Unveiling BJP’s Border Blunders: Naravane’s “Censored” Memoir by DebaprasadBandyopadhyay Via Flickr: onceinabluemoon2021.in/2026/02/12/unveiling-bjps-border-b... The review examines the “unpublished” (?) book Four Stars of Destiny: An Autobiography by General M.M. Naravane (retd.), former Chief of the Indian Army (2019–2022), in comparative dialogue with three major critical interventions on contemporary Indian state power: the BBC documentary India: The Modi Question, Rakesh Sharma’s Final Solution (2003), and Rana Ayyub’s Gujarat Files: Anatomy of a Cover-Up. While differing in form—military memoir, investigative journalism, and documentary cinema—all four works converge in unsettling dominant state narratives through documented, insider or evidentiary accounts of crisis, violence, and political accountability. The review argues that the prolonged suppression of Naravane’s memoir through bureaucratic delay constitutes a form of de facto censorship analogous to the formal banning, blocking, or marginalization faced by the other works. Read together, these texts reveal a patterned architecture of control in contemporary India, where power manages inconvenient truths not primarily through overt prohibition, but via procedural stalling, digital blocking, market denial, and epistemic delegitimization. The review situates this pattern within broader debates on civil–military relations, communal violence, and the politics of memory, suggesting that the real threat posed by these works lies in their capacity to reinsert ambiguity, failure, and hesitation into an official narrative built on certainty and spectacle.

















