Operation Trishul: Bharat’s Power Play That Has Pakistan on Edge

“As Bharat prepares for its massive tri-service military drill “Trishul,” tensions surge across the western border, reigniting old fears and geopolitical debates.”

Paromita Das

New Delhi, 29th October: When desert winds meet ocean tides along the Bharat–Pakistan frontier, silence never lasts long. From the barren stretches of Jaisalmer to the mysterious waters of Sir Creek, a storm of strategy is brewing. Bharat’s upcoming military exercise—codenamed Trishul—is not just another display of strength; it’s a calculated signal across multiple dimensions of defense, diplomacy, and deterrence. And unsurprisingly, Islamabad has begun reading alarm between every radar ping and satellite blur.

Bharat’s Strategic Posture: Drill or Demonstration?

The Trishul exercise, scheduled between October 30 and November 10, unites the Army, Navy, and Air Force under one coordinated command. Spread across the expansive territories of Rajasthan’s Jaisalmer border to Gujarat’s Rann of Kutch, it embodies Bharat’s readiness for integrated warfare—where land, sea, and air align like the three points of a spear.

Nearly 30,000 personnel, backed by precision assets like Tejas fighter jets, Pinaka rockets, Dhruv helicopters, and K-9 Vajra artillery, will test operational synergy and real-time battlefield coordination. The Indian Navy maintains deployment in the Arabian Sea, while the Air Force handles aerial surveillance reaching altitudes of 28,000 feet, as indicated in official NOTAMs (Notice to Airmen).

Why Pakistan is Losing Sleep

Across the border, apprehension is palpable. Pakistan issued its own NOTAMs the moment Bharat’s plans surfaced, restricting flights over sensitive zones, a clear sign of nervous anticipation. Intelligence agencies in Islamabad fear that a “drill” could turn into a “move”—a rapid maneuver echoing Bharat’s earlier Operation Parakram of 2001, triggered after the Parliament attack.

The Trishul exercise’s proximity to the Sir Creek region, a long-disputed maritime boundary, heightens the tension. This muddy estuarine zone, stretching nearly 90–95 km, remains unresolved for decades—caught between historical narratives and the thalweg principle of boundary demarcation. While Bharat’s Southern Command asserts operational control from Pune, Pakistan’s countermeasures seem more about perception management than practical response.

The Sir Creek Flashpoint: A Historical Knot

The argument over Sir Creek is not new, but its timing today adds a layer of strategic calculus. Pakistan insists the creek’s waters belong historically to Sindh, rejecting Bharat’s claim drawn from the midway riverbed principle. Bharat, in turn, frames the dispute as unresolved legacy territory, reinforcing that geography is permanently tilted in its operational favor. Given its marshy terrain and limited troop movement, Bharat’s Border Security Force (BSF) continues to maintain active surveillance with technological upgrades.

This ongoing friction—paired with Bharat’s assertive defense posturing—creates what military analysts describe as “tactical ambiguity”: a posture designed to keep the adversary guessing while strengthening deterrent credibility.

Afghanistan Factor and Broader Regional Implications

Beyond the immediate border, Pakistan faces pressure on another front—its western periphery. The rise of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the Khyber region, recent Afghan water disputes, and Kabul’s decision to block nearly 80% of river flow toward Pakistan have worsened Islamabad’s predicament. The pattern—both strategic and symbolic—echoes Bharat’s earlier stand on the Indus Waters Treaty, deepening Pakistan’s perception of regional encirclement.

For Bharat, this timing is crucial. With Afghanistan recalibrating its stance and Russia-China tensions shaping the Eurasian sphere, Bharat’s Trishul exercise mirrors not just national security preparedness but also geopolitical signaling: declaring itself ready for multi-front contingencies.

Political Messaging Behind Military Might

The choreography of events adds another layer of interpretation. Defense Minister Rajnath Singh’s recent visit near the border, coupled with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s address aboard INS Vikrant during Diwali, signals assertive leadership intent. Both gestures underline one message to adversaries—Bharat will not hesitate to defend its territorial integrity, be it on land, sea, or air.

While New Delhi emphasizes the exercise as procedural defense readiness, Pakistan reads between the lines—a fear that Bharat might use the Trishul framework to assert dominance over contentious terrains like Sir Creek or to lend tactical support to coordination along the Afghan front.

Between Fear and Foresight

The anxiety enveloping Pakistan’s military circles reflects more on its political fragility than Bharat’s offensive posture. For a nation grappling with internal insurgencies, economic collapse, and international isolation, every Bharatiya maneuver appears magnified. Yet, Bharat’s approach—calibrated, confident, and constitutional—rests on maintaining deterrence without provocation. The real essence of Trishul lies not in confrontation but in coordination—testing response systems that would safeguard sovereignty during genuine threats.

However, one cannot ignore that military drills of such scale often drift dangerously close to the threshold of escalation. The lesson from history is simple: exercises simulate war but must not invite one.

A Calm Before the Tempest or Controlled Strategy?

As the desert sun fades behind Rajasthan’s dunes and the Arabian winds ripple over the Rann, South Asia holds its breath. Operation Trishul stands as a testament to Bharat’s strategic depth, technological prowess, and readiness for modern joint warfare. But it also exposes how shaky Pakistan’s geopolitical nerves remain.

Whether this becomes merely a headline cycle or a chapter in the subcontinent’s military timeline depends on the restraint both sides exercise in the coming weeks. For now, Bharat’s message is sharp yet steady—defense through preparedness, peace through power.