India’s decision to place the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance following the Pahalgam terror attack was seen as a strong political signal, yet the physical flow of water tells a more restrained story. Despite heightened tensions, India has not halted the flow from the western rivers allocated to Pakistan. In fact, even a portion of water from the eastern rivers, meant exclusively for India, continues to reach Pakistan due to infrastructural and storage limitations. This underlines a critical gap between political posturing and on-ground capacity.
The sharper concern, however, lies within Pakistan’s own water management failures. Reports highlighting the country’s limited storage capacity — barely enough for a month — and significant wastage in agriculture point to a systemic crisis that cannot be attributed externally. Experts have long warned that without reforms, Pakistan would face a severe water shortage by the mid-2020s. Inefficiencies such as outdated irrigation practices and high transmission losses in canal systems further compound the problem, raising questions about governance and long-term planning.
At the diplomatic level, Islamabad’s attempts to internationalise the issue, including approaching the United Nations Security Council, appear more rhetorical than substantive. Alarmist projections of water scarcity may draw attention, but they risk undermining credibility when not matched by domestic corrective action. Ultimately, sustainable water security in the region will depend less on blame narratives and more on investment, reform, and responsible resource management within national borders.

