Archives
(PRELIMS Focus)
Qdenga (TAK-003): India’s First Dengue Vaccine – Hope, Hurdles & Way Forward
UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:
Subject: Science & Technology / Social Justice (Health)
Micro-topic: Vaccines & Immunization; Neglected Tropical Diseases; Public Health; Biotechnology
News Context:
India’s drug regulator (DCGI) has granted clearance to Takeda’s tetravalent dengue vaccine TAK-003 (brand name Qdenga) for use in individuals aged 4 to 60 years.
This marks a significant shift from reactive vector control measures (insecticide use, breeding site elimination) to a preventive approach against dengue—a disease endemic to India with a long-term rising trend.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Vaccine Name: Qdenga (TAK-003)
Developer: Takeda (Japan-based)
Type: Tetravalent live-attenuated vaccine (targets all 4 dengue serotypes: DENV-1 to DENV-4)
Platform: Developed on DENV-2 backbone
Regulatory Status in India: Cleared by Subject Expert Committee (SEC) under DCGI
Age Group: 4 to 60 years
Dosage Regimen: Two doses, 3 months apart
Key Advantage: No pre-vaccination screening required (unlike earlier vaccine – Sanofi’s Dengvaxia)
Proven Efficacy: Strong protection against severe dengue & hospitalization
Limitation: Lower efficacy against DENV-3 and DENV-4 (especially in seronegative individuals)
Expected Cost in India: ₹3,000–6,000 per dose; full course ₹6,000–12,000 (private sector initially)
Indian Pipeline Candidate: DengiAll (Panacea Biotec + ICMR) – single-dose, based on NIH’s TV003 platform; Phase III trials ongoing; expected availability ~2027
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
Institutions: DCGI (Drugs Controller General of India), SEC (Subject Expert Committee), ICMR, NIH (US National Institutes of Health)
Concepts: Tetravalent vaccine, Dengue Serotypes (DENV-1 to DENV-4), Seronegative, Post-marketing surveillance, Vector control
Vaccines: Qdenga (TAK-003), Dengvaxia (Sanofi – withdrawn/restricted), DengiAll (Indian candidate)
Core Theme:
The core theme is the cautious introduction of the first dengue vaccine in India as a disease-modifying rather than transmission-blocking tool. While Qdenga significantly reduces severe disease and hospitalization—key public health gains—its lower efficacy against emerging serotypes (especially DENV-3) and high cost necessitate continued reliance on vector control and development of next-generation vaccines like DengiAll.
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
Static Link: Connects to National Health Mission (NHM) – Vector Borne Disease Control Programme (NVBDCP). Dengue is a notifiable disease in many states. The vaccine approval process falls under the New Drugs and Clinical Trials Rules, 2019.
Dynamic Link: Reflects India’s growing role in vaccine development (DengiAll under ICMR) and alignment with One Health approach. The post-marketing surveillance mandate addresses vaccine safety concerns reminiscent of the Dengvaxia controversy (Philippines, 2017). The serotype shift (rising DENV-3) highlights the need for real-time genomic surveillance of pathogens.
Source/Reference:
https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/qdenga-a-vaccine-for-dengue-but-not-a-silver-bullet/article70806924.ece
RoDTEP Scheme 2026: Extension, Geopolitical Context & WTO Compliance
UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:
Subject: Economy / Polity & Governance
Micro-topic: Export Promotion Schemes; Foreign Trade Policy (FTP); Government Interventions; WTO Compliance
News Context:
In March 2026, the Government of India extended the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RoDTEP) Scheme for six months (from April 1, 2026, to September 30, 2026). This decision comes amid global trade disruptions caused by the West Asia crisis (Iran-Israel-US conflict), which has increased sea freight rates and insurance premiums. Notably, the government had earlier restored 100% benefits under the scheme after a temporary reduction to 50%.
Key Details & Important Facts:
What is RoDTEP?
Launched: January 1, 2021 (Replaced MEIS).
Implementing Agency: DGFT (Directorate General of Foreign Trade) under Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
Nature: Tax neutralization/remission (Refunds embedded taxes on exported goods). Not a subsidy.
Coverage of Taxes: Refunds Central, State, and Local levies not covered under GST or Duty Drawback (e.g., Electricity Duty, Fuel VAT, Mandi Tax, Stamp Duty).
WTO Compliance: Unlike the previous MEIS (which was challenged by the US at WTO), RoDTEP is fully compliant with WTO norms (Subsidies & Countervailing Measures Agreement).
Latest Extension Details (March 31, 2026):
Extended till September 30, 2026.
Rates unchanged: 0.3% to 3.9% of FOB value.
Budget Allocation for 2026-27: ₹10,000 crore (Revised from proposed ₹21,709 crore).
Benefit Mechanism (E-scrip): Digital credits generated on ICEGATE portal. Transferable; usable for paying Basic Customs Duty or sold for cash. Validity extended to 2 years.
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
Schemes: RoDTEP, MEIS (Predecessor), RELIEF Scheme (₹487 crore for logistics).
Institutions: DGFT, CBIC, ICEGATE, Ministry of Commerce & Industry.
Concepts: Embedded Taxes, Tax Neutralization, E-scrip, FOB Value, HS Codes, Advance Authorization (AA), EOU, SEZ.
Reports/Locations: West Asia Crisis (Iran), Appendix 4R/4RE.
Core Theme:
The core theme is the shift in India’s export policy from incentive-based subsidies (MEIS) to a WTO-compliant tax remission mechanism (RoDTEP) . The recent extension highlights the government’s effort to provide liquidity and cost competitiveness to exporters facing geopolitical headwinds (Red Sea disruptions, rising freight costs) without violating global trade rules .
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
Static Link: Connects to WTO Agreements (ASCM – Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures). Unlike MEIS, RoDTEP does not constitute an export subsidy because it merely reimburses taxes actually paid, avoiding legal challenges at the Dispute Settlement Body (DSB) .
Dynamic Link: Links to Atmanirbhar Bharat (boosting manufacturing), Foreign Trade Policy 2023, and the G20 focus on resilient supply chains. The extension also demonstrates how geopolitical events (West Asia conflict) directly impact Indian economic indicators (merchandise exports) .
Possible Prelims Angle: MCQs may ask about the nodal ministry (Commerce vs. Finance), the predecessor of RoDTEP (MEIS), the WTO compliance status, or the nature of the benefit (subsidy vs. tax reimbursement). Another angle: the specific taxes covered (e.g., Electricity duty, not GST).
Source/Reference:
https://www.thehindu.com/business/rodtep-scheme-extended-for-six-months/article70807974.ece
Rice’s Whale: Oil Drilling vs. Endangered Species – A Gulf of Mexico Dilemma
UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:
Subject: Environment & Ecology / Geography
Micro-topic: Endangered Species; Biodiversity Conservation; Climate Change; Environmental Laws and Policies
News Context:
The Trump administration has invoked national security (citing the Iran war and rising energy prices) to seek an exemption from endangered species laws to expand oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. The seldom-used Endangered Species Committee granted this request on March 31, 2026, despite scientific warnings that drilling could push the critically endangered Rice’s whale—of which fewer than 100 remain—to extinction.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Species Name: Rice’s Whale (Balaenoptera ricei)
Status: Endangered (recognized as a distinct species only in 2021)
Habitat: Year-round resident of the Gulf of Mexico; found primarily in a narrow area in the northeastern part of the gulf.
Population: Fewer than 100 individuals remaining.
Threats from Drilling: Vessel strikes, noise pollution, oil spills, climate change, disruption of foraging (feeds on silver-rag driftfish), and prey habitat shifts.
Historical Impact: A significant portion of the population was likely killed by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
Other Species at Risk: Kemp’s Ridley turtle (endangered), loggerhead turtle, manatees (threatened), whooping cranes, sperm whales, endangered corals.
Legal Mechanism: Endangered Species Committee (nicknamed the “God Squad”) granted exemption from the Endangered Species Act (ESA) —only the third exemption ever issued (previous: Platte River dam; northern spotted owl logging – withdrawn).
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
Institutions: Endangered Species Committee (“God Squad”), Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC), New England Aquarium
Concepts: National security exemption, Critical habitat, Vessel strikes, Noise pollution, Deepwater Horizon (2010 oil spill)
Species: Rice’s whale, Kemp’s Ridley turtle, loggerhead turtle, whooping crane, sperm whale
Core Theme:
The core theme is the conflict between energy security (fossil fuel expansion) and biodiversity conservation. The Trump administration’s invocation of national security (Iran war-induced high energy prices) to bypass the Endangered Species Act sets a controversial precedent, prioritizing short-term energy needs over the survival of a critically endangered whale species with a population below 100.
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
Static Link: Compare with India’s legal framework – Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (Schedule I for most endangered species) and Environment Protection Act, 1986. The concept of “critical habitat” in the U.S. ESA parallels India’s Critical Wildlife Habitats (CWH) under the Forest Rights Act, 2006. The Deepwater Horizon spill connects to marine oil spill response mechanisms and liability under international law (e.g., MARPOL).
Dynamic Link: This case illustrates the energy vs. environment trade-off faced globally, especially during geopolitical crises. It also highlights the limitations of single-species conservation – an ecosystem-level approach is needed since drilling threatens multiple species (turtles, corals, birds). The use of the “national security” exemption raises questions about the erosion of environmental safeguards during emergencies – a relevant angle for disaster management and environmental governance.
Source/Reference:
https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/the-rare-whale-species-in-the-way-of-trumps-oil-drilling-plan/article70810984.ece
Contempt of Court: Constitutional Powers, Statutory Limits & Latest Judicial Trends
UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:
Subject: Polity & Governance / Indian Penal Code
Micro-topic: Contempt of Court (Constitutional Provisions, Contempt of Courts Act 1971, Powers of Supreme Court and High Courts)
News Context (Recent):
It is prime news ever since the Supreme Court reacted to the treatment of the judiciary in the Class eight textbook brought out by the NCERT. Also, the Supreme Court in February 2026 directed the UPSC to initiate contempt proceedings against states delaying DGP appointments under the Prakash Singh guidelines.
This reinforces that contempt is an active tool for enforcing judicial mandates, not merely punitive.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Constitutional Source (Court of Record):
Article 129: Supreme Court to be a Court of Record with power to punish for contempt of itself.
Article 215: High Courts to be Courts of Record with power to punish for contempt of themselves.
Statutory Framework: Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (Defines and limits powers).
Definitions [Section 2]:
Civil Contempt: Wilful disobedience to judgment/decree/order OR breach of undertaking given to court.
Criminal Contempt: Publication/scandalizing the court (lowers authority), prejudice/interference with judicial proceedings, or obstruction of justice.
Punishment [Section 12]: Simple imprisonment up to 6 months, fine up to ₹2,000, or both. Apology may lead to discharge.
Key Takeaway: Freedom of speech does not permit “scandalizing” the court, especially by senior advocates (officers of the court).
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
Constitutional Articles: 129, 215, 19(1)(a), 19(2) (Reasonable restrictions).
Legislations: Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (Act No. 70 of 1971).
Case Laws: NCERT Row, Prashant Bhushan (2020), Prakash Singh (Police reforms), P.N. Duda (1988), E.M. Sankaran Namboodripad (1970).
Legal Terms: Suo Motu Cognizance (Court on its own motion), Scandalizing the Court, Sub-Judice.
Core Theme:
The core theme is the delicate balance between protecting judicial authority and preserving fundamental rights. While Articles 129/215 grant inherent powers to punish contempt to uphold the “majesty of law,” the 1971 Act (especially Sections 3-5) protects fair criticism and accurate reporting. The 2006 amendment introducing “truth as a defence” modernized the law, aligning it with Article 21, but courts strictly require this truth to be in public interest and not a mere “camouflage” to scandalize.
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
Static Link: The concept of “Court of Record” (Articles 129/215) vs. “Contempt of Subordinate Courts” (Section 10).
Dynamic Link: The increasing use of suo motu contempt for executive inaction (e.g., DGP appointments) shifts contempt from a personal libel remedy to a tool for administrative compliance.
Source/Reference:
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/a-textbook-criticism-the-court-and-contempt/article70812291.ece
Rare Earth Corridors (2026-27 Budget): Boosting India’s Strategic Mineral Self-Reliance
UPSC Prelims Syllabus Coverage:
Subject: Geography / Economy / Science & Technology
Micro-topic: Mineral Resources; Industrial Policy; Strategic Sectors (Defence, Electronics, Renewable Energy); Atmanirbhar Bharat; Critical Minerals
News Context:
The Union Budget 2026–27 announced the establishment of dedicated Rare Earth Corridors in Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu. These corridors aim to create an integrated domestic ecosystem for mining, processing, research, and manufacturing of rare earth elements (REEs). The initiative aligns with Atmanirbhar Bharat, Net Zero 2070, and Viksit Bharat @ 2047, while reducing import dependence for strategic sectors.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Announcement: Union Budget 2026–27
Proposed Corridor States: Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu (four states)
Objective: Integrated domestic ecosystem for mining, refining, and manufacturing of rare earths
Target Sectors: Electronics, renewable energy, electric vehicles (EVs), defence manufacturing
Strategic Goals:
Reduce import dependence for critical minerals
Enhance domestic capability in advanced materials value chains
Position India as a global player in rare earths
Implementation Mechanism:
Joint Working Group (JWG) to formulate Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)
JWG includes all stakeholders
Relevant Keywords for Prelims:
Schemes/Policies: Atmanirbhar Bharat, Net Zero 2070, Viksit Bharat @ 2047, National Critical Minerals Mission (implied linkage)
Concepts: Rare Earth Elements (REE) – 17 elements (lanthanides + Sc, Y); Strategic Minerals; Import Dependence; Domestic Value Addition; Advanced Materials
Institutions: JWG (Joint Working Group), Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), Indian Rare Earths Limited (IREL) (likely implementing agency)
Locations: Odisha (beach sand minerals), Kerala (monazite sands), Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu
Core Theme:
The core theme is the strategic development of India’s rare earth value chain from mining to manufacturing. By creating dedicated corridors in four mineral-rich coastal states, the government aims to break China’s near-monopoly in rare earth processing, ensure supply security for green technologies (EVs, wind turbines) and defence systems, and achieve self-reliance under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage):
Static Link: Connects to Indian geography – distribution of monazite sands (Kerala, TN, AP, Odisha) and the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 (since rare earths are often associated with monazite containing thorium). Also links to Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957.
Dynamic Link: Aligns with the National Critical Minerals Mission (announced in Budget 2024-25) and India’s participation in the Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) (US-led initiative to secure critical mineral supply chains). The corridors support India’s EV policy, National Hydrogen Mission (rare earths for electrolysers), and defence indigenization (magnets in guidance systems).
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2247969®=3&lang=1
(MAINS Focus)
End of Left Wing Extremism: From Military Victory to Inclusive Development
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Security (Internal Security) | GS Paper II – Polity (Governance)
Sub-topic: Left Wing Extremism (LWE); Security Operations; Tribal Rights; Development
Introduction
Amit Shah declared India “Naxal-free” on March 30, 2026, marking a major milestone against Left Wing Extremism. While the security success is significant, the real challenge now is ensuring inclusive development, protection of tribal rights, and accountable governance—so that military gains translate into lasting peace and reconciliation.
Main Body
The LWE Challenge: Historical Context
Aspect
Details
Peak Influence
Over 180 districts across Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra—tribal, forest, mineral-rich areas
UPA Era Approach
Dr. Manmohan Singh flagged LWE as biggest internal security challenge; Operation Green Hunt (2009–10) faced criticism from allies; hesitant, measured approach
Current Approach
Uncompromising militarist strategy; dual approach: dialogue/rehabilitation for surrenders, “no mercy” for those who refuse
Operational Achievements (Recent Years)
Metric
Number
Maoists Surrendered
4,839
Arrested
2,218
Neutralized in Encounters
706
Significance: Military capabilities of insurgents decapitated; state presence now possible in some of the least governed regions.
Concerns: The Cost of the Approach
Concern
Analysis
Human Rights
Sweeping strategy branded human rights activists and academics as “urban Naxals”
Legal Overreach
Police measures went beyond anti-terrorism law provisions; strangling freedoms; distorting judicial processes
Tribal Alienation Risk
Military victory should not accelerate crony capitalist extraction of natural resources at tribal expense
Forest Rights
Historical grievances remain—tribal rights over land, forests, and mineral resources must be protected
Beyond Military Victory: The Development Imperative
Initiative Already Begun
Goal
School in every village
Universal education access in worst-affected areas
Aadhaar and ration cards
Formal identity and food security for residents
State presence expansion
Governance reach in previously inaccessible regions
Maoist Ideology: They are ideologically opposed to parliamentary democracy—a position delinked from development or its absence. But the absence of development provided fertile ground.
Way Forward: Inclusive Development & Reconciliation
Priority
Action Required
Tribal Rights
Genuine expansion of rights under PESA (Panchayats Extension to Scheduled Areas) and Forest Rights Act
Substantive Participation
Ensure tribals’ meaningful participation in parliamentary democracy, not just token representation
Accountability in Resource Extraction
Mineral-rich regions must see benefits flow to local communities; prevent crony capitalism
Rehabilitation
Comprehensive rehabilitation for surrendered cadres; livelihood pathways
Reconciliation
Heal wounds of conflict; address historical grievances; politics of inclusion over retribution
Governance Infrastructure
Strengthen last-mile delivery—health, education, electricity, connectivity
Critical Analysis: Strengths & Gaps
Strengths
Gaps
Decisive military victory—insurgent capacity neutralized
Human rights concerns and legal overreach during operations
State presence now feasible in inaccessible regions
Risk of resource extraction without tribal consent
Development initiatives (schools, Aadhaar) already rolling
Historical grievances (land, forest rights) not fully addressed
Dual approach (dialogue + force) framework in place
Reconciliation politics yet to unfold
Conclusion
India’s success against LWE is a major internal security achievement, with Amit Shah playing a key role. However, real success depends on what follows—ensuring inclusive development, protecting tribal rights, accountable resource use, and grassroots governance. The next challenge is shifting from force to reconciliation, so that peace is sustained through justice, dignity, and democratic participation.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
“India is now Naxal-free, but military victory alone does not ensure lasting peace.” Critically examine the challenges and opportunities in the post-LWE phase. (250 words, 15 marks)
Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/corridor-of-opportunity-on-the-end-of-left-wing-extremism/article70811690.ece
Politicization of Anti-Corruption Bodies: Lessons from the Excise Policy Case
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Statutory Bodies) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Sub-topic: Central Vigilance Commission; CBI; ED; Rule of Law; Institutional Integrity
Introduction
The collapse of the Delhi excise policy case—where a court declined to frame charges against Arvind Kejriwal—raises serious concerns about India’s anti-corruption system. Despite high-profile probes by the Central Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement Directorate, no prima facie case was established.
It highlights a deeper dilemma: balancing genuine corruption probes with the risk of criminal law being used as a political tool.
Main Body
The Excise Policy Case: A Timeline of Institutional Failure
Phase
Key Event
Launch
CBI registers FIR; ED initiates parallel proceedings; massive corruption conspiracy alleged
Arrests
Delhi CM, Deputy CM, businesspersons arrested; months of custody, prolonged interrogation
Media Narrative
Dominated TV debates; shaped electoral perceptions
Judicial Outcome
Trial court declines to frame charges—no prima facie case of criminal conspiracy or bribery; no clear evidence linking policy decisions to illegal personal gain
Key Question: How did a case launched with such certainty fail to cross even the basic threshold required for trial?
Institutional Failures: When Prosecutions Lack Evidentiary Foundation
Failure
Analysis
Premature Prosecution
Decision to register FIR carried immense consequences—arrests, reputational damage, prolonged pre-trial incarceration—without reasonably solid evidentiary foundation
Political Momentum
Cases driven by extraneous pressures rather than evidence invite speculation about motivations
Fragmented Investigative Ecosystem
CBI, ED, and other agencies lack coordinated, specialized capacity
Principle: The head of an investigative agency must ensure prosecutions are grounded in evidence, not suspicion or political momentum.
The Difficulty of Proving Corruption: Judicial Standards
Challenge
Explanation
Invisible Evidence
Corruption leaves limited visible evidence; money moves through intermediaries, shell companies, consultancy contracts
Complex Evidentiary Architecture
Successful prosecutions require financial trails, documentary records, digital communications, corroborated witness testimonies
SC Principles
Policy decisions cannot be automatically criminalized unless clear evidence of dishonest intent and personal gain exists
SC Precedent: The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that policy decisions require clear evidence of criminal intent—a principle that protects against politically motivated prosecutions but also makes corruption cases difficult to sustain.
Investigative Capacity Deficit
Gap
Requirement
Reliance on Witness Statements
Indian agencies still rely heavily on testimony rather than forensic financial analysis
Lack of Specialized Tools
Modern corruption probes require forensic accounting, data analytics, tracing beneficial ownership, cross-jurisdictional financial reconstruction
International Benchmark
Singapore, Hong Kong have developed specialized expertise; India’s ecosystem remains fragmented
The Structural Dilemma: Legitimate Investigation vs. Political Weapon
Tension
Implication
Corruption is Real
Public contracts (liquor policies, irrigation projects) face genuine allegations; public confidence requires serious investigation
Criminal Law as Political Tool
If arrests and prosecutions are perceived as executive weapons, institutional legitimacy suffers irreparable damage
Outcome Gap
Large policy-level corruption cases rarely end in successful prosecutions; trap cases (officials caught accepting bribes) fare better
Consequence: When allegations rarely lead to convictions, public cynicism deepens.
Way Forward: Strengthening Anti-Corruption Institutions
Reform
Action
Forensic Capacity
Build specialized expertise in financial forensics, data analytics, beneficial ownership tracing
Coordination
Streamline investigative ecosystem across agencies
Prosecutorial Discipline
Ensure cases are built on robust evidentiary foundations before filing charges
Political Restraint
Political leaders must resist deploying criminal law as tool of partisan contest
Institutional Autonomy
Protect investigative agencies from executive pressure; ensure selection processes insulated from political considerations
Successful Precedents
Need credible examples of rigorous investigation and successful prosecution in large bribery cases to restore confidence
Critical Analysis: Strengths & Gaps
Strengths
Gaps
Highlights evidentiary gaps in high-profile cases
Does not quantify the scale of investigative capacity deficit
Identifies structural dilemma (real corruption vs. political weapon)
Underplays role of judicial delays in case outcomes
Compares favorably with international benchmarks (Singapore, Hong Kong)
Could elaborate on reforms to CBI/ED appointment processes
Calls for forensic capacity building
No discussion of whistleblower protection frameworks
Conclusion
The excise policy case collapse is a warning: when anti-corruption probes lack evidentiary rigor, they risk losing credibility. India needs strong, independent institutions—but criminal law must not become a political tool. The way forward is better forensic capacity, prosecutorial discipline, and institutional autonomy to ensure accountability without compromising fairness or public trust.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
“High-profile case collapses highlight the dilemma between anti-corruption efforts and politicisation.” Critically examine institutional deficits and suggest reforms for evidence-based prosecutions. (250 words, 15 marks)
Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/how-anti-corruption-bodies-are-politicised/article70812827.ece
Democracy Anaesthetised: The Evacuation of Moral Agency in Wartime
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – International Relations | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Sub-topic: Democracy and War; Media Ethics; Global Governance; Moral Responsibility
Introduction
The war in Iran is shrouded in abstraction and sanitised language, dulling public awareness despite widespread opposition. Fragmented media and selective empathy obscure its human cost, leaving citizens disengaged. This moral anaesthesia reflects not just an information gap, but a deeper failure of democratic citizenship.
Main Body
The Paradox of Public Opposition in a Democracy
Fact
Implication
Pew Poll: 61% of Americans disapprove
Majority opposes the war
No rousing global support
Only sullen, quiet coping
Yet no effective constraint
Public opinion fails to translate into political action
Paradox: In a democracy, such opposition should restrain policy. Instead, it deepens anxiety—democratic mechanisms have been rendered ineffective.
Mechanisms of Moral Anaesthesia
Mechanism
How It Works
Lack of Meaningful Coverage
Fragmented media ecosystem; partisan reporting; social media clips produce illusion of knowledge without experiential synthesis
Sanitised Language
“Capabilities degraded”, “escalation logic”, “tactical advantage”—violence rendered invisible
Racial Hierarchies of Concern
Selective empathy; Blinken’s “no hierarchy of trauma” statement—self-delusion or deliberate obfuscation
Moral & Psychological Fatigue
Even aware citizens feel disarmed; democracy evacuated as site for reflection
Consequence: Democracy has not grown more disposed to cruelty—it has reached a point where everyone seeks absolution from responsibility.
The Middle Power Paradox: India’s Dilemma
Tension
Analysis
Prudential Self-Interest
States seek to shield themselves from immediate fallout; not responsible for initiating conflict
Moral Narcissism
Absolving themselves of responsibility to help end it
India’s Silence
Moderate calls for taking a stand dismissed as “moralism”; yet prudence requires confronting catastrophe
Critical Point: Coalitions of “naming and shaming” are essential. Without willingness to confront war as war, middle powers become “trifling entities trapped in self-delusion.”
The Nature of the Catastrophe: Global Interconnected War
Feature
Examples
Entwined Theatres
Ukraine, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Iran, Ethiopia, UAE, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sudan, Yemen—all interconnected
Willingness to Burn the House Down
US disregards international law; Israel creates failed states as strategy; Iran exhibits strategic catastrophism
Legitimised Means
Targeted killings, asymmetric warfare, bombing civilian infrastructure, hitting water supplies
Long-Term Consequences:
Heightened global suspicion and paranoia
Nuclear risks intensify
Failed states multiply
Psychological and institutional devastation rivals physical destruction
Democracy Has Already Lost
Dimension
Loss
Moral Agency
Citizens feel disempowered; democracy no longer site for reflection or action
Public Discourse
Degraded by sanitised language, selective concern, and self-delusion
Institutional Integrity
International laws and norms disregarded; domestic regimes willing to burn the house down
Middle Power Role
Self-interest dominates; no coalition of naming and shaming emerges
Stark Conclusion: If democracy is anaesthetised in the face of those willing to burn the house down, it has already lost.
Critical Analysis: Strengths & Gaps
Strengths
Gaps
Exposes mechanisms of moral anaesthesia in democracies
Underplays role of civil society and anti-war movements
Highlights middle power complicity through silence
Does not offer concrete pathways for democratic awakening
Names racial hierarchies of concern as ethical failure
Limited discussion of India’s specific foreign policy constraints
Recognizes psychological devastation alongside physical
Could elaborate on media regulation and ethical journalism
Way Forward: Reclaiming Democratic Moral Agency
Confront War as War: Name violence directly; reject sanitised language
Build Coalitions of Naming and Shaming: Middle powers must act collectively, not hide behind self-interest
Restore Democratic Spaces: Media must provide experiential synthesis, not fragmented illusion
Reject Racial Hierarchies: All trauma demands recognition; selective empathy degrades democratic ethics
Prudence Requires Action: Moral narcissism is not prudence; preventing global catastrophe is the height of strategic intelligence
Conclusion
The war in Iran reveals a deeper crisis: the erosion of democracy as a space for moral action. Widespread opposition coexists with public powerlessness, while sanitised language masks violence. Reclaiming democratic agency requires confronting war honestly and building coalitions of conscience—else democracy risks enabling, not restraining, cruelty.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
“If democracy is anaesthetised, it has already lost.” Examine how media fragmentation, sanitised language, and elite control render publics passive during war. Analyse how India can reclaim moral agency through principled diplomacy, norm-building, and amplifying global accountability. (250 words, 15 marks)
Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/pratap-bhanu-mehta-writes-democracy-has-already-lost-the-war-10612155/