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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 15 May 2025

  1. Trumpeting claims
  2. Operation Sindoor — a reshaping of confrontation
  3. Principled criminalisation and the police as pivot


Context : Problematic Nature of Trumps Claims

  • Repeated Assertion: Trump has claimed five times that he mediated a ceasefire between India and Pakistan on May 10, hinting he averted a nuclear conflict.
  • Contradicted by India: The MEA has consistently rebutted these claims, asserting that the ceasefire was a bilateral military agreement between DGMOs of both countries.
  • Indian Narrative: India maintains that Pakistan reached out after suffering setbacks from Indian strikes during Operation Sindoor.

Relevance : GS 2(International Relations)

Practice Question : Discuss how third-party mediation attempts, like those claimed by U.S. President Donald Trump, challenge Indias core diplomatic principles. (15 marks)

Violation of Indias Core Diplomatic Principles

  • No Third-Party Mediation: Trump’s claims violate India’s long-held stance of not accepting third-party involvement in bilateral issues like Kashmir.
  • Internationalisation of Kashmir: His remarks undermine Indias position that Kashmir is an internal matter and not open to international negotiation.
  • False Equivalence: Trump’s framing of both India and Pakistan as equal contributors to conflict promotes hyphenation, which India strongly opposes.

Misleading Statements and Diplomatic Concerns

  • Trade Threats & Promises: Trump falsely claimed he used trade deals as leverage to push for peace, which MEA categorically denied.
  • Ignoring Terrorism: No mention of India’s key concern—cross-border terrorism from Pakistan—weakens India’s global case.
  • Trivialisation: Trump’s suggestion of a Modi-Sharif “dinner” makes light of serious geopolitical tensions.

Larger Strategic Implications

  • From Friend to Friction?: India must assess whether Trump’s statements reflect:
    • A personal eccentricity (“Trump being Trump”), or
    • A shift in U.S. policy towards South Asia.
  • Quad & Regional Balance: As a Quad member, the U.S. must not appear to side with narratives that contradict India’s security concerns.
  • China Factor: The growing China-Pakistan nexus may be reshaping U.S. calculus, causing indirect pressure on India.

 Indias Required Response

  • Clear Messaging Needed: India must firmly communicate its red lines to Washington, especially on:
    • No foreign mediation
    • Terrorism as the central issue
  • Preserve Credibility: India’s policy integrity and diplomatic credibility are at stake; hence strong diplomatic engagement is necessary.


Evolution of Warfare and Strategic Posture

  • Operation Sindoor marks a paradigm shift in South Asian military confrontation.
  • Moves beyond the traditional India-Pakistan bilateral conflict to represent a global model of modern warfare.
  • Warfare now involves a combination of technology, strategy, and psychological manipulation, not just physical combat.

Relevance : GS 3(Internal Security)

Practice Question : Operation Sindoor marks a new phase in Indias military doctrine. Critically evaluate the shift towards drone warfare and information warfare in the Indian strategic context. (15 marks)

Rise of Drone Warfare

  • Drone deployment is the centerpiece of this shift, replacing manned aircraft.
  • Use of swarms of inexpensive, expendable drones signifies an asymmetric technological leap.
  • India reportedly intercepted 300–400 Pakistani drones, showing the scale of drone-based warfare.
  • India’s use of SkyStriker kamikaze drones reflects the new trend of precision, low-risk, and intelligence-driven strikes.

Air Defence Transformation

  • India’s layered air defence integrates indigenous (Akash, QRSAM) and imported (S-400, Barak-8) systems.
  • Akashteer system enables real-time, digital integration of radar data for smarter threat response.
  • Defence strategy has shifted from static systems to adaptive, dynamic networks capable of neutralising simultaneous threats.

Information Warfare as a Strategic Weapon

  • Psychological operations and disinformation campaigns are now central to warfare.
  • Pakistan employed digital propaganda — doctored videos, fake narratives, and social media manipulation — to weaken morale and shift perceptions.
  • Similar trends seen in Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine conflicts, where information control is as crucial as military power.

Strategic Deterrence and Escalation Control

  • India’s response showcases escalation management without total war, allowing military assertion with diplomatic space.
  • The PM’s speech (May 12) reflects doctrinal evolution with three pillars:
    • Rapid, proportionate response to provocation.
    • Comprehensive offensive-defensive integration.
    • Advanced escalation control avoiding full-scale war.

Technological Independence and Self-Reliance

  • Emphasis on indigenous platforms like Akash and Project Kusha reflects:
    • Reduced foreign dependence
    • Boost to defence exports
    • Enhanced technological sovereignty

Jointness and Inter-Service Integration

  • Integrated Air Command and Control System (IACCS) enabled real-time coordination between Army, Navy, and Air Force.
  • Transition from conceptual jointness to operational synergy.
  • Unified intelligence support improved precision targeting and strategic planning.

Democratisation of Warfare Technology — Double-Edged Sword

  • Advanced tech is now accessible to state and non-state actors, including Pakistan.
  • Increases potential for asymmetric threats and hybrid warfare.
  • Necessitates overhauling India’s defence and intelligence architecture to remain ahead.

Redefining Victory and Warfare

  • Modern victory is not about territory but multi-dimensional dominance:
    • Technological superiority
    • Information control
    • Psychological edge
  • Traditional metrics of military success have become outdated.

Key Takeaway

  • Operation Sindoor symbolizes India’s shift from reactive defence to proactive, tech-savvy, multi-domain warfare—setting a template for future strategic conflicts.


Central Thesis

  • Criminalisation must be guided not only by substantive criminal law (what is criminal) but also by procedural criminal law (how it is enforced).
  • The police plays major role of this process, and their discretion must be regulated and principled.
  • The Supreme Court’s Imran Pratapgarhi v. State of Gujarat case highlights the need for procedural restraint and responsible policing.

Relevance : GS 2(Governance , Polity)

Practice Question : What do you understand by principled criminalisation”? Critically analyse the role of police discretion in shaping criminal justice outcomes in India. (15 marks)

Understanding Principled Criminalisation

  • It refers to legitimising the states power to label an act as criminal and impose punishment.
  • Criminalisation should align with:
    • Collective interests of society.
    • Violent attacks against individuals.
    • Violation of personal autonomy or rights (non-intervention principle).
  • Despite well-structured laws (like the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita), ground-level criminalisation can still be disproportionate or misused.

Importance of Procedure in Criminal Law

  • Procedural law (BNSS) is not just about ‘how’ but determines whether and how fairly criminalisation occurs.
  • Real criminalisation occurs through:
    • Detection → FIR → Investigation → Arrest → Prosecution → Conviction → Sentencing.
  • Discretion and bias in this process often lead to over-criminalisation or under-criminalisation of certain groups.

Police as the Pivot

  • Police are the primary agents in implementing criminal law.
  • Their discretionary powers (who to arrest, what to register) shape the actual reach of criminalisation.
  • Risks:
    • Overzealous policing of minor/non-harmful infractions.
    • Neglect of serious, harmful offences.
    • Frivolous or politically motivated FIRs.

Section 173(3) of BNSS: A Check on Overreach

  • Allows police 14 days for a preliminary inquiry before registering an FIR for certain offences (punishable between 3–7 years).
  • Intended to prevent misuse of police powers and unnecessary criminalisation.
  • Empowers police to filter out frivolous cases before formal proceedings.

Imran Pratapgarhi Case: A Procedural Landmark

  • Case facts:
    • FIR registered against a Rajya Sabha MP for an allegedly inflammatory poem.
    • Police failed to conduct mandatory preliminary inquiry as per Section 173(3).
  • Supreme Court quashed the FIR, citing non-compliance and misuse of procedural powers.
  • Emphasised that police have a duty to apply procedural safeguards, especially when fundamental rights (like speech) are involved.

Conclusion

  • Principled criminalisation = Substantive + Procedural discipline.
  • Police must act with accountability and restraint, especially when fundamental rights are at stake.
  • Judicial oversight is essential to ensure that the state’s coercive power is used responsibly and constitutionally.

May 2025
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