Sanjha Morcha

PC: Nagrota as shameful as 26/11 Says ownership of surgical strikes should’ve been left to Army

New Delhi, December 3

Former Union Home Minister P Chidambaram has said the recent Nagrota attack is as “shameful” as the 2008 Mumbai carnage and has “disproved” the belief that surgical strikes can end cross-border terrorism.Speaking at the launch of former National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon’s book, titled “Choices: Inside the making of India’s foreign policy”, Chidambaram said there was no “unified command” at the level of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).“What happened at Nagrota is just as shameful as what happened in Mumbai. The cross-border, cross-LoC action will not prevent Pakistan-based terrorist groups from attacking Indian installations and camps,” he said last night. “The strikes restore balance at the border. It sends a signal to Pakistan that if you can do it, we can do it. But to imagine that a surgical strike will put an end to cross-border action, that has been disproved by what has happened in Nagrota,” he said.He claimed that there was “no coherence” at the level of MHA and attributed it to discontinuation of a “good practice”. “I think the practice of having a Home Minister, home secretary, the special secretary, the DIB, the director of RAW and NSA meet every day was a good practice. The practice has stopped. That is why there is no coherence, no coordination, no unified command at the level of home affairs,” he said.About surgical strikes, Chidambaram said the ownership should have been left to the Army. “First, the ownership should have been left to the Army like we have in the past. Second, we should not make statements like ‘Pakistan called us yesterday and begged us to stop’ or make statements like ‘I will gouge their eyes’. These statements make us a laughing stock,” he said. — PTI

‘Engaging Pak the only answer’

  • Former Union Home Minister P Chidambaram said engaging Pakistan was the ‘only answer’ that India had
  • He said the present government started at one extreme and had now swung to another
  • “The first extreme was over-enthusiasm and the second is of their own making. Eventually, you have to live with your neighbours. The only answer is to engage Pakistan through trade, cultural exchanges or people-to-people exchanges,” he said