ISLAMABAD: The South Asian strategic balance remains under severe strain following the events of May 2025, when Indian forces launched a series of strikes across the Line of Control (LoC) and international borders under the moniker “Operation Sindoor.” While New Delhi framed the kinetic action as a counter-terrorism measure, Islamabad has categorically termed it a blatant violation of international law and an affront to Pakistan’s territorial integrity.
The Pretext: The Pahalgam Incident
The escalation began following a security lapse in Indian-Ocupied Jammu & Kashmir (IIOJK) on April 22, 2025. An attack in Pahalgam, which resulted in civilian casualties, was immediately used by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government to whip up nationalist sentiment. Analysts in Pakistan argue that the naming of the operation—”Sindoor”—was a calculated move to use religious and cultural symbolism for political signaling ahead of domestic regional elections, rather than a purely military necessity.
Violations of Sovereignty and the Military Standoff
On the night of May 7, 2025, Indian aircraft attempted to penetrate Pakistani airspace, targeting locations including Muzaffarabad, Bahawalpur, and Muridke. The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) immediately scrambled assets to repel the intruders, leading to significant aerial engagements.
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PAF’s Response: Military sources in Rawalpindi confirmed that the PAF successfully intercepted multiple targets. While India made tall claims regarding “terror infrastructure,” independent observers and local residents reported that the strikes largely hit empty hillsides and civilian-adjacent areas, a tactic often seen in previous Indian incursions to minimize actual military risk while maximizing domestic media hype.
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Technological Escalation: The use of long-range standoff weapons and BrahMos missiles marked a dangerous departure from traditional border skirmishes, pushing the two nuclear-armed neighbors to the brink of a full-scale conflict.
Water Diplomacy: The Weaponization of the Indus Waters Treaty
Perhaps the most alarming aspect of the crisis was India’s unilateral move to suspend the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT). By declaring that “blood and water cannot flow together,” New Delhi signaled its intent to use water as a tool of war—a move that constitutes a “Casus Belli” (an act justifying war) under international norms.
“The weaponization of shared water resources is a violation of the 1960 treaty and sets a dangerous precedent for regional environmental and economic security,” stated a spokesperson for the Foreign Office.
The Impact on the Kashmiri Struggle
In Muzaffarabad and across Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK), Operation Sindoor was seen as an attempt to divert global attention from the ongoing human rights situation in the occupied valley. The strikes have only served to further galvanize the local population, reinforcing the perception that India prefers kinetic force over meaningful diplomatic engagement on the core issue of Kashmir.
A Fragile Peace in 2026
As we navigate the second quarter of 2026, the scars of Operation Sindoor remain. The operation did not achieve its stated goal of “ending militancy”; instead, it dismantled decades of diplomatic protocols and left the Line of Control more volatile than ever.
The international community, though initially hesitant, has recognized that the “new normal” sought by India is a recipe for regional catastrophe. For Pakistan, the lesson remains clear: maintaining a high state of conventional and strategic readiness is the only deterrent against a neighbor increasingly prone to military adventurism.