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Operation Sindoor, Nari Shakti, and the new normal in Asia
The Sunday Guardian
|May 18, 2025
India has not just signaled its resolve, it has exposed Pakistan's fragility. This moment is not just strategic but civilizational.

India's actions have laid bare what it has long argued: that terrorism is not a rogue element of Pakistan's state machinery but its central element. This isn't just a claim, it is a fact, demonstrated on the ground and acknowledged across global capitals. The illusion of strategic parity has collapsed.
India has executed precision strikes deep into Pakistani territory, dismantling terror camps, disarming military targets, and neutralizing strategic assets once believed untouchable. No military or terrorist target that India sought to attack was Pakistan able to defend. Be it Chinese patrons or recent Turkish ones, when the moment of reckoning came for it, Pakistan was lacking, and by extension, so were its patrons.
India has not just signaled its resolve—it has exposed Pakistan's fragility. This moment is not just strategic but civilizational. For the first time, Pakistan finds itself confronted with an India that is no longer reactive or tentative, but a nation that is prepared, unafraid, and unyielding. Pakistan's myth of strategic depth—the belief that chaos across its western border buys it leverage in the east—now lies in tatters. The unholy fusion of military ambition, religious extremism, and state collapse has been spotlighted in full daylight, and it is not a sight that evokes sympathy or respect. What it evokes is disgust and alarm.
While Pakistani generals are busy ranting on television, its ministers posturing themselves with their borrowed English, Pakistani citizens wait in lines, deprived of dignity and as instruments of Pakistan's deep state military apparatus. A nation's might is not just in its missiles but also in how it connects with ordinary citizens. In Pakistan, when even tea becomes scarce, it's not deterrence but submission.
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