Kanishka bombing: CSIS names Khalistani extremists, validating India's 40-year stand
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Canada's intelligence agency has formally acknowledged that Canada-based Khalistani extremists were responsible for the 1985 Air India Flight 182 'Kanishka' bombing, which killed all 329 people on board — a belated affirmation of a position India has consistently maintained since 23 June 1985. The statement, issued by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) on the bombing's anniversary, is being described as far more than a symbolic admission.
What CSIS Said
In its National Day of Remembrance for Victims of Terrorism statement, CSIS explicitly named the perpetrators for the first time in an official capacity. 'On June 23, 1985, a bomb planted by Canada-based Khalistani extremists destroyed the aircraft, killing everyone on board — most of them Canadians. It remains the deadliest terrorist attack in Canada's history and a defining moment for our national security community,' the agency stated. Of the 329 killed, 268 were Canadian citizens, many of Indian origin.
Decades of Denial and Documented Failures
According to an analysis published by Khalsa Vox, successive Canadian governments permitted Khalistani extremist groups to operate with relative impunity, sheltering behind frameworks of free speech and multiculturalism. The report cited the Major Commission inquiry, which documented intelligence lapses, surveillance failures, and evidence mishandling by CSIS itself. Talwinder Singh Parmar, identified as a key figure in the plot, evaded justice for years. Families of the victims reportedly waited in vain for full accountability.
The analysis noted that funding flowed to extremist networks, rallies glorified perpetrators, and political expediency — particularly the pursuit of diaspora votes — repeatedly outweighed decisive counter-terrorism action. This 'selective tolerance,' the report argued, strained bilateral relations, hindered extradition efforts, and allowed fringe elements to shape public narratives around Punjab and Sikh identity.
Why the Timing Matters
The CSIS statement comes amid heightened scrutiny of Khalistani networks operating on Canadian soil. Canadian intelligence has increasingly flagged these groups as 'national security threats,' citing the diversion of community funds and the exploitation of democratic institutions to further extremist objectives. The acknowledgment is being read, in part, as a response to sustained pressure on Ottawa to confront the domestic roots of transnational terrorism.
Notably, this admission arrives against the backdrop of a prolonged diplomatic strain between India and Canada, which deteriorated sharply in 2023 over allegations related to Khalistani operatives. The Kanishka bombing, the report underscored, should have unified both nations against extremism four decades ago — instead, it became a fault line.
India's Consistent Position
The report highlighted India's consistent cooperation with Canada on counter-terrorism through intelligence sharing and efforts to secure justice for its citizens and diaspora victims. New Delhi has long maintained that the bombing was conceived and executed from Canadian soil by extremists pursuing a violent separatist agenda — a position now formally echoed by Canada's own intelligence establishment.
The Khalsa Vox analysis called for action beyond the press statement: 'True reconciliation demands dismantling support networks, prosecuting remaining suspects, freezing assets, and rejecting the glorification of terrorists in public spaces.' Whether Ottawa translates this acknowledgment into concrete policy steps will determine its actual significance.