Deterrence Fragility in South Asia
The recent hostilities between India and Pakistan highlight the fragile state of deterrence in South Asia. While familiar triggers like cross-border provocations exist, the broader strategic context has evolved significantly.
Key Players and Dynamics
- United States: Resumed its crisis manager role, reviving India-Pakistan hyphenation, which New Delhi opposes.
- China: Increasing influence in Pakistan’s military, transforming the conflict into a strategic triangle involving India, Pakistan, and China.
India's Response and Strategic Concerns
- India's retaliatory actions demonstrate a shift from passive restraint to active deterrence, strengthening its domestic and international stance.
- Each military engagement risks drawing India back into regional conflicts, conflicting with its global aspirations.
- India seeks to maintain a global identity, avoiding frameworks that equate it with Pakistan.
Diplomatic Approaches and Challenges
- The reappearance of India-Pakistan equivalence in global discourse is seen as a diplomatic setback for India.
- India aims to distinguish itself as a rules-based state against a revisionist actor (Pakistan).
- Despite strong strategic ties with the US, India finds these do not always yield control over narratives during crises.
Pakistan’s Strategic Position
- Pakistan uses US involvement to gain parity recognition in disputes with India.
- India must focus on broadening bilateral ties with key partners beyond crises.
Indus Waters Treaty and Regional Implications
- India considers revisiting the Indus Waters Treaty to apply pressure without immediate disruption.
- Such actions have significant symbolic and regional implications, inviting international scrutiny.
China’s Role and Military Alignment
- China acts as both a diplomatic and material enabler for Pakistan.
- Pakistan’s military capabilities are significantly enhanced by Chinese equipment and support, challenging India’s traditional air superiority.
Strategic Challenges and Future Directions
- The risk exists of episodic conflicts becoming the norm, undermining regional stability and India's strategic ambitions.
- India must innovate doctrinally and control the narrative to shift the conflict paradigm.
- International perceptions often default to viewing South Asian crises as requiring bilateral mediation, affecting India’s Indo-Pacific stabilizing role.
Conclusion
India faces a new strategic reality where crises are triangular, involving multiple stakeholders and complex narratives. Its challenge is to respond effectively while maintaining its position as a stabilizing global power, not confined by regional volatility.