India delivered a sharp rebuttal at the United Nations Security Council on Monday, saying it is not normal to tolerate Pakistan’s continued use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy, as it pushed back against what it called a “false and self-serving” narrative advanced by Islamabad on Operation Sindoor.
India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish, was responding to remarks by Pakistan’s envoy Asim Iftikhar Ahmad during an open debate of the Security Council on “Reaffirming International Rule of Law: Pathways to Reinvigorating Peace, Justice, and Multilateralism.”
Ahmad referred to Operation Sindoor, Jammu and Kashmir, and the Indus Waters Treaty in his address to the Council.
Harish said Pakistan, currently an elected member of the Security Council, has reduced its participation to a “single-point agenda” aimed at harming India and its people.
With Ahmad claiming that Pakistan’s response to Operation Sindoor “established that there can be no ‘new normal’ based on coercion or impunity,” Harish said terrorism can never be normalised, countering what he described as Islamabad’s attempt to do so.
India’s remarks underscored New Delhi’s long-standing position that cross-border terrorism remains the core issue in its relationship with Pakistan and cannot be reframed under broader geopolitical or legal arguments at multilateral forums.
"We have heard talk from the Representative of Pakistan about the new normal. Let me reiterate again that terrorism can never be normalised as Pakistan wishes to do. It is not normal to tolerate Pakistan’s continued use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy," Harish said, adding that India will do whatever is required to protect and ensure the safety and security of its citizens.
"This hallowed chamber cannot become a forum for Pakistan to legitimise terrorism,” Harish said.
Harish said Pakistan’s envoy “advanced a false and self-serving account” of Operation Sindoor, launched by India in May last year, targeting terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir in retaliation for the April 22 Pahalgam attack that killed 26 civilians.
“The facts on this matter are clear. Pakistan-sponsored terrorists killed 26 innocent civilians in a brutal attack in Pahalagam in April 2025. This august body itself called for holding the perpetrators, organisers, financiers and sponsors of this reprehensible act of terrorism accountable and brought to justice. That is exactly what we did,” Harish said.
Harish’s reference was to the press statement issued by the Security Council in April last year.
In the statement in which the 15-nation body had condemned in the strongest terms the terrorist attack in Pahalgam and had “underlined the need to hold perpetrators, organisers, financiers and sponsors of this reprehensible act of terrorism accountable and bring them to justice”, with the Council stressing that those responsible for these killings should be held accountable.
Harish underscored that India’s actions in Operation Sindoor were measured, non-escalatory, and responsible, and focused on dismantling the terrorist infrastructure and disabling terrorists.
“Till May 9, Pakistan was threatening more attacks on India. But on May 10, the Pakistani military called our military directly and pleaded for a cessation to the fighting,” he said, adding that the destruction caused to multiple Pakistani airbases by the Indian operation, including images of destroyed runways and burnt-out hangars, is in the public domain.
Hitting out strongly at Pakistan for raising the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, Harish said Pakistan has no locus standi to comment on matters that are internal to India.
“The Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir has been, is, and will always remain an integral and inalienable part of India,” he said.
On the Indus Waters Treaty, Harish said India had entered into the agreement 65 years ago in good faith, in a spirit of goodwill and friendship.
“Throughout these six and a half decades, Pakistan has violated the spirit of the Treaty by inflicting three wars and thousands of terror attacks on India. Thousands of Indian lives have been lost in Pakistan-sponsored terror attacks,” he said.
In the wake of the Pahalgam terror attack, Harish said India was “compelled to finally announce that the Treaty will be held in abeyance until Pakistan, a global epicentre of terror, credibly and irrevocably ends its support for cross-border and all other forms of terrorism.” Further, India asserted that Pakistan is well advised to introspect about the rule of law.
"It could start by asking itself how it has let its armed forces engineer a constitutional coup through the 27th amendment and giving life-time immunity to its Chief of Defence Forces,” a reference to the 27th Constitutional Amendment passed in November last year under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif that gives Pakistan’s Field Marshal Asim Munir lifelong immunity from any legal prosecution.





