India’s Spy Trap: The Arrest That Exposed a Proxy War at Its Doorstep
(Chapter 1)
India’s National Investigation Agency made a striking arrest on 13th March 2026. Matthew VanDyke, an American national, and six Ukrainian nationals were detained under India’s anti-terror laws. The charge was serious. They allegedly used Indian territory as a corridor to cross illegally into Myanmar and train ethnic armed groups. Investigators also suspect they trained banned insurgent outfits active within Northeast India itself.
VanDyke is no ordinary traveler. After university, he rode a motorcycle across North Africa and the Middle East. During the 2011 Libyan Civil War, he joined rebel fighters against Gaddafi, was captured, imprisoned for six months, and escaped. He later planned to document the Syrian Civil War, but after ISIS executed his journalist friends James Foley and Steven Sotloff, he pivoted entirely. He founded Sons of Liberty International, a non-profit security outfit that trains local populations and militias to defend themselves rather than deploying foreign fighters directly. His footprint spans Iraq, Syria, Libya, Venezuela, and Iran.
What alarmed Indian authorities most was the nature of the training. VanDyke was allegedly providing special forces-style instruction focused on drone operations, guerrilla tactics, and modern warfare techniques. The Ukraine and Myanmar conflicts had already demonstrated how cheap, modified commercial drones can completely change a battlefield. Lightly armed rebels using them have managed to hold off far better-equipped state militaries. If this knowledge reached banned insurgent groups in Northeast India, it would represent a massive leap in their capabilities.
The geography makes this even more dangerous. The border between Indian states like Mizoram and Manipur and Myanmar’s Chin and Sagaing regions is porous and mountainous. Many communities on both sides share close ethnic ties. Weapons, tactics, and trained fighters move across this border with relative ease. Even if VanDyke’s primary target was anti-junta rebels inside Myanmar, the proximity of banned anti-India groups makes spillover almost inevitable.
VanDyke’s operational doctrine adds another layer of threat. His stated goal has never been to deploy foreign fighters but to train local populations to sustain themselves. In military terms, this is a train-the-trainer model. Indian authorities were not simply arresting a few foreign combatants. They were stopping individuals attempting to build self-sustaining insurgent cells capable of spreading modern warfare tactics to hundreds more.
Theories on Espionage
Three geopolitical theories have emerged around the arrest. The first suspects a covert Western intelligence operation, possibly CIA-linked, designed to destabilize India’s historically volatile Northeast. The second points toward Ukrainian special operations networks, which have reportedly been active in Sudan, Mali, Syria, and Libya to strike Russian assets. The third frames the operation as pressure on India for its continued purchase of discounted Russian crude oil throughout the Ukraine conflict, a policy that has frustrated Western governments.
For Indian authorities, the theoretical origins matter less than the concrete threat. Is Northeast India being used as a lawless transit route for international mercenaries? Did the training successfully reach banned Indian insurgent groups? Was the mission a cover for active espionage? The NIA appears to believe it stopped something significant before it could take root. Whether all three theories converge or only one proves true, the arrest signals that India’s northeastern frontier has become a theater far larger than a border-policing problem.
American Benevolence
All three theories do trace back to American influence in some form. The CIA angle is direct. The Ukrainian connection runs through Washington too, since Ukraine’s special operations capacity has been substantially funded, trained, and equipped by the United States. Even the Russian oil pressure theory points toward Washington, as it is the US and its allies who have most forcefully pushed India to abandon Russian energy.
VanDyke himself is an American national. Sons of Liberty International, whatever its non-profit framing, operates in theaters that align closely with American foreign policy interests. His previous operations in Iraq, Syria, and Libya all map onto zones of active US strategic concern.
The evidence as presented points toward a coordinated effort, whether state-directed or state-tolerated, that originates from within the American sphere of influence. Whether Washington ordered it, winked at it, or simply created the ideological and financial ecosystem that made it possible is the question investigators will likely never fully answer in public.
India, for its part, seems to understand this. The NIA’s response was swift and the charges are severe. That itself is a message.
Justice
There was a Urdu movie from India called Mughal-e-Azam. In that a statue sculptor (Sangtarash) says “how little difference there is between the justice and tyranny of emperors.”
Shahenshahon ke insaaf aur zulm mein kis qadar kam farq hota hai.
The sculptor says it from the lowest rung of existence. He shapes the image of kings with his own hands. He knows their grandeur is stone deep. He has no illusions.
Akbar, one of history’s most celebrated rulers, is in the middle of doing something that looks just. But the sculptor sees through the theatre of it. Justice dispensed from absolute power is still absolute power. The king decides what is just. That decision itself is the tyranny.
The parallel to the VanDyke case is sharp. When Washington funds a rebel, it calls it democracy promotion. When it arms a militia, it calls it capacity building. When it trains insurgents near a rival’s border, it calls it supporting self-determination. The language is generous. The architecture underneath is not.
India purchasing Russian oil is an act of sovereign economic decision-making. The response, if these theories hold, was to fund instability at its borders. That is not diplomacy. That is the king’s tyranny wearing the king’s justice as a mask.
Mughal-e-Azam was released in 1960. K. Asif spent over a decade making it. That one line from a minor character has survived longer in meaning than most of the grand speeches in the film.
Useless but useful
The sculptor had a singular, specialized skill. Carving likenesses of power. Useless in a market, useless on a farm, and useless to a merchant. His entire existence was contingent on the king needing monuments to himself. Remove the king and the sculptor starves.
VanDyke is the modern sangtarash (sculptor).
His skill set, training insurgents in drone warfare and guerrilla tactics, has exactly zero civilian application. No corporation hires him. No hospital needs him. No farmer or teacher or engineer has any use for what he knows. His entire professional existence depends on someone powerful enough to fund a conflict and cynical enough to need deniability.
Without a CIA, without a Ukrainian intelligence network, without some state or quasi-state actor running a geopolitical play, VanDyke is simply an American man with unusual hobbies and no income.
The Sculptor
The sculptor carved what kings commanded. VanDyke trains whom power points him toward.
And like the sculptor, he likely tells himself he believes in the work. That he is serving something noble. Freedom, resistance, self-determination. The sangtarash probably believed the emperor was genuinely great. That belief is what makes both of them useful. A cynical sculptor carves poorly. A cynical trainer trains half-heartedly.
True believers are the most economical tool of power. They come with their own motivation. The king pays only in food and shelter. Sometimes not even that.
We shall discuss more Benevolence of USA on India in the next chapter.