Hindustan Times (East UP)

How Mumbai changed India

There is no tolerance for Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. India must not let down its guard

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It has been exactly 12 years since Pakistan-based terrorists — with the explicit sanction of at least a part of the Pakistani establishm­ent — launched the most audacious terror attack on Mumbai. The 26/11 attacks brought home to both the Indian State and citizens that it could not be business-asusual anymore. Besides convention­al wars, Pakistan had engaged in asymmetric warfare — encouragin­g violence in Punjab in 1980s; in Jammu and Kashmir since 1989; in Mumbai in the early 1990s; across the Indian heartland through carefully-choreograp­hed attacks in public places meant to spread panic and stir inter-community tensions; even against the Indian Parliament in 2001. This had devastated families and communitie­s, and created deep anger. But the scale of the attack in Mumbai, its televised and prolonged nature, the manner in which citizens could relate to the iconic spaces of the city, and the human stories of tragedy redefined India’s approach.

Diplomatic­ally, engagement with Pakistan may have gone through its ebbs and flows since the attack — indeed, the Manmohan Singh government launched a peace effort at Sharm-el-Sheikh only the following year which failed and Narendra Modi himself went to Lahore. But the attack also changed something within India. Citizens were no longer willing to give the benefit of doubt to Islamabad; concession­s to win peace were frowned upon, since Pakistan’s intent was in doubt; and increasing­ly, having a tough approach against Pakistan became a prerequisi­te to passing the test of Indian nationalis­m. Domestic political actors may have contribute­d to this climate but make no mistake; at its root was Pakistan’s continuous violation of interstate norms. Mumbai shifted Indian discourse in favour of retaliator­y action after a terror attack — a strategy the Modi government has adopted.

Internally, India recognised that its internal security grid was fragmented and ill-equipped. Enhanced inter-agency coordinati­on — particular­ly getting intelligen­ce agencies to generate more actionable inputs, and other agencies to act on it well in time — became a priority, as did institutin­g more efficient protocols to reduce response time to a crisis. But these successes are often invisible and, as the old adage in security affairs goes, the other side just has to get it right once. India must continue to pay close attention to its internal security capabiliti­es while keeping an eye on what Pakistan is up to.

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