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Cost of terrorism has risen as India ushers in a new normal

The New Indian Express Kochi

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May 13, 2025

Operation Sindoor marked a decisive shift in India's counter-terrorism doctrine — not merely as a retaliatory action, but as a calculated strategy of cost escalation designed to deal with cross-border terrorism.

- JAYANTH JACOB @New Delhi

By striking terror infrastructure deep within Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), India signaled that cross-border terrorism would no longer be tolerated without a tangible and rising price.

Indian officials termed the strikes measured, proportionate, and non-escalatory, and the intent was anything but it being business as usual with Pakistan. The goal was to establish a new normal — one in which India responds decisively and with strategic clarity to every provocation, raising the cost for Pakistan's use of terror proxies and re-setting expectations for international actors accustomed to Indian restraint.

But the question remains, what would be the threshold for a retaliatory military action?

As explained by Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri on May 7, Operation Sindoor was guided by three core objectives: to prevent further terrorist activity, to deter the use of cross-border proxies by Pakistan-based terror groups, and to pre-empt specific threats identified through intelligence.

This framework aligns with a growing strategic shift in New Delhi's security thinking — limited, intelligence-led, and politically integrated operations that send a long-term message to Pakistan and the international community alike.

The trigger for Operation Sindoor came on April 22, when terrorists trained and armed in Pakistan operating under the cover name The Resistance Front, a Lashkar-e-Taiba offshoot — carried out a brutal attack in Pahalgam, killing 26 civilians.

MEER VERHALEN VAN The New Indian Express Kochi

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The New Indian Express Kochi

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The New Indian Express Kochi

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The New Indian Express Kochi

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Cong Bihar meet sees heated debate over 'selling of tickets, friendly fights'

DISCONTENT within the Bihar Congress surfaced sharply at the party’s first post-election review meeting, where several candidates flagged flaws in ticket allocation, selling of tickets and ‘friendly fights’ between allies as main reasons for the humiliating defeat in the recent Assembly polls.

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The New Indian Express Kochi

Police raid madrassas, masjids amid concerns over unlawful activities

AFTER an interstate ‘white-collar’ terror module linked to the November 10 Delhi blast was busted, police on Thursday conducted inspection of madrassas and masjids across Srinagar as part of a wider effort to curb unlawful and radical activities in places of worship.

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GROUNDWATER URANIUM NEEDS URGENT MITIGATION

A multi-agency study by Indian researchers published in Nature has found high levels of radioactive uranium-238 in breast-milk samples in Bihar.

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India's wait to be a $5-tn economy could get longer

IMF says it could take at least one more year than earlier projected to reach the milestone

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