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Brinks Report > Blog > World > Indus Waters Treaty on Hold — Because Blood and Water Don’t Flow Together
World

Indus Waters Treaty on Hold — Because Blood and Water Don’t Flow Together

Dolon Mondal
Last updated: May 15, 2025 6:34 pm
Dolon Mondal
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The Indus Waters Treaty, signed in 1960 between India and Pakistan, has helped both countries share river water peacefully for over 60 years. Even during wars, the deal stayed intact. But now, that old patience is wearing thin.

India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar recently said the treaty is “held in abeyance.” Translation? India is putting it on pause. Not ending it—yet—but not treating it like business as usual either.

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This isn’t just about rivers. It’s about terror. India has repeatedly pointed to attacks, infiltrations, and support for terror groups coming from Pakistani soil. The logic is simple: How can there be cooperation on water if there’s war by other means?

It’s like trying to have dinner with someone who throws stones at your house every night. Sooner or later, you stop sharing the food.

What does “held in abeyance” really mean?

It means India is not walking away—yet. But it also won’t keep playing by the old rules if the ground realities don’t change. It’s a warning shot, not a full strike.

This could go two ways:

  • Positive: Pakistan cleans up its act. The treaty is restored, water flows, peace holds.

  • Negative: Terror continues. India pulls out, Pakistan faces water stress, and the region heats up further.

Pakistan’s Heavy Dependence

According to the World Bank, nearly 80% of Pakistan’s agriculture depends on Indus waters. That’s huge. Without a working treaty, the impact could be severe—on food, economy, and daily life.

India, in contrast, has more diverse water sources and advanced river-linking projects. For India, this is leverage. For Pakistan, it’s lifeblood.

Time for a Hard Reset?

India has played fair for decades. It gave water, even during attacks. But now, New Delhi is asking: what has that goodwill brought us?

Maybe it’s time for Pakistan to choose. Stop the terror—and keep the tap running. Or continue the game—and risk losing it all.

Because peace doesn’t mean being naïve. And the Indus Waters Treaty is not unconditional love—it’s a contract. Break trust, lose benefits.

Also Read Pakistan Begs India to Restore Indus Waters Treaty—After Years of Sheltering Terror

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