Experts Back Rajnath Singh's 'Fear for Peace' Message to Pakistan

Defence experts have endorsed Defence Minister Rajnath Singh's deterrence message to Pakistan, "bhay bin hoye na preet" (no love without fear). Former NSA advisory board member Tilak Devasher noted that India's previous goodwill gestures were misinterpreted as weakness by Pakistan. Senior Fellow Sushant Sareen argued that instilling fear and pressure is more effective than pursuing friendship. Both experts emphasized dealing with Pakistan from a position of strength rather than expecting friendly relations.

Key Points: Rajnath Singh's Deterrence Strategy on Pakistan Gets Experts' Nod

  • Rajnath Singh's "bhay bin hoye na preet" deterrence message backed by experts
  • Tilak Devasher says India's past goodwill seen as weakness by Pakistan
  • Sushant Sareen advocates instilling fear and dropping "nice guy" approach
  • Experts call for dealing with Pakistan from a position of strength
3 min read

"Keep them under check, talk to them with strength": Experts reflect on Rajnath Singh's message to Pakistan, emphasise on deterrence strategies

Defence experts support Rajnath Singh's message to Pakistan: "Bhay bin hoye na preet". They emphasize strength, deterrence, and instilling fear over goodwill.

"I think fear works best. If people or neighbours are afraid of you, of how much damage you can cause to them, how much harm you can do to them. - Sushant Sareen"

New Delhi, April 30

Defence Experts weighed in on India's new diplomatic approach with Pakistan, backing Defence Minister Rajnath Singh's message "bhay bin hoye na preet", underlining the necessity to maintain the "position of strength" and to "instil fear", dropping the strategy to expect friendly relations.

In a conversation during ANI's National Security Summit 2.0, Tilak Devasher, Former Member of the NSA advisory board, noted India's previous attempt at "goodwill" with Pakistan has been interpreted as "weakness."

"I took it as a strength that you can only be friends if you are sure about yourself, sure about your position, and you speak from a position of strength. I think what he (Rajnath Singh) was trying to say, what I got, the sense that you have to be strong and powerful," he said.

"You keep them under check, keep them, talk to them from strength, don't show any weakness. Pakis will not understand goodwill. They think it's a weakness," he added.

Observer Research Foundation Senior Fellow Sushant Sareen also backed the statement, adding the necessity to instil fear and pressure them to bring them under control. He criticised the previous efforts of acting as a "nice guy" to cultivate friendship.

"I think fear works best. If people or neighbours are afraid of you, of how much damage you can cause to them, how much harm you can do to them, how much pressure you can bring them under, nothing works like that. All this nonsense about friendship, goodwill, doesn't work," Sushant Sareen said.

"Our problem has been, and I blame a lot of Indian bureaucracy and the culture of the Indian government, that we must always be nice to people. We must cultivate friendship. You know, we must be seen as the nice guys. Listen, nice guys finish last. Right?" he said.

Sareen pushed to act as a "big guy" who knows how to get Pakistan in line and drop the idea of friendship and deal with them with "disdain"

"Don't be the nice guy. Be the big guy. I think you have to keep piling up the pressure. You have to hurt them wherever you can hurt them. Don't give any quarter to them. And stop this nonsense of Wasim bhai aaye the aur main Akram bhai se milne gaya. They are not your bhai. Just drop the idea. That's nonsense. So, deal with them with disdain," he said.

Rajnath Singh, addressing the ANI National Security Summit 2.0, noted that a powerful deterrence is essential for peace and stability in international relations.

Giving the mantra of "Bhay bin hoye na preet" (There can be no love without fear), Singh said, "Operation Sindoor was a concrete manifestation of deterrence. I recall only one line about deterrence: "Bhay bin hoye na preet," meaning there can be no love without fear. This is the essence of deterrence. The same holds true in international relations. A powerful deterrence is essential for peace and stability."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
This is a nuanced take. On one hand, I agree we need a strong deterrence, but "instilling fear" as a primary strategy might be oversimplified. Diplomacy requires a mix of strength and smart engagement. We shouldn't close all windows for dialogue either. The "nice guy" approach definitely failed, but the "big guy" attitude needs careful execution to avoid unnecessary escalation.
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Rahul R
Absolutely spot on. Pakistan has repeatedly misinterpreted our goodwill gestures as weakness. From Kargil to Uri to Pulwama - they only understand the language of force. Let them fear us, let them think twice before sending their terrorists across the border. Jai Hind! 🙏
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Vikram M
I'm a bit skeptical here. Don't get me wrong - we must be strong. But "deal with disdain"? That sounds like we're becoming the bully. Pakistan has its own public opinion, its own military complex. We need smart deterrence, not just taunting. Also, calling them "Pakis" in official discourse is disrespectful. Let's be strong, but also maintain dignity.
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Priya S
"Be the big guy" - I love this! We've been the nice guy for too long, and what did it get us? More terrorism, more proxy wars. Time to use our military and economic might to keep them in check. Those Balakot strikes and Operation Sindoor sent the right message. Strength with restraint - that's the Indian way.
K
Karthik V
It's refreshing to see our leaders finally acknowledging the ground reality. We tried the hand of friendship - Lahore bus, Agra

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