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Explained | Delhi’s first SVBIED attack: Why vehicle-borne suicide bombings are almost impossible to stop

Delhi’s first SVBIED attack shows why vehicle-borne suicide bombs are almost impossible to detect.

November 15, 2025 / 21:17 IST
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A VBIED attack turns an ordinary vehicle into a high-speed weapon. Monday’s blast forces a rethink inside India’s counterterror grid.

Delhi has seen bombings before, but Monday’s incident is in a different league. For the first time, the national capital has faced a Suicide Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive Device (SVBIED) attack, a tactic security agencies consider one of the hardest to detect and even harder to prevent.

According to a report by The Times of India (TOI), investigators believe this attack marks a worrying escalation: the bomber used an ordinary vehicle as both delivery mechanism and weapon, exploiting a vulnerability that modern cities still struggle to defend against.

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What exactly happened, and why it matters

A suicide attacker driving a vehicle packed with high-grade explosives detonated it inside the city. TOI reports that this marks the first known SVBIED strike in Delhi, bringing India face-to-face with a form of urban terrorism that global agencies treat as a top-tier threat.