By Dipak Kurmi
Terrorism, in its contemporary manifestation, is not a crime of momentary rage or spontaneous passion—it is a meticulously organised, cost-effective instrument of asymmetric warfare. For decades, I have maintained that terrorism is essentially a low-cost war, wielded by states and non-state actors alike to destabilise societies, erode national confidence, and cripple the sovereign functions of targeted states. Its preferred targets are not always the armed forces but often unarmed civilians, whose very existence and identities are symbolically attacked to degrade social cohesion and demoralise state institutions. It is a war of stealth, deception, and calculated brutality, designed not merely to kill but to erode the soul of a nation.
The broader architecture of terrorism reveals that its objectives are rarely confined to immediate violence. It is a deeply insidious strategy aimed at undermining trust within communities, disrupting public order, and creating a pervasive sense of insecurity that gnaws at the faith of people in their government’s ability to protect them. Beyond the bomb blasts and massacres lies a more sinister ambition: to paralyse the institutional capacities of the state and obstruct its rise, especially in the case of aspirational nations like India. Terrorism is thus not just an act of violence—it is a tool of geopolitical engineering.
In the Indian context, the orchestrated use of Islamic terrorism by Pakistan’s military establishment exemplifies the weaponisation of radicalism for strategic ends. The Pakistani deep state has built a vast transnational infrastructure of terror, encompassing ideological radicalisation, narcotics, arms trade, and counterfeit currency to destabilise India. Despite some of these militant proxies turning inward and generating a boomerang effect within Pakistan, the country’s military-intelligence complex has continued to support and cultivate such networks. Their aim is clear: to fracture India’s national cohesion, target its public spaces, and retard its optimal growth as a regional and global power.
Yet, India’s response mechanisms remain constrained. Neither the conventional criminal justice system, with its procedural inertia and institutional vulnerabilities, nor routine military responses, limited by diplomatic sensitivities and logistical constraints, can decisively neutralise this threat within a definitive timeframe. The reality is sobering: while targeted military strikes, such as the surgical operations carried out by India in retaliation to terror attacks, help in degrading enemy infrastructure and delivering a powerful psychological message, they remain insufficient to dismantle a well-entrenched and ideologically driven global terror-industrial complex.
This is not to underplay the strategic necessity of military action. A military response becomes essential, even unavoidable, when national institutions are breached by foreign-backed terror elements. Precision strikes by Indian defence forces inside Pakistan—confirmed by even sceptical Western media such as The New York Times—have not only demonstrated operational capability but also exposed Pakistan’s deceptive narrative warfare. However, such responses, while tactically effective, are not strategically conclusive. Over-reliance on military options against irregular warfare—especially for a developing nation like India, dependent on imported defence hardware—can become an unsustainable drain on resources and national morale.
It is vital to understand that terrorism today is not a standalone threat. It exists in symbiosis with organised crime, ideological radicalisation, and geopolitical patronage. The same networks that traffic arms and drugs also finance terrorist operations. Dirty money generated through illicit trade and corruption finds its way into the hands of radicals. It is estimated that organised crime in India may be generating hundreds of billions of dollars to fund local and regional terror networks. This nexus not only corrodes state capacity from within but also subverts law enforcement, judicial processes, and even policymaking.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has rightly identified this triangle of threat—terrorism, radicalism, and organised crime—as a structural danger to national security. But India is not alone in grappling with this monster. According to Brown University’s “Cost of War” project, the United States spent nearly $8 trillion in its global war on terror, resulting in over 5 million human casualties, only to arrive at an inconclusive outcome. The war not only drained American resources but also allowed China to outpace the U.S. in critical advanced technologies. This underscores a stark lesson: military might alone cannot defeat an ideologically resilient and globally interconnected terror network.
Pakistan, despite harbouring Osama bin Laden and providing safe havens to terror leaders, has faced no existential consequence. This is partly because certain global powers perceive its capacity to incubate and export terrorism as a strategic asset. Some within Western establishments are suspected of maintaining covert linkages with the Pakistani deep state, even as overt military aid has been reduced. Moreover, Pakistan’s increasing reliance on Chinese weaponry could potentially neutralise India’s conventional advantage. While the Indian military remains professionally superior, its adversary’s access to high-end Chinese defence platforms and willingness to act without domestic accountability presents a real and ongoing challenge.
The internal dimensions of the threat are equally alarming. India is being bled by a thousand invisible cuts, and not all of them are foreign-inflicted. Some are self-inflicted wounds, caused by corruption, institutional subversion, and intellectual denialism. Certain influential sections within India, knowingly or unknowingly, abet the objectives of India’s adversaries by downplaying threats, enabling radical narratives, or obstructing counter-terror frameworks. This silent sabotage hampers our performance on governance indices, technological innovation, and economic output—areas where China, despite being authoritarian and opaque, continues to outperform India.
Clandestine global crime networks, operating with near impunity, have succeeded in establishing parallel regimes in vulnerable nations. In parts of South America and Africa, such networks have effectively hijacked state institutions. India, too, risks similar institutional capture if the threat is not addressed through systemic overhaul. These entities do not just infiltrate institutions—they neuter them, making the state incapable of defending itself or advancing its developmental agenda. The intersection of geopolitics, organised crime, and ideological radicalisation is thus the new theatre of modern warfare.
This is why the Prime Minister’s vision of “zero tolerance” to terrorism must be interpreted not as a slogan but as a blueprint for systemic transformation. India needs to innovate governance models that not only bolster economic and technological capabilities but also harden internal resilience. We need to strengthen our cyber capabilities, develop indigenous intelligence infrastructure, reform policing, and streamline counter-radicalisation efforts. Simultaneously, we must identify and neutralise enablers of organised crime that nourish the terror ecosystem.
Terrorists may be the frontline attackers, but they are expendable proxies. The real threat lies in their backers—the financiers, ideological propagandists, and geopolitical patrons. Winning this war demands not just courage on the battlefield but clarity in policy, reform in institutions, and agility in governance. It also demands global partnerships based on shared intelligence, coordinated sanctions, and real-time action against state sponsors of terror.
India stands at a pivotal juncture. We have the opportunity to craft a new national security doctrine that aligns with our democratic values, leverages our demographic potential, and safeguards our strategic autonomy. But for that, we must recognise that terrorism is not merely a security issue—it is a civilisational challenge. To defeat it, India must not only be strong, but also wise.
(The writer can be reached at dipakkurmiglpltd@gmail.com)