syndrome to which so many of our political conversations fall prey, much of the noise – especially on the internet – has focused on Arundhati Roy’s recent “embedded” piece from the Dantewada frontlines. Running the gamut from Talveen Singh to Salil Tripathi to Shobhaa De, Roy’s critics have driven home the point that, Roy’s advocacy of, if not the Naxalite cause, then at least the necessity of the Naxalite cause, is at best irresponsible and deluded; and at worst, complicit in Naxalite violence. Most notable of all were veteran liberal journalist Barkha Dutt’s April 7 tweets: not content with a dig at Roy (“what would be unbearable is anymore twisted romanticism of the CAUSE. no more 36 page essays on the good folk of dantewada pls”), Dutt even called into question the Indian Air Force’s own apparent reluctance in the face of civilian calls for using air power against the Naxalites (“Air chief may be right in questioning use of air power against ones own people but this attack will have to change the rules of the game”).