The first major task Pradhan took up as Home Secretary in February 1985, was to assess the political situation in
Punjab. Politics in Punjab had become secessionist in nature and the
Akali Dal party was calling for an independent country of
Khalistan. Following the previous Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi's ordering of
Operation Blue Star to flush out the militants, and her subsequent assassination by her own
Sikh bodyguards sympathetic to the Khalistan cause, the situation in Punjab had become tense. Pradhan suggested re-initialisation of dialogue with the Akali Dal, and as a precursor suggested the replacement of Punjab Governor K.T. Satarawalla, with a person of political background. Following this,
Arjun Singh was made the new Governor of Punjab in March 1985. Pradhan also suggested involving the former Maharashtra Chief Minister
Sharad Pawar in the Punjab negotiations. Being from Maharashtra himself, Pradhan was aware of the political structure on his home state, and knew of Pawar's abilities, and his added advantage of being a friend of
Parkash Singh Badal, one of the Akali strongmen. Pawar's appointment led the way to his rejoining the Congress (I) from which he had split. Pawar went on to become a Congress strongman in the
Narasimha Rao government. Pradhan was given the task of assessing the election-readiness of Punjab, and he arranged meetings between jailed student leaders and their mentors to assess the mood of the Punjab youth. When elections were held in Punjab, the Akali Dal joined the mainstream and was returned as the ruling party. == Punjab Accord ==