47 comments

  • nblgbg 13 hours ago
    I believe it's mostly overstated. Pakistan is not economically strong enough to participate in a war, and India is not interested either. However, the Modi government wants to project strength. They were unable to locate the terrorists even after two or three weeks and needed a distraction. So, they targeted some areas in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK). In response, Pakistan claimed to have shot down four Indian aircraft and a drone. However, so far, they haven't provided any pictures or locations to support these claims. Both sides will likely exchange fire along the border, and the situation will eventually calm down. Each side will claim victory in its own way.
    • krisoft 3 hours ago
      > Pakistan is not economically strong enough to participate in a war

      They have nukes. They don't need to be rich to do massive damage. Sure doing so would have terrible consequences, but cooler heads sometimes don't prevail. Or only prevail after much suffering and pain.

      • stuckinhell 8 minutes ago
        my worry is the nukes too
      • karaterobot 46 minutes ago
        There aren't a lot of examples of a country being unwilling or unable to fight in a full-scale war, and instead launching nukes at their next door neighbor. I don't think this is part of the playbook, or based on evidence, I think it's coming from anxiety.
        • jncfhnb 41 minutes ago
          There aren’t a lot of examples of nuclear states being attacked by a stronger military power
        • nine_k 6 minutes ago
          Consider: willing but unable to fight any more, overpowered, and unwilling to surrender. That's where launching nukes, the ultimate weapon of retaliation, could look very enticing.
      • ashoeafoot 2 hours ago
        More important ,ever since the multipolar great games resumed , they will have customers for nukes. Trump really was the final nail on deterence reliance ..
        • ben_w 1 hour ago
          That may be a long-term problem, but right now it's like worrying about high cholesterol during a knife fight.
          • ashoeafoot 1 hour ago
            Its not, you goto look at how the actors in the region act and invest. Some of the regions rich seem remarkable calm towards a muklear armed iran.
            • ben_w 52 minutes ago
              Can Pakistan can ship nukes to Iran fast enough for the Iranian economy to supply in return a militarily useful quantity of anti-air and anti-missile defence systems? On a timescale of "shooting currently happening"? If not, that's a problem for the rest of the decade, whereas an escalating situation on this border could've already evaporated a few cities between me having read the headline 20 minutes ago and pressing the [reply] button now.
    • enugu 5 hours ago
      > They were unable to locate the terrorists even after two or three weeks and needed a distraction.

      This does not make sense. When France attacked Daesh in 2015 after the terrorist attacks in Paris or when the US attacked Afghanistan after 9/11, the objective wasn't to target the exact people who carried out the attacks, but the organization behind the attacks. People can always be found as long as the organization remains.

      The goal of the attacks would be to make any future terrorist attack an expensive option for the Pakistani military as opposed to something which can be done routinely. There was a sharp drop in the terrorist attacks in Kashmir after the 2019 confrontation.

      • whatshisface 1 hour ago
        >when the US attacked Afghanistan after 9/11, the objective wasn't to target the exact people who carried out the attacks, but the organization behind the attacks

        The mission in Afghanistan was very much to find Bin Laden. It was changed after he escaped.

      • reverendsteveii 1 hour ago
        We could have gone after the people who actually did 9/11 but that was a bit of a non-starter. Also I think you're equivocating between multiple interpretations of "the terrorists" when most people absolutely wouldn't draw a distinguishing line between, using 9/11 as an example again, the actual hijackers and Osama bin Laden. There's absolutely no question that any time the phrase "the 9/11 terrorists" is used it means both the actual perpetrators and the people who planned and supported the attack.
      • nindalf 5 hours ago
        > There was a sharp drop in the terrorist attacks in Kashmir after the 2019 confrontation.

        There were fewer terrorist attacks, certainly. I'm sure the Indian government would like to believe that the 2019 strike had an effect, but far more likely causes are

        - Money. Pakistan's economy has stagnated and the country has lurched from one IMF bailout to the next (2019, 2023, 2024). It got so bad at one point that politicians were asking people to drink less tea so they could conserve foreign currency.

        - Covid. Affected everything, but certainly harder to think about waging conflict when such a massive problem is affecting the country.

        - Internal political instability, especially when Imran Khan took on the military and lost. The military was actually in danger of losing their primacy for the first time in decades.

        - Conflict with the Taliban and Pakistani Taliban. The ISI had nurtured the Taliban to be tame pets and it turned out not to be the case. Crushing these was the highest priority, not least because it made their policy of nurturing terrorists look idiotic.

        All of these factors meant Pakistan wasn't and isn't in the best shape to wage war overtly or covertly with India. India's economy has continued to grow, in contrast to Pakistan. The official Indian policy of "benign neglect" towards Pakistan appeared to work well.

        I'm sure these attacks will be spun as a success in the future. Safe to say a Bollywood movie dramatising the events is already in the works. But Pakistan's own economic and political problems are far more likely to influence its decisions to engage in this sort of behaviour.

        • enugu 4 hours ago
          If you are actually arguing that a country targeted by a terrorist attack does not gain deterrence with a counterstrike relative to letting things go on, then how uniform do you consider this prescription? Should the terror attacks in the US or France not have had a military response?

          What happens to the incentives of terror groups in response to such a policy?

          ---

          The role of money only becomes an issue when conducting a terrorist attack becomes expensive. Missiles and jets consume much more money in comparison to training recruits via an intermediary organization like LeT and sending them across the border to carry out attacks.

          A regime in which a terror attack leads to a high pressure, expensive situation for the Pakistani military is completely different from regularly scheduled, train and deploy terror attacks from militants which used to happen earlier.

          In that situation, the military has to respond to economic pressure, pressure from allies and pressure from its own people.

          • nindalf 3 hours ago
            The Pakistani military cares about itself, above all. It wants to maintain its role as the primary protector of the Pakistani people, answerable to no one but themselves. As long as the threat of India looms large, their primacy is guaranteed. As a reward generals are allowed to grow filthy rich.

            Support for the Pakistani military was at its nadir during the era of benign neglect because there wasn't an Indian boogeyman to justify their interference in politics and economic exploitation. But now that India has attacked Pakistani targets this will quiet any internal criticism of the Pakistani Army.

            In other words, the military absolutely loves it when India engages in so-called deterrence. No Pakistani army soldier died (according to both sides). Pakistani people support the Pakistani Army more strongly than ever. It's absolutely perfect for the Army. I fully expect that they'll fund more terrorists, leading to a constant cycle of violence.

            • spwa4 2 hours ago
              > I fully expect that they'll fund more terrorists, leading to a constant cycle of violence.

              Yes, that's the defining characteristic of all terrorist organizations. Get money, not through politics or production or economy, but by damaging others. Then get paid for not doing quite as much damage. This model has spread quite a bit in the past 5 years.

          • lmm 3 hours ago
            > Should the terror attacks in the US or France not have had a military response?

            Probably, yes. Military responses to terrorism are almost always counterproductive. I don't know which specific attacks you're talking about, but the ones I can think of the US did far more damage to itself with the blowback than the original attack ever achieved.

            • enugu 3 hours ago
              Note that I am not referring to the prolonged occupation of Afghanistan, much less of Iraq here. Rather, something like a strike which targets bin Laden and other organizers of the terrorist attack.
      • lazide 5 hours ago
        1) Pakistan is a lot less stable right now than 2019 (as is the world).

        2) The putative organization is in Pakistan, and likely supported by the military.

        The biggest threat India is doing (IMO) is threatening the water supply. That is getting everyone in Pakistan’s attention.

        These strikes are more about managing the local political situation in India, which requires some degree of obvious violent retribution.

        • enugu 4 hours ago
          The incentives of the Pakistani generals to permit organizations like LeT to commit further terrorist attacks is a different domain from whatever the local political situation is like in India. There has been a past regime where Pakistani generals were able to train and send militants regularly to conduct terror attacks in India. Without an effective response from India putting pressure on these generals, that can easily become the new normal again.
          • lazide 53 minutes ago
            Do you think (plausibly) threatening to cut off water to large swathes of Pakistan, or blowing up some random terrorist camps, is the bigger actual threat?
        • m0llusk 1 hour ago
          "less stable" === yikes
        • arjun1296 2 hours ago
          [dead]
      • arjun1296 2 hours ago
        [dead]
    • th3iedkid 8 hours ago
      Looks like some of the locations were deep within Pakistan and were targeted precision strikes. They have also released video footage of many of the strikes https://idrw.org/indian-airstrikes-target-terror-infrastruct...
      • datadrivenangel 2 hours ago
        Massive misinformation out there, so be skeptical of anything that flatters anybody.
    • bluefirebrand 12 hours ago
      People said the same sorts of things when Germany suddenly invaded Poland, which rather famously spiraled into World War 2
      • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
        > People said the same sorts of things when Germany suddenly invaded Poland

        Hell, look at HN on the eve of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. One of the top comments was essentially a dismissal from Kherson edited to an "oh shit."

        • IAmGraydon 11 hours ago
          You can only edit for a maximum of 2 hours on HN, so not sure how that happened.
          • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago
            > You can only edit for a maximum of 2 hours on HN, so not sure how that happened

            Because in two hours it went from being "mostly overstated," Ukraine being "not economically strong enough to participate in a war" for a long duration and that Russia being "not interested either," to holy shit the mad king is mad.

            • vesinisa 10 hours ago
              Ukraine was not and still is not economically strong enough for war. It just suffered an unprovoked invasion by its neighbor and had no option but to either capitulate or fight.

              I hope I am not biased but it really does not seem comparable to the border situation in Kashmir where both sides are showing aggression towards each other and weighing the costs of going to an all out war.

              • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago
                > Ukraine was not and still is not economically strong enough for war. It just suffered an unprovoked invasion by its neighbor and had no option but to either capitulate or fight

                The Western consensus about the outcome of the invasion that of a rout.

                > both sides are showing aggression towards each other and weighing the costs of going to an all out war

                Outside an Indo-Chinese land war, the only paths for industrial war emerge from New Delhi. Either in reacting to a miscalculation by Islamabad. Or because India's going imperial. The latter would be shockingly like Russia invading China in both scale and capacity to get drawn out by outside backers.

                • fakedang 6 hours ago
                  If India's going imperial, why would Pakistan bother with hosting terrorist elements to provoke a hostile "belligerent" (according to you) neighbour, and letting them attack a civilian zone?

                  Indian leadership hasn't been going on TV prior to the Pahalgam attack and putting out bellicose statements like Hindus and Muslims can't live together - Pakistan did. Also India isn't stupid to invade a nuclear armed country with a first-use policy.

                  The above incursions are the usual dance we see with India and Pakistan (and China), that we see every few years. Except this time, Pakistan triggered it by attacking civilians, just like 26/11, while even Indian support of Pakistani terrorists such as the Balochistan Liberation Army has never led to a large-scale slaughter of civilians in Pakistan.

                  Pakistan messed up big time, they'll chalk up the L, it will be a few tense words for some time, and then things will get back to where they were before.

                  • lupusreal 5 hours ago
                    > If India's going imperial, why would Pakistan bother with hosting terrorist elements to provoke a hostile "belligerent" (according to you) neighbour, and letting them attack a civilian zone

                    Underlaying this line of reasoning is an assumption that Pakistan makes coordinated, coherent, and more or less rational decisions. But Pakistan is run by the military with civilian leadership being a farcical fig leaf. They routinely fall into prolonged periods of martial law, and arresting former prime ministers is the norm. What's more, Pakistan's military is divided into numerous factions which are operationally independent and have their own internal politics going on.

                    Therefore, any analysis of the form "[hypothesis] is unlikely because it would be irrational and uncoordinated" is extremely dubious.

                    • fakedang 1 hour ago
                      Exactly my point. A single terrorist attack is no grounds for India going "imperial". India has always been very predictable. Pakistan on the other hand remains a volatile mess, and some rogue elements push shit like this once in a while. Except this time, the rogues are the ones ruling. All this does is make Pakistan a pariah state further. Even the Gulf states stood with India this time, when usually they stand on the sidelines and send mere condolences.

                      On a side note, the Gulf states being involved in negotiations pretty much means the end of the US as a diplomatic hegemon for the region.

              • owebmaster 5 hours ago
                > It just suffered an unprovoked invasion

                It was such a great coincidence they had a huge army trained and armed by the west at the same time.

                • lmm 3 hours ago
                  How suspicious and provocative of Ukraine to increase their military training after Russia's first unprovoked annexation of part of their country. How fiendish of the West to assist them in preparing to defend themselves.
                • gmokki 4 hours ago
                  I don't think there were western armaments in Ukraine even though Russia invaded Ukraine over ten years ago and they have been fighting ever since. In the second phase of the invasion both sides still used old Soviet equipment until West finally decided that sanctions are not enough to stop Putin
        • krainboltgreene 11 hours ago
          Putin is a particularly deranged type of fascist though, much like Bush, who is okay making the poor calculation of a Ukrainian invasion for the benefit of a wartime economy. Even German ambassadors in Ukraine were caught off guard having to leave that night.

          Modi is a different type of beast, he's a long term political power that doesn't need a wartime economy, and is still establishing his internal power. He's going to have to deal with the insane SS brigade he's fostered eventually. Also while Putin and others thought that Ukraine would fall like Afghanistan (quickly), zero people think that Pakistan is going anywhere within this eon. While it's not the graveyard of empires, it's definitely the hospice.

          • sofixa 10 hours ago
            > Putin is a particularly deranged type of fascist though, much like Bush, who is okay making the poor calculation of a Ukrainian invasion for the benefit of a wartime economy

            While Putin is undoubtedly deranged, I think his goals with invading had much more to do with delusions of grandeur and trying to rebuild the Russian/Soviet empire than wanting the "benefit" of a "wartime economy". Russia was drastically unprepared for a long war, and its economy, heavily reliant on export of raw materials and import of finished goods, has suffered.

            • dmos62 7 hours ago
              There's as many theories about why Putin and Kremlin did what they did as there are war analyst books on it. Some of them are more right than others, but at the end of the day, if I'm honest, I'm as confused as I was in 2014. Which is a problem not only for my curiosity: if Western policymakers are as confused as me, it's difficult to craft a good policy: we're effectively playing half-court tennis (to quote Sarah C. Paine).
              • foobarian 3 hours ago
                I think it still makes sense to me that they were too used to just rolling in and assuming power like happened many times after WW2. Czechoslovakia, Hungary, post-Berlin interventions like in Georgia, then Crimea most recently. I think they expected Kiev to be the same. The real question is why did the latest intervention turn out different? What changed?
              • wbl 1 hour ago
                The beauty of destroying invading armies is you don't need to ask a lot of questions about why there are there.
              • lostlogin 5 hours ago
                > it's difficult to craft a good policy

                This is a choice though. The decisions aren’t as hard as leaders are making them. Pulling support or giving support would end the war. Neither has actually occurred and support has been drip fed, bleeding both countries.

                • dmos62 4 hours ago
                  > The decisions aren’t as hard as leaders are making them.

                  Is there a statement that is more "armchair-policy-maker"?

                  In all seriousness, I have a similar sentiment about support for Ukraine, but I'm saying that it's difficult to have a robust policy (especially when it involves so many parties) when you struggle to understand the opponent's perspective.

              • dboreham 2 hours ago
                Usually the answer to why a crazy country leader did something odd has to do with "not waking up dead tomorrow".
            • krainboltgreene 9 hours ago
              I agree with most of this except maybe the "soviet empire" bit. His recent mentions of it (within the last 3 years) has been about how the fall of the Soviet Union broke up the "historical russian" borders. For Ukraine specifically he compared himself to Russian Czar Peter the Great.

              A long time ago he lamented the fall of the Soviet Union which is especially hilarious as he was very likely involved in and vultured on the remains of it's demise.

              > Russia was drastically unprepared for a long war

              He, much like all of military officials in NATO at the time, assumed it was going to be over after they landed in Kiev.

              I also contest that the economy has suffered: https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russian-economy-shows-s...

              The only exception is the pipeline, but then who could have expected that the US would sabotage an ally's ability to heat it's citizens? (assuming you ignore the last 100 years of american doctrine)

              • WillPostForFood 9 hours ago
                4.6% growth, 10% inflation, and interest rates at 21% is not great.
                • jajko 7 hours ago
                  But its far from bottom of how much general russian population is willing to suffer before next bloody revolution happens. I don't talk about wealthy educated people from moscow or st petersburg (at least those that didn't leave), they are on purpose less targeted by whats happening, but rather permanently subjugated populations from poor regions whose lives changed comparatively little compared to cold war.

                  Prigozhin had a last real chance, you could see how much common folks and most of army immediately aligned with them. But when they took hostages whole families of his mercenary group leaders, they backed down with predictable results. Interestingly not all aligned generals were executed, I expected bigger purge. Maybe he would be much worse though.

                  • krainboltgreene 5 hours ago
                    The Russian citizens approval of the war mirrors America’s own approval ratings of the invasion of Iraq as well.
                • codedokode 4 hours ago
                  The stores have food on the shelves and nobody is dying from hunger. As for GDP, Russian GDP year-to-year growth is 4.6% and USA GDP growth was 2.8%.
                  • ahoka 3 hours ago
                    Broken window fallacy.
              • os2warpman 6 hours ago
                >He, much like all of military officials in NATO at the time, assumed it was going to be over after they landed in Kiev

                Military officials knew with no doubt whatsoever that the Ukrainians would fight like hell, and that they were better man-for-man, dollar-for-dollar, than the Russians.

                NATO officials' first-hand knowledge of the Ukrainian will to fight is why they begged their governments to allow shipments of materiel to Ukraine.

                • somenameforme 3 hours ago
                  As a peer mentioned, the 'Kiev will fall in 3 days' came from Mark Milley (US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time), not Russia. Beyond that, the decision was then near immediately made to lock all men of "fighting age" in the country, prevent them from leaving, and begin mass conscription.

                  This is something that I hope, in the future, will be seen as no less barbaric than slavery. If people want to fight for their country, then they absolutely should. But if people don't want to fight for their country, then they should never be able to be forced to - it's a mockery of any notion of human rights.

                  There's many things in this world I would be willing to die for, but a country? The notion feels quaint. Of course I realize this means that any country that does set aside such rights would have a tremendous military edge, but perhaps in such a world where human rights are held as more than a placard of convenience, the notion of dying for one's country might no longer seem so quaint.

                  • ashoeafoot 2 hours ago
                    They found parade uniforms in those tanks that stalled out on the way to Kjiev.
                  • sofixa 3 hours ago
                    > There's many things in this world I would be willing to die for, but a country

                    > human rights

                    I see where there is a gap in your understanding. Ukrainians and the Ukrainian army aren't fighting for the abstract concept of a geopolitical entity (the country of Ukraine), they're fighting for their people, culture, language, existence, safety, freedom. Russia is proudly performing a genocide in Ukraine [1], and Putin has already stated that Ukrainians are just misguided Russians.

                    What do you think a Russian occupation of Ukraine would look like? They're already kidnapping children [1] and indiscriminately murdering and torturing civilians.

                    Yes, it was horrible that every single man of fighting age was conscripted. But desperate times force desperate measures.

                    1 - in case you've missed the news, Russia is indeed (without trying to hide it, it's all out in the open, their chief of staff and various ministers have talked about it) kidnapping people and specifically children from Ukraine. Those children are being educated to be good Russian citizens, which is genocide as per the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (to which Russia is a signatory), Article II (e).

                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_abductions_in_the_Russo-...

                    https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/documents/atrocity-...

                    • hnpolicestate 58 minutes ago
                      This doesn't sound factual to me. The children you quoted as being "kidnapped" lived in regions of Russia that voted to secede from Ukraine. They are defacto Russian citizens. Their parents voted for it.
                • krainboltgreene 5 hours ago
              • navane 6 hours ago
                The economy seems to be working still (numbers go up), because its a full on war-economy. You eat your country from the inside out, everything you produce explodes, and there's no way to transition out of it except by winning the war.
            • aa-jv 8 hours ago
              >delusions of grandeur

              How do you come to this conclusion - have you been studying Putins' speeches in the last 3 years, or analysed some of the policies that led to this conclusion?

              Did you see his recent interview on Croatian TV where he discusses this specifically?

              EDIT: hey downvoters - is it not valid to study world leaders' directly rather than going through a third party .. ?

              • JumpCrisscross 7 hours ago
                > have you been studying Putins' speeches in the last 3 years, or analysed some of the policies that led to this conclusion?

                Yes. By his ex ante metrics, his war has thoroughly backfired. By the current aims, it's absolutely delusionally revanchist.

                • impossiblefork 6 hours ago
                  Same assessment here. There is absolutely an excessively punitive element in Russian policy. I only really saw it due to their actions in the NKAO (peacekeepers simply letting Azerbajijan starve people, and then doing nothing about an invasion), but it's clearly a thing also in the Ukraine war.
                • aa-jv 7 hours ago
                  >ex ante metrics

                  So, based on potential future events, you've come to this conclusion.

                  But I don't see any current evidence to support the claim. Can you clarify your position?

                  You saw his interview on Croatia TV recently? His statements refute your position.

                  • JumpCrisscross 7 hours ago
                    > based on potential future events, you've come to this conclusion

                    No. I'm saying by the goals he set out before the war, he has failed.

                    > You saw his interview on Croatia TV recently? His statements refute your position

                    Putin is sort of like Trump in that he messages multiple messages. We cannot know what is in his mind. But Putin has repeatedly made revanchist nonsense statements about Russia's sphere of influence and imperial downfall. He's also said that's not what Russia wants. But that's (a) recent and (b) unsubstantiated by the facts ont the ground.

                    • aa-jv 7 hours ago
                      >No. I'm saying by the goals he set out before the war, he has failed.

                      Fine, but what were those goals, where/when did he set them out and what is the current status? I'd like to study this issue myself - so any sources you can provide?

                      >We cannot know what is in his mind.

                      Yet you claim to know, which is why I'm interested - if you don't believe his words, what basis do you have to make the assertion that you know his real intentions?

                      As far as I can tell (and I am merely hours away from the Ukraine border), the land he has occupied is precisely what he set out to achieve, and it doesn't look like that is about to change any time soon.

                      So please, share your references. I'd quite like to understand how you can make such conclusions with such certainty, while doubting the words of the very individual responsible for it. I remain unconvinced you've observed any of his recent public statements with regards to Russia's position with Europe.

                      • anonymars 3 hours ago
                        Oh, I have one for you. The article that the state news media auto-published and then retracted when reality failed to measure up: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-60562240

                        You can run the original through a translator as it's still archived. https://web.archive.org/web/20220226051154/https://ria.ru/20...

                        > Russia is restoring its unity - the tragedy of 1991, this terrible catastrophe of our history, its unnatural dislocation, has been overcome. Yes, at a great cost, yes, through the tragic events of a de facto civil war, because now brothers, divided by their belonging to the Russian and Ukrainian armies, are still shooting at each other - but Ukraine as anti-Russia will no longer exist. Russia is restoring its historical completeness, gathering the Russian world, the Russian people together - in all its totality of Great Russians, Belarusians and Little Russians. If we had refused this, had allowed the temporary division to become entrenched for centuries, then we would not only have betrayed the memory of our ancestors, but would also have been cursed by our descendants - for allowing the disintegration of the Russian land.

                        Note that referring to Ukrainians as "little Russians" is grossly offensive but fits with the big picture idea (which you can see scattered in this very thread! https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43913680) that Ukraine isn't a real country or a separate nationality. This year we have been provided a very easy parallel: the rhetoric that Canada isn't really separate and should just be the 51st state. (What a coincidence!)

                        • anonymars 3 hours ago
                          Here's another short video I always share on this topic, with John McCain laying things out in 2014 after Russia seized Crimea. We're about halfway through his predictions, I'd say. https://youtu.be/HLAzeHnNgR8
                      • sofixa 6 hours ago
                        > As far as I can tell (and I am merely hours away from the Ukraine border), the land he has occupied is precisely what he set out to achieve, and it doesn't look like that is about to change any time soon.

                        Is that why the best Russian forces attacked Kyiv, including a paratroop landing to capture Antonov airport, which is in the Kyiv suburbs? You don't do that kind of thing if you're not expecting to capture the city. Also, why did Russia need to mobilise if it got what it wanted?

                        Add in Russia's claims that they're just removing the Ukrainian government, which it accused of being neo-Nazis.

                        > Putin's address was aired during an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on the situation in Ukraine that began on the evening of 23 February.[14][15] At the meeting itself, Vasily Nebenzya, Russia's representative to the UN, stated: "We are not carrying out aggression against the Ukrainian people, but against the group that seized power in Kyiv."[16]

                        > Our plans do not include the occupation of Ukrainian territories

                        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_conducting_a_special_milita...

                        That's called delusional backpedaling by both the Russians, and people like you who seem intent on giving them the benefit of the doubt for no apparent reason. Russia is not a rational actor, and no, nothing that has happened has been to plan, unless you believe their plan included having to mobilise, and losing the Black Sea fleet to a country with no navy.

                        • aa-jv 5 hours ago
                          "People like you" - you lost me here. I'm asking out of interest, not because I'm a useful idiot for Russians, and I'm not challenging your position because someone might consider that "you are a bootlicker for Western war-mongers", but because I have a legitimate interest in the conclusions you've made and the means you've taken to reach them, and I want to see the details - not the anecdotes, not the vitriol - based on evidence that can be reviewed and which is not keyed to emotional levers being pushed and pulled depending on which 'side' you are on.

                          I'm not interested in the vitriol - name-calling and invalidation of ones intelligence is a limited technique in terms of effectiveness - I am interested in the source of your understanding, such as it is. I work with refugees regularly from various conflicts, including Gaza and Ukraine, so my personal insight is based on on-the-ground assessments from civilian victims of these conflicts, whose voice is not often heard in the masses. What I know so far: nobody in the civilian cadre wants these wars, only their utterly insane leaders do.

                          So, again, what of the Russian governments' official positions have you evaluated against the reality of the facts on the ground?

                          Russia got its land corridor to Sebastopol, Crimea, where they continue to operate their nuclear-armed naval base: a requirement they made very clear early on in the conflict.

                          Russia have gained control over the territories in the east where they claimed that Ukraine was committing crimes against the mostly-Russian speaking population prior to their invasion. A consequence of their actions has been the result where, a significant portion of Europes' population now have a greater understanding of the nature of the various groups involved in the conflict - and yes, that includes a broader understanding of the Ukrainian and Russian extremist groups involved.

                          And .. a million men are dead because neither side had what it took to actually maintain peace.

                          >Russia is not a rational actor

                          By which standard can you make this claim of any nation which has invaded and demolished sovereign states this century? There are literally no states involved in any conflict today which can be considered rational actors.

                          States are, by very stint of necessity, duplicitous and calculating in their actions - which is why I think it is very selective to make conclusions on the state of the conflict in Ukraine on the basis of public statements and propaganda - from both sides of the conflict. I'd like to have a distinct set of statements which can be verified against the current reality, but this is not forthcoming - so far, the vitriol is getting in the way of rational discussion.

                          So .. What do you think of Putins' statements made on Croatian Channel 4 TV on Monday, regarding Russia's position vis a vis its relationship with Europe? All lies? Should be ignored on the basis of some masterful application of coffeeshop psychology techniques?

                          • mopsi 4 hours ago

                              > I want to see the details - not the anecdotes, not the vitriol - based on evidence that can be reviewed and which is not keyed to emotional levers being pushed and pulled depending on which 'side' you are on. /---/  What I know so far: nobody in the civilian cadre wants these wars, only their utterly insane leaders do.
                            
                            It goes without saying that nobody in Ukraine wants the war, but indeed, let's examine facts and not personal anecdotes. KIIS and other surveyors have consistently found ~80% support for continuing to resist the invasion (graph 6): https://kiis.com.ua/?lang=eng&cat=reports&id=1509&page=1

                            Likewise, saying that the Sevastopol naval base "continues to operate" is quite a stretch when we look at the facts:

                            * The HQ of Sevastopol naval base was blown up: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missile_strike_on_the_Black_Se...

                            * The flagship was sunk along with a third of the entire fleet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_cruiser_Moskva https://x.com/HudsonInstitute/status/1765453597829935482

                            * The remaining fleet has fled to Russian ports (primarily Novorossiysk) on the eastern coast of the Black Sea to escape destruction: https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2024/06/new-sat-images...

                            * Even there, unmanned Ukrainian naval drones continue to pose a significant danger. In the past week, in the first ever aerial combat of this kind, they shot down two fighter jets near Novorossiysk: https://www.wsj.com/world/europe/ukrainian-naval-drones-shoo...

                            Quite a different picture from the victory parade you were trying to draw us. When reality and narrative differ this much, "people like you" labels shouldn't offend, because you indeed represent a certain distinct type.

                          • sofixa 2 hours ago
                            > "People like you" - you lost me here. I'm asking out of interest, not because I'm a useful idiot for Russians

                            I'm sorry, but you are. Might not be your intention (I strongly doubt it), but you are.

                            > and I want to see the details - not the anecdotes, not the vitriol - based on evidence that can be reviewed and which is not keyed to emotional levers being pushed and pulled depending on which 'side' you are on.

                            I linked you a Wikipedia page with the timeline, quotes and Putin's official announcement of the war on kremlin.ru. What do you have to say about that, other than "wanting to review the evidence"? Come on, gave you plenty, go ahead and review it, and come back to us telling us how Russia supposedly achieved its aims.

                            > So, again, what of the Russian governments' official positions have you evaluated against the reality of the facts on the ground?

                            Their starting position, which is that they're bringing peace to the bad Ukraine Nazis, and that they're fighting NATO encroachment, both of which are objective failures - Ukraine is still there, and NATO got even closer to Russia with Sweden and Finland.

                            > Russia got its land corridor to Sebastopol, Crimea, where they continue to operate their nuclear-armed naval base: a requirement they made very clear early on in the conflict.

                            Cool, and the Black Sea Fleet is still in Sevastopol, right? Wait, there's a Black Sea Fleet, right? Right?

                            Russia lost the Black Sea Fleet to a country with no navy. It had to evacuate whatever was remaining of it to Novorossiysk, far out of range of Ukrainian drones. They could have saved a lot of lives and their fleet by just moving the fleet there in the first place.

                            > A consequence of their actions has been the result where, a significant portion of Europes' population now have a greater understanding of the nature of the various groups involved in the conflict - and yes, that includes a broader understanding of the Ukrainian and Russian extremist groups involved.

                            One party, Russia, invaded and is genociding the other [1]. Ukraine had a negligible problem with neo-Nazis in a militia. Totally the same "extremist groups on both sides", right?

                            > What do you think of Putins' statements made on Croatian Channel 4 TV on Monday, regarding Russia's position vis a vis its relationship with Europe? All lies? Should be ignored on the basis of some masterful application of coffeeshop psychology techniques?

                            So, I Googled around, and saw some youtube/facebook/linkedin links talking about that and how Russia isn't Europe's enemy (even though they're literally invading a European neighbour and threatening others, sure mate) and bla bla nonsense. But on further searching... there is no such thing? Grok (not that it's very reliable) says that it can't find any proof of such statements. Googling with HRT 4, the name of the Croatian channel, finds nothing. Their website with the Putin tag shows nothing: https://www.hrt.hr/tag/vladimir-putin

                            So it's fake... Good job being a useful idiot for the enemy of Europe.

                            1 Russia is indeed (without trying to hide it, it's all out in the open, their chief of staff and various ministers have talked about it) kidnapping people and specifically children from Ukraine. Those children are being educated to be good Russian citizens, which is genocide as per the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (to which Russia is a signatory), Article II (e).

                            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_abductions_in_the_Russo-...

                            https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/documents/atrocity-...

              • jajko 7 hours ago
                [dead]
            • matheusmoreira 3 hours ago
              I thought he invaded because of historical and not at all unfounded fears of western encirclement. Ukraine was getting pretty close to NATO, after all. I don't doubt that there were imperialist intentions, I'm just saying there is also a certain strategy and logic to the invasion.

              Hopefully this will finally teach the nations of the world they can't rely on the likes of the US for their protection. If they want to survive and keep their sovereignity, they should really start developing missile technology and stockpiling nukes. If they don't, they will simply get steamrolled by nuclear armed opponents while the US does pretty much nothing about it despite promising to because they're not actually willing to risk global thermonuclear war with Russia over some eastern european country.

          • graemep 2 hours ago
            Putin is not a fascist. He is a Russian nationalist/imperialist dictator. Far more like Catherine the Great than like Hitler or Mussolini.
        • HideousKojima 9 hours ago
          That's because we'd seen "Russian invasion imminent" every year since the annexation of Crimea. It got to be very boy who cried wolf.
          • jltsiren 8 hours ago
            A lot of people have learned exactly the wrong lessons from the Boy Who Cried Wolf. Making people complacent with repeated false alarms is more likely the intended outcome than a failure.

            When I was in school, one of the history teachers spent a lot of time describing how the Yom Kippur War started. I guess he thought it told something important about how things work in the real world. The lead up to the Russian invasion looked pretty much the same. An ordinary person could not have known if the invasion would actually start this time. But a reasonable person should have understood that if an invasion was about to start, that was what it would likely look like.

          • benterix 8 hours ago
            This is actually a known tactics. I remember in the 90s thieves often did similar things like triggering an alarm on a parking lot every night. At first many people were alarmed and went down to check on their cars. But after a few false alarms nobody cared. It was then when they started to steal.
          • matkoniecz 7 hours ago
            For start Russia invaded Ukraine and continued war in eastern regions.

            Russian invasion was not imminent, it was ongoing.

            And for full scale invasion: there were a clear signs of it before it happened.

        • hshdhdhj4444 6 hours ago
          The competition to Putin entering Ukraine is obviously ridiculous.

          Putin had already attacked multiple countries before. Georgia, Chechnya, and leads a vast network of para militaries that are fighting all over Africa as well.

          Heck, Putin had literally attacked and conquered a whole area of Ukraine itself not even a decade ago.

          Anyone who was saying Putin would not attack Ukraine either had no knowledge at all about how Putin operated or was willfully misleading.

          India has shown no such imperial intentions that Putin has demonstrated and spoken about multiple times both before and since his attempt to take over Ukraine.

          • navane 6 hours ago
            I agree with you now, but I also remember everyone, all kinds of experts, saying Putin is just postering. I think it's important to remember that.

            It is important to note when things are not normal. Putin actually invading Ukraine was a very unexpected move.

            Unfortunately, we as people are very good at rationalizing after the fact "oh of course this was coming", shrugging our shoulders and just moving on as if nothing happened. "It is what it is, this too shall pass".

            • __s 3 hours ago
              Indeed. I took it as a serious threat after seeing prediction markets in February move up to 30% odds of it happening
            • somenameforme 3 hours ago
              The problem is that posturing can turn into reality (which is perhaps what you're trying to say). I do think Russia was posturing. They began seeking negotiations 4 days after they invaded, and outside of an absurd longshot decapitation strike all of their early maneuvering was much more performative than military in nature.

              With Ukraine's entry into NATO appearing increasingly imminent, they likely felt they could force matters with a semi-bluff thinking they could catch Ukraine by surprise. Then the West jumped in thinking they could catch Russia by surprise. In the end nobody was really "surprised" and so we got a war that I expect nobody, especially in hindsight, really expected, let alone wanted.

              • macintux 3 hours ago
                > With Ukraine's entry into NATO appearing increasingly imminent

                Say what? AFAIK, Ukraine wasn’t even eligible for entry due to the organization’s rules on contested territories.

                • somenameforme 2 hours ago
                  The most clear trend in modern times is that rules are "flexible" when convenient. Here [1] is the relevant Wiki page, dated to the day before Russia's invasion. NATO had repeatedly emphasized that Ukraine would be accepted into NATO, all that was missing was a date. In the context of this, there was ongoing escalation between Russia and NATO. Russia repeatedly sought any sort of means or agreement to ensure that they wouldn't end up with NATO setup on their doorstep. And NATO increasingly antagonistically disregarded and even belittled such interests. At the same time being ever more provocative with things like NATO-Ukraine military exercises in the Black Sea.

                  It feels very much like the intent was to provoke, especially when this largely parallels the Cuban Missile Crisis with roles reversed. When the USSR wanted to expand their military reach to Cuba, we nearly started a nuclear war over it. And in that case, Cuba doesn't even share a border with the US! So it's not like we simply lacked the ability to understand why they might have a genuine concern here.

                  The reason I backdated the article is because when you read that it sounds exactly like Russia is making their intentions of an invasion, if a compromise cannot be reached, rather unambiguously clear. And so if you read it, with hindsight, one might think it was edited with that outcome in mind.

                  [1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ukraine%E2%80%93N...

                  • macintux 1 hour ago
                    In the absence of a membership action plan, NATO saying "Yes, someday Ukraine will be a member" (something that they were barely able to agree on in 2008, and nothing changed in the 15 years after that) is hardly "imminent".
            • lostlogin 5 hours ago
              > Putin actually invading Ukraine was a very unexpected move.

              Was it? The scale was surprising, but troop build ups were noted ahead of time and Russia had been fighting in Ukraine for many years.

              Am I misremembering?

              • justin66 3 hours ago
                You're not misremembering.

                The US government warned everyone the invasion was really going to happen, the Ukrainian government warned everyone the invasion was really going to happen, and the Russian government warned everyone the invasion was really going to happen. The mainstream media warned everyone the invasion was going to happen, and the financial markets responded.

                Some people don't have the sense to come in out of the rain.

                • graemep 2 hours ago
                  > Some people don't have the sense to come in out of the rain.

                  Those people included almost all western governments who had blithely assumed Russia was not threat, did not react to the previous invasion (and some took the stance Russia had the support of the inhabitants of ethnically Russian areas), did not react to the invasion of Georgia, and generally just assumed it would be OK - which Russia took as a signal the west would be fine with an invasion of the rest of Ukraine.

                  • justin66 1 hour ago
                    Perhaps my impression was colored by the US government actually having a clear picture of what was about to happen. I won't defend Europe too much. It seems to me like Poland, the Nordics and the Baltics see Russia pretty clearly, but everything kind of falls apart the further away from Russia you get.
                • llm_nerd 2 hours ago
                  >the Ukrainian government warned everyone the invasion was really going to happen

                  Quite contrary, the Ukrainian government was publicly saying that it was all bluffing.

                  https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60174684

                  Zelensky repeatedly said that the West was creating a panic. Ukraine's repelling of the attack was heroic and legendary, but the truth is that if it wasn't for the astonishing incompetence of the Russian assault, where there was a massive traffic jam almost all the way from Belarus to Kyiv, it really would have been a quickly conquered nation.

                  >and the Russian government warned everyone the invasion was really going to happen

                  But they didn't. Russia kept portraying the build-up as drills with Belarus.

                  https://news.sky.com/story/ukraine-crisis-putin-says-militar...

                  Western intelligence predicted Russia's plans perfectly, but a lot of people were very in denial about it.

                  • justin66 2 hours ago
                    I'd forgotten about Zelensky's prewar media strategy. Whoops.

                    Regarding Russia: did the strange televised meeting of Putin's war cabinet (whatever it would be called), wherein everyone went around the room and voted "yes" to invasion even though a couple of them looked like they were in a hostage video, happen before or after tanks rolled into Ukraine? In my mind that's a "prewar" thing but maybe I got the sequence of events wrong? (I'm finding it hard to google this even though it was a fairly important event. Weird.)

                    > Western intelligence predicted Russia's plans perfectly

                    I remember thinking the white house handled communications surrounding the invasion very well, kind of a rare foreign policy bright spot for them. Too bad it didn't make a difference.

                    • llm_nerd 1 hour ago
                      That weird meeting I think you're thinking of-

                      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8B0mWzB4GOQ

                      (I recalled it as well and with normal searching could not find it, even with date winnowing, but asking Gemini 2.5 Pro and it immediately gave me that resource)

                      This meeting happened just before the invasion. Far too late for anyone to really do anything, and long after most of the "are they/aren't they?" discussions happened. Up until that point Russia was repeatedly denying their "special military operation". Just as they denied their invasion of Crimea and their little green men in the Donbas.

                      As an aside, that absolutely bizarre security council meeting is virtually indistinguishable from the North Korea-style Trump administration meetings that we now see weekly, where it's a circle of embarrassingly laughable platitudes and servitudes by a cowed and pathetic administration.

                      >I remember thinking the white house handled communications surrounding the invasion very well

                      They did.

                  • viraptor 2 hours ago
                    > Zelensky repeatedly said that the West was creating a panic.

                    I still have no idea if it was serious, or a fake "look at us helpless and not preparing at all". It was reported in media that he was given early warnings and briefings from the US about the incoming attack. There are so many cases like that that were may never learn about for sure...

                    • llm_nerd 48 minutes ago
                      Ukraine kind of wasn't prepared at all. The US was screaming warnings and giving precise intel, but Ukraine's defence didn't seem to plan for an actual attack at all.

                      https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-64664944

                      It is just shocking incompetence by Russian forces that Kyiv wasn't taken in days. Russian units faced negligible resistance right to the outskirts of Kyiv, where their own lack of training, planning and logistics stalled their efforts.

                      https://kyivindependent.com/opinion-russias-failure-to-take-...

                      Ukraine is now a potent military force and Zelensky is a bonafide hero, but they were in a profound state of denial and got incredibly lucky in those early days.

              • anonymars 3 hours ago
                Very much so. The Biden administration was sounding the alarm, loudly, and the general vibe was, "well that wouldn't make any sense, there goes America crying wolf again like Iraq"

                Here was one example: https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-ukraine-invasion-predictions-...

                See also: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/2/21/why-ukrainians-dont...

              • megous 5 hours ago
                Yes, even Russian soldiers were surprised when they were suddenly marching to Ukraine.

                Buildups were happening repeatedly in the past under the guise of exercises.

                Eg. here tanks and ~80k soldiers in 2018: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/15/world/europe/ukraine-russ...

          • Mountain_Skies 3 hours ago
            >Putin

            >India

            Interesting how in one case it's the leader of the country doing the invading and in the other it's the country doing it without the leader behind it mentioned.

            • criddell 2 hours ago
              Because one is a real democracy, the other is a dictatorship.
          • anticodon 6 hours ago
            > Putin had already attacked multiple countries before. Georgia, Chechnya

            As always, westerners leave in an information bubble. Chechnya was always a part of Russia. It was a civil war. Ukraine was always a part of Russia until 1991, btw, there was never a separate country called "Ukraine" before 1991 - you can easily find that even in Western history books, although I'm sure they'll be rewritten in some way soon, if not already.

            Georgia launched attack in 2008, it is easily confirmed by:

            1. News from that time (there was a several days delay between Georgia attack and when Medvedev decided to respond, during that time Putin called a press conference and said: "Georgia has started an attack and is bombing civilians, but Western press is silent about it". You can still find recordings of that press conference on video hosting sites, I believe.

            2. There was an independent EU investigation that also confirmed that Georgia started the attack in 2008.

            3. Last year Georgian government itself confirmed that they were attacking first.

            It never cease to amaze me in what distorted information reality people live.

            BTW, it's for the best, because it was the reason why West could coerce Georgia into starting a war in 2008. All the population, including the top politics lived in an alternative reality, so they basically said to Georgia: "Russia is weak and corrupt, they have no army, no weapons, they have only shovels, and even their shovels are rusty. So you'll easily get what you want without any resistance."

            Actually, more or less the same repeated in 2022. Just read HN comments from 2022: "Russians are surrendering by tens of thousands a day, they don't want to fight with warm and welcoming and kind Ukrainian soldiers", "Ukraine burns thousands of Russian tanks and armored vehicles a day: here's a photo proof", etc, etc.

            So this distortion of reality works the other way round, when West bases its actions on it. There are lies from top to bottom, and then everyone makes all kinds of decisions based on those lies.

            • PedroBatista 5 hours ago
              [flagged]
            • saagarjha 6 hours ago
              [flagged]
              • anticodon 5 hours ago
                So, what is my mistake? When and where existed "Ukraine" before 1991?
                • agubelu 5 hours ago
                  Even if your premise was true, which it isn't, do we justify the imperialist invasion of a sovereign state because it was founded after some threshold year?

                  Countries are not a fact of nature. They change, come and go for a large number of reasons. The Ukrainian people are constituted in a country and have repeatedly expressed they don't wish to be part of Russia. If you want to force them to be at gunpoint, at least be open about it instead of hiding behind a historical pseudo-argument.

                • saagarjha 5 hours ago
                  Hacker News should just ban your account. After all you didn't have it before 2014, so I guess the natural state of the site is not having you around.
                • wqaatwt 4 hours ago
                  1918? Most of the territory of modern Ukraine. Before it was conquered by Bolsheviks.

                  Also Russia as an independent state ceased to exist in 1922. So it’s hardly that different. Both Russia and Ukraine only became independent countries in 1991 when they decided they to leave the USSR.

            • ponector 4 hours ago
              Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania were always part of "Russia". Would you suggest they should be invaded as soon as Ukraine is fully occupied?
              • wqaatwt 4 hours ago
                Yes, that’s literally what these people are saying.

                Russia is allegedly entitled to own half of Europe due to some deranged reasons. Everyone who disagrees with that is supposedly a nazi or something similar.

                The concept of hypocrisy is entirely foreign and incomprehensible to anyone who honestly supports Russian imperialism..

                • ponector 4 hours ago
                  We can flip the question: when German, Japan and other should invade Russia to get back their territories?

                  Königsberg(Kaliningrad) was always German. Kuril islands were always Japanese.

                  While Russian army is distracted - Germany and Japan should get their territories back now.

            • actionfromafar 6 hours ago
              You can call it whatever you want, Russia is killing a lot of people in places which used to be peaceful.
              • ponector 4 hours ago
                Funny twist is they are killing people on territories which have been friendly to russia, mostly used russian language in private life. Friendly doesn't mean they want to be occupied, though.
            • wqaatwt 4 hours ago
              > there was never a separate country called "Ukraine" before 1991

              By your standards there was no separate country called Russia between 1918 and 1991. So how is this different?

              Also absurd argument. There was no country called Belgium until the 1830s. So what?

              > So this distortion of reality works the other way round

              So your justification for distorting reality is that other people are allegedly doing that so it’s fine for you to engage in that as well?

              • ponector 4 hours ago
                > there was never a separate country called "Ukraine" before 1991

                Btw that is simply not true. There has been independent Ukraine few years by the end of WWI. Unfortunately, eventually they lost the war to the red army and been occupied by Moscow .

              • ashoeafoot 2 hours ago
                the nazis came as far as they did because a ton of peoole greeted them as liberators and joined their new oppressors to fight for a free homeland. You dont do that unless you really hate the empire you are imprisoned in..
            • sofixa 2 hours ago
              > As always, westerners leave in an information bubble. Chechnya was always a part of Russia. It was a civil war. Ukraine was always a part of Russia until 1991, btw, there was never a separate country called "Ukraine" before 1991 - you can easily find that even in Western history books, although I'm sure they'll be rewritten in some way soon, if not already.

              While this is categorically not true (WWI, the Ukrainian SSR), it's also irrelevant. There wasn't an independent Czechia or Albania either, or Turkey, or Greece, or Italy, or Germany, until there was. Historical non-existence of a state doesn't mean that with the rise of nationalism in the 19th and 20th century those states didn't become entities people wanted to belong to.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_Ukrainian_langua...

              Here's a chronological list of various supressions of the Ukrainian language. There has been a semblance of a Ukrainian identity long before the 1990s.

              > Georgia launched attack in 2008, it is easily confirmed by:

              Interesting, the timeline does not add up with the independently sourced Wikipedia article on the topic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Georgian_War

              Is it wrong? Feel free to update it.

              > 2. There was an independent EU investigation that also confirmed that Georgia started the attack in 2008.

              link?

              > "Ukraine burns thousands of Russian tanks and armored vehicles a day: here's a photo proof",

              Yeah, where are the Russian battle groups? Where are the modern tanks? Why did last year's 9th of May parade have so few armoured vehicles?

              • Detrytus 1 hour ago
                > Ukraine was always a part of Russia until 1991, btw, there was never a separate country called "Ukraine" before 1991

                For very limited definition of "always" - Ukraine existed in different forms since like 9th century, including being a part of Duchy of Lithuania, and then Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, until 1795. Then in 1918 western Ukraine became part of Poland again. Ukraine with the borders as we know them today (OK, pre-2014) was created after WWII, as a part of Soviet Union.

                So no, Ukraine was never "a part of Russia", excluding the short periods when Russia conquered them by force.

      • mcmoor 8 hours ago
        History isn't only WW2. There's a lot of situations with high tension that doesn't explode into war. One big proof is Cold War not ending in human annihilation. Also 19th century Concert of Europe is entirely built on diplomatic finesse to prevent greater conflict.
        • JeremyNT 3 hours ago
          It's the exception that proves the rule. Things look stable until they aren't.

          There are enough "tense diplomatic situations" happening all the time, and given a long enough timeline eventually some will fail and end in disaster.

        • HPsquared 6 hours ago
          It's an artifact of education. Everyone is taught about a handful of big famous wars, but it doesn't really give an understanding of international relations. It's actually a bit dangerous.
      • aucisson_masque 8 hours ago
        That's different, Germany used fake death of German soldier to justify an invasion of Poland.

        India is bombing Pakistan, Pakistan is shelling India, but so far no army invaded another country.

        Beside both Germany and Poland didn't have the atomic weapon.

        • HPsquared 6 hours ago
          It's worrying that the world is progressing to "nuclear states attacking each other". Like two cowboys who both have revolvers, getting into a bar fight.
      • nblgbg 11 hours ago
        "I understand your skepticism, but realistically, I don't see the case. Pakistan is in a very bad situation. The U.S. has cut off a lot of funding over the past decate. They were on the verge of bankruptcy a couple of years ago, and China bailed them out.
        • BLKNSLVR 11 hours ago
          New proxy war between US-aligned India and China-supported Pakistan?

          My understanding is that China and India don't tend to get along politically.

          • chgs 4 hours ago
            Not convinced India is particularly US aligned, and while Pakistan is relations have deteriorated in the past, the us has backed Pakistan more than India.

            Maybe this time the us would back India as part of a proxy war.

            • roncesvalles 1 hour ago
              The thing is, the US doesn't want partners; it wants allies. And that's too big of a commitment for India to make. This is basically the central tension that keeps US-India relations from moving too fast.
          • pmontra 10 hours ago
            China and India are still formally at war since the 60s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Indian_War and there is an ongoing dispute over territories in the east of India https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Indian_border_dispute

            The latter still makes the news in the West sometimes, not every year. HNers from those countries might give us some insights about how much their people feel it important.

            • nindalf 5 hours ago
              For what it's worth, China has had past or current border disputes with every neighbour of theirs. They have issues with India, Japan, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, to say nothing of Taiwan. The ridiculous nine-dash line they've come up with contravenes international law and basic common sense.

              If you meet an asshole in the morning, you're unlucky. If you meet nothing but assholes all day, you're the asshole.

            • Symmetry 3 hours ago
              My wife is from China and when I ask her what people there think of the India/China border disputes she says that people aren't aware of them.
              • nonethewiser 3 hours ago
                Doesnt surprise me much. It's very far from 95% of the population and China doesnt have much to gain by being loud about the border skirmishes.
          • xlinux 10 hours ago
            I don't know what you are drinking but America funded Pakistan and have been supporting it. How do you think they got f16 for free
            • BLKNSLVR 10 hours ago
              Drinking ignorance. Thank you for the additional info.
            • willvarfar 10 hours ago
              A lot has changed over the years. While the soviets were supplying India and propping up their puppet state in Afghanistan the US used Pakistan as a proxy.

              But by the time the US were hunting Bin Laden a lot had changed and support has been trailing off.

              Now most recently Trump has been growing the US pro-Israeli - and basically being broad-stroke anti-every-kind-of-muslim - policy and actions in the gulf and has put the now-meagre levels of ongoing US aid to Pakistan completely on hold.

          • spaceman_2020 10 hours ago
            That’s changing. Both countries need each other now in the absence of American money. Recent rhetoric from both sides has been reconcilatory
          • sofixa 10 hours ago
            India is not US aligned. They're an independent country with an independent foreign policy, doing whatever makes sense for them.

            Buying Russian gas on the cheap, buying French, American, Russian military equipment.

            • graemep 2 hours ago
              China is a potential threat to them, which is likely to mean an alliance with the US will makes sense to them, especially if the US becomes more hostile to CHina.
      • nonethewiser 3 hours ago
        >People said the same sorts of things when Germany suddenly invaded Poland, which rather famously spiraled into World War 2

        The analogy isnt a great fit.

        Germany hadn't previously invaded Poland (and vice-versa) many times leading up to that point.

        A missile strike and an invasion are on completely different levels.

      • rayiner 3 hours ago
        War is universal in human history and most of them don’t turn into World War II. centuries of unique circumstances went into World War II.
      • HPsquared 6 hours ago
        That war involved external parties though. Who are the external parties here who would want to get involved?
      • SpicyLemonZest 11 hours ago
        And if it turns out next month that India has a secret plan to conquer Pakistan and split it with Iran, that will be similarly concerning. I’m extremely confident that’s not the case.
      • dyauspitr 10 hours ago
        Yeah but if you’re a part of the region you know India is not stupid or expansionary. No Indian is really worried about this turning into a full scale war.
        • saagarjha 6 hours ago
          Many of the people I know in India are worried. Nobody likes it when missiles get launched.
        • pm90 7 hours ago
          I wouldn’t be so sure. It is easy for the tit-tat to spiral out of control. Any kind of military skirmish is very concerning… we should stop the fighting while we still can.
      • pfannkuchen 11 hours ago
        "suddenly"

        Poland refused to negotiate on a land bridge to East Prussia and a compromise on Danzig governance because daddy Britain said they didn't have to.

        Germany's brutality was not justified, but it's not as if it happened suddenly.

        • bluefirebrand 10 hours ago
          It was pretty "sudden" as in unexpected, given that the world was still reeling from the last war
          • cjbgkagh 10 hours ago
            All sides were rapidly rearming, it was far from unexpected.
            • bombcar 4 hours ago
              Exactly. "Unexpected" is not the same as "we hope not" - but it's often presented that way.
        • adamnemecek 11 hours ago
          It is sudden as it was an overreaction.
          • pfannkuchen 10 hours ago
            Are all overreactions sudden?

            Man A is pushing man B repeatedly and yelling at him as a bar dispute escalates. Man B pulls out a gun and shoots man A.

            Overreaction? Yes. Sudden? Not necessarily.

            • orwin 8 hours ago
              Man B push around man A, insult him, poke him. Man A ask him to stop. Man B pulls out a gun and shoots man A. Here, ftfy.

              Poland saw what what Germany did to Czechoslovaquia, decided that negotiations would only happen after a demilitarization and de-escalation.

              But it's true it wasn't sudden, poland was preparing for the war, the attack from both side (cooperation between Germany and Russia) is what took them by surprise

              • pfannkuchen 8 hours ago
                Hold on, nowhere did I say that A and B corresponded to the Germany/Poland situation. You are putting words in my mouth.

                I was strictly illustrating a counter example to the implied notion that overreaction implies suddenness.

                To further demonstrate that this is a misunderstanding on your part, it wouldn’t even make sense for me to have A and B correspond to the Germany/Poland situation - that would make my argument circular!

                It isn’t very kind to take an interpretation that would set the speaker’s argument as circular, when an alternate and trivially-demonstrated-as-more-valid interpretation is also available. I believe the advice is often stated as - assume good intent.

                On your second point - this is an elementary school tier interpretation of history. Poland itself did not have anywhere close to sufficient leverage to make such decisions about delaying negotiations. They were able to do so solely due to Britain’s backing their decision with force. Why did Britain back them? Why do you believe the history book written by the winners so easily on a topic so fuzzy as motive?

            • nsavage 4 hours ago
              That's not really comparable to Poland and Germany. More comparable would be: Man A is pushing man B repeatedly and yelling at him as a bar dispute escalates. Man A pulls out a gun and shoots man B once Man B retaliates.
    • aprilthird2021 11 hours ago
      I think you're mostly correct. This does mirror the 2019 flare up, and yeah ultimately neither side wants their populace to figure out they're not as strong or prepared as they claim. For Pakistan after squashing the democratically popular leader, they can't afford to appear weak (the only thing they can lean on is strength to explain to the populace why they are better than a democratically elected leader). For India, also, the BJP has been waning in popularity after almost a decade of incumbency, this could be the straw that loses them their major support.
    • Guptos 2 hours ago
      I hope this is true
    • conradfr 3 hours ago
      Yet people died.
    • tonyhart7 12 hours ago
      so its saving face attack??? idk about that
    • pokstad 13 hours ago
      Thanks for stating these forecasts so authoritatively. Or maybe we should admit this is uncharted waters and we shouldn't downplay what is possible?
      • tomjen3 2 minutes ago
        Its not the first time these two have been at war.
      • ivape 13 hours ago
        It's also worth pointing out that whatever nonsense the terrorists were on about will now just get reinforced. You could be talking about a more agitated situation with even more terror attacks. This is how bullshit like this escalates. They should have coordinated with Pakistan to run the strikes.

        I also thought the Ukraine war wasn't "really" going to happen. Humans will human.

        • bluefirebrand 12 hours ago
          > They should have coordinated with Pakistan to run the strikes.

          I think the past 30 years have demonstrated enough that Pakistan is only paying lip service when they denounce attacks like this

          At best they don't care, and at worst they sponsor the terrorists directly, but they definitely are not trying to help anyone stop attacks like this or root out their extremists

          • cheema33 6 hours ago
            You may not be aware of this, but terrorists inside Pakistan kill Pakistani military servicemen on a weekly basis.

            India's attack on Pakistan are counterproductive. It will fuel the fire and the crazies will kill more Indians and Pakistanis as a result.

            • ivell 5 hours ago
              Pakistan has a concept of good terrorists and bad terrorists. Terrorists against India (JeM, LeT) are good terrorists. They are protected and trained by Pakistan army (e.g. protection given to JeM leader). Good terrorists are sometimes declared dead to avoid international scrutiny while protected clandestinely (Sajid Mir).

              Bad terrorists are of course that attack Pakistani Army (e.g. Baloch Liberation Army).

              Notable is how Osama was protected by Pakistan army as he was a useful indirect source of income (war on terror)

              Indias attack was aimed at the Good Terrorists of Pakistan. The hope is to reduce their capabilities. Not sure how much successful they have been though.

            • lenkite 4 hours ago
              LeT is a state sponsored terrorist organization. It was founded by General Zia as he proudly declaimed that he would "Bleed India with a Thousand Cuts". I suggest reading the books written by Pak Generals to know that they fully believe in investing in militant/terror organizations - it is a firm and unalienable part of their military culture. Such a culture was actually encouraged by the US initially before the 9/11 blow-back.
            • lazide 5 hours ago
              Geopolitical decisions like this are always ‘least bad’. The Modi gov’t in India is not as strong as it looks, and they couldn’t continue to function if they let such a high profile and obviously religiously motivated terrorist attack go ‘unanswered’.

              The water threats are the real leverage, but without some obvious military action they’d be skinned alive by the Hindu hardliners (Hindutvas).

          • ignoramous 5 hours ago
            > root out their extremists

            Pakistanis themselves are subject to numerous terror incidents. I'm not sure what causes folks to automatically assume Muslim nations support "extremists" as a policy. Sure, there may be power brokers who do, but that's the case for any country, democratic or not.

              On 16 December 2014, six gunmen affiliated with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan [attacked] the Army Public School in Peshawar. The terrorists ... [a Chechen, 3 Arabs and 2 Afghans] opened fire ... killing 149 people including 132 school children, making it the world's fifth deadliest school massacre ... led to Pakistan establishing the National Action Plan to crack down on terrorism.
            
            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Peshawar_school_massacre
        • nindalf 5 hours ago
          > They should have coordinated with Pakistan to run the strikes.

          Like when America coordinated with Pakistan to grab Osama? Actually no, they didn't coordinate with Pakistan because the terrorist was being harboured by the Pakistani military. Coordinating would have had the same effect as tipping the terrorist off and letting him escape.

          Your comment assumes that Pakistan doesn't view harbouring and training terrorists as a legitimate way to conduct their foreign policy.

        • dd_xplore 12 hours ago
          Like US co-ordinated with Paxtan to destroy laden? The laden who was hiding near a military base in Paxtan?
          • aprilthird2021 10 hours ago
            This always seems really disingenuous to me. He was hiding in an extremely concealed manner. Never ever went outside, and it's not as if the Pakistani military can just break into every house nearby and search for him everywhere.

            How they caught him was crazy in and of itself, and required fake vaccination drives, another thing no military can do to its own people to catch terrorists.

            I really don't think they are blameless at all, at all, but this kind of stuff feels conspiracy-level to me. This was the most wanted guy in the world, no country, no army could plausibly have concealed him and coordinated that effort to keep him hidden. Someone along the chain would have given him up

            • Brigand 5 hours ago
              They absolutely covered Bin Laden. The intelligence agencies are not of your opinion:

              „Counterterrorism officials told Logan that there is no way the Pakistanis didn't know about this.“

              https://www.cbsnews.com/news/did-pakistan-know-where-bin-lad...

            • legolas2412 2 hours ago
              Please read about Dr. Shakil Afridi. The doctor who helped CIA find Laden has been in Pakistani prison for a decade plus now, on false drummed up charges.

              Why are you sure that Pakistan is not supporting terrorists now, after decades and decades of evidence otherwise?

            • ganarajpr 7 hours ago
              Lol, whats disingenuous is your arguments, honestly. So, either you have to argue that Pakistan's military is extremely idiotic / naive that it could not even detect a known terrorist living just around the corner or you have to argue that they knowingly kept him in their "shadow". The vast majority of the people believe its the latter - you are free to believe that they were idiots.
            • dd_xplore 7 hours ago
              Paxtan has always sheltered terrorists, even now they are providing security to LeT, JeM etc.
              • ignoramous 5 hours ago
                Hasn't Pak banned both LeT and JeM?
                • legolas2412 1 hour ago
                  On paper sure. But what is the reality like?
        • arjun1296 2 hours ago
          [dead]
        • dyauspitr 8 hours ago
          Pakistan is not a rational state. The stated sole purpose of their intelligence agency ISI is the destabilization of India. The terrorists are backed, sheltered and armed by the government. There’s a reason bin Laden successfully hid there for so long.
          • saagarjha 6 hours ago
            India, of course, has a dual focus.
            • lupusreal 5 hours ago
              Pakistan being shit doesn't mean India isn't shit.
              • saagarjha 4 hours ago
                I have faith in both countries to figure things out and am willing to condemn them when they mess up. But that's related to my point, anyway, I was half-joking that India can't have Pakistan as its sole focus because it has China on its other border to care about too.
      • roenxi 12 hours ago
        These are actually well charted waters - people are shooting at each other and some fairly high percentage of the time everything calms down but the rest of the time it escalates crazily with both sides losing control. Situation as old as time, long rich history of provocative military action.

        I observe from time to time that Moscow appears to be under fire from the occasional US-sponsored attack for example. So far, so good. Most of the time things don't go terribly wrong, just the worst case scenarios here are quite grim. The India-Pakistan situation is probably a bit safer because anything catastrophic is likely to just kill millions/billions of people in India and Pakistan instead of an entire hemisphere of carnage.

        • happyopossum 11 hours ago
          > from time to time that Moscow appears to be under fire from the occasional US-sponsored attack for example

          Ok, you lost me there..

          • brabel 7 hours ago
            The US is definitely sponsoring Ukraine in the war together with the EU so when Ukraine attacks Moscow, which it is currently doing regularly, it seems like that’s a fair characterization. If Russia were strong enough they would surely be responding to those attacks not only by hitting Ukraine but their “sponsors” too.
          • pjc50 7 hours ago
            Didn't the US sponsorship abruptly terminate?
          • roenxi 11 hours ago
          • xkcd1963 9 hours ago
            How is his viewpoint not valid?
    • arjun1296 3 hours ago
      [dead]
    • madaxe_again 8 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • TheOtherHobbes 8 hours ago
        Geopolitics can remain irrational longer than you can remain alive.
      • arp242 4 hours ago
        And many things didn't come to pass. The entire business between Israel and Iran from last year springs to mind (also recall that many feared the Bush administration would seek war with Iran, which never happened). The Cuban missile crisis was resolved, and there was no nuclear war in general during the Cold War. etc. etc.

        In the end this is just information-free hand-waving which says nothing about the current situation.

      • graemep 6 hours ago
        > What possible reason would Putin have for invading Ukraine?

        He said he would, and what would trigger the decision at least as early as 2008.

    • greatwhitenorth 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • lwo32k 10 hours ago
        Too simplistic. Its also about preventing fanatics from taking control of Nukes or the military.

        We already know what happens when Islamic fanatics take over the army in Afghanistan/Iran/Lebanon/Gaza.

        If the Muslim Brotherhood took over Egypt (and they did win the elections) instead of a US propped up Military Dictatorship that would just add another layer of chaos to the middle east.

        Its not black and white. Plus all sides make mistakes cause the problem is way above everyones pay grade.

      • r00fus 11 hours ago
        [flagged]
      • aprilthird2021 11 hours ago
        There isn't proof that this terrorist attack was directed by Pakistan. The terrorists themselves haven't been caught. India also supports terrorists in Pakistan (like the BLA who took hostages on a train a few months back), allegedly.

        There's no morally superior actor here, unfortunately.

        EDIT: There are many other strange things about the parent comment like why are you upset about the word "militant" instead of "terrorist"? They are functionally synonyms. What militant group isn't a terrorist group? And why is it opposite calling the BJP Hindu nationalist? It is a term they themselves coined and use to describe themselves??

        EDIT 2: the original commenter is using a very cleverly edited clip from a different time period to support his claims. But watch the full clip and judge for yourselves. He is clearly referring to training the Afghan Mujahideen 3 decades ago, who the US also supported in the Soviet-Afghan War: https://youtube.com/shorts/lkO8fR4vlgA

        • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
          > There isn't proof that this terrorist attack was directed by Pakistan

          Their defense minister admitted to it a few days ago to a Western Media channel.

          • riffraff 10 hours ago
            Which media outlet? This is a big claim given even after these attacks the Pakistani government claims it didn't.
            • kumarvvr 10 hours ago
              • roenxi 10 hours ago
                It is hard to figure out what he is saying in that clip; it doesn't have the context that explains what he was actually referring to and the clip jumps in a way suggesting that part of his response was elided.
                • FullGarden_S 9 hours ago
                  feel free to look up the full interview and get the context right.
                  • roenxi 9 hours ago
                    He's linking a source specifically so that other people don't have to do that. If we have to go searching for our own sources there wasn't any point submitting the comment; the idea is to look at what was linked and talk about it.
                    • FullGarden_S 8 hours ago
                      I see. If you are not satisfied with the shared source or think the video is edited to project a certain kind of perspective with ulterior motive, feel free to look further into it before completely discarding it was what I meant. searching Yalda Hakim, Khawaja Asif full interview might point you in the right direction. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ir8pJbKE37U
                      • roenxi 7 hours ago
                        And with the benefit of more context it is pretty clear he wasn't admitting to anything - the interview started with him condemning terrorism and the quotes in question was more him pointing out [0] that everyone has been funding terrorist groups in his part of the world and he thinks Pakistan has suffered for it.

                        Pakistan might be involved in this one, they might not be. I don't know. But that clip isn't evidence either way. He's quite insistent that Pakistan wasn't involved in the topical attacks. And indeed that the attacks may not have happened at all. He can't be admitting responsibility to something that he doesn't believe has happened done by groups he claims don't exist.

                        [0] Add some allowance for English apparently not being his native language - he was reiterating points from earlier in the interview.

                        • FullGarden_S 6 hours ago
                          >He's quite insistent that Pakistan wasn't involved in the topical attacks.

                          Yes, just like how Pakistan was insistent about their involvement in sheltering Bin Laden. I don't understand why you expect any representative of a nation to confess explicitly to their crimes themselves but things like that just don't happen. Confession to their indirect involvement is the leading clue to majority of their actions and further investigation that will never be disclosed to public can only dig the truth.

                          >And indeed that the attacks may not have happened at all

                          that is very funny. That attack did happen and the attackers did send a message mentioning the name "Modi" to one of the survivors they spared. The tourists were stripped first to verify if they're circumcised and were shot immediately thereafter. I won't share further details but I ensure you, it really did happen and feel free to discard this as misinformation or dig further into it yourself.

          • aprilthird2021 10 hours ago
            I don't think that's true, but either way, do you agree at least that the same accusation can be plausibly levied against India's support for terrorist outfits in Pakistan?
          • SpicyLemonZest 10 hours ago
            I would encourage you to be very skeptical when you hear inflammatory things with vague details like this. If it were true, wouldn’t you have heard which Western media channel it was?
            • FullGarden_S 10 hours ago
              its not a Western media channel. Its NDTV https://www.youtube.com/shorts/WLwHK_22pm0
              • SpicyLemonZest 10 hours ago
                Neither person in this clip claims or admits that Pakistan directed the 22 April terrorist attack.
                • FullGarden_S 9 hours ago
                  Why would they? Even the USA never admits their direct involvement straight away so its delusional of you to be expecting something like that. If Pakistan is the kind of nation to confess, peace would have been established long back.
                  • SpicyLemonZest 9 hours ago
                    It sounds like you agree with me that the defense minister did not say what the original commenter claimed he said, so I’m not sure what you’re calling me delusional about.
                    • FullGarden_S 8 hours ago
                      I mean, Pakistan denies sheltering Bin Laden till date so its expected of them to deny any and all of their involvement officially.

                      I'm sorry if I was rude by using the term delusional but given their behavior, that is what it seemed like to me to expect a confession from them.

        • arjun1296 7 hours ago
          [dead]
    • jjude 8 hours ago
      > Pakistan is not economically strong enough to participate in a war,

      Pakistan has nothing to lose. So there are lots of incentives for Pakistan army to go rogue.

      • pm90 7 hours ago
        This isn’t how anything works. Both India and Pakistan depend on imported military hardware. Every time they’ve fought each other they’ve been embargoed. So every kind of engagement has an implicit timer before the military literally runs out of munitions to continue any kind of serious war.
        • jjude 6 hours ago
          This is what then PM Nawaz Sharif said about Kargil war:

          > After the war, Nawaz Sharif, Prime Minister of Pakistan during the Kargil conflict, claimed that he was unaware of the plans, and that he first learned about the situation when he received an urgent phone call from Atal Bihari Vajpayee, his counterpart in India. Sharif attributed the plan to Musharraf and "just two or three of his cronies", a view shared by some Pakistani writers who have stated that only four generals, including Musharraf, knew of the plan.

          Possible he was lying. But this is an accepted view even in the Pakistan.

      • impossiblefork 6 hours ago
        Pakistan has everything to lose. They are totally dependent on India for reliable water supply, i.e. for getting something other thana drought-flood cycle.

        Military action is only going to lead to India being less willing to give them an even supply. They are totally dependent on keeping India happy, and now of course, they've failed to do that by allowing these recent murders.

      • saagarjha 6 hours ago
        Pakistan has a population of 250 million people. But, of course, an army can go rogue regardless; they have no need to follow the words of economists (or anyone, really).
      • conradfr 3 hours ago
        Pakistan is irrelevant, what do the people in charge have to lose (or win)?
    • JumpCrisscross 13 hours ago
      > Pakistan is not economically strong enough to participate in a war, and India is not interested

      Proxy war between U.S. and China. We’re moving the naval assets that were bombing the Houthis. India seizing Pakistan-administered Kashmir cuts Islamabad off from China.

      • postingawayonhn 12 hours ago
        The US isn't interested in picking sides. Historically it has tried to be friendly with both (though that hasn't always been easy).
        • hackandthink 12 hours ago
          "However, Pakistan was a valuable diplomatic partner, and its government helped the United States achieve a rapprochement with the People’s Republic of China in the early 1970s."

          "U.S. prestige was damaged in both nations, in Pakistan for failing to help prevent the loss of East Pakistan and in India for supporting the brutality of the Pakistani regime’s actions"

          https://history.state.gov/milestones/1969-1976/south-asia

        • Jtsummers 12 hours ago
          Historic policies don't apply to the current administration. It's really anybody's guess at this point what the US would do if this conflict ratchets up significantly.
        • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
          > Historically it has tried to be friendly with both

          By funding a known miliary dictator (Pervez Musharraf), for decades, helping strengthen the military rule in Pakistan.

          So much for "spreading democracy"

        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
          > US isn't interested in picking sides. Historically it has tried to be friendly with both

          Sure, but one side offers clear benefits over the "ally from hell." (Islamabad, at the very least, has clearly picked a side.)

          Also, I'm not arguing what I think will happen. I'm arguing how this could escalate. And the only way I see it doing so is (a) someone bombs the wrong thing or (b) Beijing or Washington see an opportunity to win chips.

        • tonyhart7 12 hours ago
          "US isn't interested in picking sides"

          but you dont want any of them to ally with russia or chinnese, ignoring problem also "problematic"

        • smt88 12 hours ago
          Nothing about historical US foreign policy can tell us what the current regime wants or will do.
          • happyopossum 11 hours ago
            Good. HN is full of posts about stupid crap the US govt has done in the past.
            • cosmicgadget 9 hours ago
              Don't underestimate the stupidity of this administration. History could pale in comparison.
            • smt88 2 hours ago
              "No the stupid crap of the past" != "smart"

              There are countless ways to be stupid and destructive, especially when you're actively trying to destroy your own country's institutions.

      • sandspar 12 hours ago
        The Pakistan-India conflict is orthogonal to America and China's.
        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
          > Pakistan-India conflict is orthogonal to America and China's

          India is negotiating trade deals and weapons purchases with the West. (Historically, Moscow was its security source.) Pakistan got some F-16s in 2022, but otherwise has been deepending ties with Beijing. It's wild to suggest America's cold war with China is orthogonal to this conflict.

          • sandspar 12 hours ago
            Ask a random Indian in India whether he'd be willing to die for the US. The US and China have interests in the area, so maybe I shouldn't have said the word "orthogonal". But the original commenter said a conflict between India and Pakistan would be a "US-China proxy war". Come on. India and Pakistan have enough reasons to hate each other. They don't need America or China's goading. And neither India nor Pakistan would accept their conflict being characterized as a US-China war.
            • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
              > Ask a random Indian in India whether he'd be willing to die for the US

              Not how proxy wars work.

              > India and Pakistan have enough reasons to hate each other. They don't need America or China's goading

              Not how proxy wars work. The backers enable. The proxies fight.

              > neither India nor Pakistan would accept their conflict being characterized as a US-China war

              This is how proxy wars work. They literally don’t if the proxies realise they’re fighting a foreign war on their homeland.

              • air3y 9 hours ago
                >This is how proxy wars work. They literally don’t if the proxies realise they’re fighting a foreign war on their homeland.

                India and pakistan have contested boundaries and their hostilities doesn't depend on foreign powers. Interestingly, when the hostilities between china and india flared up in 2021, and india moved many divisions from its pakistan border to its chinese border, pakistan didn't change its posturing to put pressure on india. This was acknowledged by indian army during a press briefing. Both so far have never fought against each other for foreign powers, but have fought against each other for their own reasons. So no proxy wars so far.

                • JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago
                  > India and pakistan have contested boundaries and their hostilities doesn't depend on foreign powers

                  Yes? That’s what lends it proxy war potential. An endemic war. Like, there were actual conflicts in e.g. Vietnam and Afghanistan before they became proxy wars. Those same risk factors are present today.

              • random42 9 hours ago
                It’s not a proxy war. Not every world event is about the US.

                Source: I am an Indian.

                • JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago
                  > It’s not a proxy war. Not every world event is about the US

                  Nobody said as much. The original comment described how this can escalate.

              • sandspar 10 hours ago
                [flagged]
                • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago
                  I'm really not claiming anything that requires more than a cursory review of the history of proxy wars. Or, like, talking to someone who lives in a country we've recently proxy warred. The people fighting in the wars we proxied were fighting for a domestic cause. Outside powers then glommed onto that dispute. Nobody thought they were dying for the superpowers' ends; they were fighting a local civil war or rebellion or reconquest.
                  • sandspar 10 hours ago
                    Ok man sounds like you've got the cultural and historical situation under control.
        • slt2021 12 hours ago
          It is useful for the US to isolate China from Iranian oil resources. Currently Iranian oil can go via Pakistan to China.

          Thats how Us operates: exploits old conflicts for its own immediate benefit, like it did with Ukr-Rus war.

          If some people die on both side it is acceptable for the Us, because these are not Us citizens dying

          • maxglute 12 hours ago
            CPEC isn't viable energy coordidor yet - no completed oil/gas infra from Iran to Pak to PRC. Which only leaves trucks, and the roads not designed to support 5000+ trucks per day for Irans 1m barrels per day.
          • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
            > Thats how Us operates: exploits old conflicts for its own immediate benefit, like it did with Ukr-Rus war.

            This is realpolitik 101, and every powerful society does it. Like, India didn't help sever Bangladesh f/k/a East Pakistan from Islamabad because it was being nice. (I'm not saying every society exploits every old conflict. Just that if you need to do something, you start with extant fault lines. Like, if you're going to war with Nazi Germany you don't sideline the Soviets and British because that's mean or whatnot.)

            Also, the problem with Pakistan isn't that its ports could be used to import oil. It's that the ports are being configured for Chinese blue-water operations.

            • slt2021 12 hours ago
              I can understand seizing opportunities in situations like this, however I cannot support instigating and creating these situations in the first place.

              https://m.economictimes.com/news/defence/pakistans-defence-m...

              • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
                > cannot support instigating and creating these situations in the first place

                With all due respect, what you and I support isn’t super relevant to what will happen over the coming weeks.

          • lazyeye 11 hours ago
            It doesn't matter what it is, or where it's happening in the world, some people will always make it about the US. Always. It's tiresome.
  • seatac76 51 minutes ago
    Things most likely will not escalate.

    These terrorist attacks are always planned by Pak Army with the next steps in mind. Pak Army needs a war to re assert it's dominance. It is under a lot of pressure domestically due to what they did to democratic opposition, so precipitating war with India would provide a chance to consolidate the base. The choice of explicitly targeting people by religion was done to ensure an Indian response. Which is what their Chinese backers also want, start a war to ensure India gets distracted. Smart geopolitics on their part.

    Long term India will have to think through deterring such terrorist actions from Pakistan. Pakistan was and remains a epicenter for Islamic terrorism and sooner or later the world will have to confront it, they have been getting a pass for far too long. Deterrence will only come when the real perpetrators which is the Pak Army - Jihadi complex is deterred. Hell Pakistani people might be better off without the current Pak Army.

    As for the Indus Water Treaty shenanigans, nothing will happen there, it's all posturing.

    • bigyabai 26 minutes ago
      I'd just like to see the evidence that India claims justified their attack. Between this and the fallout of the Canadian Sikh assassination, it's really starting to feel like Modi's government doesn't care about having a believable narrative at all.
      • seatac76 9 minutes ago
        I really do not think the onus is on India to provide evidence every time a terrorist attack happens when it’s Pak policy to orchestrate it. Evidence was provided during previous conflicts Kargil, Mumbai didn’t do much did it.

        As for the Canada thing by your logic still waiting on evidence from Canada.

  • dang 14 hours ago
  • MichaelMoser123 14 hours ago
    The bad news: there is some real potential for escalation due to the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty

    https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/india/indias-water...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indus_Waters_Treaty

    Wasn't there something in the intro of "Mad Max fury road" about water wars?

    • niemandhier 4 hours ago
      This is probably the only real dangerous point at the moment.

      Neither side gains to win much from a conflict, but should India really tamper with the water supply I hope they consult their economists first. Otherwise Pakistan has little choice but instantly commit to a full war.

      The reason:

      A significant amount of the food produced in Pakistan directly depends on the water from the river Indus. Even a moderate water supply reduction would lead to a loss of around 10% of the harvest.

      That does not sound like much, BUT economically food is a commodity with low 'elasticity', meaning demand does not really go down with reduced supply. The result would therefore be a doubling of food prices.

      In a country where people have little dispensable income, that means wide spread famine.

      By all measures India is the more powerful state, but as Ukraine demonstrates: Desperation can make up for a lot of disadvantage.

      • sdsd 4 minutes ago
        >By all measures India is the more powerful state, but as Ukraine demonstrates: Desperation can make up for a lot of disadvantage.

        The question is whether China would prop up Pakistan like NATO did for Ukraine

      • roncesvalles 1 hour ago
        >Even a moderate water supply reduction would lead to a loss of around 10% of the harvest.

        If that's the case then the die is already cast. Early in the conflict, India released too much water on the Chenub too early for the season as a way to punish Pakistan. The quantity of water was such that Pakistan had no choice but to let it run off to the sea. This now means that the upstream Indian reservoir will not have enough water to release during regular season where coordinated releases ensure farmers have an uninterrupted supply during certain critical time periods.

      • Tade0 3 hours ago
        Ukraine was desperate in 2014, when the Green Men arrived. In 2022 they were already anticipating an invasion, just didn't know when exactly it would occur.

        By 2020 they already had Bayraktars and Javelins:

        https://www.dailysabah.com/business/defense/ukraine-to-buy-5...

    • JumpCrisscross 13 hours ago
      > there is some real potential for escalation due to the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty

      Neither side wants peace. But neither side wants to commit military manoeuvre that secures strategic aims. So we get this defence sale wet dream of a forever war instead.

      • screye 13 hours ago
        India wants peace. A peaceful India threatens Pakistan's entire existence as a military state. Therefore, Pakistan keeps instigating with outrageously cruel terrorist attacks.

        There are no strategic goals here. Either side may recover some vantage points high up in the Himalayas. But that's about it.

        • hayst4ck 11 hours ago
          Israel and Russia also want peace. China wants peace with Taiwan. The US wants peace with Greenland and Canada.

          You have to be careful with that word, peace, because all wars are defensive.

          • SetTheorist 2 hours ago
            In what possible sense can you possible mean that "all wars are defensive"?

            And it is absurd to claim that Russia wants peace. It can literally have peace anytime it wants by simply pulling its troops out of Ukrainian territory and ceasing the launching of missiles and drones on the populace.

            The US threats on Canada and Greenland are not made with "peace" in mind.

            • cogman10 45 minutes ago
              OP's point is warhawks and propaganda can easily weaponize their position as the aggressors as being "peace seeking".

              The best example of this is the Iraq war. The US invaded another country and sold it as a peace keeping mission because "They are building weapons of mass destruction!".

              In fact, the US has decades of history doing such actions (see: banana republics and the CIA's anti-communism efforts).

            • JumpCrisscross 50 minutes ago
              > In what possible sense can you possible mean that "all wars are defensive"?

              I think the argument is all wars can be defensively spun. Russia apologists falling for the imminent-Ukraine-membership lie, MAGAs falling for the idea that we’re defending our Arctic interests by invading Greenland, Hitler’s argument that the Nazis were defending against a jealous Jewry and Europe, et cetera. The justifications for war are always, in part, however flimsily, couched in terms of defence (in modern times).

          • coryfklein 4 hours ago
            I’m sorry, but this is getting really out of hand, we can’t even use the word “peace” now?
            • infecto 3 hours ago
              I didn’t read it that way. I read it more that saying India is a peaceful nation is probably not the full truth. As a third party I always had the impression this was one of those tit for tat forever wars. Each attack there is usually an antagonist but over the whole course it’s muddy.
            • matheusmoreira 3 hours ago
              Common street robbers want peace too. They want to rob you of your property as peacefully as possible. They very much want you to just surrender and let it happen.

              Violence is usually conditional. It comes with instructions on how to avoid it. Let the criminal take your things and he won't shoot you. Let us take this territory and you won't be killed. If you surrender and submit to our rule, you will have your peace. It's just that the cost is your land, your economy, your freedom, your secuity, your dignity, your pride, your self-determination

              The key fact about violence is nobody actually wants it. Everybody wants peace. At the same time, everybody also wants scarce resources that others are unwilling to just hand over to them. So they use the threat of violence to get what they want. Actual violence is risky and all bets are off once it escalates. Without the threat of violence though, why negotiate when you can just take?

              So there's a lot of nuance to "peace". India cannot claim to want peace and then suspend a treaty that provides vital water resources to Pakistan. Pakistan cannot claim to want peace and at the same time support insurgency against India. All of these things will obviously escalate the situtation until it erupts into war.

          • ignoramous 5 hours ago
            > You have to be careful with that word, peace, because all [offensive] wars are defensive

            The jingoists won't ever be ... as Orwell predicted, they'll use Orwellian terms fit for their grandeur and inline with their delusion.

        • rfrey 11 hours ago
          Every country wants peace, as long as it's on their terms.
        • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
          > India wants peace

          Not really. There are options for a negotiated peace that involves swapping land, specifically, ceding Muslim-dominant territory to Pakistan and setting borders along rivers. That's anathema in India because there is broad-based antipathy towards Islamabad, historically, and Muslims, recently.

          • screye 12 hours ago
            > ceding Muslim-dominant territory to Pakistan

            Why would India do that? Why would a unilateral surrender of land be considered valid terms for peace?

            > swapping land

            In a fair swap, what land would Pakistan offer in exchange?

            > Muslims, recently

            Pakistan doesn't have a stellar reputation for treatment of its Muslim minorities (Ahmediyyas, Ismailis) and non-Punjabi muslims (Balochis, Pasthuns, once-Pakistani-Bengalis). I'm inclined to consider India a safer nation for most muslim denominations.

            ____

            Note: Pakistan's historic terror attacks have been deep in India soil (Mumbai, Delh). There is no indication that they'd maintain peace with India if they gained control over Kashmir.

            • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago
              > Why would a unilateral surrender of land be considered valid terms for peace?

              Because you trade it for more than it's worth to you. America gave up the Philippines, for example. Every decolonisation effort could accurately be described as "a unilateral surrender of land."

              > what land would Pakistan offer in exchange?

              You'd probably need China to participate. Maybe Siachen or even areas of Sindh? It's a long shot. One of the elements would almost certainly be co-ordinated anti-terrorist policing. Maybe guaranteed by China.

              > I'm inclined to consider India a safer nation for most muslim denominations

              I am, too. But let's be honest, neither side is concerned with the wellbeing of anyone in Kashmir.

              • ignoramous 5 hours ago
                > decolonisation effort

                Kashmiris on the Indian side are citizens (unlike in "colonies"). AFSPA must be phased out but Kashmir isn't the only Indian state that's subject to it.

                > neither side is concerned with the wellbeing of anyone in Kashmir

                Yeah, the issue is too good to give up for (religion-based) politics and (military-industrial) businesses, on both sides of the border.

                Reminds of me this Bollywood movie dialogue: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/RJAJdYw3ctw

                • JumpCrisscross 48 minutes ago
                  > Kashmiris on the Indian side are citizens (unlike in "colonies")

                  Since when has that prevented any government from negotiating borders?

                  > the issue is too good to give up for (religion-based) politics and (military-industrial) businesses, on both sides of the border

                  Yup. I’d add that the citizens of both countries legitimately despise each other. Not genocidally, for the most part, but dismissively to each others’ humanity. So it’s not like you have to go full manufactured consent to develop jingoism.

            • barrkel 4 hours ago
              One moment you say India wants peace, the next you question why India would make compromises that might lead to peace.

              You know how this looks from a position outside the conflict, right? Can you imagine a Paskistani perspective? Put yourself on the other side. Imagine what it would take for peace from that point of view.

            • monkey_monkey 7 hours ago
              > I'm inclined to consider India a safer nation for most muslim denominations.

              That almost made me laugh.

            • aprilthird2021 10 hours ago
              > I'm inclined to consider India a safer nation for most muslim denominations.

              Come on. You can't live in India and think this seriously.

              Anyways, the Kashmir issue is contentious but Kashmiris never got to say whether they should be part of India or not, unlike most states and people during partition. I am very aware the full history of the region is murky and that the removal of Kashmiri Pandits from the region led to the current broad swath of support for Kashmiri independence (or becoming a part of Pakistan, either way being separate from India), but the current situation is what it is, and until that is resolved it will continue to be an issue in India.

              > Pakistan's historic terror attacks have been deep in India soil

              India is said to sponsor Balochistan separatism as well, those groups have also made attacks deep into Pakistan, so again, no indication that either side will remain peaceful if the Kashmiri conflict ended.

              • unmole 1 hour ago
                > You can't live in India and think this seriously.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Ahmadis_(Pakist...

                > unlike most states and people during partition

                This is complete nonsense. Nobody got a say, Kashmir wasn't any different.

              • leosanchez 2 hours ago
                > Come on. You can't live in India and think this seriously.

                I don't know where you live. There are states in India where minorities are absolutely safe.

              • arjun1296 7 hours ago
                [dead]
          • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
            > There are options for a negotiated peace that involves swapping land, specifically, ceding Muslim-dominant territory to Pakistan and setting borders along rivers.

            Sorry, why would that be done? When Pakistan was split from India, because of the Muslims voting against their own land that they have been living in for centuries, the lines are set and done.

            Why should India cede more land?

            Pakistan is on one of the most resource rich, fertile lands in the Indian subcontinent.

            • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago
              > When Pakistan was split from India, because of the Muslims voting against their own land that they have been living in for centuries, the lines are set and done

              Lines are never "set and done for." We had a short period of global consensus around the unacceptability of taking territory by force. But between the superpowers' proxy wars, America's invasion of Iraq, China's annexation of Tibet and threats on Taiwan, and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, that precedent was always tenuous at best and, now, has certainly passed.

              > Why should India cede more land?

              Because New Delhi expects something of greater value in return. For example, one could see a China-mediated truce trading territory in J&K for settling boundaries in Andra Pradesh and/or a deployment of Chinese troops on anti-terrorist missions in Pakistan.

              Nobody is saying India just give land to Pakistan for feelsies. It's engaging in a negotiation where that's on the table.

              > Pakistan is on one of the most resource rich, fertile lands in the Indian subcontinent

              Geopolitics isn't fair? (Also, India is richer than Pakistan. Both in population and GDP per capital.)

              That said, this argument represents the pathos in India. India broadly isn't interested in peace if it comes at the cost of territory. It expresses a preference for certain things above peace.

              • pkd 9 hours ago
                This is a weird line of reasoning. By this logic the aggressors will always win because the other side should always concede territory for peace.

                Even if Kashmir is ceded to Pakistan, there is no reason why they'd be done aggressing for more territory.

                • JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago
                  > By this logic the aggressors will always win because the other side should always concede territory for peace

                  Nope. It’s just being realistic about the priorities at play. And there isn’t a clear aggressor in this conflict, it is as old as both states.

                  (Also, countries have bought and sold territories for ages. That doesn’t invite aggression or strike me as wrong.)

                  > if Kashmir is ceded to Pakistan, there is no reason why they'd be done aggressing for more territory

                  They wouldn’t. New Delhi would have to get something that is worth more than that territory in return.

                  • ivell 1 hour ago
                    >They wouldn’t. New Delhi would have to get something that is worth more than that territory in return.

                    What would that be? Pakistan and India had an agreement to peacefully resolve issues already in 1972 Simla agreement. But they continue to send terrorists to murder indian civilians on indian soil. They never followed the agreement. They invaded twice after that agreement.

                    Anything that India gets out of Pakistan cannot be trusted. They have been claiming that Osama was not in Pakistan, while taking money from the US to support its war in terror.

                    I don't think Pakistan has any trustability remaining.

                    It will continue to provoke and attack India as long as their military rules the nation. Their military's existence is the anti-India stance it propagates.

                    • JumpCrisscross 44 minutes ago
                      > Anything that India gets out of Pakistan cannot be trusted

                      Then the only security solution for India is invading and replacing Pakistan’s government. Anything less is needlessly drawing out the violence out of caution and cowardice. The fact that this is obviously overkill belies that there is room for diplomacy.

                      Also! Not how diplomacy works! A fundamental fact about international relations is it’s anarchic. If your model of international relations requires trust for diplomacy, you’ve fundamentally missed how geopolitics works.

                      > It will continue to provoke and attack India as long as their military rules the nation

                      Look at the history of France and Germany negotiating territory exchanges, including under duress. Or the U.S. and Britain while the two hated each other. Et cetera.

              • kumarvvr 9 hours ago
                One does not negotiate with terrorist supporting military dictatorships.
                • saagarjha 6 hours ago
                  Pakistan is not a military dictatorship, at least not in its current form. Terrorist supporting, maaaaybe. But a lot of countries are terrorist supporting, and the world is happy to negotiate with them.
                  • ivell 1 hour ago
                    >Pakistan is not a military dictatorship

                    I think here we are looking into a textbook style definition. But for all practical purposes, military rules Pakistan. It is well understood by its own citizens, especially post-Imran Khan.

                    >But a lot of countries are terrorist supporting, and the world is happy to negotiate with them.

                    Would like to understand which countries you mean. No one is negotiating with Iran nowadays. India also was willing to negotiate in the past, not anymore it seems.

                    Support for terrorism as a state policy is to put pressure without major impact to the aggressor nation. The aggressor is in an advantageous position. Terrorism is low cost high impact (non material, but psychological). There is not much leverage for the suffering country here. So negotiations are not long lasting.

              • sbmthakur 7 hours ago
                I know that's just an example but any kind of third party arbitrator has to be trusted by India. As far its territorial integrity is concerned India doesn't trust China or even the US, and this is true across party lines.
          • alephnerd 12 hours ago
            > involves swapping land, specifically, ceding Muslim-dominant territory to Pakistan

            The sectors on the Indian side where fighting is happening right now in Jammu Division are 50-50 Muslim-Hindu/Sikh. What you are advocating would lead to Yugoslav style ethnic cleansing.

            > setting borders along rivers

            It already is that on the LoC, or mountain faces where rivers are not existent.

            • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
              > What you are advocating would lead to Yugoslav style ethnic cleansing

              Yes. When you have a sectarian conflict, the only lasting solution is moving people around. Hateful people don’t learn to stop hating each other. Particularly not when you’re dealing with the levels of education in J&K.

              > It already is that on the LoC, or mountain faces where rivers are not existent

              And. Having a river with a sectarian cross isn’t useful.

              This stuff is hard and controversial. It takes work. My point is nobody is particularly interested in that work versus leaving the region in a low simmer.

              • saagarjha 5 hours ago
                > Yes. When you have a sectarian conflict, the only lasting solution is moving people around. Hateful people don’t learn to stop hating each other. Particularly not when you’re dealing with the levels of education in J&K.

                "We should do my poorly thought out plan because they're too dumb to stop killing each other" is not a reasonable way to discuss geopolitics.

              • alephnerd 12 hours ago
                > Yes. When you have a sectarian conflict, the only lasting solution is moving people around. Hateful people don’t learn to stop hating each other.

                Jammu Division is an entirely separate ethnic community (Pahari) from that in Kashmir Division (Koshur).

                Even during the worst of the partition and the Indo-Pak Wars, the mountain areas where active fighting was occurring never saw the same kind of religious violence you'd see in neighboring Kashmir or Punjabi speaking areas like Jammu City or Mirpur City.

                This would be solving a non-existent problem, as the leadership making decisions for conflicts on or around the LoC are not from these regions.

                And btw, the Indian and Pakistani army did attempt that when my grandmother was a child, but it didn't stick and people from one side or the other would just cross back - and this was the norm until the 1980s.

                ---------------

                There are ways to resolve the problem longer term, and that requires forcing professionalization of the Pakistani Armed Forces and cajoling India back to the negotiating table using the carrot and the stick. Similar precedent already exists with the Israel-Egypt peace accords under Sadat, and would have happened under Bajwa, Nawaz Sharif, or Musharraf if they weren't undermined.

                • JumpCrisscross 11 hours ago
                  > leadership making decisions for conflicts on or around the LoC are not from these regions

                  The people in the region are pretty much irrelevant, one can successfuly model the conflict as a proxy war between New Delhi and Islamabad. Their interests are particular to the borders in the region, namely, access to waterm, China and the other side's Kashmir.

                  > ways to resolve the problem longer term, and that requires forcing professionalization of the Pakistani Armed Forces and cajoling India back to the negotiating table using the carrot and the stick. Similar precedent already exists with the Israel-Egypt peace accords under Sadat

                  This is a solution from a different era. The current borders are unstable and thus unsustainable. Between proxy forces and the militarisation of the South China Sea, we're kicking the can down the road until someone acts decisively.

                  The game theory is that kicking the can down the road works for both sides. There isn't a pressing need for peace between India and Pakistan, just not nuclear conflict. And that's achieved with a Korean Peninsula-esque stalemate. The problem is either side gaining an advantage resolves the issue, and the later that happens the more destructive the resolution would be. (Think: Pakistan gaining top-of-the-line Sino-Russian missile defence.) And both sides know that ex ante. So we have a prisoner's dilemma without the common enemy (and common ally) that animated Tel Aviv and Cairo.

          • sbmthakur 7 hours ago
            Under no circumstances India is ceding any territory to a military run state that has sponsored terrorism in India. If Pakistan is serious they can start by putting PoK on the table and halt all anti Indian activities in their country. That would be a good start.
          • arjun1296 7 hours ago
            [dead]
          • xlinux 10 hours ago
            [flagged]
        • alephnerd 12 hours ago
          > A peaceful India threatens Pakistan's entire existence as a military state

          Pakistani Military leadership has attempted to negotiate normalized relations as well. The issue is someone in their lower ranks or on the political front tries to take advantage of normalization attempts to overthrow the previous leader. I documented a number of cases that happened this past decade below.

      • alephnerd 13 hours ago
        Pretty much. It isn't worth it for either India or Pakistan at the macro level, and intra-elite factionalism would strike well before anyone could commit to a sustained conflict.

        And partners like KSA and UAE would come down hard if this became an extended conflict.

        • spaceman_2020 10 hours ago
          The difference this time around is that leadership in both countries is more religiously hardline than the last serious war like situation we had (after Nov 26 2011).

          Asif Munir is the son of an imam and an avowed Islamist. India’s ruling party is openly pro-Hindu. Modi is also under pressure from the hardline religious wing of his party for the recent focus on caste instead of religion

        • JumpCrisscross 13 hours ago
          > It isn't worth it for either India or Pakistan at the macro level, and intra-elite factionalism would strike well before anyone could commit to a sustained conflict

          Yup. But those same forces conspire against a sustained peace.

          > partners like KSA and UAE would come down hard if this became an extended conflict

          Zero chance. The problem is China.

          • alephnerd 13 hours ago
            > Zero chance. The problem is China

            As I mentioned previously, the China factor is significant but overstated. And I'm fairly hawkish about China.

            UAE and KSA have equally as much if not more leverage on Pakistani elite than China. Majority of Pakistan's trade is devoted to the UAE and KSA, and most leadership (military, political, and business) has family and financial relations in both countries.

            In addition, the UAE and KSA's sovereign wealth funds own the bulk of Pakistan's core assets like K-Power, PIA, Karachi Port, etc.

            Furthermore, the classic Pakistani Army retirement strategy is to become a mid-level officer in the Saudi Land Forces, due to past recruitment.

            And finally, a similar amount of Pakistani weapons systems are NATO adjacent from previous American procurement, so Pakistan has leveraged Turkiye as a hedge against being overly dependent on China.

            > But those same forces conspire against a sustained peace

            On the India side the same people who were negotiating normalization with Bajwa remain. The only change has happened in the last couple years is IK was ousted by Bajwa, and then he was ousted by Munir.

            Munir was DG ISI during Balakot, and immediately demoted to Corps Commander in the direct aftermath of the LeT attack (who like other militant orgs have gotten support from the ISI, but not as much from the Army). It's Munir's clique that appears to be trying to use this to solidify their hold within Pakistan.

            India and Pakistan can normalize relations, and sincere attempts have been made by both sides, but inter-factional competition amongst Pakistan's elite has undermined it. Pakistan needs a Musharraf again.

            • JumpCrisscross 13 hours ago
              Nobody is threatening to topple Islamabad. UAE and KSA have interests, but insufficient influence to force outcomes. The relevant players are in Beijing and Washington.

              > India and Pakistan can normalize relations, and sincere attempts have been made by both sides, but inter-factional competition amongst Pakistan's elite has undermined it

              India has less motivation for war. But it’s also done nothing to negotiate a peace.

              • saagarjha 6 hours ago
                I mean, it wouldn't be the first time. Although I'm not sure one can say the prior coups were orchestrated by a foreign power.
              • alephnerd 12 hours ago
                > UAE and KSA have interests, but insufficient influence to force outcomes

                2019 is a good example of UAE using it's heft [0][1]. In a couple years we'll probably see leaks in Bloomberg or AJ about KSA doing something similar rn.

                > India has less motivation for war. But it’s also done nothing to negotiate a peace.

                Both have worked on reconciliation immediately before some incident arises that causes talks to collapse.

                For example, the last couple months before this incident happened [2], in 2021 thanks to the UAE [1][3] before Bajwa-IK-Munir's tussle, 2017-18 before Balakot according to Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy [4], and 2016 before the Pathankot Attack [5].

                In most cases, both attempts are made at negotiating normalization, but some faction attempts to undermine it.

                And there were multiple other examples before the Modi admin, at least 2-3 other attempts in the MMS-Musharraf admin and 1 attempt in the Vajpayee-Sharif admin, but they were all undermined by some faction in the Pak Armed forces.

                I'd recommend reading "The Spy Chronicles" by AS Dulat (former head of India's intel agency) and Asad Durrani (former head of Pakistan's intel agency) where they decided to leak a number of these incidents. The book ended up causing a major political scandal in both India and Pakistan.

                [0] - https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2021-03-28/india-...

                [1] - https://tribune.com.pk/story/2417903/gen-bajwas-india-peace-...

                [2] - https://tribune.com.pk/story/2460279/fm-says-govt-to-serious...

                [3] - https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-03-22/secret-in...

                [4] - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14799855.2019.16...

                [5] - https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-35240272

                • JumpCrisscross 12 hours ago
                  > 2019 is a good example of UAE using it's heft

                  This is not projecting power, it's the UAE (and Qatar) playing their aspirational roles as the new Davos/Switzerland for diplomacy.

                  Pakistan is definitely more anti-peace than India. But while Islamabad undermines peace, New Delhi is mostly uninterested in it.

                  • alephnerd 12 hours ago
                    > Pakistan is definitely more anti-peace than India. But while Islamabad undermines peace, New Delhi is mostly uninterested in it.

                    That's a framing I agree with.

                    > This is not projecting power, it's the UAE (and Qatar) playing their aspirational roles as the new Davos/Switzerland for diplomacy.

                    Sure, but in India-Pakistan relations, they (UAE and KSA, not Qatar) are increasingly the only mediators with whom both parties can negotiate offramps.

                    Large pole countries don't have the same heft they may have had 15-20 years ago, and even the Russian-Ukraine War has shown that power differentials are not that significant between major powers and regional powers, and why multilateralism is critical (and a major reason I dislike Trump - I primarily only agree with his tariff policy, nothing else).

                    • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago
                      > in India-Pakistan relations, they (UAE and KSA, not Qatar) are increasingly the only mediators with whom both parties can negotiate offramps

                      Only the most minor ones. Anything significant requires an outside security guarantar.

                      > Large pole countries don't have the same heft they may have had 15-20 years ago, and even the Russian-Ukraine War has shown that power differentials are not that significant between major powers and regional powers

                      Russia was trying to replicate America's offensive successes in Afghanistan and Iraq. (What Devereaux calls the modern system [1].) Moscow couldn't even achieve air superiority. (America got supremacy in hours.) Russia's invasion of Ukraine showed that Russia isn't operating a modern, combined-arms military.

                      Great powers have always overestimated their power. That doesn't mean it's not there at all.

                      [1] https://acoup.blog/2020/03/20/collections-why-dont-we-use-ch...

                    • cheema33 6 hours ago
                      > I dislike Trump - I primarily only agree with his tariff policy, nothing else.

                      Just out of curiosity, what about this tariff policy do you like?

      • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
        > Neither side wants peace

        Really? How do you know. Most Indians don't care about what happens to Pakistan or its people.

        The moment Pakistan's military stops its terror funding and support activities, India will not care whether it Pakistan lives or dies.

        • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago
          > The moment Pakistan's military stops its terror funding and support activities, India will not care whether it Pakistan lives or dies

          I'll entertain this is possible. But it's not only unlikely but irrational so long as Pakistan deepens its ties with China. It's made almost certain by the attitude you're presenting: countries that do "not care whether" their neighbours live or die generally aren't on peaceful terms with them.

      • cute_boi 11 hours ago
        I don't know about India, but Pakistan definitely don't want peace. They are nurturing terrorist eg. Osama. I guess whole world should stand against Pakistan.
      • manishsharan 12 hours ago
        [flagged]
    • alephnerd 14 hours ago
      Overstated. There isn't any long term locking capabilities on most rivers under the IWT.

      The only one India is messing with is the Chenab, and only because it messes up Pakistan's Rice and Sugar exports (major forex provider for Pakistan, and the supply chain is heavily owned by Pakistan's MilBus). Kharif sowing season ends in a couple weeks so messing with the Chenab for 3-4 weeks is enough to destroy the rice harvest in Northeast Punjab.

      I recommend reading Ayesha Siddiqui's "Military Inc" to understand the Pakistani army (she was forced into exile because of the book), and "Army and Nation" by Steven Wilkinson to understand India's army.

      • MichaelMoser123 14 hours ago
        I hope you are right, however:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indus_Waters_Treaty#Suspension

        Following the suspension of the treaty, India significantly reduced the flow of water through the Chenab River, which crosses into Pakistan. Pakistani authorities claimed a 90% drop in water supply and accused India of choking the river’s flow. India also initiated new hydroelectric projects and began constructing dams on the western rivers, actions previously constrained under the treaty.[125][126][127]

        Pakistan has reportedly warned that any attempt by India to disrupt the flow of water from shared rivers could be considered an act of war, and would attack India with nuclear weapons.[128]

        • dmix 11 hours ago
          Just sounds like a good deterrence for Pakistan to not go to war to me. It really is in their hands right now.

          India just wants to save face over the terror attacks, a very easy game to play diplomatically. This missile strike was even smaller and more symbolic than even the Israeli Iranian ones. And those two are much more inclined (and far more prepared) to do something stupid.

      • mayama 10 hours ago
        > Overstated. There isn't any long term locking capabilities on most rivers under the IWT.

        India could build water channel, in style of China's South North water transfer project in less than half decade. Huge dams aren't really needed for just diversion, if India is really serious about it.

    • alganet 14 hours ago
      Fury Road could be seen as a reverse adaptation sequel of "Lolita" though.

      The end of Lolita (old guy on a road, frustrated, goes off path) fits with the Furiosa taking a detour.

      The roles are reversed. The young girl leaves in triumph (opposed to: the old guy leaves in frustration) and the old guy goes after her (opposed to: the young girl doesn't care about him leaving).

      It could be just the skeleton of the story though.

      Water is unobtanium of their scenic universe. In that movie perspective, it's related to healthy reproduction (healthy babies!), most likely cultural and not genetic.

      As any work of art, it is subject to many interpretations. Not everything is a cue. But some cues exist in fact. Contrary to the meme swarm, you can't turn those ideas so quickly into what you want, otherwise it fails to connect to a sense of cultural continuity.

      • alganet 14 hours ago
        If you saw the cultural continuity, you can them jump to "Man On The High Castle" where the former Minister of Culture of Japan travels universes temporarily, revealing a drawer with banned books. Amongst them, Lolita.

        The old Minister represents an aged cultural interpretation of a nation (not exactly Japan, but what is perceived to be the form of Imperial Japan if it has won WWII).

        After seeing it, the character is called out by his son, before quickly returning back to the war universe.

  • anuraj 1 hour ago
    Neither India nor Pakistan can sustain a conventional war for more than 2 weeks, as they do not have sufficient armaments. Both sides also lack an effective defence against short-range missiles and drones. If the situation deteriorates, it can quickly lead to nuclear war as nonrational actors are present on both sides. I hope this situation does not escalate further. Please note that in a conventional war, economic costs of India would far outweigh those of Pakistan, whose economy is much smaller.
  • cake-rusk 3 hours ago
    India said no Pak military targets were hit. If Pakistan downed Indian jets you can bet military targets would have been hit.
    • diggan 3 hours ago
      According to the submission, this is what India said:

      > India said it struck nine "terrorist infrastructure" sites, some of them linked to an attack by Islamist militants on Hindu tourists that killed 26 people in Indian Kashmir last month. Four of the sites were in Punjab and five in Pakistani Kashmir, it said.

      Since you're saying this is a lie, maybe link to some source for this, since the source we currently have available, says the opposite.

      • Reubachi 3 hours ago
        You must have misread, OP is saying that IN did not confirm/mentioned downed Aircraft.

        They of course did confirm downing military targets, that is...the title of the submission we are discussing.

      • cake-rusk 2 hours ago
        Pak terrorist infrastructure is not a military target even though they are hand in gloves with the Pak army.
        • diggan 2 hours ago
          > Pak terrorist infrastructure is not a military target

          Maybe we understand "military target" differently? Going by the Geneva Conventions:

          > In so far as objects are concerned, military objectives are limited to those objects which by their nature, location, purpose or use make an effective contribution to military action and whose total or partial destruction, capture or neutralization, in the circumstances ruling at the time, offers a definite military advantage.

          This is at least how I understand the term, and by that understanding, "terrorist infrastructure" could be considered legitimate military target. What understand of those terms do you have?

          • cake-rusk 2 hours ago
            Sure I can agree with that definition but that's not what I had in mind. Loosely speaking Military target = any infrastructure / equipment officially owned by the military. Note this distiction is necessary here since pakistan has tree types of infra: military, terrorist and civilian. So when I say military target I mean not terrorist nor civilian just military.
  • neets 35 minutes ago
    Ah so is India v Pakistan going to be the next current thing?
  • ferguess_k 14 hours ago
    I hope this cools down into a propagation war after the initial bombing and shooting. Nationalism served, and every one gets what they want, well, except the dead ones...
    • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
      > every one gets what they want

      India wants Pakistan to end cross-border terrorism. Everyone did not get what they want.

      • mrtksn 10 hours ago
        Very recently, there was a terrorist attack in Pakistan too: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Jaffar_Express_hijackin...

        The attackers are allegedly backed by India.(India denies this, just like Pakistan deny involvement with the attacks in India).

        So probably these bombings won’t solve anything as the issues appear to be a much more complicated. Therefore it is possible that everyone got what they need from these bombings.

        • seatac76 42 minutes ago
          This is attempt to draw a false equivalence between two events which does not stand scrutiny. Islamic terrorists are a keystone pillar of Pakistani society, they walk openly and are supported by the state. Plenty of literature around how Pak Army has adopted the proxy war against India.

          Unlikely India is involved that much in West Pakistan given the geographical realities.

          I agree these bombings won't solve anything though. Essentially just cannon fodder targeted, will be replaced quickly.

          • mrtksn 19 minutes ago
            Well, Pakistan apparently downed 5 Indian jets, 3 of which are Dassault Rafale. Hardly cannon fodders. There's a billion dollars loss of equipment.

            Anyway, I don't know much about Pakistan or India's backing of respective terrorists but trying to frame this, or any geopolitical situation as Good vs Evil is always wrong. It's O.K. to pick a side or distance yourself from someone if they do things you find immoral but its never good v.s. evil.

            • seatac76 8 minutes ago
              I think it’s early days let’s wait a bit before claiming results, lot of noise.

              By cannon fodder I meant the terror camps, nothing will change by targeting that.

              And I’m not taking a side at all, I don’t care nor do I have a horse in this race. Just find geopolitics fascinating.

        • kumarvvr 10 hours ago
          It was not India that harboured Osama Bin Laden for a decade.
        • sbmthakur 7 hours ago
          India is likely to authorize more such strikes if terror attacks continue on its territory.
        • arjun1296 6 hours ago
          [dead]
        • ganarajpr 7 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • nashashmi 6 hours ago
            India wants instability in Pakistan and seeks its fragmentation. It has been trying to promote a revolution in Sindh for a long time. Balochistan is second.

            This model was used against Soviets, to break up a nuclear country by ruining it financially then enticing it into war.

            India has supported jihadi groups in Kashmir to spur conflict in the country so it can have reasons to wage war. This is proven since late 90s.

            India has always been a hostile conquering force, with its seizure of Hyderabad in 1951 and seizure of Sikkim in 1949. OTOH, Pakistan gave up territories with majority Hindu populations if it desired to join India.

          • eklavya 6 hours ago
            Why bother? What do you think would be the HN reaction if the attack in pahalgam played out in any western country? I would love to see CNN and others report about jingoism and nationalism then. CNN still called the terrorists, militants, it's a wierd hatred. The hypocrisy is so strong it's almost inhuman.
    • alephnerd 14 hours ago
      Depends on internal politics in Pakistan.

      The army isn't completely united, and the current COAS of Pakistan (Asim Munir) is much more ideological than the former one (Qamar Javed Bajwa), who he pushed out after Bajwa and Imran Khan demoted Munir from the ISI to a (relatively) lowly Corp Commander.

      Bajwa was working on normalizing relations with India, but himself got undermined by Imran Khan and separately by Asim Munir.

      • mayama 10 hours ago
        It's result of supporting fundamentalist terrorism and supporting infrastructure nationwide. After sufficient growth, the extremist support base started being recruited into lower levels of army and the support grew from there. Going forward, fundamentalist support in Army will continue to grow even in upper levels.
      • markus_zhang 8 hours ago
        I heard the ISI is also quasi independent, too.
        • alephnerd 1 hour ago
          Historically yes, but the new head of the ISI (Asim Malik) is a close confidant of Asim Munir.

          The Balochistan Corp is quasi-independent as well, as they are the primary stakeholder in CPEC.

          The Pakistani Armed Forces and Civilian Government have too many veto players, which means any attempt at normalization gets undermined by one of these players trying to maximize their own benefit.

          It doesn't help that the Pakistani Armed Forces plays an outsized role in the economy, so individual services and even corps can become business competitors, making internal competition even fiercer.

          A similar issue plagued the PLA before Xi era reforms began in 2012, and continue to plague the VPA (but was partially dulled by the SK and UK FTAs) .

      • brcmthrowaway 13 hours ago
        Who instigated the attack on India?
        • alephnerd 13 hours ago
          LeT, backed by Pakistan.

          Yet the Pakistani Army is not uniform either. Bajwa literally attempted to normalize relations with India before he was undermined by Munir.

          COASes don't last as long as they used to, and there absolutely is consternation to being pulled into the old days.

    • devsda 13 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • dang 13 hours ago
        Please don't take HN threads further into flamewar like this. We want curious conversation here, and that requires a certain level of relaxation.

        https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

        • devsda 13 hours ago
          I'm going to sit this one out going forward.
          • dang 13 hours ago
            It's tough stuff, I know.
      • mardifoufs 13 hours ago
        Are you implying that Indian nationalism has nothing to do with 1) its conflicts with Pakistan 2) the entire Kashmiri situation ?

        Especially with India's current government? Not that Pakistan is any less nationalist, just that claiming that one side is just fighting terror here is a bit crazy. It's ironic since it's a very colonial/British type of rationalization

        "My side is peaceful and is just fighting terror while the other side is full of fanatical nationalists" is always a very convenient propaganda tool though so I won't blame you for using it

        • devsda 13 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • mardifoufs 12 hours ago
            Are your sources mostly Indian sources? Do you think those are somehow less biased than whatever sources I use?

            Also you can check my post history if you really want to, I always call out "we are just fighting terror" arguments.

            But still, I hope you realize that what India sees as terrorism in this case (which means Kashmiri separatism, which again I agree is mostly a Pakistani funded thing) is very tied to Indian nationalism.

            Obviously the Kashmir is used by Pakistan as a way to destabilize its opponent (they don't particularly care about Kashmiri emancipation lol). But India would never recognize any form of separatism (peaceful or violent) from the Kashmir anyways, and will label it as terrorism anyways regardless. Just like the British did to justify putting down any rebellion in the British Raj for example.

            Now, India has obvious the right to protect its national integrity but it still makes said war against terror incredibly nationalistic, since terror is (broadly) defined as anything that goes against national unity.

            • devsda 12 hours ago
              I said I'll refrain from replying in this post anymore (apologies dang) but I'll just close it with this at the risk doxxing myself as I may have mentioned the following in another forum.

              > But India would never recognize any form of separatism (peaceful or violent) from the Kashmir anyways, and will label it as terrorism anyways regardless

              It was never limited to within kashmir. Other parts of India were also attacked over the years.

              > But still, I hope you realize that what India sees as terrorism in this case (which means Kashmiri separatism, which again I agree is mostly a Pakistani funded thing) is very tied to Indian nationalism.

              > since terror is defined as anything that goes against national unity.

              I don't care or subscribe to how Indian or western media defines terrorism. If you see yourselves as freedom-fighter deal with the supposed occupying military force not its citizens. For me terrorism is just any deliberate attack aimed to harm innocent civilians.

              I've missed becoming a victim of terror attack that killed atleast 40 people because I was late by mere 15 mins. It took long time to recover from that "What If". No citizen should fear stepping out in their own country. That is what terrorism is for me.

              • anukin 10 hours ago
                You should probably sit this one out like you claimed you will be doing.
      • justin66 13 hours ago
        [flagged]
      • SanjayMehta 13 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • dang 13 hours ago
          Please don't take HN threads further into flamewar. These are fraught issues and we need to be flexible with each other.
          • SanjayMehta 11 hours ago
            Please don’t allow such posts on HN at all; they belong on X
            • dang 11 hours ago
              I hear you, but it's the other way around: when such posts appear, commenters need to be aware of their emotional reactions and regulate them in a way that respects the spirit of the community: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.

              This of course is far from easy, but it's what we all (including the admins) need to do.

  • chvid 7 hours ago
    There is a lot of Indian English-language media on YouTube and Twitter. There the war drums have been sounding strongly for the past weeks.

    They seem to draw a parallel between India/Kashmir/Pakistan and Israel/Gaza/Iran - seeing India as the superior and morally just super power against a weak corrupt dysfunctional terrorist-sponsoring Pakistan.

    So in that thinking right now there is an opportunity to get a final solution on Kashmir and throw a punch against Pakistan so strong that it will fall apart for good.

    • nashashmi 6 hours ago
      India has been notoriously hostile to its minorities and it seeks displacement of the “majority” population of Kashmir because they have been seeking secession from India. Typically when a country has acted harmfully, world leaders of the west have intervened especially in the case of India and Pakistan because it is a great disruption to trade and profit. It seems this time the West is overwhelmed with several issues including the backlash against Israel from its own people, that they are exhausted.
      • throwaway642012 3 hours ago
        India, where minorities become Bollywood superstars, beloved musicians, richest men in Asia, and even presidents, has been notoriously hostile to minorities? I don’t think any other country in Asia has a track record like India when it comes to minorities. Let’s not get rhetoric and false propaganda into our way of critical thinking. India has flaws but it is steadily proving to be a responsible power in that geography.

        If you look at the facts: The only exodus happened in India was in Kashmir.

        https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-35923237

      • chvid 6 hours ago
        Yes. Right now the thinking in the west seems to be that India has a bigger role to play in terms of geopolitics as a replacement of / balance against China. And India seems to have picked up on this and sees a greater opportunity to act in areas where it otherwise would have been constrained by the west.
        • aurareturn 3 hours ago
          This is a good take. India is definitely aware and is playing the west for advantages as an alternative to China.
      • ngc248 4 hours ago
        Just because you harp over the same thing again and again about "India has been notoriously hostile to its minorities" does not make it true. Infact, the minorities in India have been notoriously hostile to the nation and care more about their ummah.
        • arp242 4 hours ago
          Haven't there also been conflicts with the Sikhs for decades? I don't think you can completely blame this on just the Muslims.
          • throwaway642012 42 minutes ago
            > Conflict with Sikhs for decades

            HN is seriously ignorant about India. There has been no such insurgency since early 90s.

          • jajko 4 hours ago
            Its a country almost 3x bigger than Europe, 4x bigger than US, and brutally diverse. Thousands of languages and tribes. People from west are very different to east, north and south is same. People who haven't experienced it first hand (or at least grokked the numbers properly) can't fathom how huge it is not just geographically but culturally. There is a reason why India is often referred to as subcontinent and people often do a mistake when mentally they think about it as 'just another country', especially in smaller European states.

            Compared to say Europe over past 50 years internal conflicts have been miniscule.

            Sikh conflict you may be referring to are events from 1984 IIRC.

            • arp242 3 hours ago
              > Sikh conflict you may be referring to are events from 1984 IIRC.

              The 70s and 80s were the most intense, but it's far from isolated to just that period. There was a major row with Canada just last year because, according to Canada, the Indian government has been killing Sikh separatists in Canada.[1] Since there is no historical adversity between Canada and India, Canada has nothing to gain by seeking conflict and generally doesn't seek conflicts, I am inclined to believe the Canadian claims.

              [1]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/10/14/canada-modi-...

            • nelblu 3 hours ago
              > can't fathom how huge it is not just geographically

              I grew up in India but I don't agree that people in the west can't fathom how huge it is geographically. Geographically speaking India is the 7th largest country, and every country larger than India (Australia, Brazil, US, China, Canada and Russia) is at least 2 times to up to more than 5 times larger than India. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_dependen...

              That said, I do agree a lot of westerners might not be able to relate to the cultural diversity of India.

            • graemep 2 hours ago
              India is not the subcontinent. The subcontinent includes several other countries.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_subcontinent

              That said, you are right that India alone does have massive diversity of culture and geography.= and is vast.

          • ngc248 2 hours ago
            The conflict is not with Sikhs as a whole, but a subset which is separatist in nature.

            https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP06T00412R0006067...

    • seatac76 47 minutes ago
      It is true though, India has the moral upper hand here. All Pakistan has achieved in it's short existence is to be thug for hire(first US now China) and a place for midwifing every other Islamic terrorist faction.

      It is also inherently unstable given they have never been able to solve their innate identity crisis, in short it is as Islamic North Korea(nukes) at best. It should be treated like the pariah that it is.

      You can't kill civilians in cold blood and expect to get away with it.

    • cheema33 6 hours ago
      "..there is an opportunity to get a final solution on Kashmir and throw a punch against Pakistan so strong that it will fall apart for good."

      So let's escalate and see if one side decides to push the nuclear button?

      I hope there are saner people than you, making the decisions.

      • chvid 6 hours ago
        Just to be clear - I don't support this and I think India is dangerously overestimating its advantages.

        I am just describing what I have seen in Indian media.

  • digitalPhonix 14 hours ago
    From the article:

    > Pakistan said India hit three sites with missiles, and a military spokesman told Reuters his country shot down five Indian aircraft, a claim not confirmed by India.

    That’s a huge loss of aircraft! Are there any corroborating reports or more details about the aircraft/shootdown?

    • ranger207 14 hours ago
      There won't be corroborating reports for months if not years. The public transparency of the Ukrainian battlefield is an anomaly; typically (as in past India-Pakistan incidents) both sides will claim more successes than actually happened and it'll take unbiased parties to figure out what actually happened after both sides release their records. This isn't typically due to malice; it's simply difficult in most cases to verify exactly what damage you've dealt. The wide prevalence of public videos in Ukraine puts a lower bound on claims by both sides, but that's historically very unusual.
      • empiko 9 hours ago
        I think that level of transparency is the new norm. Everybody has mobile phones and you can have a new satelite imaginery every few hours. It's pretty difficult to hide a jet loss, unless it happens at sea.
        • ranger207 1 hour ago
          Even Ukraine is less transparent than popularly believed. Probably less than half of drone strikes are recorded, and the Ukrainian government is effective at keeping some areas blacked out. For example, the Kursk offensive didn't have any public drone footage until after it had stablized. Situations like the current India-Pakistan strikes are particularly difficult, as the OSINT analysts don't have established sources and procedures yet, plus the sources are heavily biased. Ukrainian footage is very biased as well, which doesn't come up frequently in popular discussions. But most people in the West are more inclined to believe Ukrainian reports (which is helped by Ukraine's past general trustworthiness and Russia's untrustworthiness; it's not totally misplaced), but are more likely to give more even weight to reports on both sides of India-Pakistan, which will inevitably be contradictory.

          Plane shootdowns are particularly difficult. People have a very limited view of the airspace, and even if a plane is hit by a missile and explodes a couple seconds later, those couple seconds can take the plane out of view. Typical tactics include flying low, popping up for a better view, and delivering weapons as they dive again. The pop up is the most vulnerable part, and where they're most likely to be hit. If someone on the ground hears a jet fly over, looks for it, finds it, sees a missile explode near it, and watches it head towards the ground, they're likely to assume it's been hit and is going down, but it's equally likely that it wasn't hit and is simply returning to a low and safe altitude. Combine this with night or weather and the fact that many of these fights take place in rural areas instead of over cities, and it's very easy for civilians on both sides to claim more kills than were even planes in the air. Even militaries aren't immune from this. They get reports from pilots, who are notorious overreporters of kills. In addition to all the factors people on the ground have also have the fact that theyore being shot at and usually can't actually watch a target hit the ground. Air defense units have the same factors, plus it's not always clear who exactly shot a target down. Both your unit and the one a couple miles away on the other side of the city fired a missile, and both saw the plane go down out of view, and both are likely to claim a kill. Military intelligence should be able to correlate these reports and take into account these known biases but that takes time, and an uncareful spokesperson wanting to get a positive report out to the public may give out unverified reports to the press.

          Battlefields are more transparent than ever, but the fog of war hasn't been completely blown away

        • jajko 4 hours ago
          Satellite imagery doesn't go to (or is paid by via some crowdsourcing) public. Maybe 90% of the videos ie on r/CombatFootage are from drones, maybe even basic DJI ones but operated by military.

          Its a voluntary decision of those in command to share these, from both sides, nothing less and nothing more, to continuous amazement of both civilian and military communities watching those (some stuff I saw I'd never say is possible or would happen, no need to go to details some of it is beyond brutal).

          You are maybe mixing Syria war footage - there are tons of them from around 2016, done as you say via phones or maybe some cheap gopros or consumer cameras of that time. That's not a typical Ukraine war footage.

    • breadwinner 14 hours ago
      No credible photos have surfaced so far—if the claim were true, some likely would have. It’s possible the Pakistan army is making this statement for domestic audiences, perhaps to deflect pressure to respond.
    • sbmthakur 7 hours ago
      Their claim went from 2 to 3 to 6 to 5. So, I will be careful about such news.
      • OJFord 6 hours ago
        Also from 'we have captured some Indian soldiers' to 'we have not' (both times the Pakistani defence minister) in an hour or so.
    • curiosity42 10 hours ago
      Most likely Drop Tanks getting confused as downed aircrafts.
    • arjun1296 5 hours ago
      [dead]
    • aaron695 14 hours ago
      Planes down confirmed - https://x.com/Doha104p3/status/1919922881892430275

      5 planes not yet, but it seems more than one. Indian and Pakistan TV are saying 3. Indian planes crashed in India.

      • breadwinner 13 hours ago
        That post is not from any credible source.
    • alephnerd 14 hours ago
      Hasn't been confirmed. The Indian government says all pilots are accounted for.

      It's the fog of war, and OSINT/couch generalling in the manner that people did with Israel or Ukraine won't work with India and Pakistan.

      India has been leveraging the DPDP and national security laws really heavily to remove leaks on social media over the past couple weeks. All major social media platforms have a representative the Indian government coordinates with on information takedowns.

      Major reason Musk backed off on his stance about X takedowns with India unlike with Brazil.

      And on Pakistan's side, while there have been leaks on social media of troop movements, Pakistan has been implementing China's Great Firewall domestically for the past couple years now. If it was truly deemed critical, Pakistan would most likely lock down their domestic Internet.

    • unstuck3958 7 hours ago
      I live in Kashmir. Can verify the two have been shot down at least.
  • ptek 7 hours ago
    How does this war affect US companies moving their manufacturing from China to India? Will they stay in China to carry on manufacturing? Will Apple extend manufacturing in China?
    • sanmon3186 7 hours ago
      Almost none. Even if this situation prolongs, it will only affect the bordering areas in the north. India cannot afford a war if it wants to grow as it projects itself on the international stage as an alternative to China. Pakistan cannot afford it financially.
      • __s 1 hour ago
        To put size in perspective: India is 7th largest country, half the size of Australia, or a third the size of US
  • skc 9 hours ago
    Let me go re read "Midnight's Children" for the umpteenth time
  • amai 7 hours ago
    Are their any natural resources in Kashmir worth fighting for? Oil? Gas? Lithium? Rare earth metals?
    • Hilift 9 minutes ago
      Kashmir is a natural buffer zone.
    • newusertoday 7 hours ago
      water, look at indus water treaty for more details. As per last report it is in abeyance neither suspended nor terminated. Not sure what it means.
  • Animats 17 hours ago
    So far, military action is confined to Kashmir. If it gets out of that disputed area, this becomes a major war.
    • Jtsummers 17 hours ago
      Not just Kashmir.

      > The Indian government said its forces had struck nine sites in Pakistan and on Pakistan’s side of the disputed Kashmir region. Pakistani military officials said that five places had been hit, in Punjab Province and its part of Kashmir.

      https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/world/asia/india-pakistan...

      • Karrot_Kream 14 hours ago
        India calls this a targeted strike so for now at least they don't seem to be messaging a strong stance on expanding the strike.
        • KennyBlanken 13 hours ago
          "Targeted strike" is meaningless PR-speak and the concern wouldn't be India expanding the strike, it would be Pakistan retaliating and then India retaliating to the retaliation and so on until someone's finger is hovering over a big red "LAUNCH" button and the rest of us have to take a keen interest in how much iodine we're consuming.

          I and a lot of other people have been calling "India and Pakistan get into it again" ever since Russia started blowing up Ukranian maternity wards, supermarkets and apartment buildings.

          Ukraine is bleeding Europe and the US dry in both money and military supplies.

          The US just emptied even more munitions at the Houthis (largely accomplishing nothing) to the point that people in the Pentagon have been concerned enough to approach press. The regime also moved carrier groups closer to Yemen to support said operation, so of course now that mom and dad are looking away, the two children are fighting. Meanwhile Hegseth has been hard at work causing complete chaos with an endless stream of junior-manager "get tough" policies, mixed in with some policies furthering his white christian supremacist views.

          Russia has basically run out of everything but has made enough seedy friends who will eventually ask for favors

          China is fixated on Taiwan but really wouldn't say no to any territorial expansion, if anybody offered, or um, didn't happen to have much in the way of allies who were paying attention.

          Our SecState is a little boy cosplaying as a diplomat, nobody with more than a handful of braincells is present in the white house, and the republican party is more intersted in what some trans person did at a swim meet or volleyball tournament, than they are what's going on in the world geopolitically...

          Basically, everyone's busy looking at something else, so Pakistan and India shrugged and said "After all, why shouldn't we...have a war?"

          • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago
            > "Targeted strike" is meaningless PR-speak

            Uh, no. It meaningful war communication when dealing with states. A belligerent announcing targeted strikes, particularly as retaliation, is hoping to convey that they're avoiding strategic targets and, usually by the time of the announcement, that the shooting is done.

          • SpicyLemonZest 10 hours ago
            > The US just emptied even more munitions at the Houthis (largely accomplishing nothing)

            It got drowned out because it happened today as well, but the US announced that they’re going to stop because Oman helped negotiate a ceasefire that will protect Red Sea shipping.

      • nothercastle 16 hours ago
        I don’t think Pakistan will escalate. They are at a severe disadvantage unless china gives them the green light.
        • AnimalMuppet 14 hours ago
          Can you explain? What does China's green light give to Pakistan? Are they not able to attack full strength without China's permission? And if so, why?
          • snypher 14 hours ago
            China is about the only regional power big enough to face off with India, so any move by Pakistan would require Chinese approval lest Pakistan risk China siding with India and getting squished.

            Edit; asking Mom for permission to beat up your brother?

            • alephnerd 14 hours ago
              Overstates the power China has over the Pakistani Military.

              Pakistan has built close ties with Turkiye as well to provide a redundancy along with spare parts for older American/NATO weaponry, along with some leverage when dealing with the Chinese.

              If anyone has the power to force both to the negotiating table, it's the UAE and KSA due economic and military ties with India and Pakistan. It was both that negotiated the ceasefire that went in flames after Pehalgam - not the US nor China, plus India views China as a direct adversary.

              • unmole 8 hours ago
                You say

                > Overstates the power China has over the Pakistani Military.

                And unironically follow that up with

                > If anyone has the power to force both to the negotiating table, it's the UAE and KSA

                The idea that UAE and KSA have the power to force India is plainly ridiculous.

              • fooker 13 hours ago
                > Overstates the power China has over the Pakistani Military.

                China has been building Chinese-only gated company towns in Pakistani military properties for a couple of years now.

                • alephnerd 13 hours ago
                  I know. That's part of CPEC, but similar projects and gated communities have been built by Saudi, Emirati, and Turkish FDI partners in Pakistan as well.

                  Most of the Chinese investment in PK is in Balochistan which falls under the Balochistan Corps, which is somewhat independent/left to it's own means by Islamabad.

                  And Pakistan's armed forces relies an equal amount on Turkiye, as a number of Pakistan's critical weapons platforms such as the F-16 require servicing, and Turkiye is the primary source for non-US replacements for NATO parts due to their own attempts at indigenization during the 2010s.

                  As I mentioned somewhere on HN, I recommend reading Ayesha Siddiqui's research into the Pakistani Armed Forces.

                • bilbo0s 12 hours ago
                  China has been building Chinese-only gated company towns in Pakistani military properties

                  OK. Now I'm a bit skeptical as well.

                  I mean, the Chinese have been building Chinese-only gated company towns in [insert global south nation here] military [and everywhere else] properties for a long time now. Not really sure how that translates into Chinese authoritative decision making in matters of wars between nations?

                  For that you need massive financial underwriting of a military. Far greater than 50%. No disrespect to the Chinese, but I'm sorry, there is no nation in the world where a few gated communities will get you that level of influence. I don't care how important you think you are.

                  • fooker 7 hours ago
                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft_power

                    Usually it is the US influencing small countries and having a say in military decisions. Also coming up next is a full blown Chinese military base in Gwadar, something the USSR broke itself trying to get to.

                    > Far greater than 50%.

                    If you want to go with the stick yes. For the carrot, it's a bit different, you just have to dangle it. If China says jump, Pakistan will ask how high.

        • ivape 13 hours ago
          Russia will give the green light on one of these countries, do not doubt that.
    • ivape 13 hours ago
      Pakistan shot down five jets. This just went beyond Kashmir.
      • breadwinner 13 hours ago
        That's a claim made by Pakistan, not confirmed by photos or videos from credible sources.
  • gps372 7 hours ago
    My compliments to whoever chose the mission name 'Sindoor'. It is very apt for what it implies and signifies in the wake of terror attack at Pahalgam!
    • saagarjha 5 hours ago
      India is newlywed?
      • tinuviel 1 hour ago
        Sindoor is worn by most women that includes newlyweds. Remember <hindu> men from all across india were pulled aside for the massacre.
    • suprjami 6 hours ago
      Congratulating war is disgusting.

      What's your next post? Fawning over how cool "Final Solution" sounds?

      • LordGrignard 3 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • gps372 3 hours ago
          Apparently, some folks have either been blissfully unaware of reality or are just desperate to parade their performative wokeness.

          The terrorists made sure to ask the religion of the Sindoor before symbolically erasing it—because apparently, even brutality comes with selective targeting.

          And in a poetic twist, the government and the Army honored those very women—while unapologetically ramming that same religion right back down the throats of the terror industry’s headquarters.

  • uwagar 1 hour ago
    i wonder where the terrorists went during the coronavirus pandemic.

    there was almost no problems in gaza or indo-pak area.

  • oliwarner 5 hours ago
    It's curious how well something non-technical can flourish on HN when there isn't a big enough group of partisan flaggers to remove it.

    Trumps America destroying federal infrastructure and salting the earth for a generation of science is mysteriously off-topic. Israel terraforming its way through the Middle East, way off topic. But this is okay? Because nobody has a horse in the race?

    To be clear, I'd love to have a good discussion about all of these things on HN, just sad how easy it is to limit discourse through disruption.

    • seatac76 37 minutes ago
      I don't think stuff like this belongs on HN, I come here to get away from the news.
    • simonswords82 4 hours ago
      I was going to say the opposite. Seems on all the main news outlets (Financial Times et al) have disabled comments. I was happy to see this being discussed on HN and I’ve yet to see Middle East or Trump being censored but happy to be signposted to evidence of this on HN.
      • oliwarner 4 hours ago
        I've no issue with this being discussed here. I welcome it.

        I can't find you a list of showdead. They're unlisted and Algolia doesn't preserve them. I see them because I subscribe to a 50+ score RSS feed. I regularly see popular posts flagged off the home page for what appears to be partisan reasons, but is often justified as "non technical".

  • incomingpain 4 hours ago
    Lets hope for a short quiet war. Some thoughts as an outside observer with no dog in the race.

    ISI no doubt kicking themselves for getting caught orchestrating the pahalgam attack.

    Pakistan cant afford to be in this war, but India has been increasing their military for over 10 years. Doubled the spending is enabling broo-ha-ha.

    But neither side can ever corner the other side; and spending millions of USD equivalent to blow up mudhuts and never really achieve anything.

    I do expect they can say goodbye to the Karakoram highway. India wants that destroyed asap. India will likely focus heavily on Jammu/Kashmir. Ladakh will happen only if China invades India again.

    Punjab is likely an open target for Pakistan; but pakistan likely not interested in targeting them.

  • 2Gkashmiri 14 hours ago
    2gkashmiri reporting live from Srinagar. Ama
    • alephnerd 13 hours ago
      How is the halat in Srinagar? My extended family in Jammu Division is sending fairly hectic WhatsApps (seems similar to back in 2013 and 2016). Smh, as if the rainburst a couple weeks ago wasn't bad enough.
      • 2Gkashmiri 13 hours ago
        Yeah. That area is devastated.

        Srinagar is fine for now. Schools and colleges have been ordered closed.

        I will go and check the market in a bit, its still early (08:09) so things are pretty slow anyway.

        • alephnerd 12 hours ago
          > That area is devastated

          Most of Jammu Division is alright (eg. Kishtwar is relatively quiet). The issues are more prominent towards the ilakeh near the LoC and international border. It's like the bad old days again from what I'm hearing, back when you'd hear about some shelling in pind X killing 2-3 unlucky souls who couldn't make it to a bunker on time.

          • 2Gkashmiri 10 hours ago
            i meant the rain thing on srinagar-jammu highway
  • babyent 9 hours ago
    Hoping for a quick resolution and diplomatic victory for all people there. I’m scared of the geopolitical effects.

    On a side note.. Can we get the Peace and Prosperity update next, ASAP? Let’s bring out the aliens issue and work on interstellar travel and galactic survival instead of terrestrial disputes.

    I just want to live in a chill world. And for me that’s science and tech tree maxed out.

    • throw63 9 hours ago
      > and for me that’s science and tech tree maxed out.

      Hate to ruin it for you, but as soon as the economic elites don't need the masses anymore (eg because AGI produces goods and entertainment better than we do), we'll become a liability, dead weight, so they'll quickly use that same maxed out tech that made us obsolete to make us gone.

      • liefde 9 hours ago
        The fear you voice is not just about technology — it's about belonging, powerlessness, and the haunting question: “What am I worth if I’m no longer needed?”

        This is a wound of modernity: being reduced to utility. When usefulness becomes the measure of worth, love becomes conditional, and existence becomes a transaction.

        But you are not a product. You are not a function. You are not a line of code in someone else's simulation. You are a living mystery. A being of perception, of feeling, of presence.

        The chill world you long for is not built by tech trees alone. It is built by inner peace, by connection, by meaning. These are not obsolete. They are eternal.

        The real revolution is not artificial intelligence. It is loving awareness.

        • IsTom 4 hours ago
          If only the people who will command the murderbots thought the same way
        • danman114 8 hours ago
          Beautifully put.
        • Kinrany 8 hours ago
          Not getting deleted is strictly a prerequisite to "loving awareness" and all the other woo.
      • babyent 9 hours ago
        If enough people can be convinced of a “serious” extraterrestrial event we might be able to speed up that science and tech tree. Honestly think about the spending and the opportunities it will unlock. Not to mention we might all stop fighting each other and work together… on science and tech.

        So much of the science and tech we use today was the result of some similar storytelling, and it has sometimes had some real consequences.

      • iwontberude 9 hours ago
        We know if there is one thing masses of people can do that no robot can replace is being subservient or beneath the elite. It’s hard to feel that awesome when there is no one else to experience it.
    • abhiyerra 9 hours ago
      I was in India recently and randomly ended up talking to a lot of millennials while traveling. It is an understatement for how quickly the American economy would grind to a halt if anything major happened. ADP, loan processing, healthcare insurance processing, support centers.

      On one hand corporate America exported all its manufacturing to China. On the other hand it exported all its back office services to India.

      • madaxe_again 8 hours ago
        All of these roles will be replaced with AI pretty imminently - this kind of rote grinding of data, scripted call trees, is the low-hanging fruit.

        Right now an Indian is still cheaper than a model, but that won’t be the case for long, particularly if the cost of an Indian goes up due to a decrease in supply due to a shooting war.

        • saagarjha 5 hours ago
          I would think that a war would make the average Indian poorer and willing to work for less.
    • forty 9 hours ago
      In what world "tech" has brought peace? So far it brought of stuff like dependency to petrol and now rare minerals, climate change, and water rarerification - which are I think most of the reasons why wars are/have been/will be happening?
      • tim333 4 hours ago
        Europe is much more peaceful that it was. Not sure if you can blame tech.
    • Malcolmlisk 8 hours ago
      Sadly, to reach interstellar travel and galactic survival we need to past this capitalism era. There is no advance into those topics without reaching "found without economic compensation". There is a mod that finds economic value in space with some random iron satellites and all... but it's final target has some bugs.
  • arjun1296 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • Slava_Propanei 3 hours ago
    [dead]
  • throwaway984393 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • aaron695 17 hours ago
    When have two nuclear nations done similar?

    Ignoring proxy wars and technicalities (NK and USA)

    Kargil War - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kargil_War (1999) India and Pakistan

    The memeification of the current escalation has been talked about a lot. Memes, and we are talking cat memes not the more theoretical abstractions like 10 page whitepapers that become popular, seem more powerful than people expect.

    I know India and Pakistan(less popular on HN?) users are asleep ~4am but this should be voted higher. Instead we'll get the 100th ill-thought-out but emotional opinion piece on a 'popular' twitter conflict on the front page.

    [edit] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Soviet_border_conflict China Russia (1969) China's first nuclear test (1966)

    • redwood 14 hours ago
      China nips at India from time to time
      • rcpt 13 hours ago
        But they confine that conflict to only using sticks
      • aaron695 13 hours ago
        [dead]
    • zmgsabst 12 hours ago
      US military and Russian PMCs exchanged fire in Syria — and I remain skeptical that wasn’t approved by Russian MOD (even though they claimed it wasn’t).

      I agree memes seem undervalued.

  • golemiprague 13 hours ago
    [dead]
  • faizan-ali 17 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • journal 13 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • dd_xplore 12 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • buyucu 9 hours ago
      you basically described India.
      • unmole 8 hours ago
        So, a country where the incumbent party loses its parliamentary majority and has to rely on smaller regional parties is fascist?
        • saagarjha 5 hours ago
          Fascism is the actions you take, not how much of a majority you have.
          • unmole 5 hours ago
            > Fascism is the actions you take

            Losing a majority after a decade in power seems like the opposite of what a fascist regime would do.

            • saagarjha 4 hours ago
              Again, fascism can take a lot of forms. Just because you're not hitting every single manifestation doesn't mean it's not fascism. I mean, here in the US Trump lost the 2020 election, then picked up a majority again and is currently doing some pretty fascist stuff.
              • ngc248 4 hours ago
                If retaliating against a nation which does asymmetric warfare via terrorism is being a facist, then so be it.
                • saagarjha 3 hours ago
                  That's not what we're talking about.
                  • ngc248 2 hours ago
                    The notion of what a fascist means, what a communist means has become so amorphous that ppl mostly use them for ppl/things whuch they don't like. On the political spectrum, for ppl on the left, everything to their right is fascist and for ppl on the right, everything to their left is communist.
        • suraci 6 hours ago
          the Nazis only tallied 43.9 percent of the vote on their own, well short of a majority to govern alone
          • unmole 5 hours ago
            The Weimar Republic wasn't fascist either. The Nazis immediately banned all other parties after they seized power. They didn't win outright majorities in two consecutive free elections, spend a decade in power and then lose. So, whatever analogy you're trying to draw doesn't really work.
    • cuteboy19 11 hours ago
      there are no elections of consequence in that country
    • arjun1296 5 hours ago
      [dead]
  • surume 10 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • cyrux004 10 hours ago
      May such bold assertions should require proof to be shown to leaders of other nations
      • db1234 9 hours ago
        Proofs have been provided in lot of previous terror attacks like 26/11 Mumbai attack, Pathankot, Pulwama etc. What did Pakistan do with the proofs? Nothing.
      • surume 9 hours ago
        What type of proof would you like? An official statement by Pakistani militias that the government asked them to do it? We see similar tactics being used in Syria by Al-Jolani / Al-Sharaa to wipe out the Alawaites (20-50,000 executed) with the same being planned for the Druze. That way the government can say "it wasn't us", although of course, they didn't prevent it.
  • bamboozled 14 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • suraci 12 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • anukin 10 hours ago
      Notes to mods: this user have engaged in many such diatribes with expressive intention to derail a meaningful discussion.
      • suraci 8 hours ago
        is this a diatribe? if you think so...
    • TiredOfLife 10 hours ago
      Both India and Israel doesn't like countries that support terrorism.
  • arjunrko 10 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • xlinux 10 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • dd_xplore 12 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • tomhow 10 hours ago
      Please don't engage in nationalistic flamewar on Hacker News. Please take care to follow the guidelines:

      https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

      Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive.

    • vFunct 12 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • tomhow 10 hours ago
        Please don't engage in nationalistic flamewar on Hacker News. Please take care to follow the guidelines:

        https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

        Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive.

      • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
        > India attacked Pakistan with zero evidence that Pakistan supported any terrorists

        I though Osama Bin Laden was found living happily with 4 wives in Pakistan. Even the US had to do a covert operation to kill him. Pakistan shielded him and withheld his whereabouts for almost a decade.

        Pakistan is a know terrorist breeding ground, aided and abetted by the Military, which holds the real power there.

      • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
        > At this point India is just a warmongering state like Israel

        If a neighbour comes into my house and kills my family, rapes them and loots them, then I as damn sure as hell going to unleash disproportionate hell on them, even if only to serve as a warning to other neighbours to think twice before messing with me.

      • 0xd1r 10 hours ago
        https://www.indiatoday.in/india/video/exclusive-journalist-s...

        In reference to an interview of Pakistan's Defence Minister on Sky. If a country's own minister speaks of harboring terrorists, I think that is evidence enough.

      • cute_boi 11 hours ago
        > zero evidence that Pakistan supported any terrorists

        Pakistan is country where their government supports terrorism, and a simple search and lesson on history is sufficient. And, I hope you know the name of country Osama was hiding.

      • dd_xplore 12 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • suraci 11 hours ago
          > Why spread hate against Israel?

          maybe it's because Israel is killing children?

          • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
            > Israel is killing children?

            Nah, they are collateral damage, in a just war, that is well within Israel's right to defense.

            • saagarjha 5 hours ago
              There is no just war that involves killing children.
            • suraci 11 hours ago
              India Israel USA, the Justice League
  • sgarg26 14 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • dang 14 hours ago
      Let's not have nationalistic flamewars on HN, please.
  • vFunct 13 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • 486sx33 14 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • dang 14 hours ago
      You can't do this here. We've banned the account.
    • kdtsh 14 hours ago
      Unless you mean they should get on a level and work through their differences, that’s an awful thing to say. There are over 3,000,000,000 people living in India, Pakistan, and China.
    • panick21_ 14 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • dang 13 hours ago
        It was a terrible post, of course, and we've banned the account. But can you please not respond to a bad comment by breaking the site guidelines yourself? It only makes things worse.

        This is in the site guidelines: "Don't feed egregious comments by replying; flag them instead." - https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

        (a.k.a. don't feed the trolls)

        In egregious cases like this one, you're welcome to email us a heads-up at [email protected].

  • Calliope1 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • asdf6969 12 hours ago
    What a horrible time to work in an industry with mostly foreign coworkers.
  • su8898 12 hours ago
    A few months ago, I stopped reading random news and decided to stick only to Hacker News. But now, even Hacker News is filled with random content. I guess there's no escaping the news these days.
    • kirubakaran 1 hour ago
      You could use this filter to remove politics from HN: https://histre.com/hn/?tags=+all-politics

      ( d: I made it; ref: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35904988 )

    • huevosabio 12 hours ago
      I logged odd Twitter and can only access it through an eink device. I am much saner now.

      I really enjoy reading the community here chime in on current events, but I also lament that I can't shield my online consumption from the news.

      • bdangubic 12 hours ago
        HN is the easiest place to skip the content you are not interest in
        • huevosabio 8 hours ago
          Of course, but the problem is not that I am not interested, it's the contrary I am instinctively attracted to it!

          If it was lack of interest I wouldn't need to place so much friction between me and Twitter.

    • bravetraveler 7 hours ago
      It'll show up on your doorstep before too long, keep it up.
    • Apocryphon 11 hours ago
      Talking about armed brinksmanship between two nuclear powers is sooooo random, maybe a more specialized community like they have on Reddit is more your speed?
      • su8898 11 hours ago
        Thanks for the judgment, but I think you might have missed the point I was making.
        • ThrowawayTestr 11 hours ago
          What point are you trying to make? HN has always had threads about major events and two nuclear powers fighting is a major event.
        • Apocryphon 5 hours ago
          If you can’t take the news, get out of the aggregator.
    • xkcd1963 9 hours ago
      hackernews is very biased
  • neom 13 hours ago
    I've been thinking recently about how business has been a pretty decent wrapper around wars and killings, arenas, lands, whatever, just: competing for human death. However, I've also been thinking that in late stage capitalism, genuine entrepreneurship is probably increasingly difficult to get into, leading to less genuine opportunity, leading to less business, leading to idle hands, leading to the devils workshop.
    • ivape 13 hours ago
      You know, I sit on a few Christian discords and all they do on it is fight between each other (denomination vs denomination). They sit around and combatively go after each other and there is also interfaith beef that happens constantly on those Discords (Muslims vs Christians is a big one). It's almost like ... yeah, I have to agree with you. It's almost like if the human doesn't have a true and good outlet for energy, then bad energy comes spilling out. I don't know what these cats in Kashmir sit around and do all day, but if it's anything like the venues I'm describing, then yes, they are sitting around riling themselves up against the "other".

      This was one of the videos of the terror attack that sparked this:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-TyztPaQfA

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwKKcwk8Cc8

      26 dead, and about 17 injured in the terror attack. There were 5 jets shot down in the retaliation. I don't know how reciprocal the retaliation was. This is tricky.

      • anukin 10 hours ago
        5 jets shot down is fake news. There is no evidence of that. It’s a claim by Pakistani govt to appease the domestic population.
        • oefrha 8 hours ago
          I’m sure this Reuters report with photos of wreckage is fake news: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/three-fighter-jet...
          • sbmthakur 7 hours ago
            Those are fuel tanks, not jets. And their source is "four local government sources". In a conflict fueled with massive disinformation I would rely on something more concrete.
            • oefrha 7 hours ago
              It’s your country, I’m just a neutral on the outside. If you want to take the stance of “fake news”, “no evidence of that” unless India publicly admits it, by all means. I don’t count on that happening though because there’s obviously “appease the domestic population” going on.
      • neom 13 hours ago
        I lived in Manhattan for 20 years and during the Obama years I was traveling across the country a lot, was very obvious to me Trump was coming but people thought I was nuts. I'd head back to the city and sip a cosmo thinking "people really love to hate 'other'".
        • slt2021 12 hours ago
          I tend to take Marxist view: elites always exploit the common man, and when the common man becomes unhappy, it is the best strategy to channel hate towards the Other so that regular folk dont start asking inconvenient questions.

          Like every time there is small blip in economy in the Us, it is always illegals and immigrants in general and poor people are blamed. Always.

          Never have I ever seen a PE billionaire getting blamed for acquiring companies by borrowing at 0% rates and firing people to and outsource jobs

          People in Bay Area feel it is okay to pay 50% in marginal taxes on payroll, while billionaire class either doesnt pay at all, or pays 10% capital gain at best

          • 0dayz 10 hours ago
            That is not true, plenty blame the rich, just look at the murder of the United CEO.

            Generally though blaming the elite has become selective and polarizing, only blame the opposite side for being rich not yours (Hasan piker on the left or Elon musk on the right).

          • jajko 3 hours ago
            You overestimate rich folk's ability to woo masses while staying completely hidden, with some ultra nefarious agendas. There are some ways to achieve some stuff but there are many conflicting interests even up there.

            The simple, but way more sad fact of life is - people, when we create large enough population, are pretty stupid. We are well capable to fuck ourselves up without anybody behind the wheel driving it. And its not just 'them', its all of us.

            Humans are not that great, individuals can achieve greatness in some narrow meaning (and since its pretty rare its so celebrated, confirming what I write), sure but overall we are pretty dumb highly emotional beasts, trivial to manipulate like a baby doll. 99% of that is via emotions, the aspect of our existence we have almost no control of.

      • arjun1296 3 hours ago
        [dead]
    • xkcd1963 9 hours ago
      Truth be told, we have all tools to feed all humans and have a moderate life quality, but some people want to have more than others, just for the sake of it.
      • wtcactus 8 hours ago
        Yes, the ones that finance, develop and operate those tools to feed all humans, should absolutely be entitled to have more than the ones that do nothing and benefit from them.

        Otherwise, soon, those tools will not exist anymore.

  • jmclnx 14 hours ago
    I have believed and still believe India and Pakistan will engage on the first nuclear war :(

    I hope it does not happen, but the way things are going in this world, I would not be surprised.

    In the past, the USSR and the US would try to broker peace between the two countries. I doubt anyone will try now.

    • Karrot_Kream 14 hours ago
      Hm? The US and Pakistan have seen a lot of tension since the fall of the USSR, and ever since they established a hotline between themselves, there's been much lower risk.

      Since the fall of the USSR there's been the Kargil War and the 26/11 Terrorist Incident, along with plenty of other tense moments.

      (Additionally, I feel frustrated that your comment about Indian and Pakistani geopolitics seems unaware of the last 30 years of geopolitical developments between the two countries, but not sure that leads to a productive conversation.)

    • alephnerd 14 hours ago
      India has a dedicated No First Use Policy, and the former head of India's nuclear command gave an in depth presentation about India, Pakistan, and China's nuclear doctrine at Livermore Labs a couple years ago - https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OZpIrZvP0Co

      Most of the conversation about a nuclear war is dated (30-35 years old) because it was based on the 1990 standoff, before which India and Pakistan did not have a hotline similar to that which the US and USSR developed.

      After the 1990 standoff, that was developed, and was clearly implemented during the Kargil War in 1999 (just because Clinton admin didn't want to call it a war because of NPT implications doesn't mean it wasn't a war).

      At this point, be more worried about Ukraine or South Korea - Russia's nuclear doctrine has become much more questionable after the 2022 invasion, and North Korea's nuclear doctrine remains hazy.

      I recommend reading "Dangerous Deterrent" by Paul Kapur (former head of strategy at the State Department under Bush, and now Trump's nominee for South Asia Strategy).

      • energy123 12 hours ago
        De jure doctrine is one thing. There's also accidents, which become more likely during war especially in semi failed states like Pakistan.
      • jjk166 13 hours ago
        Policies can be changed, or ignored. The question is would Pakistan trust its neighbor, with whom it has decades of animosity and in this scenario is currently at war, to stick to such a policy?

        While I personally doubt this particular instance will escalate to nuclear war, or even a major conventional war for that matter, the situation is clearly very dangerous. Doctrine is a terrible indicator of what a country will actually do.

        For Russia and North Korea, even though their doctrines may be hazy, their geopolitical positions indicate they are unlikely to start a nuclear engagement. Russia has a very large conventional military which, despite it's significantly worse than expected performance, is slowly but steadily making progress in a war that other great powers are not willing to directly join. Conversely, half the world's nukes are pointed squarely at Russia. Their strategy pretty much the entire time under Putin has been slowly normalizing their military actions, use of nuclear weapons in even the most minimal capacity would be very likely to provoke exactly the military response they don't want and would gain them nothing. Their nukes exist specifically to deter that response.

        North Korea is even more clearly disadvantaged by a potential nuclear exchange. Sure they have enough nukes to cause serious damage to South Korea, but they already had the conventional forces to do that long before they got nukes. They could strike America, and do quite a bit of damage, but they have no hope of doing enough damage to prevent a retaliatory strike that would kill the regime. They are caught between two major nuclear powers, the US and China, and their nukes are clearly to prevent one from attempting a regime change without relying too heavily on the other.

        Both of these states would probably have ceased to exist by now if they did not have nukes, and both will stop existing if they ever use nukes. They are more or less stable.

        India and Pakistan are a totally different story. Both need nukes to deter not only eachother but other neighbors, which produces a heavily destabilizing effect (eg if India builds more nukes to counter a buildup in China, Pakistan needs more nukes, which means India needs even more nukes, and so on). Further, neither nation is staring down the barrel of a true clusterfuck arsenal like those possessed by the US and Russia - while it would no doubt be catasrophic beyond anything the world has seen before, a nuclear exchange between the two nations is potentially survivable. Finally you have not just two governments but two populations with a deep seated enmity rooted in religious conflict, it is easily possible for the entire chain of command to be willing to go against their personal self interest with no one in a position to pump the brakes. It's a situation that could become very bad, very quickly, without anyone doing anything too absurd.

        • alephnerd 12 hours ago
          As I mentioned above, the framing you mentioned is 35 years out of date already. Even Pakistan has a fairly open nuclear doctrine which they have also presented on numerous occasions at Livermore Labs [0]

          [0] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9U7erxQUkY

    • smt88 12 hours ago
      This would be true mutually-assured destruction, so it still seems unlikely.

      Pakistan could kill hundreds of millions with a few launches and India could kill everyone in Pakistan.

  • KnuthIsGod 9 hours ago
    Another American proxy war in the offing ?

    The US have been arming and supplying Pakistan for decades.

    • tim333 8 hours ago
      I can't see it. I don't think the US wants to get involved.
  • kumarvvr 11 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • whatsupdog 43 minutes ago
    When George Bush attacked Iraq, 3 reasons were given: 1. Dictatorship - no democracy. 2. Terrorist training camps (including Al Qaeda). 3. Weapons of mass destruction.

    All 3 were true for Pakistan at that time. Parvez Musharraf was a dictator. Whole world knew about the terrorist training camps in Pakistan, and Osama was finally found there. And they had demonstrated their weapons of mass destruction.

    So why Iraq and not Pakistan? USA instead started giving Pakistan 5 billion a year and 75 F16s. Shame on USA.