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The Indus Treaty Is Dead—And So Is Our Tolerance for Jihadi Terror
The Daily Guardian
|April 28, 2025
The blood spilled in Pahalgam was the final drop that made the river overflow. Once again, Hindu pilgrims and families, symbols of India's pluralistic civilizational soul, were targeted and slaughtered by jihadi terrorists. But this time, Bharat did not merely condemn. It chose action—not the noisy, reactive kind that makes headlines for a week, but the silent, unyielding kind that redefines a nation's strategic posture for generations.
The abrogation of the Indus Waters Treaty by India is not merely a technical withdrawal from an outdated agreement; it is a profound civilizational response to decades of terror, betrayal, and strategic naivety. It marks the end of India's tolerance—not just for bloodshed, but for a lopsided moral burden it carried for far too long.
Ever since the announcement, a chorus of doubters has risen—academics, media pundits, retired bureaucrats—asking, "How will India implement it? You cannot change river courses overnight." Some, in their eagerness to appear pragmatic, have even floated bizarre fantasies about giant pumps emptying rivers. What they fail to grasp is a fundamental truth about the Modi doctrine: India does not speak first and act later. In this government's playbook, action precedes announcement, and execution precedes publicity.
The seeds of this moment were sown much earlier, perhaps even in 2016, when in the aftermath of the Uri terror attack, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stated with chilling clarity: "Blood and water cannot flow together."
Those who dismissed this as rhetorical flourish failed to see the groundwork being laid, brick by strategic brick, across India's river systems.
Projects like the Kishanganga Hydroelectric Plant, operational since 2018, were not mere infrastructural additions—they were geopolitical tools. The revival of the long-stalled Ratle Hydro Project on the Chenab, the reactivation of the Tulbul Navigation Project to regulate Jhelum's flow, the expedited construction of the Shahpurkandi Dam, and the ambitious Ujh Multipurpose Project were all steps in a silent chess game where India repositioned itself as the true master of its rivers. These projects were not just about hydroelectricity or irrigation; they were about reclaiming sovereignty over resources that history, bad diplomacy, and misplaced idealism had frittered away.
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