When Peace Becomes a Wound: India, Terrorism, and the Weight of Restraint
Iâve always believed in peace. I still do. I donât dream of war. I donât find glory in bloodshed. And I certainly donât believe revenge heals grief. But what happens when the very peace youâre protecting is the reason you keep losing your people? What happens when the other side doesnât believe in peace at all?
This blog isnât written out of hatred. Itâs written out of heartbreak, confusion, and the raw frustration of watching the same pattern play on loop - a terrorist attack, innocent lives lost, silence from the world, and once again, India is told to be âmature,â âcalm,â and ârestrained.â
How many Pulwamas? How many Pahalgams? How many coffins wrapped in our tricolour will it take before the world understands that peace without accountability is just a pause before the next tragedy?
India has tried. Again and again. Diplomatic talks, bilateral agreements, backchannel negotiations, and yet, terrorist camps continue to thrive across the border. How long are we expected to act like itâs not happening? And more importantly, why must we always be the ones trying?
Yes, I am anti-war. Yes, I believe in dialogue. But donât confuse that with weakness. Because defending your people is not the opposite of peace ,it is the very foundation of it. What India did with Operation Sindoor wasnât about revenge. It was about drawing a line , a line that shouldâve been drawn long ago.
And let's address the said "diplomatic peace mediation" : the hypocrisy of international response. IMF loans flowing into a country that has harboured, sheltered, and at times even celebrated known terrorists. Social media giants gag Indian voices calling out terrorism, but conveniently stay silent when the hate flows the other way. Neutrality? Really? Or is it just comfortable indifference?
No, I donât hate Pakistani civilians. I never will. But I will not pretend that both sides are equally innocent. I will not chant "peace" if it comes at the cost of more Indian blood. Because thatâs not peace. Thatâs surrender.
India has done enough. Now, India is doing what it must. And if the world wonât understand that , maybe it never really cared.
I write this as someone who aches every time a soldier doesnât return home. As someone who still wants peace , but not the kind that requires us to die for it.