IJCOPE Journal

UGC Logo DOI / ISO Logo

International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management

A Peer-Reviewed, Open-Access International Journal Supporting Multidisciplinary Research, Digital Publishing Standards, DOI Registration, and Academic Indexing.
Journal Information
ISSN: 3108-1754 (Online)
Crossref DOI: Available
ISO Certification: 9001:2015
Publication Fee: 599/- INR
Compliance: UGC Journal Norms
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer Review: Double Blind
Volume 02, Issue 03

Published on: March 2026 2026

OPERATION SINDOOR : A PORTRAYAL OF INDIAN MEDIA REPRESENTATION AGAINST TERRORISM

Sudip Kumar Das

Junior Research Fellow (JRF)  West Bengal State University

Article Status

Plagiarism Passed Peer Reviewed Open Access

Available Documents

Abstract

Operation Sindoor was a key counter-terrorism effort by the Indian Armed Forces following the Pahalgam terrorist attack, which targeted civilians and raised internal tensions throughout India. The operation focused on the Pakistani terrorist groups Laskar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen, with the Indian military taking a proactive approach against terrorism. This paper focuses on how media coverage of Operation Sindoor highlights India’s strong defence system and expresses gratitude for the tireless efforts of the Indian Armed Forces in ensuring national security. It also fostered a spirit of nationalism and patriotic values in media coverage. The operation helped to build public trust and faith in the Indian military. Notably, the media underscored the contributions of women in the operation, especially Colonel Sophia Qureshi and Wing Commander Vomika Singh. This operation emphasised women's empowerment and nationalistic efforts. The operation was delivered as an opposite narrative to the ongoing anti-Muslim narratives after the Pahalgam attacks. The study examines the media’s role in forming public opinion on Operation Sindoor, highlighting India’s commitment to combating terrorism while   promoting a non-religious perspective. It conveyed a strong message to the world about India’s determination to combat terrorism with a zero-tolerance policy. The Indian media reports that Operation Sindoor is not designed to violate any country’s sovereignty or to attack civilians. Its true goal was a response to the terrorist attack on India and a vow to fight terrorism together.

How to Cite this Paper

Das, S. K. (2026). Operation Sindoor : A Portrayal of Indian Media Representation Against Terrorism. International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management, <i>02</i>(03). https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i3.156

Das, Sudip. "Operation Sindoor : A Portrayal of Indian Media Representation Against Terrorism." International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management, vol. 02, no. 03, 2026, pp. . doi:https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i3.156.

Das, Sudip. "Operation Sindoor : A Portrayal of Indian Media Representation Against Terrorism." International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management 02, no. 03 (2026). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i3.156.

Search & Index

References


  1. Zahra, S., & Shahid, M. (2025). Narratives in Conflict: Media Framing and Propaganda During the 2025 India-Pakistan War. Review Journal of Social Psychology & Social Works, 3(2), 833-838.

  2. Janjua, R. K. (2025). Operation Sindoor: Indian Media’s Black Propaganda and Fake News Tactics and Their Impact on Public and International Perceptions in the 2025 India-Pakistan Conflict. Pakistan Social Sciences Review, 9(3), 261-270.

  3. Sindoor, O. Operation Sindoor: The Rise of Aatmanirbhar Innovation in National Security.

  4. Miller, D., & Sabir, R. (2012). Propaganda and terrorism. Media and Terrorism: Global Perspectives. London: Sage, 77-94.

  5. Ramachandran, S. (2025). Operation Sindoor. Counter Terrorism Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses, 17(4), 8-15

  6. Pandey, A. K. (2025). Operation Sindoor and information warfare. International Journal of Political Studies, 1(3), 40-57.

  7. Mukhopadhyay, S., & Nadathur, S. T. (2025). Operation Sindoor and the Geopolitics of Narrative: Framing India and Pakistan in Global Media. Journal of Contemporary Politics, 4(3), 110

  8. Wasif, M., Yousaf, A., & Perveen, A. (2025). Discursive Constructions of Power and National Identity : A Critical Discourse Analysis of Indian Political and Media Narratives on operation Sindoor. Journal of Applied Linguistics and Tesol (JALT), 8(4), 1551-1559.

  9. Vohra, A. (2025). Operation Sindoor: India's Atmanirbhar Success Story. Defence & Diplomacy, 14(3), 11-20.

  10. Ghafoor, A., & Kasi, A. Z. (2025). Limits of Indian Hegemony: Lessons from Operation Sindoor and Its Aftermath. Journal of Social Horizons, 2(4), 267-274.

Ethical Compliance & Review Process

  • All submissions are screened under plagiarism detection.
  • Review follows editorial policy.
  • Authors retain copyright.
  • Peer Review Type: Double-Blind Peer Review
  • Published on: Mar 27 2026
CCBYNC

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. You are free to share and adapt this work for non-commercial purposes with proper attribution.

View License
Scroll to Top