Pakistan Sounds ‘Water War’ Alarm Over Indus Treaty As India Standardises Post-Pahalgam Hardline | Exclusive Details

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Last Updated:July 01, 2026, 22:26 IST

Top intelligence sources indicate that Pakistan’s military and political leadership are deeply rattled by India’s refusal to engage

 AP)

Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Asif. (File image: AP)

In a sharp escalation of cross-border rhetoric, Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif has warned of an unprecedented “water war", threatening military retaliation after India firmly placed the 65-year-old Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in abeyance. Islamabad’s aggressive posturing marks a desperate attempt to internationalise the issue, shifting its traditional focus beyond Kashmir to frame water security as a flashpoint for full-scale military conflict.

“If this matter is not resolved peacefully, then, God forbid, a war over water could also happen," Asif stated, claiming that New Delhi is “bent on turning water into a dispute". He argued that the 1960 pact had successfully survived multiple full-scale wars between the two nuclear-armed neighbours without major friction, accusing India of deliberately attempting to sabotage Pakistan’s agrarian economy.

The Post-Pahalgam Doctrine: Blood and Water Cannot Flow Together

The current diplomatic gridlock is a direct consequence of New Delhi’s decisive policy shift following the April 2025 Pahalgam terror attack, in which 26 civilians, mostly tourists, were killed in Jammu and Kashmir by proxies of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba. Moving away from decades of strategic restraint, India unilaterally suspended all institutional cooperation under the IWT—including mandatory hydrological data sharing, bilateral commission meetings, and participation in treaty-linked dispute mechanisms like the Court of Arbitration at The Hague.

India’s decision to hold the treaty in abeyance is built on a clear, principled framework of state responsibility. New Delhi maintains that international water-sharing agreements are fundamentally premised on goodwill, reciprocity, and good-faith engagement. A state cannot sponsor cross-border terrorism on Indian soil while simultaneously demanding uninterrupted, legally protected strategic benefits from Indian rivers.

Top intelligence sources indicate that Pakistan’s military and political leadership are deeply rattled by India’s refusal to engage. By cutting off the cooperative scaffolding of the treaty without physically diverting or interdicting the flow of the western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab), India has effectively dismantled Pakistan’s ability to manipulate international arbitration tribunals while doing nothing to curb terror infrastructure.

Accelerating Infrastructure on the Western Rivers

While Islamabad uses aggressive rhetoric to project itself as a victim of water weaponisation to the UN Security Council, India is aggressively exercising its legitimate rights under the treaty’s original geography. New Delhi has fast-tracked major run-of-the-river hydroelectric and storage infrastructure projects in Jammu and Kashmir.

In tandem with these power projects, India has completed critical sediment-flushing operations at the Baglihar, Salal, and Dulhasti dams, alongside reviving the long-delayed Tuldul navigation barrage. These measures significantly enhance India’s domestic water utilisation and reservoir storage capacity within the strict technical bounds of the Indus basin, leaving Islamabad with dwindling legal leverage. By anchoring the restoration of the treaty directly to the complete, verifiable, and irreversible eradication of cross-border terrorism, New Delhi has successfully flipped the strategic script. Pakistan’s loose talk of a water war underscores its growing realisation that India’s post-Pahalgam doctrine has permanently altered the rules of engagement, making it clear that the price of state-sponsored terror will now be extracted from Pakistan’s most critical lifeline.

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Manoj Gupta

Manoj Gupta

Group Editor, Investigations & Security Affairs, Network18

News world Pakistan Sounds ‘Water War’ Alarm Over Indus Treaty As India Standardises Post-Pahalgam Hardline | Exclusive Details

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