Centre unveils policy to tackle terror threats


PRAHAAR — India's National Counter-Terrorism Policy & Strategy

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Milestone Detail
Pre-PRAHAAR era India's counter-terror response was ad hoc — governed by individual statutes (UAPA, TADA, POTA) without an overarching doctrine.
26/11 Mumbai attacks, 2008 Catalysed creation of the NIA (2009) and NATGRID, but no unified policy emerged.
NIA Act, 2008 Established the National Investigation Agency as the apex federal counter-terror body. [S2]
UAPA (as amended 2019) Gave power to designate individuals (not just organisations) as terrorists; backbone statute for PRAHAAR. [S2]
Dec 2025 Policy finalised; The Hindu first reported its imminent release. [S3]
23 Feb 2026 PRAHAAR released by MHA — India's first formal national counter-terror policy. [S1][S3]

4. Core Static Facts

Name & Acronym - Full title: National Counter-Terrorism Policy and Strategy - Branding: PRAHAAR (Hindi: "strike/assault")

Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) [S1]

Document Status: Policy (not a statute); uploaded as PDF on mha.gov.in [S1]

The Seven Pillars of PRAHAAR [S1][S2]:

# Pillar Essence
P Prevention of terrorist attacks Intelligence-led, proactive disruption
R Response — swift and proportionate Rapid response forces, SOPs
A Aggregation of capacity Capacity-building across security and intelligence agencies
H Human rights compliance Rule-of-law-guided operations
A Addressing conditions conducive to radicalisation De-radicalisation, counter-narrative
A Alliances — international cooperation Extradition treaties, MLATs, UN engagement
R Recovery & resilience Whole-of-society approach, victim rehabilitation

Threat vectors identified: - Land, water, and air — all three frontiers explicitly named. [S3] - Cyber domain — "criminal hackers and nation-states" target India. [S3] - Critical sectors protected: power, railways, aviation, ports, defence, space, atomic energy. [S3]

Legal Framework (enabling statutes): [S2] - UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act) - Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) / Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) / Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) - PMLA (Prevention of Money Laundering Act) - Arms Act, Explosives Act

Key agency: National Investigation Agency (NIA) — apex body for terror investigations and prosecution. [S2]

Normative stance: India does not link terrorism to any specific religion, ethnicity, nationality or civilisation. [S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Social / Ethical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. PRAHAAR is India's first-ever National Counter-Terrorism Policy and Strategy. [S1]
  2. Released by the Ministry of Home Affairs on 23 February 2026. [S1]
  3. The document is publicly available as a PDF on mha.gov.in. [S1]
  4. PRAHAAR identifies seven pillars: Prevention, Response, Aggregation of capacity, Human rights, Addressing radicalisation, Alliances (international), Recovery. [S1]
  5. India identifies terrorist threats on all three frontiers — land, water, and air. [S3]
  6. Cyber-attacks by criminal hackers and nation-states are explicitly named as threats alongside conventional terrorism. [S3]
  7. Critical sectors explicitly listed: power, railways, aviation, ports, defence, space, atomic energy. [S3]
  8. Policy does not link terrorism to any religion, ethnicity, nationality or civilisation — a formal stated position. [S3]
  9. Acknowledges "sponsored terrorism from across the border" with Jihadi outfits — direct (though not named) reference to Pakistan. [S3]
  10. al-Qaeda and IS are named as global terrorist groups targeting India. [S3]
  11. Primary legal backbone: UAPA, BNS, BNSS, BSA, PMLA, Arms Act, Explosives Act. [S2]
  12. NIA is the nodal agency for counter-terror investigation and prosecution under this policy. [S2]
  13. Policy aims to deny terrorists access to funding, weapons, and safe havens — mirroring FATF language. [S3]
  14. The Hindu first reported the policy's finalisation on 23 December 2025 — two months before release. [S3]
  15. PRAHAAR is a policy document, not legislation — it does not require parliamentary approval. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-III (Internal Security); secondary relevance to GS-II (Governance, Government Policy) and GS-IV (Ethics — human rights, accountability).

Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Linkages between development and spread of extremism; Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security; Basics of cyber security; Security challenges and their management in border areas. - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors.

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "PRAHAAR, India's first National Counter-Terrorism Policy, signals a shift from reactive to proactive security governance. Critically analyse its key pillars and the institutional architecture required for effective implementation." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "How does PRAHAAR address the convergence of conventional terrorism and cyber threats? What legal and technological frameworks are needed to operationalise the policy?" (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "India's counter-terrorism efforts have historically suffered from centre-state coordination gaps. Does PRAHAAR adequately address these federal challenges?" (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
UAPA (Unlawful Activities Prevention Act) & 2019 Amendment Primary legal backbone of PRAHAAR; individual designation as terrorist.
National Investigation Agency (NIA) Apex implementation body under the policy; mandate, jurisdiction, conviction rates.
FATF (Financial Action Task Force) PRAHAAR's emphasis on denying terror financing mirrors FATF's mandate; India's FATF membership context.
Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT) India's long-standing UN proposal; PRAHAAR's international cooperation pillar links here.
Critical Information Infrastructure Protection (NCIIPC/CERT-In) PRAHAAR's cyber-threat dimension; protects the same critical sectors.
Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023 New criminal law framework integrated into PRAHAAR's legal architecture.
NIA Act, 2008 & 2019 Amendment Gives NIA jurisdiction across states — federal dimension of counter-terror.
NATGRID & Multi-Agency Centre (MAC) Intelligence-sharing infrastructure relevant to PRAHAAR's "Prevention" pillar.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. PRAHAAR is not a law — it is a policy/strategy document and does not require parliamentary enactment. Aspirants often confuse it with legislation like UAPA or POTA.
  2. Ministry confusion — PRAHAAR is released by MHA, not the Ministry of Defence or MEA, though it has security and foreign-policy dimensions.
  3. Acronym trap — PRAHAAR stands for seven pillars (not six or eight); the "A" appears three times (Aggregation, Addressing, Alliances) — a common MCQ trick.
  4. Date confusion — Policy was finalised by December 2025 but released publicly on 23 February 2026; these are two different events.
  5. Scope confusion with POTA/TADA — PRAHAAR is not a revival of banned laws; it operates within the existing legal framework (UAPA, BNS). TADA was repealed in 1995, POTA in 2004 — confusing their timelines is a recurring error.

11. Sources