Failed Regime Change Effort

The plot to destabilize India was scripted long ago — in foreign capitals, executed through Indian proxies, and camouflaged as “protests” and “civil resistance.” From the anti-CAA agitations to the so-called farmers’ movement, the Opposition’s toolkit has remained the same: manufacture unrest, demonize Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and project India as a nation on the brink of collapse. But the recent developments — the Delhi Police preparing a detailed and explosive affidavit on the 2020 Delhi riots — have once again exposed the anatomy of this grand conspiracy. The affidavit, soon to be filed before the Supreme Court, reportedly lays bare how individuals like Umar Khalid and Sharjeel Imam, glorified by the Opposition and their media allies as “student leaders,” were in fact key players in an orchestrated attempt to create nationwide mayhem. Their actions were timed with precision — just before then U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit to Delhi — clearly meant to internationalize India’s internal affairs and project Modi’s government as “authoritarian.” The intent was not dissent; it was sabotage. The Delhi Police, working under the strategic supervision of Union Home Minister Amit Shah, has painstakingly pieced together evidence — financial trails, encrypted messages, and foreign links — connecting these agitators with a larger network of domestic and international players. This is not hyperbole. It’s a pattern seen before in other nations targeted by the same forces — a playbook perfected by the so-called global “deep state.” The Supreme Court, therefore, stands at a decisive juncture. India’s judiciary must not become a theatre for political propaganda dressed up as public interest litigation. It must recognize that beneath the veneer of activism lies an agenda — to erode trust in democratic institutions and to stall India’s rise as a global power. The judiciary’s silence or complacency could embolden those who thrive on chaos and disinformation. The invisible hands behind this effort are not hard to trace. Billionaire activist George Soros, a self-proclaimed crusader against “nationalism,” has openly declared his intent to “correct” India’s course — meaning to weaken Modi politically. His vast network of NGOs, think tanks, and media fronts has been accused globally of funding disruptive movements and influencing democratic outcomes. In India, they’ve found eager collaborators among the Opposition parties, ideologically disoriented academics, and a section of the commentariat that mistakes cynicism for intellect.

There are even reports — though officially unconfirmed — that elements within the U.S. administration during Donald Trump’s presidency explored covert means to “contain” Modi’s assertive foreign policy, particularly after India’s bold military operations like Operation Sindoor, which exposed Pakistan’s nuclear deceit by targeting its assets at Kirana Hills. That a sitting U.S. president could have authorized his intelligence apparatus to meddle in India’s internal stability underscores how seriously New Delhi’s growing strategic independence rattled the Western establishment. Meanwhile, Pakistan continues to play its duplicitous games, even as its own credibility lies in ruins. Afghanistan, too, seems to have finally realized Islamabad’s poisonous role in its instability. The Taliban regime, now reeling under Pakistan’s betrayals on security and trade, is living proof that duplicity has no loyal friends — only temporary clients. Against this volatile regional backdrop, India’s message of strength could not have come at a better time. The Modi government’s ongoing 10-to-15-day theatreisation exercise — an integrated military drill combining the Army, Navy, and Air Force — is the most ambitious since Independence. It signals unmistakably to the world, and especially to our rogue neighbors, that India will defend its sovereignty with unity and precision. It is also a message to those plotting from within: India’s resolve cannot be fractured. And yet, the Opposition refuses to learn. Having failed to win the people’s mandate, it continues to dabble in deceit — spinning tales of “vote chori,” “Constitution change,” and the scrapping of SC/ST reservations. These are not arguments; they are fear bombs. Lies meant to inflame divisions and delegitimize democracy. It’s a cynical strategy — to lose elections but win narratives, to fail at the ballot box but succeed in chaos. The judiciary must recognize that these are not coincidences. They are coordinated acts in a larger geopolitical contest where India’s rise is viewed as a threat by entrenched global interests. The Supreme Court’s duty, therefore, is not merely to adjudicate but to insulate the Republic from these subversive designs. The failed regime change effort may have been exposed, but the war against India’s stability is far from over. What the conspirators must understand, however, is that this is a New India — militarily strong, economically resilient, and politically aware. Its people cannot be manipulated by foreign puppeteers or their local agents. And its institutions — least of all the Supreme Court — must remain immune to the seductive rhetoric of chaos disguised as conscience.