The Indian Parliament has finally decided to hold a detailed discussion next week on Modi government’s Operation Sindoor after calls for accountability grow in India.
Opposition leader, Rahul Gandhi, strongly criticized the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for hiding Indian military losses and failures.
Many Indian defence analysts and intellectuals have pointed out that India failed to achieve any military or political objective through Operation Sindoor.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has also lashed out at Modi multiple times over US President Donald Trump’s claims of a ceasefire between India and Pakistan.
Indian Parliament to debate Operation Sindoor
“How can the Prime Minister give a statement? Kya bolenge PM, ki Trump ne karwaya hai? (What will he say? That Trump has announced it? He can’t say it, but it is the truth. The entire world knows that Trump has announced a ceasefire. We can’t hide from reality,” Gandhi said.
Modi government has maintained that the ceasefire between India and Pakistan occurred after direct communication between DGMOs of both countries on May 10.
However, US President has on multiple occasions taken credit for stopping a war between India and Pakistan.
Pakistan officially endorsed Trump’s version of the narrative and praised his leadership for securing peace in South Asia.
Since the May war between India and Pakistan, Modi has avoided going to the Parliament over Operation Sindoor despite repeated requests by opposition and civil activists.
Multiple experts have highlighted that Narendra Modi often played with fire by creating artificial tensions in the region to garner local support from his extremist base voters.
Gandhi has also criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s foreign policy, saying that after “Operation Sindoor,” India is facing global isolation.
He stated that the military operation heightened regional tensions and presented serious diplomatic challenges for India on the international stage.
Speaking to journalists, Rahul Gandhi said that all of Modi’s “personal diplomacy” efforts have failed. As soon as the crisis began, none of India’s close allies, including the US, UK, France, Russia, or the European Union, openly supported India, exposing the true state of its foreign policy.