Concepts

Hot Pursuit

CAPF wiki2 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectDefence

Definition

The act of pursuing and engaging fleeing armed adversaries (such as militants or insurgents) across a border or into a neighbouring State's territory, immediately after an attack, to neutralise them before they reach safety.

Key points

  • In international law, "hot pursuit" is most clearly recognised at sea: under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), a coastal State may chase a foreign ship that has violated its laws from its waters into the high seas, but the pursuit must be continuous and must stop on entering another State's territorial waters.
  • On land there is no general settled right of cross-border hot pursuit; entering another State's territory without consent raises sovereignty and international-law questions, so States rely on self-defence arguments and limited operations.
  • India has conducted limited cross-border ground operations against insurgents, notably along the Myanmar frontier in 2015 against north-east insurgent camps, conducted by the Army, often discussed in the context of hot pursuit (carried out with coordination, not as a doctrine of unilateral incursion).
  • Cross-border counter-terror actions such as the 2016 LoC strikes are framed by India as pre-emptive and limited, distinct from a routine doctrine of hot pursuit into another country.
  • Operationally, hot pursuit demands rapid intelligence, mobility and clear rules of engagement, balanced against the human-rights and sovereignty constraints of operating near or across borders.

Why it matters for CAPF

Hot pursuit links border management, counter-insurgency and international law; the maritime UNCLOS rule and the 2015 Myanmar cross-border operation are commonly referenced facts.

Common confusion

Maritime hot pursuit is a recognised legal right under UNCLOS with strict conditions; cross-land-border hot pursuit has no equivalent general right and depends on consent or self-defence justifications. Hot pursuit (chasing a fleeing enemy) is conceptually distinct from a planned surgical strike.

One-line recall

Chasing fleeing armed adversaries across a border right after an attack; clearly recognised at sea under UNCLOS, legally contested on land (for example the 2015 Myanmar operation).

concept surgical strikes, concept line of control vs international border, concept loc vs lac, concept comprehensive convention on terrorism

Parent note

border management of india

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