Close Menu
  • Indian Festivals 2026
  • Movie & OTT Releases This Week
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • NRI Life
  • Advertise with us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
  • Download Indian Community App
  • Advertise Here
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Indian CommunityIndian Community
Trending
  • 401(k) vs NPS: Should NRIs in the US Invest in India’s Pension Scheme?
  • Best Indian Baby Names Sanskrit 2026 — 60+ Meaningful Choices for Boys & Girls
  • Weekend OTT Watchlist: What to Stream This Weekend (March 27–29, 2026)
  • Satan – The Dark Movie Review: A Haunting Tamil Horror That Stays With You Long After the Credits Roll
  • Derby (2026) Review: A Feel-Good Malayalam Campus Entertainer Packed With Youth and Friendship
  • Toaster on Netflix: Rajkummar Rao’s Dark Comedy Has a Release Date — And It’s Gloriously Bizarre
  • Suyodhana Movie Review: Priyadarshi’s Career-Best Performance Powers This Gripping Sound-Driven Thriller
  • Nee Forever Review: A Charming Tamil Romance That Makes Modern Love Feel Real
  • Indian Festivals 2026
  • News
    • National
    • International
    • Entertainment
    • Scam Alerts
    • Achievements
    • Business
    • Health & Medicine
    • Science & Technology
    • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Latest Movie Releases
    • Latest OTT Releases
  • NRI Life
  • India & Culture
  • Health & Wellness
Indian CommunityIndian Community
Home » News » International
International

India's security and counter-terrorism approach transformed after 26/11: Report

Indian Community Editorial TeamBy Indian Community Editorial TeamNovember 24, 20253 Mins ReadNo Comments Add us to Google Preferred Sources
India's security and counter-terrorism approach transformed after 26/11: Report
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

New Delhi, Nov 24 (IANS) India has significantly strengthened its coastal surveillance, revamped intelligence-sharing systems, and enhanced the speed of its specialised response units since the November 26, 2008, terrorist attack in Mumbai, a report said on Monday.

It added that globally, understanding of the network of Pakistan-based militant groups has deepened considerably compared with 2008.

Writing for Global Order, political and security analyst Chris Blackburn stated that Operation Sindoor, launched in May 2025, demonstrated India’s increasing willingness to strike terrorist infrastructure directly—including facilities associated with Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed—whenever such threats breach its red lines.

“Yet the deeper challenge remains troubling and persistent. Many of the architects, facilitators, and ideologues behind 26/11 continue to reside openly in Pakistan, protected by layers of political ambiguity, judicial inertia, and bureaucratic indulgence. Their organisations rebrand, splinter, or mutate, maintaining the same goals under new banners,” Blackburn stated.

“The international community, meanwhile, often slips back into the easy rhetoric of ‘dialogue’ and ‘engagement,’ even when the empirical record shows that these groups operate with a sophistication and reach that no responsible state should tolerate. The complacency is widespread and familiar: a slow normalisation of terror as an unfortunate but routine hazard of an interconnected world,” he added.

According to the report in Global Order, each year, the anniversary of 26/11 compels reflection not only on the tragic loss of lives, but also on the anatomy of an attack that transformed India’s approach to security, diplomacy, and counter-terrorism. It stressed that Mumbai was not targeted at random–it symbolised India’s global identity as a hub of financial strength, cinematic imagination, and multicultural coexistence.

However, the report said, the conspiracy behind the attack originated far from the Gateway of India. It was conceived in Pakistan by Lashkar-e-Taiba, a jihadist organisation nurtured over years through a sophisticated combination of indoctrination, disciplined military-style training, and backing from Pakistan’s security establishment.

“Seventeen years on, that spirit remains the city’s most significant memorial. Our duty is to honour it with honesty and resolve. The tragedy of 26/11 was not inevitable; it was enabled. It will be repeated elsewhere—perhaps in different forms, through new technologies or new proxies—if the structures of impunity around cross-border terrorism persist. The world owes the victims of Mumbai more than condolences. It owes them vigilance. It owes them honesty. It owes them a refusal to normalise the kind of violence that aimed to turn one of the world’s great cities into a headline,” the report noted.

–IANS

scor/as

Add us to Google Preferred Sources
Indian Community Editorial Team

The Indian Community Editorial Team curates, verifies, and publishes stories that matter to Indians worldwide. From culture and community to business and innovation, our mission is to spotlight voices, ideas, and events that bring our global community closer together. Have news or a story to share? Submit it to us at [email protected].

Add A Comment
find baby names

Spain Draws 0-0 Against Egypt in World Cup Preparation Friendly

April 1, 2026

PBKS Captain Shreyas Iyer Fined for Slow Over-Rate in IPL Match

April 1, 2026

Pankaj Tripathi Reflects on Bihar’s Influence at Tokyo Event

April 1, 2026

Ilaiyaraaja to Score Music for Debut Film of Sivaji Ganesan’s Grandson

April 1, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
About Us
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
Corporate
  • Download Indian Community App
  • Advertise Here
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
© 2026 Designed by CreativeMerchants.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.