OPERATION 'SINDOOR'/OPERATION 'BUNYAN UL MARSOOS'
A DIALECTIC INQUIRY (Abridged)
The Second Law of Unintended Consequences
“Applying
force via fulcrum to leverage an object, without true understanding of all the
related parameters, will move the object in the direction opposite to that
intended, and if persisted, result in unintended break of the fulcrum itself.” – Col RS
Sidhu
Preamble
The 22nd
April 2025 massacre at Baisaran meadow of Pahalgam, India in a cross-border
Pakistan sponsored terrorist act, occurred in the immediate aftermath of a religiously inflammatory address by Gen Asim Munir, the
Chief of Staff of the Pakistan Army and the de facto ruler of Pakistan, on 16th
of April 2025. He termed J&K as the jugular vein and emphasised the
irreconcilable differences in the identity of Pakistan and a ‘Hindu’
India. This set the ideological overtone for the communal massacre of
Indian citizens by Pakistan sponsored terrorists.
India named
its military response to the massacre as ‘Operation
Sindoor’. In ‘Sanatam Dharm’, widely but incorrectly known as ‘Hindu’
religion, ‘Sindoor’ is a religious mark applied on the head by a married
woman, and holds religious and spiritual significance. The terrorists had
brutally shot dead the male hostages, after ascertaining their religion, in
front of their wives and children. ‘Operation
Sindoor’ obliquely signifies seeking reprisal for the widows of the
Indian citizens massacred in cold blood.
Pakistan
followed through by naming its riposte to Indian military strikes as ‘Operation
Bunyan ul Marsoos’, after a verse from the holy book of Islam, “Indeed,
Allah loves those who fight in His cause in rows as though they are a solid
structure (Bunyan ul Marsoos).” – Quran, Surah As-Saaf (Chapter 61, Verse
4).
This set the
stage for the first spiritual-military confrontation between India and
Pakistan.
Pakistan,
with a highly factitious domestic polity, and dwindling support from the
Islamic comity of nations, hoped to rally domestic and the ‘Islamic Ummah’
(world muslim community) support, to face off the Indian military challenge.
More insidiously, it was also an attempt to subvert the loyalty of the
substantial Indian muslim population by appealing to place religion over
country.
For India,
it highlights the determination of its current unabashedly nationalist and
right wing Government to take Pakistan head-on by calling its religious bluff.
At the same time, it also looked to consolidate its domestic base.
This inquiry shall not be complete without first
factoring the influence of China in the entire episode. Despite
facing unremitting hostility from China, the Indian state and its military has
a lot to thank it for. The covert hand
of China in leveraging Pakistan to orchestrate the course
of events leading to Operation ‘Sindoor’/Operation ‘Bunyan ul Marsoos’, is the
third instance after 1962, and 2020, when Chinese hostility has forced India to
undertake strategic course corrections in the right direction.
The second aspect
which needs detailed consideration is the plausible trigger for the Pahalgam
massacre and the subsequent chain reaction.
Thereafter, several tangible and intangible factors have been considered
to holistically assess the outcome of the first
spiritual-military confrontation between India and Pakistan in April-May of 2025.
More often than not it’s the ‘intangibles’ that assume greater criticality and
are also more difficult to analyse. The evaluation
shall cover the following: -
Preliminary Inquiry
China Factor
Plausible Trigger
Review of Tangibles
Factor 1 – National Aim
Factor 2 – Role of Predictability
Factor 3 – Nuclear Deterrence
Factor 4 – Effect
on National Economy
Discussing Intangibles
Factor 5 – India’s ‘Operation Sindoor New Normal’ Doctrine
Factor 6 – Domestic
Impact
Factor 7 – Geopolitical
Repercussions
Factor 8 – Perception Management
The China
Factor
China looks
at the territory of all countries adjoining its land borders, and the maritime
waters adjoining its eastern board, as its first line of defence. Since the
coming to power of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in China, it looks at
India and Japan as major stumbling blocks to its dominance in Asia, and its
aspiration to orchestrate a China centric global order.
To secure
its Northwestern, and Southwestern flanks it has cultivated nuclear armed North
Korea and Pakistan. China is also the biggest supplier of major weapons and military
infrastructure for the Pakistan military, and the largest investor in its energy,
ports, and surface communication infrastructure. The choke hold of China over
Pakistan is further revealed from two statistics. 80% of weapons and equipment of
Pakistan military are from China, and the latter is also its biggest creditor
with loans totalling US Dollars 29 billion, which is 22% of total debt
of Pakistan.
China has invested deeply in the energy, surface communication, and
maritime infrastructure in Pakistan, under the special purpose vehicle the
China Pakistan Energy Corridor (CPEC). This is critical to its own energy
security as an alternative to the vulnerable maritime trade route.
The key factor that cements the alliance
between China and Pakistan is their enduring hostility towards India. Both are
totalitarian states with a common long term vision to neutralise India and
stymie its rise on the global stage. Pakistan is the perfect and ever willing
catspaw of China for use against India.
The fail safe remedy of every totalitarian
state, when faced with critical internal contradictions is to raise the bogey
of external threat. The leadership of China is faced with economic turmoil
resulting from the most unpredictable and frequently changing stance of the
Trump administration of the US, being enforced through tariff war, trade
restrictions on high technology related merchandise, and manipulating shifts of
critical foreign manufacturing away from China. Even more concerning to China
is the likely shift of this manufacturing to its Asian rival India.
Pakistan itself is in the throes of great political
turmoil. Its economy is stagnating, and mere survival is dependent on foreign
loans. While uniting the country against the traditional enemy India is a time
tested option for the Pakistan military, the poor state of the economy makes
any prolonged military confrontation against a powerful India, on its own,
unsustainable.
For China, embroiling India in a prolonged
regional conflict with Pakistan is a low cost alternative to dissuade this
shift. An open military confrontation with India, prolonged and subsidised by
covert support from China, suits the self-interests of the leadership of both
the states.
The methodology of the massacre of innocent
civilians, and provoking message left with the survivors indicate inviting an
assured response from a predictable India.
The tracing of Chinese Huawei satellite phones
and highly encrypted ‘Ultra’ sets that communicate via Chinese BeiDou satellite
system communication link with the terrorists, are plausible indicators of
indirect Chinese facilitation.
The ‘battlefield indicators’, selection of inaccessible
to vehicular traffic, void of security cover, and remote locale for executing terrorist
action, are hallmarks of military precision and extensive training.
Even the selection of the date and time for
the planned massacre, synchronised with the absence of the Indian PM on a
foreign visit to Saudi Arabia is highly revealing.
It all points to a joint, well planned
strategy to enmesh India in an economically debilitating military confrontation.
Factor 1 – Defining
& Achievement of Aim
There is no
official Indian document in the public domain which declares the aim for
‘Operation Sindoor’. The same, perforce, needs to be deduced from the
statements of their apex leadership. Here two statements stand out.
The first is
the categoric remark of the Indian PM, made on 24th of April 2025, his
first public address in the immediate aftermath of the Pahalgam massacre, “…Today, from the soil of Bihar, I say to
the whole world: India will identify, track, and punish every terrorist, and
their backers. We will pursue them to the ends of the earth…I want to say
in the clearest terms: those who carried out this attack, the terrorists,
and those who plotted it, will face punishment beyond their imagination...The
time has come to wipe out even the last remnants of terrorist strongholds.”
The second is the statement of the PM at a joint meeting with
the RM, NSA, CDS, and Chiefs of Staff of the three services, held on 29th
of April 2025, as reported in the media, “…it is our national resolve to deal a crushing blow to terrorism”.
In concise words, the stated aim of Operation ‘Sindoor’ may
well be inferred as
-
identifying and neutralising the five perpetrators of the
massacre, their supporting OGWs from the LeT/TRF, Pakistan based masterminds of
the LeT/TRF, and their ISI handlers from the Pakistan military.
-
neutralising major terror sites housing the command chain,
training infrastructure, and logistics network of Pakistan based terror
organisations operating against India.
-
dissuade Pakistan from undertaking/supporting such
misadventures in future.
In the above meeting of 24th of April, the PM was
also quoted, “… (of delegating) complete operational freedom to decide on
the mode, targets, and timing of the nation’s response to the Pahalgam terror
attack…”, to the Chiefs of Staff
of the three services.
However, in
a functioning democracy, such ‘free hands’ are invariably accompanied
with unstated caveats. In this instance, it may be inferred from the diplomatic
signalling between New Delhi and Islamabad, and the decision to select only
terrorist infrastructure targets for initial neutralisation, that giving
minimum cause to the adversary to escalate the military confrontation was a key
consideration.
The initial
strikes caused severe destruction to the command chain of JeM at Markaz
Subhanallah Bahawalpur, and the LeT Markaz Taiba at Muridke, and their advanced
camps at Shakargarh and Sharjal at Sialkot in Punjab province of Pakistan. In
POJK the terror infrastructure of JeM, LeT, and HuM was hit at Mehmoona Joya,
Gulpur and Abbas near Kotli, Barnala near Bhimber, and Syedna Bilal and Sawai
Nala near Muzaffarabad in POJK. A total
of nine terror sites, four in Punjab province of Pakistan, and five in POJK
were targeted.
These sites account
for nine of the 21 terror sites reflected in the map displayed during the
official press briefing at New Delhi. It is logical to assume that the balance twelve
terrorist camps had minimal logistics infrastructure being more of transit
facility prior to infiltration into India, and were likely vacated owing to the
long anticipated Indian retaliatory strike. Hence, were not deemed as a viable
target for punitive action.
However, the
heads of the LeT, JeM, and HuM are still in command of their terrorist
organisations. There is no official input on the action against the ISI
handlers. The five terrorists involved in executing the massacre are also
untraceable. It may therefore be judicious to infer that achieving the inferred
aim by India is only partial.
But the heavy
retaliation by Pakistan escalated the conflict into a direct, though limited,
confrontation between the two militaries. Here India, by breaching the Pakistan
ADGE to inflict heavy damage on all their major strategic airbases, gained a
decisive edge. This advantage was further broadened by restricting Pakistan
offensive assets to the vicinity of the IB.
Pakistan on the other hand, failed to attain
most of its national objectives. The UNSC meet held at its request was
inconclusive. Except for a symbolic statement in favour of Pakistan by the OIC,
and statements of support from China, Turkiye, and Azerbaijan, its stand did
not receive any international support.
Militarily it was not able to provoke India
into a prolonged military standoff/conflict, and was forced to approach India
for a face saving request for ceasefire.
It was not able to make good its threat on
deeming India’s action on IWT as an ‘act of war.’
The only indeterminate factor is the degree of
success in deterring Pakistan from continuing with its strategy of actively
supporting crossborder terrorist acts within India.
Having decimated the Pakistan ADGE,
neutralising the Pakistan nuclear umbrella, terming IWT as non-negotiable, and
holding ‘Operation Sindoor’ as a threat in being, India holds Pakistan in a
straitjacket.
Factor 2 – Role of Predictability
The underlying premise of the joint
China-Pakistan strategy was to provoke India into a predictable response. In retaliating
with trans-LC ‘surgical strikes’ in 2016, Indian had targeted
terrorist infrastructure eleven days later. In 2019, India delivered
its trans-LC retaliatory airstrikes targeting terrorist infrastructure twelve
days later. India had set three predictable patterns. A time span of
around a fortnight, targeting only terror infrastructure, and not violating the
IB.
The Indian retaliation to the Pahalgam
massacre was launched fifteen days later, and targeted only terror
infrastructure. However, it broke the third pattern by not only launching
strikes across LC, but for the first time also across the IB.
This had a singular impact on the planning and
conduct of the ensuing military operations. Due to the unstated political
caveat, India spread its offensive air effort into fighter bomber, fighter air
support, and electronic support roles, in mission packages assigned to
different targets.
Pakistan on the other hand anticipating
predicted response by India, assigned approximately 2/3rd available
effort poised towards the LC, and 1/3rd to cover the IB sector. It
was also able to design its mission packages with predominantly fighter
aircrafts for interdiction roles. This, coupled with its effective placement of
available Saab 2000 Erieye
Airborne Early Warning and Control (AEW&C) aircrafts to vector its air
effort onto intended targets, enabled it to achieve a localised favourable air
situation. This is the primary reason for it to claim more kills over IAF
aircrafts across the LC. The PAF, anticipating no violation of airspace, based
on predictability pattern, had also strategise to employ long range AAMs to
target IAF assets across the IB/LC in Indian airspace. Another plausible reason
for it to secure ‘kills’ in the initial phase.
India achieved its subsequent success by
breaking its own predictability patterns.
Its retaliation was not one off, and broke its self-imposed taboo on targeting Pakistan
strategic military installations, including nuclear sensitive infrastructure.
This was a contingency which the Pakistan military had not anticipated. This is
evident from its subsequent weak military response, and being forced to request
India for a ceasefire.
Both adversaries, India and Pakistan, would
have derived their own learnings for implementation in the next conflict
scenario. As regards China, it too shall introspect on confronting India
differently.
Factor 3 – Nuclear Deterrence
Despite unstinted support of China in
equipping Pakistan military with modern weapons platforms and war fighting
equipment, the latter simply lacks requisite combat potential to take on India
militarily. Acquiring a nuclear umbrella enabled the Pakistan military to claim
overall parity with India. Thus, nuclear sabre rattling formed the basic
premise behind Pakistan’s strategy of engaging India in asymmetric warfare.
India’s innovative multiple strikes on
selective strategic bases of Pakistan has shattered this premise. An even more
fundamental difference has emerged. Indian political leadership has shed its
inhibition to engage in dissuasive strikes against Pakistan. This is the
biggest self-inflicted injury to Pakistan.
On a broader canvas, it also signals China of
Indian determination to safeguard its sovereignty. Militarily too it has
showcased India’s military interdiction reach over China’s strategically vital
CPEC and CMEC projects, to the east and west of India.
Factor 4 – Effect on National Economy
India, by limiting the military confrontation
in time and space, has ensured no adverse economic fallout on its economy.
There has been minimal damage to military infrastructure and major weapons
platforms. Even then, the release of additional INR 50,000 crore funds to its
military in emergency powers to recoup its high end munitions expenditure, and
purchase of key new technology enabled war fighting resources, in just four
days of limited military engagement, educates us on one critical aspect. The debilitating
adverse fallout on the national economy, had India been forced into a
protracted open military conflict.
Learnings emerging from the course of military
operations, shall most probably direct the future military acquisitions towards
a mix of limited advanced foreign military equipment, complemented with a mass
of indigenous developed technology platforms. For India, this shall add heft to
‘Atamnirbharta’ (Self-reliance) in defence manufacturing. As a bonus, it
would also reduce its dependence on unreliable, foreign original equipment
manufacturers.
For Pakistan, even this limited confrontation
will turn out to be very prohibitive. Its economy, already surviving on IMF
bailouts and foreign doles, will be severely hit by the inevitable rise in
military expenditure. A concomitant factor to this eventuality will be the
reduced availability of funds for development of public infrastructure, a
recipe for increased regional instability.
Factor 5 – India’s ‘Operation Sindoor New Normal’ Doctrine
Pakistan had entered the fray, anticipating absorbing a light Indian
retaliation before launching its own riposte, that would orchestrate a limited
but prolonged military confrontation, followed by strategic international
intervention to prevent a ‘nuclear conflict’ at an appropriate stage. The
overall aim was to vitiate the foreign investment climate in India. However,
India did not follow the predicted script.
Pakistan was caught off guard by India holding in abeyance the IWT. In
one stroke India seized the initiative from Pakistan. By successfully calling
the nuclear bluff, India has also opened the door to widen the conflict
scenario at will.
India’s political leadership, filled with new confidence, is less likely
to leave unchallenged any future provocations by Pakistan. Assured retaliation
shall be a new reality for Pakistan.
This has left Pakistan with restricted manoeuvre space to pursue its
self-interests.
Factor 6 – Domestic Impact
The Indian state is already stage managing the spectacular display of professional
performance by the military to script a favourable public opinion of the political
leadership currently in government.
This will have a great impact on the political environment, by weakening
the opposition to the controversial reforms being undertaken by the present government,
and firm its grip over organs of the state.
It may also generate greater political interest by giving a fillip to the stalled reforms in the military,
and introduce changes in the existing ponderous Chain of Command.
In Pakistan, the first impact is already visible with the imminent promotion
of Gen Asim Munir, their COAS, to the rank of a Field Marshal. His securing an
extension of service by another 2-3 years is also now a distinct possibility.
If so, there’s less probability of the government introducing any extraordinary
change in body politic of the country.
But there are provincial factors also at play in Pakistan. This is the
first time since 1971, that the common citizen has experienced the sound and
fury of India’s military might in the midst of their population centres. No
amount of censorship and perception management can negate this reality. This will
have a major impact about the competency of their own military, on the minds of
their citizens. This has a strong probability of converting into a political
storm, and further embolden separatism tendencies in outlying provinces.
Factor 7 – Geopolitical
Repercussions
There are three major ongoing conflicts, Rus
in Central Europe, Levant in West Asia, and India China-Pakistan in South Asia.
Each of these conflicts have their unique dynamics, with distinct learnings.
The events of the short and sharp military
exchange between two nuclear weapon armed states, with the shadow of a third
major nuclear armed weapon state looming over the conflict zone, are most unique.
For Pakistan the geopolitical outcome is on
predicted lines. Its reliance on external military and economic support will
increase, making it more vulnerable to pulls and pressures of its backers. This
will make its actions more volatile, more unpredictive, and decrease the
reliability of any understandings arrived at with it.
However, the US and China are equally at home
in inducing instability, in regions of interest, and fish in troubled waters. So
it will further enhance the suitability of Pakistan to act as their proverbial
catspaw. India needs to understand that there is going to be no let up in
the ‘Great Game.’
In humour it may be said that it should be comparatively
easy for Indian leadership to readjust to this ground reality. More so, as it is
at ease functioning in chaos. India is no stranger to this game, as evident
from the popular usage of the Punjabi vernacular, ‘Siapa’, and even a
paraphrase in Hindi vernacular ‘raita failana.’
India’s success brings to it a bag of mixed fruits. It shall enhance its
status as a reckonable entity in the Indian Ocean Region. However, this very
success shall also beget greater attention as a serious emerging competitor on
the global stage. India, while being alert to external machinations to tie it
down in South Asia through regional instability, shall have to adapt its
strategic thought process for action on a broader canvas.
Factor 8 – Perception
Management
While terming ‘Operation Sindoor’ as the ‘new
normal’ by India may be vicariously questioned, both internally and externally,
the one factor on which there is commonality of opinion is, perception
management being the ‘new normal’. This is a factor, where totalitarian regimes
have a running start over their adversaries with democratic form of governance.
Pakistan scored over India in managing the
fallout of the terror incident, and orchestrating international concern on the imminence
of a nuclear exchange. The provenance of this statement may be fairly
established, by its securing a second tranche of the IMF loan despite the
terror incident, and serious attempts at diplomatic intervention by the US for
a ceasefire.
India’s learnings from the predictability
factor gave it an edge in blunting Pakistan denials on effectiveness of the strikes
on targets within Pakistan. This time India launched precision strikes on targets
in full public glare, and displayed photographic, and technology based evidence
to substantiate provenance of destruction caused by its strikes.
India’s second success in perception
management lay in blanketing own casualties reasonably well. Despite repeated
claims by Pakistan of downing Indian aircrafts, the latter has been partially successful
in obfuscating the issue. This has denied situational military advantage to
Pakistan.
India was also successful in eroding global audience
trust in official Pakistan briefings. The ‘photo op’ visit of the Indian PM to
Adampur airfield, which Pakistan had claimed was destroyed along with the advanced
S400 AD platform, immediately after the stop firing agreement, is indicative of
active perception management steps by India.
But India’s biggest success lay in brilliantly
managing the nuclear escalation front. Its effective strikes on the strategic Nur
Khan and Sargodha nuclear hinges of Pakistan, and yet denying hitting any
nuclear infrastructure stumped Pakistan. The persistent social media campaign
on the subject while inducing a denial from the IAEA, forced the Pakistan PM to
admit the destruction of these targets by India.
Overall India maintained an edge over Pakistan
in perception management of the conflict. However, its information management
mechanism, though reasonably effective in long term, is too ponderous to secure
situational advantage for itself, that continues to be the forte of Pakistan.
To sum up this factor with humour, while sharing the basic truth, Pakistan
military may have to struggle harder to fight the sarcasm of their own citizens
evident from some of the more popular meme awash on their social media, ‘Larai kadi jeetey nahi, election kadi
haarey nahi!’ (never won a war, never lost an election!)
Overall
Outcome
For India,
‘Operation Sindoor’ has delivered invaluable experience in the nuances of
applying military force. No amount of wargaming would have brought the actual decision
makers face to face with the existing vulnerabilities in the national command
chain, the right direction for the restructuring of the national defence
architecture, and for re-equipping the armed forces.
The most valuable
lesson gained by India is the exposure of its political leadership in real time
decision matrix; in military parlance, ‘battle inoculation under live fire’.
They entered the battle with cautious treads, but when ‘the push came to a
shove’ they showed nerves of steel, as earlier during the 2020 Galwan
faceoff against China.
The biggest gain
for India has been the shedding of inhibition, by its political leadership, to
cross the IB. This predictability earlier put its military at a severe
operational disadvantage, and was at the root of the Pakistan strategy to ‘bleed
India by a thousand cuts.’
Another major gain
is, once and for all, to bring down the curtain on the adversary’s nuclear
umbrella. The destruction of Nur Khan and Sargodha air bases of Pakistan, was
the clearest message, that their National Command Authority was within reach of
India’s might.
As the adversaries
reflect on what went wrong for them, India has gained critical time to rearm
and restructure its armed forces, ramp up its defensive and economic infrastructure,
and build trusted geopolitical alliances.
The Pakistan military, the de facto decision makers, are stunned by this
serious military reverse. But this is not the first time that the Pakistan
military has been bested by India, as attested to by the outcomes of 1948,
1965, 1971, 1984, and 1999 battles between the two. Supported and armed,
earlier by the USA, and now by China, the Pakistan military has stuck to the
façade of being the victors within their domestic civil society.
What is new this time is that their nuclear umbrella, a panacea for all
their ills, has been blown away. But an even more significant occurrence is
that this is the first time that the Pakistan military leadership found their ‘own
skin in the game’. No military ruler ever rings up his prime minister in
the middle of the night to inform them that their most secure military complex,
at a hand shaking distance from their location, has just been destroyed by the
enemy.
But it should be realistic to assume that the contest is not yet over.
With China at its back, Pakistan military will look at new ways to claw back
into yet another, and more imaginative, confrontation with India.
Future Probabilities for India
India’s ‘Operation Sindoor New Normal’ doctrine – First articulated by the
Kargil Review Committee Report in 1999, it has taken India’s political
hierarchy a quarter of a century to be confident enough to publicly embrace and
enforce zero tolerance to cross-border terrorism as a state policy. But the
efficacy of this ‘new normal’ shall be dependent on two factors. First
shall be, a strong Indian political will to stay the course. The second
shall flow from the innovations employed by the Pakistan military to circumvent
the dynamics of the ‘new normal’. Any other alternative for the Pakistan
military hierarchy shall lead to the unthinkable eventuality of giving up on
the levers of power, an unlikely occurrence.
Escalatory deterrence – By linking denial of trade, and water to
compliance on ceasing crossborder support to terrorism, and introducing the
ever present danger of retaliatory crossborder military strikes, India has been
successful in crafting a new sub-nuclear escalatory deterrence matrix. But a
wily Pakistan shall always look at creative ways to circumvent and wear down
India, an aspect that needs to be factored in future contingency management. Creativity
and innovations should be the ‘mantra’ for India’s dealings with Pakistan, to
keep the latter off-balance.
Enhancing military preparedness – To better prepare itself for the coming
global uncertainties, India shall need to imbibe the right lessons from the
limited military confrontation, and fast pace reforms and re-equipping its
military to rectify observed: -
Anomalies in the military chain of command.
Fast track stalled Theatre Command structuring.
Roll out Maritime Theatre Command, the only
low hanging fruit.
But the most critical is to relook at integrating
the proposed Joint Air Defence Command into an Integrated Homeland Air Defence Command
to ward off the ever present and ever increasing dimension of the
drone threat.
Beautiful and enlightening read
ReplyDeleteThank you for your thought Janghu
DeleteWonderful and balance insight. I have read all the three parts and Kudos to Col sidhu for such thoughtful blogs. Congratulations. Rgds Col Suhas Thakar
ReplyDeleteCol Suhas Thakar thank you for your words.
DeleteTargeted widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure like rail junctions. water storage, power infrastructure etc. to give rise to a sense of hopelessness directly in the civilian population, in order to coerce the rogue leadership across the Ravi R to permanently rein in their proxies, could be a solution. Otherwise the rogues (aided by their 'allies') may probably continue with blatant terrorism leading to a spiral of escalating responses.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for your viewpoint!
ReplyDelete