In 1991 Punjab recorded more insurgency deaths than any year of the conflict, and serious commentary discussed the state’s future in the vocabulary of secession and civil war. By the end of 1993 organised militancy had effectively ceased to exist. Collapses that fast are overdetermined, and the era’s partisans have each claimed the single cause, the police campaign, the population’s turn, the movement’s rot, according to their brief. This article, standing at the point in this series where the collapse must be explained, sets out the five forces the scholarship and the record support, in the order of their weight.
First: The Population Turned
Every serious account, including those of the campaign’s own commanders, begins here. The Sikh peasantry that had sheltered the movement after 1984, from conviction, grief, or fear, withdrew that shelter in the early 1990s, exhausted by the extortion economy, the predation on families, the killing of elders and the codes enforced at gunpoint that this series has documented. Intelligence, the campaign’s decisive commodity, flows from exactly this layer, and it reversed direction: the informer networks of 1992 were staffed by the villages of 1988. No police tactic manufactures that reversal; the militancy manufactured it, one levy and one atrocity at a time, upon its own base.
Second: The Campaign Closed the Space
Upon that turned ground, the state’s machine worked with undeniable effect. The saturated deployment, the head money and the pursuit of named leaderships man by man, the border fencing that choked the Pakistan pipeline, and the methods whose lawful and unlawful strands this series has separated and weighed, together collapsed the militants’ operating space in eighteen months. The campaign’s defenders are entitled to the sequence; its documented crimes, the staged encounters and the disappearances, are entered in this series’ ledger and are not subtracted by the sequence. Both facts stand.
Third: The Movement Devoured Itself
Fragmentation, mapped earlier in this series, matured into fratricide. Factions fought over collection territories and communique credit; discipline decayed until village Punjab could not distinguish liberation army from armed gang because, in district after district, there was no distinction; and the leaderships’ physical removal to Pakistan separated command from consequence. Movements survive states’ pressure routinely; few survive their own franchisees.
Fourth: Politics Reopened
The elections of 1992, for all the gunpoint paradox this series has examined, restored a political channel, and the panchayat and municipal polls that followed gave rural Punjab a safe way to answer the question the boycott had begged. Offered ballots without death threats, Punjab used them massively, and every vote cast was a defection the movement could not punish at scale. The Akali return in 1997 completed the demonstration that every constitutional grievance of 1982 could be pursued in office rather than from the sarais.
Fifth: The Cause Had Hollowed
Beneath all four ran the ideological exhaustion. The demand this series traced from its origins had never commanded Punjab’s majority; by 1992 its living content was a decade of buses, bazaars, and levies, and its promised state had been prefigured, in the territories the movement actually ran, as tyranny. Causes end when their own constituency can no longer say what victory would be for; by the endgame, the militancy’s Punjab could not.
The five forces ranked, one conclusion follows and closes this article: Punjab’s peace was made first by Punjab, by the village that turned, the voter who returned, and the society that had never signed the project. The state’s campaign accelerated an ending the population had authored, and took, along with its due credit, liberties with law whose accounting fills this series’ final batch. Both authorships belong in the record, in that order.


In 30 Seconds



