A GATHERING STORM: ON INDIA’S DIPLOMATIC ACTIONS AGAINST PAKISTAN

THE CONTEXT: A rare mass-casualty assault on tourists in Pahalgam (Anantnag) has triggered India’s most sweeping package of “coercive-diplomacy” steps against Pakistan since Balakot 2019. The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) has paired diplomatic downgrades with punitive riparian measures, signalling that the escalation ladder remains open.

BACKGROUND: PATTERN OF CROSS-BORDER TERRORISM

    • Historical continuum: 1999 Kargil → 2001 Parliament Attack → 2008 Mumbai Attacks → 2016 Uri Attack → 2019 Pulwama → 2025 Pahalgam.
    • Terror proxies: Shift from Jaish-e-Mohammed overt operations to TRF (plausible deniability model).
    • Doctrine revival: Pakistan Army Chief Asim Munir’s ‘jugular vein’ rhetoric mirrors pre-Kargil escalatory doctrines.

INDIA’S DIPLOMATIC AND STRATEGIC RESPONSES:

MeasureRationaleHistorical Parallel
Suspension of Indus Waters Treaty (meetings/data sharing)Strategic signal; legal non-breach (Art VII IWT)Pulwama Response (2019) – India expedited water project clearances
Visa Cancellations, Consular DowngradeMinimalistic engagement principle2002 Parliament Attack aftermath: diplomatic isolation tactics
Closure of Attari ICP BorderHalt economic soft targets2016 post-Uri trade suspension at LoC points
Diplomatic Briefings to Global PartnersNarrative shaping; preventing external mediationPost-2019 Balakot, extensive international outreach

PAKISTAN’S REACTION: COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE POSTURING:

    • Mirror Actions: Visa suspensions, trade blockages, threats to Simla Agreement stability.
    • Escalatory Rhetoric: Water blockade = “act of war”; indirect threats of retaliatory strikes.
    • No Internal Accountability: No action initiated against TRF-LeT infrastructure despite FATF technical compliance demands.

GEOPOLITICAL RESPONSE:

    • Global support for India: The U.S., EU, Japan, and UAE have condemned terror without urging Indian restraint.
    • Pakistan’s Diplomatic Isolation: FATF grey-list removal (2022) gains squandered; no serious allies are willing to back Islamabad’s accusations.
    • Strategic Calculus: China is cautious after the Gwadar attacks; the Saudi-UAE axis is reducing the enthusiasm for financial bailout in Pakistan.

IMPACT ASSESSMENT

1. Trade – Formal bilateral trade (USD 1.2 bn in 2024) likely to zero out; indirect third-country routing (≈USD 10 bn) faces higher logistics costs.

2. Aviation & Connectivity – Pak air-space closure raises flight times to Europe and US by up to 40 min, inflating ATF costs for Indian carriers.

3. Water & Energy Security – Potential acceleration of 3.6 GW of run-of-river projects on Chenab/Jhelum; ecological downstream risks.

4. Tourism & Local Economy – Pahalgam footfall plunged 60 % within a week, imperilling J-K’s ₹600 cr annual tourism revenue.

THE CHALLENGES:

1. Treaty Law Complexity: Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) Exit Constraints

    • The IWT (1960) — brokered by the World Bank — lacks an explicit withdrawal clause; unilateral suspension risks violating Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969) norms.
    • Possible reliance on “Rebus Sic Stantibus” doctrine (Art. 62, VCLT) — fundamental change of circumstances — but highly contentious and rarely accepted internationally.

2. Escalation Control in a Nuclearized Environment

    • Pakistan’s Full Spectrum Deterrence Doctrine (2015) and possession of tactical nuclear weapons (e.g., Nasr missiles) narrow India’s kinetic options.
    • Framework Reference: India’s “Cold Start Doctrine” (Proactive Operations) — limited thrusts without strategic overreach — remains doctrinally relevant but politically sensitive.

3. Humanitarian Optics and International Perception

    • Any material reduction in Indus river water flows could violate the humanitarian principles of Customary International Law (no harm principle) and SDG-6 (Clean Water & Sanitation).
    • 2008 Sri Lankan military campaign backlash over civilian harm shows how quickly humanitarian narratives can shift geopolitical alliances.

4. Disruption of Regional Connectivity Initiatives

    • Closing the Attari ICP and other land corridors hinders India’s own regional integration goals:
      • INSTC (International North-South Transport Corridor).
      • Chabahar Port–Afghanistan–Central Asia linkage.
      • TIR Convention transit initiatives.
    • Impact:
      • Afghan exporters (especially dried fruits) rely on Wagah–Attari land route.
      • India’s outreach to Central Asian Republics weakened without functional terrestrial routes.
    • Strategic Dilemma: Punishing Pakistan economically vs hurting regional goodwill and India’s “Extended Neighbourhood Policy.”

5. Proliferation of Cross-Border Proxy Warfare

    • Post-retaliation, increased proxy operations (terror attacks, cyber sabotage) by Pakistani deep-state assets like:
      • Jaish-e-Mohammed,
      • LeT’s cyber-warfare wing,
      • ISI-linked “cyber militias”.
    • Post-2019 Balakot strikes, India faced a spike in cyber phishing attacks (CERT-IN reports 2020).

6. Managing Global Narratives and Information Warfare

    • Pakistan actively weaponizes global media and human rights forums (e.g., OIC resolutions).
    • Social media misinformation campaigns amplify allegations against India.
    • 2020 EU DisinfoLab exposed over 750 fake pro-Pakistan/anti-India websites.

7. Long-term Diplomatic Isolation of Pakistan: Marathon, not Sprint

    • Tactical victories like FATF grey-listing (2018-2022) can be reversed unless pressure is sustained.
    • Over time, geopolitical dynamics (e.g., China’s BRI push, Russia’s tilt toward Pakistan post-West sanctions) can dilute isolation efforts.

THE WAY FORWARD:

1. Institutionalise an Escalation Management Doctrine

    • Formulate a graded retaliation matrix approved by the National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS), embedding diplomatic off-ramps tied to counter-terrorism benchmarks (UNSCR 1373 compliance).
    • U.S. 2022 “Integrated Deterrence Strategy” against grey-zone threats offers a modular model to adapt.
    • It balances credibility of punitive responses while containing nuclear risks under the doctrine of Escalation Dominance (Colin Gray, strategist).

2. Hydrological Strategy 2.0 under Indus Treaty Framework

    • Expedite India’s storage rights (up to 3.6 MAF on eastern rivers under IWT provisions) via projects like Ujh Multipurpose Project (212 MW, 781 MCM) and Shahpur Kandi Dam.
    • 2016 Kishanganga Arbitration Award confirmed India’s non-consumptive uses.

3. Financial Warfare: Disrupt Cross-Border Terror Funding

    • Enhance coordination with FATF, Egmont Group and Interpol NCB units to track and freeze terror-related hawala, shell firms and crypto-wallets.
    • Deploy blockchain forensic analysis (similar to Chainalysis models) to follow illicit financial trails.
    • Terror groups like LeT/TRF increasingly exploit decentralized finance (DeFi); tackling financial lifelines cripples operational capacities.

4. Technological Edge on Line of Control (LoC)

    • Deploy AI-powered foliage penetration radars (FOPEN), automated counter-drone systems, and loitering munitions at identified infiltration hotspots.
    • Israel’s “Iron Dome” hybrid AI-defense model offers lessons on fusing radars, UAVs and auto-targeting for rapid-response neutralisation.
    • LoC dynamics have shifted towards tech-enabled infiltration; India’s counter-infiltration grid needs modernization for pre-emptive interdiction.

5. Strategic Minilateralism: Mobilising Key Partners

    • Activate quiet back-channel diplomacy with UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Quad-Plus members (France, Australia) leveraging shared counter-terror imperatives.
    • Gulf states designated TRF as terror entity in 2024; build on this momentum.
    • Shared Intelligence + Joint Pressure = Diplomatic isolation of Pakistan without overt escalation; reflects ASEAN’s Quiet Diplomacy success model.

6. Build Enduring Societal and Economic Resilience in J&K

    • Expand Project Sadbhavana 2.0:
      • Counter-radicalisation modules based on UNDP’s Youth Resilience Model.
      • Subsidized tourism revival packages (₹5,000 crore corpus).
      • Skill-building hubs in all 20 districts by 2027.

THE CONCLUSION:

India must craft a calibrated strategy that fuses lawful hydro-diplomacy, cutting-edge counter-terror capabilities, and societal healing in Jammu & Kashmir. While leading a global norm-building agenda against state-sponsored terrorism, transform asymmetric provocations into opportunities for strategic ascendancy.

UPSC PAST YEAR QUESTION:

Q. The terms ‘Hot Pursuit’ and ‘Surgical Strikes’ are often used in connection with armed action against terrorist attacks. Discuss the strategic impact of such actions. 2016

MAINS PRACTICE QUESTION:

Q. Discuss India’s diplomatic and strategic response after the Pahalgam terror attack. What are the main challenges India faces, and what steps should be taken to deal with them effectively?

SOURCE:

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/a-gathering-storm-on-indias-diplomatic-actions-against-pakistan/article69491676.ece

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