as underscored by Amit Shah, Rajnath Singh, and S Jaishankar in Parliament, has made the world take note of Bharat's military resolve, capabilities, and tactics. It has alarmed its enemies, but also made friends uneasy and envious read more
As well-articulated by Indian ministers in Parliament, Bharat is no more a soft state that could be punched at will and gotten away without consequences. File image
When the Congress-led Opposition called for a discussion on Operation Sindoor, one thought it would be a close contest. The Opposition leaders would grill the treasury benches. But as the proceedings of the past two days suggest, the Opposition seems to have come underprepared. Maybe it never expected the treasury benches to accept the motion to have a debate, though there were enough indications that the government was willing to discuss the matter in Parliament.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The Opposition story doesn't end here: Had it just given a walkover, one still would have forgiven the Congress and its allies. The Congress went ahead and committed a hara-kiri. It did what even the Americans could not do in the wake of Operation Sindoor. While the Trump administration, in recognition of Islamabad's role, labelled the Pakistan-based Resistance Front, a Lashkar-e-Taiba proxy, as a global terrorist outfit for its role in the killing of 26 people in Pahalgam on April 22, 2025, the Congress came out categorically saying there was no Pakistan connection with the dastardly attack.
Congress Self-Goal
Had the self-goal come from a junior party member, one could still have ignored the transgression. But the statement came from one of the tallest Congress leaders, P Chidambaram, who had taken over as the country's Home Minister soon after the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. It wouldn't have taken much effort for him to find out the proof of Pahalgam's Pakistani links. As Home Minister Amit Shah reminded the Opposition during the debate in the Lok Sabha on Tuesday, 'We have their voter ID numbers. The rifles and cartridges used were made in Pakistan.'
There's, however, a pattern to the Congress' goof-up on Pakistan-linked terror attacks. Even in 26/11, a section of senior party leaders went out of the way to project it as 'saffron terror', even when the Mumbai attack had an undeniable Pakistani connection. Interestingly, these are the same people who are invariably at the forefront to delink terror with religion when it has any jihadi angle.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh too raised 26/11 in his well-rounded speech in the Lok Sabha on July 28, 2025. While underscoring the success of Operation Sindoor, he also turned the spotlight on past failures. He cited the UPA government's indecisive response to the 2008 Mumbai attacks, quoting Pranab Mukherjee's memoirs, The Coalition Years, to show how military retaliation was consciously ruled out.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Former High Commissioner to Pakistan Ajay Bisaria, in his 2024 book Anger Management, elaborates on the moment when then Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon suggested striking LeT's Muridke base in Pakistan—only for Mukherjee to quietly shelve the idea.
'In one meeting, in the wake of the Mumbai attacks, as Foreign Secretary (Shivshankar) Menon, High Commissioner (Satyabrata) Pal, and Joint Secretary (TCA) Raghavan sat across the table in his (Mukherjee's) South Block room, he (EAM) asked his advisers what should be done. After a brief silence, Menon said India could target the LeT headquarters in Muridke with a cruise missile. Visibly startled, Mukherjee paused to clean his glasses, then thanked the officers to signal that the meeting was over,' Bisaria recalls.
Bisaria, however, believes that had Bharat responded in 2008 as it did in 2016 and 2019, the message would have entered Pakistan's security calculus. 'A decisive strike on a terrorist base like Muridke could have acted as an effective deterrent for the attacks India would face for a decade.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Menon, in his book Choices (2016), justifies the UPA inaction, claiming a strike might have united Pakistan behind its army and weakened a newly elected civilian government. Ironically, similar excuses were used even when the military was in power. Recall the narrative during General Pervez Musharraf's 2002 Agra visit, where he was projected as the best bet for peace.
It took Bharat more than six decades to stop differentiating between Pakistan's civilian and military regimes—realising both pursue the same objective, only with different tactics.
According to Menon, the global reaction to Bharat-Pakistan tensions often seeks to 'split the blame 50:50' in the name of even-handedness—exactly what the Pakistan Army desires. But Operation Sindoor upended that script. As External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar informed the Lok Sabha on Monday, 189 of 193 UN member nations supported Bharat post-strike. It wasn't aggression, but clarity of purpose and strength of execution that won global support.
Trump's Doublespeak
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Jaishankar also corrected the record on US involvement. Refuting Donald Trump's claims of brokering a 'ceasefire', he clarified that no phone call occurred between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump from April 22 to June 17. The only calls were one of condolence and a later one in Canada—none regarding military operations or negotiations.
While Trump sought credit for de-escalation, Bharat maintained strategic restraint without conceding ground. Rather than confront Trump publicly, the Modi government chose to make only matter-of-fact statements—recognising that personality politics should not derail long-term Bharat-US relations.
This despite the fact that Trump crossed three red lines: One, he falsely claimed credit for something Bharat had meticulously executed on its own terms; two, he equated Bharat with Pakistan, ignoring that one is a democratic, rules-based nation and the other a terror-harbouring, failed state; three, he undermined Bharat's long-held position that its conflict with Pakistan is bilateral, not subject to third-party mediation.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The betrayal stung more because Trump had, until then, enjoyed rare goodwill in Bharat. Many had hoped he would recalibrate the Indo-American equation. That hope has now dimmed. His post-Sindoor positioning didn't just damage his credibility—it raised strategic doubts about America's reliability in the long term. Trump may not realise it yet, but he is the biggest loser of the Operation Sindoor saga.
Then of course, there was the Dragon. If Trump fumbled diplomatically, China miscalculated strategically. The Pahalgam massacre, according to intelligence analysis, bore Beijing's fingerprints—executed through Pakistan to provoke Bharat into an overreaction. With China facing economic slowdown and diplomatic isolation, a distracted Bharat suits its interests.
But Bharat didn't fall into the trap. It responded with precision, not provocation—stunning Beijing. Since then, China has noticeably softened its tone, engaging in backchannel diplomacy. This shift isn't purely Bharat-driven—rising American hostility too has forced China to prioritise managing Trump over provoking Modi.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Now, Washington finds itself in a bind. Frustrated by what it sees as Bharat's defiance, yet constrained by China's assertiveness, it cannot afford to alienate Delhi. Any attempt to push Bharat too far risks driving it closer to Beijing. A full-fledged Dragon-Elephant-Bear tango may be improbable given China's record of duplicity, but the very possibility has given Bharat new leverage in the global order.
Conclusion
As Amit Shah, Rajnath Singh, and Jaishankar made clear, Operation Sindoor was not just a military campaign—it was a strategic declaration that Bharat would no longer absorb terrorism as fate, and would retaliate with clarity and conviction. Bharat is no more a soft state that could be punched at will and gotten away without consequences. Today, following the operation, Pakistan is cornered, its duplicity exposed. America is recalibrating, unsure how to handle a more assertive Bharat. And China is cautious, having blinked when it expected Bharat to flinch.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
But this is a moment for caution too. Operation Sindoor has made the world stand and stare at Bharat's military resolve, capabilities, and tactics. It has made the country strong—but alone. Its enemies are alarmed, and friends are uneasy and envious. One false step could prove costly.
The road ahead is interesting, yet intriguing.
Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Phone Battery Anxiety? These Power Banks Have You Covered
Phone Battery Anxiety? These Power Banks Have You Covered

Time of India

time7 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Phone Battery Anxiety? These Power Banks Have You Covered

'Hindu Terror, Not Saffron': Chavan's Remark On Malegaon Verdict Draws 'Lame Horse' Dig From BJP In a political bombshell, Congress leader Prithviraj Chavan reacted to the acquittal of all accused in the 2008 Malegaon blast by reigniting the controversial debate around "Hindu terror" and "saffron terror." 'If not saffron, call it Hindu or Sanatani terror,' Chavan said, before clarifying that terrorism has no religion. But his choice of words has ignited a nationwide storm. Chavan accused the BJP-led government and the NIA of weakening the case, asking bluntly, 'If those acquitted didn't do it, then who planted the bomb?' His remarks have given fresh ammunition to both allies and adversaries. The BJP hit back, mocking Chavan #prithvirajchavan #malegaonblastverdict #2008malegaoncase #saffronterrordebate #niainvestigation #hinduterrorism #bjpcongressfaceoff #politicalcontroversy #maharashtrapolitics #malegaonacquittal #rahulgandhi #bjpvscongress #terrorismprobeindia #sanataniterror #indianjudiciary #malegaonbombingcase #indianpoliticsdebate #hindumuslimpolitics #communalpoliticsindia #bjpcriticism #congressresponse #dineshsharmabjp #malegaoncaseupa #breakingnews #trending #bharat #toi #toibharat #indianews 7.7K views | 1 day ago

'My only mistake was fast growth in politics, made no mistake': Prajwal Revanna before sentencing
'My only mistake was fast growth in politics, made no mistake': Prajwal Revanna before sentencing

Mint

time7 minutes ago

  • Mint

'My only mistake was fast growth in politics, made no mistake': Prajwal Revanna before sentencing

Convicted in a rape case and awaiting sentencing on Saturday, suspended JD(S) leader and former MP, Prajwal Revanna, sought for lesser punishment, claiming he did nothing wrong and that his only mistake was his 'fast' growth in politics. A Special Court here is slated to pronounce the quantum of sentence after convicting the 34-year-old Prajwal in one of the four sexual abuse and rape cases registered against him on Friday. Prajwal broke down in court on Saturday as he appealed to the judge for lesser punishment. He told the court that he is a BE Mechanical graduate, and has always passed on merit. "...they say that I have raped multiple women, but none of the women have come out voluntarily to complain, they came six days prior to election (Lok Sabha polls last year)...the prosecution side brought them purposefully and made them give a complaint," Prajwal told the court. Pointing out that the woman (victim) had not complained to anyone including her husband or kin about the alleged rape, he said that she comes and gives complaint when certain videos were circulated. Stating that will bow down to the court's conviction, Prajwal said, "I have a family, I have not seen my mother and father for six months give me a less sentence is what I request the court." "The only mistake I made in my life is growing fast in politics," Prajwal, arrested in May last year upon his arrival from Germany, said. The special court for MPs/MLAs Judge Santosh Gajanan Bhat on Friday had convicted the 34-year-old Prajwal in one of the four sexual abuse and rape cases registered against him. The court is likely to pronounce the quantum of sentence on Saturday. The case pertains to a 48-year-old woman who was working as a help at the family's Gannikada farmhouse in Hassan district's Holenarasipura. She was allegedly raped twice -- at Hassan farm house and Bengaluru residence-- in 2021 and the act recorded by the accused on his mobile phone. Disclaimer: This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.

Constitution under siege, BJP doing ideological coup to replace republic with theocratic state: Sonia
Constitution under siege, BJP doing ideological coup to replace republic with theocratic state: Sonia

The Hindu

time7 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Constitution under siege, BJP doing ideological coup to replace republic with theocratic state: Sonia

Congress Parliamentary Party chairperson Sonia Gandhi on Saturday (August 2, 2025) alleged that the Constitution is 'under siege' as the ruling BJP is using its power to dismantle the very framework it long opposed. She alleged that the BJP is seeking to bring an 'ideological coup' by replacing our democratic republic with a theocratic corporate state serving the powerful few. In her special message read out at the day-long national legal conclave on 'Constitutional Challenges - Perspectives and Pathways', Ms. Gandhi said the Congress would oppose every attempt to undermine the Constitution in Parliament, in courts and on the streets, asserting that it is not just a political but an ideological commitment to defend every Indian's dignity. 'Today, the Constitution is under siege. The BJP-RSS, which never fought for freedom or upheld equality, now uses its power to dismantle the very framework it long opposed,' she said. 'Their ideological forebears glorified Manusmriti, rejected the tricolour, and envisioned a Hindu rashtra, where democracy is hollow and discrimination is the law. In power, they've eroded institutions, criminalised dissent, targeted minorities and betrayed Dalits, Adivasis, OBCs and the working poor. 'Now they seek to erase socialism and secularism, pillars of Ambedkar's vision of equal citizenship. This is not reform, but an ideological coup replacing our democratic republic with a theocratic corporate state serving the powerful few,' the former Congress chief alleged. She stressed that India yearns for the inclusive, just and democratic nation envisaged by our freedom fighters and Constitution makers. 'That is what the Congress party stands and fights for. We will oppose every attempt to undermine the Constitution, in Parliament, in courts, and on the streets. This is not just political, it is our ideological commitment to defend every Indian's dignity. I commend Abhishek Manu Singhvi and his team for reigniting this vital conversation. Our mission is clear - to reclaim the republic and protect the rights of each and every person,' she said in her message. Ms. Gandhi said the Constitution is more than a legal charter and claimed that it is the moral foundation of our democracy, built on justice, liberty, equality, and fraternity. Noting that the Constitution was shaped through the sacrifices and vision of the Indian National Congress, she said even before independence, the Congress imagined a constitution, 'by Indians, for Indians'. From the Nehru Report in 1928 to the demand for a Constituent Assembly in 1934, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru laid the groundwork and B.R. Ambedkar, as chairman of the Drafting Committee, gave form to these ideals. 'He warned that without social and economic justice, political democracy would be just a top dressing,' she said. 'The Congress recognised this and acted on it, expanding rights, strengthening institutions, and upholding dignity and inclusion,' she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store