Water is life. This is not a metaphor. For 250 million Pakistanis, the rivers that flow from the mountains of the north are not a convenience or a luxury. They are the foundation of everything, such as food, farming, survival itself. When India’s water minister stands before cameras and declares that not a single drop of water will reach Pakistan in the coming years, he is not making a political statement. He is issuing a threat against the lives of an entire nation. The Foreign Office was right to respond with clarity and firmness. Blocking water that flows across international borders is not simply a bilateral dispute between two neighbours.
It violates international law, it violates the spirit of transboundary river agreements, and it violates the most basic principles of what it means to live in a civilised world. Water cannot be weaponised. Water cannot be used as a tool of punishment or political pressure. The moment any country crosses that line, it places itself outside the boundaries of responsible statecraft.
The Indian minister’s remarks did not arrive in a vacuum. They came alongside a broader pattern of escalation like diplomatic, military and now environmental. The same week, a report from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute confirmed that India continues to expand its nuclear arsenal, including longer range missile systems that reach far beyond its immediate neighbourhood. Pakistan has noted this with appropriate concern.
An expanding nuclear posture combined with inflammatory statements about cutting off water is not the behaviour of a country seeking regional peace. It is the behaviour of a country testing boundaries.
Pakistan has said it will use every diplomatic, legal and political tool available to defend its water rights. That commitment must be followed through. The international community, particularly those nations that supply advanced technology to India, must also recognise what is at stake. Regional stability cannot survive one country treating its neighbour’s survival as a bargaining chip. *