India’s Skies, the West’s Delusion

0
India's Skies, the West's Delusion

Why New Delhi’s Stumble in Operation Sindoor Exposes a Flawed Bet Against China

The Indian Air Force’s recent skirmish with Pakistan lays bare a delusion that’s been festering in Western capitals. And so, the West anoints India as the grand bulwark against China? Really?

This morning’s Operation Sindoor – India’s salvo of 24 missiles against supposed terror nests in Muzaffarabad and beyond, avenging a Pahalgam atrocity – ended not in triumph but embarrassment. Pakistan claims five Indian jets, Rafales among them, fell to its Chinese-gifted PL-15s. India demurs, but the silence is louder than the denials. If New Delhi can’t outfly a cash-strapped rival, what possesses the West to anoint it the bulwark against Beijing’s meticulously modernised juggernaut?

The West’s India fetish is less strategy than a kind of geopolitical haute couture—dazzling, expensive, and ill-suited to the occasion. From Washington’s think-tanks to Whitehall’s drawing rooms, the Quad’s architects style India as a democratic colossus, a billion-strong riposte to Beijing’s Pacific swagger. Yet Operation Sindoor lays bare the couture’s loose stitching. India’s military, vast as a Mughal court, is throttled by procurement farce and doctrinal cobwebs. Rafales, once a diplomatic coup, arrived amid scandal; the Tejas fighter, a nationalist daydream, lingers in prototype purgatory. China, meanwhile, mints its arsenal with the cold precision of a Swiss watchmaker. The contrast is not kind.

Pakistan, that eternal thorn, didn’t need scale to wound. Its pilots, wielding PL-15s that outrange India’s Meteor missiles, turned numerical inferiority into a seminar on tactical guile. If India falters here, what hope against China’s Himalayan probes? Ladakh’s 2020 humiliations – supply lines frayed, troops frostbitten – linger, despite New Delhi’s hurried roadworks. The West, ever fond of grand narratives, ignores this at its peril. The Quad, a diplomatic Instagram filter, assumes an India that exists more in PowerPoint than practice.

Oh, India has its charms. Its navy prowls the Indian Ocean, a quiet menace to China’s maritime dreams. The Rafale, when not grounded, is a formidable beast. But these are cameos in a saga of systemic drift—corruption, lethargy, and a political class that mistakes Modi’s charisma for Clausewitz. The West’s bet on India recalls a gambler at Monte Carlo, doubling down on charm and demographics against Beijing’s stacked deck.

Operation Sindoor is no death knell, but it’s a cracked mirror. India must trade bravado for competence; the West, flattery for realism.

Until then, China, watching from the sidelines, will be smirking!