Our India headache - and how to cure it

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Fahd Husain July 05, 2026

India is in pain.

The last one year has been rather unkind to a country that had convinced itself of its super powers. The reality check, when it came, was harsh. Which is why the members of the Hindutva brigade remain in in denial even as their make-belief world collapses around them.

Should this matter to us in Pakistan?

Yes. But not in the conventional way. The fact is that both Pakistan and India are undergoing significant political, social and diplomatic changes. Navigating these changes requires absolute clarity shorn of ideological baggage and political hubris. India under the present Hindutva regime is unlikely to pivot to a realistic assessment of the situation. Which is why, we must.

This past week two developments pointed towards such a need. First, speculation swirled around Track 2 meetings between retired officials from both countries on foreign shores. A few days later, well-meaning prominent citizens from Pakistan and India jointly signed a petition calling for improved bilateral ties. Taken together, these developments suggested a desire to break the ice between Islamabad and New Delhi.

We should not walk down this path.

Instead, Pakistan should aim to institutionalise a well-considered and calibrated policy that acknowledges that India is a mere headache – and we need to find a cure as soon as possible. To do this, we should factor in three aspects of Hindutva India.

First, majoritarian India's obsession with Pakistan will only grow stronger as it slides further into officially sanctioned societal bigotry. The Hindutva project is fuelled by anti-Muslim hate and BJP's political ideology manifests this hate on to Pakistan. There is no cure in sight for this. This Hindutva bonfire will have to burn itself out over a generation or two. Or maybe not.

Second, this hate-machine will keep rational and reasonable Indians marginalised in political discourse and public debates that shape and influence domestic perceptions. There are little prospects of an attitudinal change in India.

Third, India's misperceived bluster and inflated sense of self can, and probably will, lead to another military conflict with Pakistan. We should make the next round a decisive one.

Once factored into coherent and clear-eyed policy, these three elements help decipher our way forward.


This starts with an unambiguous position that we are not interested in any kinds of talks with India. There are many people at home who take umbrage to such a position. They argue that we should appear 'reasonable' and maintain a 'peace posture' even if just for public consumption. I disagree. We have nothing to gain from talking with India as long as our neighbour continues to burn in Hindutva fever. In fact, it is better that we move away from this 'engagement' that is fashionable among some constituencies. I would go a step further and say we should politely (but firmly) say no to talks even if India wants to. This clarity will help us strategise our pivot away from our traditional focus on India.

But there are always exceptions.

None more so than Indian Occupied Kashmir. There should be zero flexibility in our position – even if it means reinforcing our diplomatic offensive at every international platform.

The other exception to our disengagement with India is its sponsoring of terrorism via Afghanistan. One of the weaknesses of our India policy is that we've remained weak in countering terrorism. In our new approach, we must tell India and our international partners that Indian sponsoring of terrorism inside Pakistan will entail a cost for India. The world has moved beyond diplomatic niceties in pursuit of national objectives. So should we.

We have India where we want it – against the ropes, angry at the world, bitter as a nation, diplomatically irrelevant, militarily humiliated, and internally fractured by brute majoritarianism. A nation of more than a billion people is in a state of collective sulk. If this wasn't enough, its policy blunders and misplaced hubris has today made it, arguably, the second most disliked country in the world (no prizes for guessing who's the first).

Best then to be amused by the faux bravado of people like foreign minister Jaishankar and buffoonery of clowns in Indian TV studios.

Here's the thing, though. Our India headache won't go away on its own. Their obsession with Pakistan is unlikely to evaporate with time. The odds of the Hindutva government blundering into another kinetic misadventure are, unfortunately, quite high. It is in this domain that we need the most clarity. The real cure for our headache will be found right here.

Three points are noteworthy:

First, we now know that the space beneath the nuclear overhang is where our strength lies. The Maarka-e-Haq victory in May 2025 showed us the strengths that need to be amplified, and the weaknesses that require immediate redressal. Time is right for Pakistan to develop a conventional conflict doctrine that builds upon the demonstrated lessons of our victory.

Second, we need to jettison our defensive military posture and fully embrace the concept of 'offensive defence'. Recent global events have proven with remarkable clarity that the logic of pre-emptive strikes has been thoroughly internalised across the world. For too long Pakistan has allowed India to initiate aggression across the Line of Control and the international border. Time is upon us to reverse this. We should be absolutely clear if we sense an imminent attack from India, we must adopt offence as the best form of defence. Clarity on this count will not only generate military strategy but also shape a powerful narrative that we need to communicate across the world.

The next round should be the defining round. We must prepare for the scenario and plan the exact outcomes we want with our conventional might. Not till India is inflicted intolerable pain will it stop being a headache for Pakistan.

The Indus Water Treaty provocations provide us a test case.
India has already announced a project that will steal our Chenab water and divert it to the Beas River. Pakistan has correctly stated that any disruption in our water supply will be considered an act of war. We need to now flesh out this declaration through a well-articulated narrative that explains and justifies the kinetic action we will take if India does not desist from such provocations.

Nothing guarantees peace better than clarity, boldness and strength.
 
Brilliant piece by Fahad Hussain, not sure why he used to waste time on useless domestic politics. There is no point in talks with current hindutva regime. Modi theatrics of peace like that Pakistan 2016 visit was just for the world. They soon got back in to blaming Pakistan for every militant attack which are blow back of their brutal regime policies on minorities.

Expecting hindutva regime to be serious about peace when they win elections based on hatred of muslims and Pakistan is foolish.
 
All HAIL the author - finally some COMMON SENSE from a Pakistani who understands that decades of appeasement and asking politely are useless when confronted with an illiterate tea seller whose hordes of voters have been nurtured precisely to follow him, Yogi, and Shah in as blind and unquestioning a manner as is possible.

Absolutely no engagement with this vermin infested qom beyond illumination for guided missile strikes.
 
Question really is why can't Pakistan annul the Simla accord? So far the government has only threatened to revoke the Simla accord and stopped short at anything material on it.

It remains a fact that there are factions inside Pakistan who are desperate for Indian appeasement and carry enough leverage over the government to stop them short of touching the Simla accord.

The headache and the enemy lies within Pakistan.
 
At last! We always seem to be the ones to let India make the first move and strike us first before we retaliate so that we can justify ourselves to world opinion. Now it is great we are building a global narrative around the IWT so that we can launch strikes first this time round
 
Question really is why can't Pakistan annul the Simla accord? So far the government has only threatened to revoke the Simla accord and stopped short at anything material on it.
Simla Accord is long dead. Revocation of special status of Kashmir was the last nail in its coffin. The Hindutva gang has always considered it a blunder by Indira Gandhi, even if some Indian diplomats sometimes pay lip service to it. Annuling it will have zero practical impact on India other than giving their foreign office a talking point.
 
Simla Accord is long dead. Revocation of special status of Kashmir was the last nail in its coffin. The Hindutva gang has always considered it a blunder by Indira Gandhi, even if some Indian diplomats sometimes pay lip service to it. Annuling it will have zero practical impact on India other than giving their foreign office a talking point.

Simla accord is pretty much in play, the recent back channel diplomacy is due to the same accord.

Pakistani government coallition does not have consensus on annuling Simla accord.
 
Simla accord is pretty much in play, the recent back channel diplomacy is due to the same
The former is a formal official agreement. The latter is, by definition, informal and unofficial. What do they have to do with each other ? Which Article of Simla Agreement mandates backchannel diplomacy if governments refuse to talk ?
 
The former is a formal official agreement. The latter is, by definition, informal and unofficial. What do they have to do with each other ? Which Article of Simla Agreement mandates backchannel diplomacy if governments refuse to talk ?

Simla accord places emphasis on diplomacy. As long as it stands, government is legally binded to exhaust diplomatic measures.

Government of Pakistan if she has enough unity should take the step of annuling it.
 
Simla accord places emphasis on diplomacy. As long as it stands, government is legally binded to exhaust diplomatic measures.

Government of Pakistan if she has enough unity should take the step of annuling it.

No need to abide or annul anything, we can do what we want. India has set a precedent in terms of not abiding by agreements. They will now reap what they sow....
 
Simla accord places emphasis on diplomacy. As long as it stands, government is legally binded to exhaust diplomatic measures.

Government of Pakistan if she has enough unity should take the step of annuling it.
What practical impact will it have ? Formal diplomacy is already dead. Backchannel happens even between countries that dont recognise each other. So, even if you go a step further from annulment and break off all diplomatic ties with India, backchannel talks will still be in play.
 
This is delusional thinking by Pakistan, as usual. It thinks it won Operation Sindoor (Maarka-e-Haq), but it didn't win anything significant. Acting as a mediator in the Iran-US war has raised Pakistan's diplomatic profile, but these things are fleeting.

None of these things have changed the ground realities for Pakistan, from its economy to its relations with Afghanistan. Yet Pakistan talks from strength, including this nonsense of "offensive defense," as if Pakistan has this capacity in the first place.

Pakistan can try, of course, but don't expect it to get the result it's seeking.

And If Pakistan doesn't want peace talks, it makes no difference to India at all. That would be India's preferred position.
 
No need to abide or annul anything, we can do what we want. India has set a precedent in terms of not abiding by agreements. They will now reap what they sow....

It would be much easier to have the accord rescinded than to carry deadweight.

What practical impact will it have ? Formal diplomacy is already dead. Backchannel happens even between countries that dont recognise each other. So, even if you go a step further from annulment and break off all diplomatic ties with India, backchannel talks will still be in play.

It will clear all hurdles in wake of countering water terrorism. Wars are a strictly legal affairs.
 

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