One month has passed since Operation Sindoor began, and the nation is still in the dark. Senior AAP leader and Rajya Sabha MP, Sanjay Singh, highlighted that the sudden ceasefire had triggered a storm of unanswered questions, but Prime Minister Modi still remains silent. As Donald Trump boasts about arm-twisting India into halting its offensive, the government offers no rebuttal, no clarity. A golden opportunity to capture PoK and strike deep into Balochistan slipped away under pressure.
The Rajya Sabha MP pointed out that while Indian forces await crucial weaponry, the Prime Minister seems more invested in boosting his friends’ business empires. And as India fumbles its diplomacy, Pakistan walks into the UN’s anti-terror committee as Vice President. This isn’t strategic restraint — it’s a foreign policy failure writ large.
Senior AAP leader and Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh said that a month has passed since the start of Operation Sindoor, and the government has clarified multiple times — including during the all-party meeting — that the operation is still ongoing. “Operation Sindoor did not begin to campaign for votes in favour of the Prime Minister or the BJP, nor was it launched for vote-bank politics. It was initiated after the horrifying incident in Pahalgam, where dreaded terrorists desecrated the sindoor of our sisters. Those terrorists have still not been arrested, not been caught, not been neutralised.”
Sanjay Singh said the core objective of Operation Sindoor was to take control of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) and completely eliminate terrorist bases. “It is the responsibility of the Government of India to fulfil this objective. The Prime Minister had a golden opportunity. He could have taken control of PoK, destroyed 21 terror camps completely, and even separated Balochistan from the map of Pakistan.”
He continued, “But he squandered this chance under pressure from Donald Trump. A month has passed, and I still want to ask the Prime Minister — why hasn’t he responded on this matter? President Trump has said not once but ten times, openly, that he threatened to cut off trade and that’s how he got the war stopped and enforced a ceasefire. All these questions remain unanswered, and the Prime Minister must respond.”
Referring to internal questions from the defence establishment, the Rajya Sabha MP asked why the government remains silent. “The nation wants to know what the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) questioned—about the aircraft crashes, and who will answer that? Clearly, no political party will answer. The Prime Minister must answer this.”
“Why can’t he come to Parliament and respond? What’s the issue? The Air Force Chief has clearly said that we don’t receive the weapons and jets we urgently need, on time. I ask the Prime Minister — what’s his real priority? The business interests of his friends or the weapons needed for national security,” he asked.
Sanjay Singh pointed out that the Prime Minister himself skipped the all-party meeting. “At that time, he was busy addressing election rallies in Bihar, meeting film stars, inaugurating projects in Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, and travelling to seek votes. He’s been to Bihar twice already. What exactly are his priorities? The nation deserves answers. Why didn’t the Prime Minister attend the all-party meeting? He has time for rallies, but not to answer the country’s serious questions.”
Highlighting the government’s lack of empathy, he criticised the Prime Minister for avoiding direct contact with the victims’ families. “The Prime Minister didn’t meet the families of those affected — except for one occasion, when he was in Kanpur for a rally and met them at the airport in an insulting manner, rather than visiting their homes. This shows the peak of the Prime Minister’s insensitivity. He should answer all these questions by coming to Parliament.”
On the Canadian Prime Minister extending an invitation for the G7 Summit, Sanjay Singh said that in many areas of foreign policy, this government has failed. The Prime Minister has travelled 129 times to 73 countries. What’s come of it? When conflict broke out between India and Pakistan, Nepal didn’t stand with us, nor did Bhutan, Sri Lanka, or even the Maldives. Even the President of Papua New Guinea, who once touched the Prime Minister’s feet, did not speak in India’s favour.
Sanjay Singh expressed concern over India’s delayed response and the international embarrassment India faced. “Only later did the Prime Minister realise he should send an all-party parliamentary delegation. But in the meantime, something shocking happened — the United Nations made Pakistan the Vice President of its Counter-Terrorism Committee. Can there be a bigger joke? The world’s biggest terror hub — Pakistan — is now the vice-chair of a committee deciding which countries are terrorists. And the Prime Minister hasn’t uttered a single word on this.”
Sanjay Singh concluded by stating, “Even the G7 invitation came in an insulting manner — only after media reports surfaced was India invited. If the Prime Minister is going to the G7 and is given a chance to speak, he must raise all these issues. He must ask how Pakistan got an IMF loan and how it was made Vice President of the UN’s Counter-Terrorism Committee. The Prime Minister must raise all these questions at G7.”