Lt Gen Abhay Krishna (Retd) has been chief of three Army commands - South Western Command, Eastern Command and Central Command.
Silence from US to Tokyo is subtle nod of approval for Op. Sindoor
“Admitting Pak defeat is also admitting poor performance of Chinese and American systems”, he says
# We are having this conversation at a time when the Govt of India has decided to depute as many as seven delegations of MPs to various countries to give India's version of the Op Sindoor and the essential salient feature of Indo-Pak relations in the wake of this latest conflict.
How do you look at the entire spectrum ... Indian success in the military operation and subsequent developments?
Lt Gen Abhay Krishna (Retd):
Life always puts one at crossroads .... one way or the other. This time again, we have achieved a lot. But we are still at a crossroad. Maybe some locations and some goal posts have changed.
The Indian military’s success in Operation Sindoor has created a moment of hard-won leverage, but today wars aren’t just won fighting across the border through bunkers and airstrikes. They also need to be won in conference rooms and press briefings too.
This domain is called ‘perception management’.
Recognising this, India has pivoted fast. The formation of all-party delegations to key world capitals signals something deeper than diplomacy. It signals political unity which is very encouraging.
In our country where internal disagreement is the norm, this rare consensus projects our strength abroad. It tells the world that on matters of sovereignty and territorial integrity, India speaks with one voice.
While the soldiers held the line, now it’s the diplomats and politicians who will win the peace and the narrative.
# But will that help Pakistan?
Lt Gen Abhay Krishna (Retd):
You have said it... I do not think that it will help. Actually, Pakistan has lost in every department of the game. Western and American experts have even said that Pakistan ran away seeking peace and ceasefire, like dogs do with tails between their legs.
But it is always wise never to underestimate the enemies. Moreover, Pakistan does not have a government which is accountable to people.
Its government is accountable to army only and the army is accountable to none. The helpless people are destined to suffer and get humiliated repeatedly
# So, where do we go from here ... next five years or 20 years... What will be Pakistan's fate?
Lt Gen Abhay Krishna (Retd):
I cannot predict anyone's future. But I can surely predict that as long as Pakistan is there, India's problems at the borders and with terrorism front are far from over.
Pakistan's economic condition is grim and both internal and external security landscapes have nosedived. It's almost pathetic as far as its defence systems are concerned. The larger mass Pakistanis are not at all happy about the prevailing situation but they are unable to do much.
# So, how should India prepare and how would Pakistan react on ground and diplomacy at least in the next few years to come?
Lt Gen Abhay Krishna (Retd):
During the stint of Imran Khan, the Pakistan army had earned a very bad reputation. It has not changed much lately also and Pak army has turned unpopular and being extremely political.
These are virtues only of a totally unprofessional military in any country.
Now this Op Sindoor and fighting the so called “Kafir nation” India as they say, this can help Gen Syed Asim Munir re-frame the public image of the military. I think people are yet to realise and understand how badly they have actually lost in just three days of military action unleashed by India.
And even if they understand, they may take another 30 years, that is next generation, to unite and decide about confronting their own army who are mainly responsible for the pathetic state of their country prevailing since the time they came into existence.
Ends
Well...Well...Well.
ReplyDelete"Perception Management" is synonym of "Narrative Building". The initial part of Women Officers briefing the Nation was a fantastic move. Why only those two Officers were selected for the task, is well evident. Thereafter, while the tempo of kinetic operations went high, the tempo of narrative building seemed feeble. The scenario changed suddenly with the three DGs of Operations coming in forefront and made that famous "body bags" statement.
Till morning of May 10th US was saying that it will not interfere as it did not concern them, but abruptly "Tweet-fired a Cease-fire". This indicates that there has been something that has hurt not only Pakistan, but also sent a splinter to Washington. That's how the activities of Boron etc started - all happening quietly. Is it happening quietly to mitigate the "panic" or is it happening quietly to maintain a "secret" ? I think, it is happening because there was a "secret panic" in Washington.
Why China did not give overt support? I guess, unless they are not affected, they shall not indulge. They have enough "disputed areas" with India to resolve, cannot afford to open another "conflict of interest", especially when they find vibes of "trade-revival" from Bharat.
Pakistan is getting sufficient "Bamboo" from Afghanistan & Balochistan. I believe IMF also gave them a mouthful yesterday.
The idea of sending all Party Delegations to narrate our narrative is good. Surprisingly, the Harvard University's South Asia Institute expressing outrage by conducting a conference is something that our think tanks could not pre-empt. More surprising is to know who funded the conference.
Operation Sindoor is not for Bhartiya Armed Forces alone. It is for every Bhartiya - Businesspeople, Actors, Sportsperson, Artists etc. Business cannot be as usual. -- Sadaiv Vidyarthi, Lucknow
Shivkashi fireworks companies can produce better quality rockets compared to Chinese missiles .. --- Swadesh K. - Chennai
ReplyDeleteWell said Gen Abhay. But given the economic situation and water diplomacy Indian government has unleashed, 30 years may come too sooner than 30 years
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