試す - 無料

Pakistan's Perfidy Front & Centre in Foreign Capitals

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

|

June 05, 2025

The parliamentary delegations impressed upon thought leaders abroad the rationale behind India's response to the latest Pak-backed terror strike. The nations now know what to expect if it recurs

- MANISH TEWARI

Let me start on a deeply personal note. My father, the late V N Tewari, was a nominated member of the Rajya Sabha. A professor of comparative modern Indian literature, a poet and an author, he conceptualised and vigorously espoused the concept of Punjab, Punjabi and Punjabiyat—the syncretic ethos of Hindus and Sikhs living together in harmony.

This was a direct philosophical, ideological and conceptual challenge to Pakistan, that by the 1980s had made Punjab the first frontier in its strategy of bleeding India with a thousand cuts by trying to create communal discord between Hindus and Sikhs.

My father was assassinated on April 3, 1984 at our home in Chandigarh. My mother, a Jat Sikh, would have died with him that fateful morning as she grappled with his assassins, except for the fact that my father's killers had run out of bullets. They had expended all of them on him. Faith-based executions such as his started in Punjab way back in the 1980s—from the standard playbook of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence.

Conceived on January 24, 1972 at the Multan Conference convened by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the strategy to bleed India with attrition was the modus vivendi Pakistan adopted to avenge the humiliation meted out by India to the West Pakistan Army in Bangladesh. Pakistan wanted nuclear weapons at any cost in order to use them as a shield while it operationalised the proxy war it had envisioned against India.

As a victim of Pakistan-sponsored terror, it was but a sequitur that I would step up and do my bit in exposing Pakistan-incubated, -resourced and -sponsored state terror on the global stage as a part of the parliamentary delegations that recently travelled to different parts of the world.

The New Indian Express Sambalpur からのその他のストーリー

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

SC: Don't want to pass order which may hurt Russia ties

Moscow says will abide by Indian laws

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

Moscow says will abide by Indian laws

SC: Don't want to pass order which may hurt Russia ties

time to read

1 min

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

THE LONG GAME OF BELONGING IN A CITY

WHO does the city really belong to? Those who are born there, those who made it their home, those who migrate there to work and build a life, or those who work for it?

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

Everyone Preaches Justice, No One Lives It

Everybody has their own version of hell.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

Share of women still low in global peace ops

A quarter century after the UN Security Council first linked gender equality to peace and security, women still make up less than one in ten soldiers and fewer than one in three civilian staff in multilateral peace operations.

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

The Alpha School Project: A Daring Innovation

The Alpha Schools enterprise is a highly innovative experiment in school education in the US that commenced in 2014 based essentially on the use of AI. It is a bold departure from the traditional. Its essential features focus on personalised learning, efficiency, and holistic development. Founded in Austin, Texas, the Alpha School challenges the conventional modelwhere students endure lengthy lectures across fragmented subjects-by reallocating time to AI-powered learning and essential life skills. This for-profit private institution is crafting footprints in other cities. It also plans potential charter school integrations for broader access. It has at the same time sparked a debate: Is it a transformative force or a fleeting experiment?

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

A Road Trip to White Male Meltdown

This twisted take on the great American road novel explores guilt, ego, and the restless mind of a man fleeing a failing marriage

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

Connect Before You Correct

Facts rarely change minds; warmth does. Connection disarms defensiveness, turning resistance into willingness to learn

time to read

4 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

Behind Closed Doors

Inside India's growing constellation of private supper clubs, cultural circles, and members-only societies

time to read

2 mins

November 02, 2025

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

The New Indian Express Sambalpur

'We can't Live Under a Threat'

Rebecca Ferguson speaks with Hilary Morgan about her latest film, A House of Dynamite, and why it is important to have conversations about nuclear powers

time to read

3 mins

November 02, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size