Terrorism as Strategy: When the Real Attack Comes from Within
Terrorism as Strategy: When the Real
Attack Comes from Within
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Terrorism is rarely random. It’s
a tool. Sometimes used by the powerless to shake power. More often, used by the
powerful to control the powerless.
In global geopolitics, we've seen
this before. The U.S. armed militias to fight Russia in Afghanistan. When the
war ended, they walked away. What rose from that abandonment? Al-Qaeda. When
the same strategy repeated in the Middle East, it birthed ISIS. That's what
happens when statecraft plays God with violent proxies.
But in India, terrorism has
evolved into something darker. It’s not an insurgency. It’s political theater.
In earlier governments, when
terror struck, ministers resigned. Heads rolled. Accountability was expected.
But under Modi’s BJP, every attack is followed not by answers but by applause.
Flags wave. Emotions surge. Votes get cast. And no one is held responsible.
Remember Pulwama? Soldiers were killed
days before the election. No military accountability. No intelligence failures
admitted. Just emotional exploitation, surgical strikes, and an election
victory.
Now, a blast in Delhi
conveniently lands ahead of a crucial voting phase. Modi leaves the country.
Shah’s busy plotting Bihar. Who’s in charge? Doesn’t matter. Because all the
ruling party needs is one explosion, one hashtag, and the herd will scream
“Modi, Modi” on cue.
This isn’t governance. This is a
production. A nation run like a reality show, scripted, timed, weaponized.
And the audience? Numb.
Conditioned. Socially engineered.
We are watching a country where a
chaiwala is ignored until he wears saffron robes. Where illiteracy is sold as
authenticity. Where education is mocked, and slogans are sacred. Where logic is
treason, and propaganda is patriotism.
Modi didn’t invent this strategy.
He just perfected it. Hate is currency. Chaos is a campaign strategy. Terror is
political capital.
And social media? Once a tool for
free speech, now a toxic wasteland of paid trolls, fake narratives, and hate
machines. Truth doesn’t stand a chance when the algorithm rewards outrage.
The real attack on India isn’t
coming from across the border. It’s coming from inside the government. The
public is being distracted, divided, and dehumanized not by bombs, but by
belief systems designed to keep them angry, blind, and obedient.
Ask yourself: Why are no heads
rolling? Why is no one ever accountable? Why do attacks always arrive right on
schedule, just before elections? Why is grief always redirected into votes?
Because this isn’t failure. Its
design.
And the saddest part? The victims
cheer for it.
India is not asleep. India is
sedated. Numbed by a decade of manufactured rage and wrapped in saffron-tinted
pride. This isn’t nationalism. It’s national hypnosis.
The terror isn’t in the blast.
It’s in what comes after nothing. No answers. No justice. Just slogans. Just
silence. Just more votes.
The word terrorism has become the favorite detergent of dirty politics. It cleans up every political crime neatly, especially under the Modi government. Whenever the heat rises, out comes the “terror” card, perfect for winning elections, changing the topic, distracting the public, and blaming whoever dares to think differently. A masterstroke really divides the nation, ruling over its wounds. And who pays the price? Not the powerful, of course. It’s always the innocent minorities, the poor, and the lower castes who bleed for the sins of the privileged. India hardly holds a monopoly on hypocrisy; across the world, “civilized” nations have made scapegoating an art form. However, India’s version has an extra twist: a judiciary that appears to be allergic to courage. Our courts prefer silence over truth, comfort over justice, and servitude over spine. Bravo, democracy mission accomplished.
ReplyDeleteYou’re absolutely right, you’ve said the silent truth out loud, the one most people are too scared to utter. Ever since independence, religious groups have been working tirelessly to dismantle the very democracy that gave them freedom. If one traces every major terrorist act in India, the fingerprints often lead back to some ideological or religious outfit, and the RSS tops that list, beginning with the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. Sardar Patel was absolutely right when he wanted to banish the RSS from India. Unfortunately, Nehru viewed that move as too authoritarian a decision that, in hindsight, might have saved India from decades of communal poison had Patel’s instinct prevailed. From there, the story of terror was repackaged, marketed as nationalism, painted in saffron, and sold as patriotism. It took leaders like Indira Gandhi to stare this monster in the eye and still move the nation forward. She had flaws, but she never traded India’s integrity for political survival. Today’s rulers, however, have perfected that dark art; they’ve turned fear into a policy, hate into a campaign, and lies into a virtue. And somehow, they still call it nation-building.
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