India’s Geopolitical Isolation and the Return of Urban Terror

Syllabus: Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security.

Context

  • India is facing a period described as its moment of reckoning in global affairs.
  • Despite strong diplomatic skills, India increasingly appears as an outlier in international politics.

India’s Growing Global Isolation

  • India is absent from major peace initiatives in West Asia and Europe.
  • It appears uninvolved in emerging Indo-Pacific dynamics.
  • South Asia is in turmoil, reducing India’s dependable partners.
  • Countries such as Afghanistan, Nepal, Maldives, and Myanmar show instability affecting India’s neighbourhood.
  • Daily new threats, including cyber threats, compound the situation.

Hostility on India’s Western and Eastern Flanks

  • India now faces two hostile neighbours: Pakistan in the west and Bangladesh in the east.
  • In Pakistan, the 27th Constitutional Amendment Bill strengthens military control and disrupts civil–military balance.
  • A new provision creates a Chief of Defence Forces, elevating Field Marshal Asim Munir as military supremo.
  • Munir now has sole control over nuclear assets and full authority against perceived enemies, including India.
  • Military dictatorships historically remain hostile to democratic India, increasing miscalculation risks.
  • Bangladesh’s interim government appears unfriendly, showing willingness to improve ties with Pakistan.
  • A Pakistan Navy ship’s visit to Bangladesh after decades indicates renewed military presence in the Bay of Bengal.

Return of Urban Terrorism

  • India faces a new phase of urban terror, different from 2008 Mumbai attacks.
  • The current module spans Srinagar–Faridabad–Delhi, involving medical practitioners linked to Al-Falah University.
  • The group draws motivation from the 1992 Babri Masjid demolition, unlike earlier lumpen-driven attacks.
  • Terror finds supporters among the educated elite, marking a qualitative shift.
  • The module accumulated 3,000 kg explosives and executed an explosion near Red Fort, raising security concerns.
  • It operated through encrypted channels and raised funds via academic networks posing as charitable entities.
  • Investigations show links with Pakistan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Türkiye.
  • The incident exposes a local radicalisation trend, contradicting claims that locals were not joining terrorism.

Need for Vigilance

  • India must prevent religious fascism from growing amid external instability.
  • Eternal vigilance is essential to avoid further deterioration of national security.

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