Op Sindoor was a Chess Game in Grey Zone: Army Chief

Chennai: Army Chief Gen Uprendra Dwivededi claimed that the Sindoor operation was different from any traditional mission and to play a chess game “we didn’t know what the next move of the enemy would be.” In May, he remembered the complexity of the terror infrastructure of retaliation on the April 22 expensive attack of India’s decisive military action in May at a function in IT-Madras.
Using the metaphor of the chess game, Gen Dwivededi said, “What we do in the Sindoor operation, we played chess. So, what does it mean? So, we didn’t know what the next movement was, the enemy would take, what to do and what to do.
“It means traditional operation, to go with everything, to take everything you have. And if you can go back, otherwise stay there. This is called the traditional approach. Here, the gray region means any activity that takes place in all fields, which is something we are talking about and that Sindoor is a gray region.” He said.
“So, we were doing chess movements and he was doing chess movements. We gave him the control of him somewhere and a place where we went to kill ourselves under the risk of losing ourselves, but that’s about life.” He said.
In May, in accordance with the Sindoor operation, IAF, Pakistan and Pakistan, the occupied terrorist groups in the occupied terrorist groups on more than one target.
The operation aimed to destroy the terror infrastructure and to neutralize key operators after the expensive attack.


