Ex-NSA had Shivshankar Menon urged govt to retaliate after 26/11

Ex-NSA had Shivshankar Menon urged govt to retaliate after 26/11

PTIUpdated: Thursday, May 30, 2019, 11:03 AM IST
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New Delhi : India would have responded differently to “Pakistan-sponsored” Mumbai terror attacks had there been a different “mix of people” at the helm, according to former foreign secretary and national security advisor Shivshankar Menon.

In his latest book titled ‘Choices: Inside the Making of India’s Foreign Policy’, Menon says that as foreign secretary he had ‘urged’ former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the then External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee that India should retaliate militarily as he felt Pakistan had “crossed the line” and the action demanded more than a “standard response”.

“My preference was for overt action against LeT headquarters in Muridke or the LeT camps in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and covert action against their sponsors, the ISI. Mukherjee seemed to agree with me and spoke publicly of all our options being open,” he writes.

“Personalities matter. With a different mix of people at the helm, it is quite possible that India would have chosen differently. In fact, if India is forced to make a similar choice in the future, I am sure it will respond differently,” he says.

Menon believes that an immediate visible retaliation would have been emotionally satisfying and gone some way towards erasing the “shame of incompetence” that India’s police and security agencies displayed in the glare of world’s television lights for three full days.

Published by Penguin, the book is an insider’s account of five major Indian foreign policy decisions in which Menon either participated directly or was associated with.

These “choices” include the India-US nuclear agreement, the first-ever boundary agreement between India and China, India’s decision not to use overt force against Pakistan after 26/11, the 2009 defeat of LTTE in Sri Lanka and India’s disavowal of the first-use of nuclear weapons.

Menon examines what these choices reveal about India’s strategic culture and decision-making, its policies towards the use of force, its long-term goals and priorities and its future behaviour.

He argues that while the Mumbai attacks, which claimed 166 lives, were unmatched in their level of organisation and “sheer savagery”, they, interestingly, united India as no other event except a war and helped the country organise the global community to “isolate Pakistan internationally”.

“India began to get unprecedented cooperation from Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf countries, and China, too, began to respond to requests for information on these groups,” he notes.

Terming India-Pakistan relation as one of the “major failures” of Indian foreign policy, Menon says that India’s relationship with Pakistan has been an “albatross that has hobbled Indian diplomacy” and enabled other powers to gain leverage in India’s and the subcontinent’s affairs.–

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