Versuchen GOLD - Frei

WINNING THE WAR

India Today

|

March 17, 2025

THE INSIDE STORY OF THE MODI GOVERNMENT'S DETERMINED BID TO END THE NAXAL THREAT, INDIA'S GREATEST INTERNAL SECURITY CHALLENGE

- RAJ CHENGAPPA and RAHUL NORONHA

WINNING THE WAR

It is early March, spring is in the air and the mahua trees are in full bloom, their reddish hue a striking contrast to the luminescent green of the sal forest in the Bastar region of the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh. From the window of the BSF (Border Security Force) chopper hovering above, the river Indravati looks like a blue ribbon wrapped around a brilliant tapestry of nature. The serenity, though, is deceptive. In the forbidding jungles below, central and state armed police forces are engaged in a grim, bloody battle against a determined band of violent left-wing extremists (LWE), or Naxals, who posed the biggest internal security challenge in India for the past six decades.

It is a war that has exacted a dismaying toll. In the past 20 years, 2,344 security personnel have lost their lives fighting Naxals—more than four times the number of Indian army personnel killed in the 1999 Kargil War. In fact, more armed personnel have died fighting Naxals than battling terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir, which till recently was the country’s other big internal security threat. The civilian toll is extremely high, too—6,258 people have been killed in Naxal attacks in the past two decades alone.

At its peak, the Naxal threat impacted 80 million people, mainly tribals. It straddled 10 states along a narrow Red Corridor running across Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Telan gana, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh. Or from Pashu pati in Nepal to Tirupati in Andhra, as Union home minister Amit Shah put it. The tide has been turning, though, in the past one year or so as the Modi government gains the upper hand in the fight against the arch-enemy of the Indian State, shrinking the threat to a much smaller amoebic blob of red confined largely to the Bastar region, where the fiercest battles are still on.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON India Today

India Today

India Today

WAS 2025 THE YEAR OF GADGETS?

Explore high-tech luxury with this year's smartest gizmos that save time, space and sanity.

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

Special Intensive Role

Efforts to clean voter rolls through the Special Intensive Revision made Gyanesh Kumar a constant political target, as reform collided with mistrust and Opposition resistance

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

THE X FACTOR!

Jean Touboul, CEO, Pernod Ricard India, on building India's first unified premium spirits portfolio with the its latest and most progressive spirits launch.

time to read

3 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

NOT JUST FOR LAUGHS

VIR DAS's memoir reveals the person behind the smiling mask of a stand-up comic

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

On a Wing and a Long Prayer

An Air India flight's crash in June and IndiGo's meltdown in December laid bare how India's aviation sector is becoming a victim of escalating ambition, weak oversight and regulatory lapse

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

Compulsive Storyteller

Defiantly prolific, SALMAN RUSHDIE is back with The Eleventh Hour, a collection of short stories

time to read

1 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE PHANTOM'S OPERA

Spice got exclusive access to one of the 25 centennial edition Rolls-Royce Phantoms at the Wynn Las Vegas Concours to celebrate a hundred years of the Rolls-Royce Phantom in black, white and gold.

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

Naxalism Meets - Its Nemesis

Even in the midst of a busy year politically, the Union home minister's crowning achievement was dealing a decisive blow to the Maoist insurgency

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE MOVER & THE SHAKER

BOLSTERED BY ELECTORAL WINS, PM MODI PUSHED THE PEDAL ON THE REFORMS EXPRESS DESPITE DISRUPTIONS UNLEASHED BY TRUMP

time to read

16 mins

January 19, 2026

India Today

India Today

ROOT & BRANCH

In an exclusive chat with India Today Spice, Chef Gaggan Anand reveals why 2026 represents a quantum leap for him.

time to read

7 mins

January 19, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size