In a major strategic shift, the indian authorities are getting ready to drop the Indus Water Treaty with Pakistan. A high-level meeting chaired by Union home minister amit shah —with Jal shakti minister C.R. Patil in attendance—was held on friday to plot the execution of this formidable step.


The decision comes in the wake of the pahalgam terrorist assault and escalating tensions along the line of control.


"Now Not Even a Drop of Water" Will Visit Pakistan


Consistent with Pinnacle Resources, india is now a company in its stance: no more water will be allowed to drift to pakistan below the 1960 treaty. The plan can be executed in three levels:


brief time period: immediately administrative and technical measures to reduce water drift.


Medium-time period: Infrastructure modifications and rerouting of river flows.


lengthy time period: full-scale treaty revamp and permanent water retention strategies.


Formal awareness sent to Pakistan


The Ministry of Jal shakti has already officially communicated the suspension to Pakistan. Inside the letter, Secretary Devshree Mukherjee noted more than one motive:


India's earlier notices for treaty amendment underneath Article 12(3).


changing demographics and water wishes.


Pakistan's consistent help for terrorism makes normal treaty operations untenable.


security concerns in light of cross-border assaults.


protection at the coronary heart of the circulation


The selection to halt the water flow is not just strategic—it is deeply related to countrywide safety. india has expressed that Pakistan's persistent promotion of terrorism has made any shape of cooperation impossible, even in shared resources.


This marks the first time in over six years—a long time—that india has moved to, without a doubt, suspend the treaty, which has long been taken into consideration as a symbol of careful international relations, even at some points of wars.


What takes place subsequently?


The move ought to significantly affect Pakistan's water supply, in particular in punjab and Sindh. india, in the meantime, appears prepared for global scrutiny and is firm on its sovereign right to revise or exit the treaty given brilliant provocation.



Find out more: