
Public Trust Stands With Our Forces – Not with the Petty Politics of India’s Opposition
From the very first shot fired in Operation Sindoor, every Indian heart beat with anxiety and pride—for our uniformed heroes who stand between us and chaos. And yet, at this moment of national resolve, the Congress-led opposition has managed, once again, to outdo itself in peddling petty, clueless theatre over unity or vision. If Rahul Gandhi and his so-called advisors think their circus can wrest public trust from our armed forces, they’ve not just misread the room—they’ve completely lost the plot.
Let’s look at the parade of idiocy that defined their “leadership” on the Parliament floor. Deepender Hooda, apparently vying for the title of class clown, thought it wise to address Indo-US diplomatic tensions by threatening: “Donald ko chup karao, warna India mein McDonald ko band karao.” Is this what Congress offers as strategy in a nuclear crisis—fast-food-level one-liners? Such blunders don’t just make the opposition look unserious—they reduce Parliament to a farce at a time India needs seriousness and strategy.
Meanwhile, Praniti Shinde, another master of misjudgment, called Operation Sindoor a “tamasha” on national television and in House debates. When Indian soldiers risk their lives and a grateful nation waits for clarity, Shinde decided her best contribution was ridicule. This isn’t accountability. It’s intellectual bankruptcy—a crass insult not just to the government but to every officer and jawan who saluted the flag and went to war.
Rahul Gandhi, per usual, brought his own brand of delusion to the party. He accused the government of lacking “political will,” claimed the military’s hands were tied by “political restrictions,” and, incredibly, suggested the Indian armed forces were fighting for the Prime Minister’s photo-ops, not for the nation. The mind boggles at this level of leadership failure. To doubt a government is your right. But to sneer at your own armed forces, to insinuate they are puppets, is a shameful display of egotism and stupidity.
Not to be outdone, Mallikarjun Kharge—the party’s resident drama specialist—shrieked about “factories of lies” and demanded showy resignations, as if real governance is a Twitter hashtag. When 26 Indians have laid down their lives, public theatrics and conspiracy-mongering are not just in bad taste, they’re an abdication of a responsible opposition’s duty. India needs answers and unity. Congress dishes out whining and paranoia.
Let’s get this straight: the DGMOs have briefed the public with unprecedented transparency, releasing satellite imagery and operational updates. The MEA has reported facts. The only “secrecy” left is the figment in the Congress echo chamber. The opposition’s demands aren’t about oversight—they’re about extracting a few more sound bites for primetime TV, hoping to trip up the government. The hypocrisy is staggering.
Here’s the hard truth the opposition refuses to face: Indians may have their doubts about any government, but when it comes to national security, the country’s faith in its armed forces is unshakeable. Endless carping about “lack of transparency” and calling our soldiers’ sacrifices a spectacle isn’t opposition politics—it’s sabotage of the nation’s morale.
Rahul Gandhi, fire your idiotic strategists. Congress needs to grow up, fast. The Indian public craves constructive critique, not the non-stop circus clowning you’ve offered. Patriotism isn’t about tweeting outrage and playing to gallery mobs—it’s about measured, reasoned interrogation and standing with the country when it matters most.
Carry on with this nonsense, and Congress can look forward to 20 more years warming the Opposition benches—because India deserves a grown-up alternative, not this insipid, juvenile cabal of desperate headline hunters pretending to be national leaders. True leadership means walking with the nation, not squabbling for cheap applause while real heroes bleed in silence for the flag.
The verdict is clear: as long as the Opposition remains this out of touch, irrelevance is not just your punishment—it’s your destiny.