Can India and Pakistan step back from the brink?
For two nations that say they want to avoid escalation, India and Pakistan seem trapped in a dangerously spiraling conflict.
India's strikes on Pakistan and Pakistan-controlled Kashmir Wednesday were clearly telegraphed — a fitting answer, it believes, for last month's terror attack in Kashmir. In response, Islamabad claims it has shot down five of New Delhi's aircraft. Civilians are now dead on both sides.
Avoiding any further intensification is critical for these nuclear-armed states. Keeping diplomatic channels open is crucial, too. The alternative is a cycle of counterstrikes that risks dangerous missteps.
For New Delhi, this calculated military action was a show of strength — a powerful blow against what it calls the "terrorist infrastructure' inside Pakistan. In a statement Wednesday, the Ministry of Defense described a "precise and restrained response' meant to avoid escalation. The airstrikes hit nine locations, officials said, and marked the deepest breach of Pakistani territory since the 1971 war.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has consistently said that the perpetrators of the attack that killed 26 people — mostly tourists — in Pahalgam would be brought to justice. The strikes have been called "Operation Sindoor,' a reference to the red powder used in Hindu ceremonies and sometimes worn by women as a sign of their married status. Officials say it's also a way to honor the women who lost their husbands in the assault.
In military operations, messaging is everything. Ahead of a press briefing by Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, officials broadcast a video cataloguing attacks that New Delhi attributes to Pakistan-backed terrorist groups — claims Islamabad denies. Misri said intelligence sources showed there was evidence the Kashmir attack was planned from Pakistan and that India's military had targeted "known terror camps' and avoided civilian, economic or military targets. Islamabad says that's not true.
The claims and denials are part of a decades-old grievance that has found fresh life. The nations have been locked in a fraught and often volatile rivalry that is almost always simmering. They've fought several wars since their violent partition following independence from Britain in 1947. Kashmir has been at the heart of the hostilities.
On many occasions they've been on the brink of major conflict, yet have successfully climbed down. They would be wise to follow a similar course of action this time.
The last close call was in 2019, after a suicide bomber killed 40 members of India's security forces. New Delhi retaliated with its first airstrikes on Pakistani soil since 1971. Islamabad shot down a jet in response and captured a pilot, who was subsequently released. Tensions dissipated and in 2021, the two sides signed a ceasefire agreement at the disputed border in Kashmir, known as the Line of Control.
This time, events may not follow such a familiar script. There are likely to be domestic and institutional pressures in Pakistan to escalate, notes Harsh Pant, vice president for studies and foreign policy at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation. "India has given Pakistan some space to maneuver by saying these strikes are nonescalatory in nature, but whether Islamabad uses that is their call,' he told me. "Escalation logic can easily become the dominant narrative.'
Both sides are playing to their domestic audiences. In India, a nationalist frenzy has been whipped up by media loyal to Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, catering to a public hungry for justice. Images of widows have been playing nonstop across television screens, while little attention is paid to dissent within Kashmir. The government insists that militants aimed to disrupt a return to "normalcy' in the region, despite ongoing concerns about its decision to revoke its autonomy in 2019.
In Pakistan, public sentiment is growing more hostile. The suspension of a longstanding agreement governing water sharing, the Indus Waters Treaty, has ratcheted up tensions. Millions of farmers depend on those flows and Islamabad has warned that it views India's measures as an act of war. It has also signaled a willingness to talk, if New Delhi stands down.
The international community is watching closely. The United Nations and others have urged restraint. India has spoken to a host of countries to lay out its aims, but will also want strategic partners to pressure Islamabad and align with its policy on terrorism. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif held an emergency security meeting Wednesday. His office earlier released a statement saying the country "reserves the right to respond, in self-defense, at a time, place and manner of its choosing.'
If the two do declare the military hostilities over, there's still one significant pressure point New Delhi can use: the Financial Action Task Force and its gray list. Islamabad was only removed from the list — which helps track money laundering and terrorism financing — in 2022 after spending four years there alongside nations such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mozambique. It will be loathe to be added again.
The real work is likely happening behind the scenes, with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaking to both nations. The UAE has helped to broker peace before and could be called upon again.
Diplomatic efforts must match the urgency of the moment. Miscalculation now could open a third front when the world is already managing war in Ukraine and conflict in Israel and Gaza. It can ill afford another.
Karishma Vaswani is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asia politics with a special focus on China.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
16 hours ago
- NHK
India woos foreign automakers to boost domestic EV production
India's government has unveiled a plan to woo foreign automakers to build electric vehicles there. India is the world's third-largest auto market. The government is offering to drastically cut import taxes for foreign automakers who pledge to set up EV factories in India. The deal is available to makers who invest around 500 million dollars or more in new plants. In return, they can import a limited number of their EVs at a 15 percent rate for five years. Currently, tariffs are upwards of 70 percent. The plan was originally aimed at attracting Tesla. Prime Minister Narendra Modi held talks with its CEO, Elon Musk, earlier this year in Washington. But the EV giant did not sign on. The government wants electric vehicles to make up 30 percent of domestic car sales by 2030. EVs accounted for just 2.5 percent of total car sales in fiscal year 2024.


NHK
2 days ago
- NHK
June 9 NEWSROOM TOKYO Bangkok Live
Lineup: 1. Thailand, Cambodia dial down tensions after clash 2. An uneasy peace in Kashmir, one month on 3. Trump tariffs pose challenges to Southeast Asian farmers


NHK
2 days ago
- NHK
An uneasy peace in Kashmir, one month on
It's been a month since India and Pakistan came to the brink of war. Their latest clash centered on Kashmir. A ceasefire is in place, but calm is elusive for people in the disputed region as tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbors remain high. The Indian military fired missiles at the Pakistani side on May 7 after a deadly attack on tourists in India-administered Kashmir in April. Islamabad denies involvement. The situation quickly escalated into a tit-for-tat exchange of missiles and drones. The two sides declared a truce, but India says it's only temporary. India-controlled Kashmir used to be bustling with tourists. Not anymore. Tariq Ghani, secretary general of Jammu and Kashmir Hoteliers Club, says bookings are "about 10 to 15 percent" of the level before the confrontation. He thinks the tensions will hurt the local economy. Meanwhile, people in the Pakistan-controlled region of Kashmir worry India may resume its offensive. Shaukat Hussain Mughal's home was destroyed in an Indian attack. He's prepared water, medicine and other necessities in case he has to evacuate to a shelter. His family has already fled. "My life has completely changed," Hussain says. "I'm always feeling fearful." Last month's hostilities left more than 50 civilians dead across both sides.