OP Sindoor sends clear message to Pak on state-sponsored terrorism: Congress MP Tewari

 Congress MP Manish Tewari. (Photo/ANI)

Chandigarh [India], May 13 (ANI): Congress MP Manish Tewari on Tuesday asserted that India’s response to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack and the subsequent retaliations has sent a clear message to Pakistan that using terrorism as an instrument of state policy will invite severe consequences.
Tewari lauded the Indian Armed Forces for their execution of Operation Sindoor, which targeted nine terror infrastructures in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK) after the attack that claimed 26 lives.
“One thing is very evident, that a message has gone to Pakistan that if it continues to use terror as an instrument of state policy, there will be punitive consequences, and those punitive consequences in the aftermath of the Pahalgam massacre were executed by the Indian Armed Forces,” Tewari told ANI.
He emphasised that the operation, launched on May 7, demonstrated India’s resolve to counter Pakistan’s state-sponsored terrorism.
Tewari expressed hope that Pakistan’s leadership would reconsider its approach, noting its use of “nuclear blackmail” for state-sponsored terrorism.
“I think the Pakistani leadership would have realised that it cannot be business as usual. They cannot use nuclear blackmail in order to continue with state-sponsored terror. I do hope that the Pakistani leadership, both the civilian leadership and more importantly the military leadership and even most importantly the Pakistani deep state, which has spawned these semi-state actors, would get the message very clearly,” the Congress MP stated.
Tewari’s comments came following the May 10 understanding of the cessation of hostilities between India and Pakistan.
This came after India’s decisive military response to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack. Operation Sindoor, launched on May 7, targeted terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir, leading to the death of over 100 terrorists affiliated with terror outfits like the Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen.
After the attack, Pakistan retaliated with cross-border shelling across the Line of Control and Jammu and Kashmir as well as attempted drone attacks along the border regions, following which India launched a coordinated attack and damaged radar infrastructure, communication centres and airfields across 11 airbases in Pakistan. (ANI)

This story is not been edited by Take One Television & Digital Network Staff and is auto-generated from syndicated feed

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