Strike at stability

In the shadowed theatre of South Asian geopolitics, India’s recent military mis-adventure, titled Operation Sindoor, stands as a stark testament to the perils of conflating nationalist fervour with statecraft. By launching cross-border strikes on Pakistan, India has risked regional stability, and has squandered its hard-earned global credibility.

This is not merely a crisis of escalation; it is a reckoning for a nation that fancies itself the heir to China’s economic throne. India, it seems, has traded long-term strategic vision for the fleeting applause of domestic politics.

At a moment when the West is seeking alternatives to China’s economic hegemony, India had positioned itself as the darling of diplomats and investors alike. Yet, with Operation Sindoor, India has all but squandered this goodwill, trading its promise as a ‘safe bet’ for the cheap thrills of nationalist posturing.

The Middle East, caught between lucrative investments in Indian infra-structure and historical ties to Pakistan, now faces an impossible choice: side with a volatile giant or a wounded ally. India’s gamble risks alienating both the West and the Arabs. This is not strength. This is pure and simple hubris.

India’s once-vaunted multi-alignment strategy lies in tatters. Iran, its gateway to Central Asia and a bulwark against Pakistani influence, now eyes India’s embrace of Israel with cold suspicion.

Russia, India’s Cold War patron, drifts inexorably into China’s orbit, unmoved by Narendra Modi’s photo-ops with the United States. Even Bangladesh, forged in blood alongside India in 1971, bristles at Hindu majoritarianism and the spectre of border clashes. When your neighbours flinch at your shadow, you are not a leader. You are a pariah.

India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty is not just reckless; it is a confession of weakness. When a nation resorts to weaponising rivers, it admits that it has lost the argument. Pakistan’s call for third- party investigations into the Pahalgam massacre was met with evasion, not with evidence.

The world is being told to trust India’s word on the matter, even as its jets lie smouldering in the fields, and its claims of ‘70 terrorists killed’ dissolve into the fog of civilian graves.

As such, the ‘goodwill’ release of Wg-Cdr Abhinandan in 2019, which was meant to de-escalate, only emboldened India to conflate restraint with surrender. India, under premier Modi, mistakes mercy for weakness, and dialogue for delay. No doubt, a calculated strike seems necessary to shatter the myth of Indian invincibility.

India’s greatest vulnerability lies not in its arsenal, but its economy. Investors crave stability; not a nuclear tinderbox. A protracted standoff could well send capital fleeing to Vietnam or Indonesia. In the age of economic empires, wars are not won on the battlefields alone. They are surely lost in the boardrooms.

KHALID AHMED

SUKKUR

Editor's Mail
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