Intentar ORO - Gratis
From Uri to doctrine: How 2016 changed India's counter-terror playbook
The Sunday Guardian
|September 14, 2025
For India's counter-terrorism and military response doctrine, the September 2016 Uri surgical strike is now believed to be a watershed moment.
This cross-border raid in retaliation to a terror attack on Indian soil soon heralded a gradual, but noticeable, change in India's playbook for dealing with similar Pakistan-sponsored heinous activities.
In hindsight, the Uri attack and surgical strike ignited a reorientation that moved India's doctrine away from its habitual restraint and towards calibrated, visible retaliation.
The evolution that began from the Uri surgical strikes in 2016, through the Pulwama-Balakot sequence in 2019, and the various thwarted infiltration attempts from 2020-24, has crystallised during Operation Sindoor in 2025.
This change is the story of a country moving from absorbing blows to imposing costs, and from reactive silence to shaping the narrative.
2016 URI ATTACK: THE TRIGGER POINT
On 18 September 2016, four heavily armed terrorists stormed an Army installation in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, killing 19 soldiers. For decades, New Delhi had responded to similar provocations with caution, guided by concerns over nuclear escalation and international intervention. Uri proved different.
Within ten days, India authorised surgical strikes across the Line of Control, targeting terrorist launch pads in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir on the night of 28-29 September. Announced publicly by the Director General of Military Operations, the strikes showcased not only military precision but also political will. The choice to publicise the operation was decisive. Until then, covert cross-LoC actions had been carried out, but they were never officially acknowledged. By taking ownership, India reframed both domestic expectations and global perceptions. The precedent of silence was broken, and a new template had been set.
FROM SURGICAL STRIKES TO BALAKOT
Esta historia es de la edición September 14, 2025 de The Sunday Guardian.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE The Sunday Guardian
The Sunday Guardian
STRATEGIC AUTARKY FOR THE AI AGE
Balancing sovereignty and innovation becomes the central task. India cannot afford to remain dependent, but it also cannot smother its own technological growth. India’s new AI Governance Framework addresses this balance directly.
4 mins
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
SMOG SHROUDS DELHI MORNING
NEW DELHI: Delhi woke up to a dense smog layer on Saturday as the Air Quality Index (AQI) touched 386, remaining in the 'very poor' category.
1 min
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
TRANSPARENCY AND TRUMP
Republican members of the US Congress, including both the House of Representatives and the Senate, will face a test of their commitment to the transparency that is so much a part of a genuine democracy.
3 mins
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
LALU DAUGHTER QUITS POLITICS
Patna: Former Bihar Chief Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav's daughter Rohini Acharya on Saturday announced she was quitting politics and \"disowning\" her family after the RJD's crushing defeat in the Bihar assembly polls.
1 min
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
NINE KILLED, 27 INJURED AT J&K POLICE STATION
What began as a meticulous examination of seized explosives turned into one of the darkest nights for the Jammu and Kashmir Police, as an accidental blast ripped through the Nowgam Police Station late last night, killing nine people and injuring 27 others.
1 min
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
China’s malign influence at the United Nations
Over the last decade, Chinese diplomats have pursued a systematic campaign to place loyal nationals in senior UN posts, leveraging financial contributions, vote trading, and bilateral pressure.
3 mins
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
Govt invests Rs 257 cr in startups via EDF
The central government has so far supported as many as 128 startups nationwide with an investment of Rs 25777 crore under the Electronics Development Fund (EDF).
1 min
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
NDA TURNED A TIGHT BIHAR CONTEST INTO A SWEEP
Until the mid-point of campaigning, both alliances privately believed the race could go either way. But then Nitish Kumar intensified his outreach, women voters began consolidating, welfare benefits visibly hit the ground, and the caste arithmetic stabilised with the return of Paswan, Kushwaha and Manjhi.
5 mins
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
IB failed to detect Red Fort blast module for more than a year
The unmasking of the terror cell was not the result of proactive intelligence but a mere 'chance investigation'.
2 mins
November 16, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
PM’s call to sing Vande Mataram is an invitation, not an imposition
PM's initiative was not about rewriting history but reopening it so that Indians can decide for themselves what their heritage means. That is democracy at its purest essence.
5 mins
November 16, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
