For more than sixty years, the Indus Waters Treaty stood as a rare pillar of stability in an otherwise volatile South Asian landscape. Today, that foundation is under serious threat.
India’s recent decision to unilaterally suspend the treaty, citing security concerns linked to the Pahalgam incident, has triggered intense global scrutiny. What is being framed as a security response is increasingly viewed by legal and diplomatic observers as a direct challenge to international law and established treaty norms.
At the core of the criticism lies a fundamental principle of global agreements: commitments must be honored. The Indus Waters Treaty was deliberately structured to withstand political tensions, with no provision allowing either side to suspend it unilaterally. By attempting to link a disputed and largely unsubstantiated security narrative to its treaty obligations, India risks crossing from diplomatic maneuvering into outright legal defiance.
This shift raises serious concerns. The move is not just about water management. It signals a broader transition from rules-based engagement to selective compliance, where international agreements are upheld only when they align with strategic interests. Ignoring established dispute mechanisms and failing to engage with international legal processes further reinforces this perception.
The consequences extend far beyond legal arguments. Water is not merely a resource in this context. It is the backbone of agriculture, food security, and economic stability for millions. When an upper riparian state uses water as leverage, it transforms a framework of cooperation into a tool of pressure, undermining trust and escalating regional tensions.
Pakistan’s stance remains clear and consistent. Treaties are binding obligations, not conditional arrangements subject to political convenience. The Indus Waters Treaty was designed to survive precisely the kind of tensions now being cited to undermine it.
If such unilateral actions go unchecked, the damage will not be confined to South Asia. It will send a troubling message to the world that even the most resilient agreements can be weakened by power politics. What is at stake is not just a water-sharing treaty, but the credibility of the international rules-based order itself.

