From UPA’s Silence to NDA’s Strike: India Redraws the Line of Dignity

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Was religious harmony a valid reason to avoid justice – or a political excuse to appease a particular vote bank? This question lies at the heart of the 2008 post-Mumbai attack discourse. In the aftermath of India’s most horrific terror attack in 2008, where 166 innocent civilians were slaughtered on Indian soil by Pakistani terrorists, the UPA-led government led by then Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh chose not to retaliate militarily. As revealed in former U.S. President Barack Obama’s memoir “A Promised Land”, then Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh had resisted calls to retaliate against Pakistan after the attack, but his restraint had cost him politically. He feared that anti-Muslim sentiment could strengthen the influence of India’s main opposition party — the Bhartiya Janta Party. But what was paraded as mature restraint was, in hindsight, a calculated retreat — a political gambit where perception triumphed over justice, and the blood of innocents became collateral in a larger game of vote-bank arithmetic.

The Congress-led UPA government of that time, under the de facto leadership of Sonia Gandhi, bore the ultimate responsibility for this inaction. It wasn’t merely a lapse in military response — it was a calculated posture of avoidance, driven by a desire to maintain a secular image, even if it came at the cost of national dignity and deterrence. The silence of the Congress regime after 26/11 was not strength in restraint; it was weakness disguised as secular sensitivity, aimed at pleasing a particular segment of the electorate.

While this reasoning may have seemed ethically complicated in retrospect, it was troubling to observe prioritizing political optics and social factors over security and justice. The silence, or rather the delay, regarding these considerations from 2008 still resonates with the citizens who desired more resolve.

Contrast this with the actions taken by the Narendra Modi-led NDA government over the past decade, culminating in the recent, bold Operation Sindoor. The current administration has displayed an evolving and assertive national security doctrine that no longer sees terrorism as merely a law-and-order problem but treats it as an undeclared war on the Indian state.

In 2016, India launched surgical strikes across the Line of Control in response to the Uri attack. In 2019, following the deadly Pulwama suicide bombing, India carried out air strikes on Balakot — deep inside Pakistani territory, signaling a departure from conventional restraint. These actions demonstrated India’s capacity and willingness to respond proportionately but firmly to provocation.

But what happened on May 7, 2025, marks a significant escalation in scope, strategy, and symbolism. Operation Sindoor, launched at 1:40 AM, was not a knee-jerk response but a calibrated and coordinated military operation aimed at dismantling multiple terror hubs across Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir. It was India’s response to the Pahalgam massacre, where 26 civilians, including a Nepali national, were killed in a brutal terror assault.

Using Rafale fighter jets equipped with SCALP cruise missiles and precision bombs, the Indian Air Force executed a 23-minute offensive hitting key terror infrastructures in Bahawalpur, Muridke, Tehra Kalan, Kotli, and Muzaffarabad regions long known to host operatives of Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed. The strikes reportedly neutralized several terrorists in under 24 hours.

Unlike the ambiguity that followed past governments’ dealings with Pakistan, the Modigovernment’s message is unambiguous: Indian blood will not be spilt without consequence. The action was swift, the target clear, and the timing strategic.

Geopolitically too, India today stands on far stronger footing. With stronger defence procurement (including Rafales, drones, missile systems), increased alignment with global powers through forums and a firmer grip on cyber and satellite intelligence, India’s retaliatory capacity is no longer symbolic — it is demonstrably operational.

Furthermore, India’s ability to manage international perception has matured. While in 2008 the fear of global condemnation held back policy decisions, today, countries like Israel and strategic analysts across the world have acknowledged India’s right to self-defence. France, while urging restraint, also recognized India’s security concerns. The shift is not merely military, but moral and strategic.

Critics may argue that retaliation risks escalation. But the bigger risk is appeasement — a policy that failed to prevent subsequent attacks after Mumbai. Justice delayed was not only justice denied in 2008; it was justice deflected.

In Operation Sindoor, India has not merely avenged a single attack but has articulated a new standard: the cost of terrorism will be extracted, decisively and unapologetically. This is not warmongering; it is strategic deterrence in a region where ambiguity is often exploited.

As the smoke clears over Muzaffarabad and Bahawalpur, what remains clear is this: India’s threshold for tolerance has shifted. From silence in 2008 to the sound of precision strikes in 2025, the message is clear and irreversible. National security is not a narrative to be managed but a duty to be delivered — and delivered it has been.

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Arvind Gulati

Arvind Gulati

Mr. Arvind Gulati is an advocate practicing in high courts and trial courts across India, with a primary focus on criminal law and constitutional matters. His practice includes rights-based litigation, public interest cases, and statutory interpretation. Mr. Gulati regularly advises on complex legal issues and drafts petitions involving civil liberties, governance, and justice reform. Passionate about using law as a tool for societal change, he contributes through writing, research, and legal awareness initiatives

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