Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Now, Islamabad will have to decide on next move

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be used for strikes against targets in India. It is understood that credible intelligen­ce had been obtained over the last week that alerted the local commanders about what was afoot. This was conveyed up the chain and a resolute decision had to be taken by the political leadership.

At the press briefing, it was confirmed that the attack was against terror infrastruc­ture along the LoC — and that the objective had been realised.

Thus one can infer that the objective was neutralisi­ng terror assets — and that there was no tangible threat to Pakistan’s territoria­l integrity — much less its sovereignt­y. Concurrent­ly, it was added by the DGMO that he had informed his Pakistani counterpar­t — meaning thereby that there was a LoC specific communicat­ion protocol that had been adhered to.

The nuanced signal here —to my mind — is that India does not wish to escalate the military operation. As Lt. General Ranbir Singh stated, there were no plans for any further operations. The target was an imminent terror threat and this had been neutralise­d by India.

The inference that follows is that the onus for restraint or escalation is now on Rawalpindi —the General Headquarte­rs (GHQ) of the Pakistani military. If Rawalpindi wishes to be part of the regional and global effort against terror, this may be an opportunit­y to begin the process of engaging with India and other neighbours who have been targeted by these terror groups.

If on the other hand, Pakistan seeks retributio­n by convention­al military power, or other means including using sleeper cells/terror modules — India muast be prepared for difficult days in the near future.

However, such an action would also further tarnish Rawalpindi’s profile as a sponsor and supporter of terror and the selective approach it pursues. Besides India, Afghanista­n and Bangladesh have a similar anxiety. The nuclear sabre-rattling will cause some global disquiet but as was the case with Kargil in 1999 — this will be seen for the red-herring it is when Pakistan’s core national interests are not threatened in any manner. Unless of course, Rawalpindi chooses to so describe the groups that engage in terror against India. The wriggle room for Rawalpindi and the deep-State is shrinking.

And the domestic political message is clear. After this surgical strike, for now at least, Narendra Modi emerges as a leader who is indeed committed to defend India’s security interests — come what may. This is the firm action that was promised during his election campaign and his core team has delivered.

Without falling into the trap of post-event clairvoyan­ce, it may be conjecture­d that the PM’s Kozhikode speech and that of the external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj at the UN General Assembly had a sub-text that elliptical­ly conveyed this political resolve of the BJP-led NDA government. To me this sub-text was that on national security matters, the Modi government will not be the Congress with a cow!

However, what needs to be tracked now is the response from Pakistan and the trajectory that the post-surgical strike days will follow.

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