What India Should Do ? Hang Them to Dry!
- By Lt Col Noel Ellis
- May 3
- 3 min read
Since Pahalgam, a lot of water has flown in the Indus and the other five rivers. War has been declared in the news rooms. Veterans took on the cudgels to disseminate Pakistan in a snap of a finger. Anchors became Army Commanders; news reporters were boots on ground. Who won? Obviously, India.

In this sweltering heat, Pakistan mobilised lock stock and barrel to the borders for obvious reasons. They anticipate a kinetic retaliation by India.
Surprisingly, the Baluchi people, people of KPK, Sindh and rebel militant groups are silent. They should have played merry hell with these exposed troops. Nevertheless!
What got me thinking were two issues. The suspension of the Indus water treaty by India and reciprocally, the suspension of the Simla agreement by Pakistan. Interestingly, they have severe repercussions, more on Pakistan than India. I will not go into the contents of these treaties as we all are already aware.
India has got the ability to turn the tap off or on, depending on our convenience and planning to drown or parch the Paki side. In the dry season, create a severe drought and in the rainy season flood them further. The agrarian society would cry hoarse. Crops & fishing would be affected drastically. The existing food crisis would spiral.

Then comes the chaos in their electricity production. All the dams producing electricity can be choked. That is why most of the Paki power stations run on fossil fuels. Probably they anticipated that. How much electricity are they producing from nuclear facilities is miniscule? These guys in the guise of producing nuclear power there make bombs instead, which they keep threatening India with.
Pakistan has a very elaborate canal system. Both for irrigation and defence purposes. Besides, they have their rivers and canals interlinked to divert water, especially during floods. Their Ditch Cum Bund which they have dug purely for defence purposes is also fed by this water. At places they have a double DCB. Naturally, they fear an invasion by the Mechanised forces of India.
What if the rivers are dried up? Firstly, their river beds which are as it is dry would further dry out. This would facilitate the armoured columns to go uninterrupted, without using much bridging equipment and water crossing expedients deep inside Pakistan.
Once the canals get dried up. The mines and obstacles laid within those canals and DCBs would get exposed. Sarkanda which grows freely would dry out, exposing what dangers lie in those water bodies. If one can see it, one can remove it. The gradient on the other side would be an issue but our Mech Forces are capable of climbing and negotiating those slopes.

Nuclear facilities need a lot of water for cooling. The Karachi facility which is way downstream uses sea water, but what about the rest? If there is no water, there would be no cooling thus jeopardising those facilities. Would Pakistan be able to sustain the production of fissile material for war purposes? Your guess is as good as mine.
If you search the net, various capacities of the dams, barrages, canals, and rivers are given in black and white. The implications of drying out a river are clearly mentioned. How would Pakistan sustain then? Even thermal power production needs a lot of water for steam. There could be a total black out in Pakistan with one turn of the tap.
Turning off water will be called an “act of war” said the Paki Defence Minister vehemently. We shall bomb the Indian Dams to get our dues of water, he said. I think we should wait for that to happen. Paki Ministers can keep having bottled water. We will leave “chullu bhar pani” for their fauj “doob marne ke liye”. Their awam won’t have water to wash their backsides.
Water is an essential commodity for desert operations. With dried up canals and rivers, Mech forces would have to cater for it. Engineers, please cater for it.

The government has given a free hand to the three service chiefs I heard. So, a request to the news channels, please calm down. Veterans, hold your guns and dear civilians have patience. We need to wait for the appropriate time. Operation Vijay when Kargil happened and Operation Parakram when attack on parliament happened has taught us many lessons to get into war mode.
If one has decided to go to war with all the wherewithal, then planning, preparation, time and place of attack and the logistics has to be meticulously worked out. When we commit ourselves, it has to be for a win. Let us wrench them first and then hang them on a line to dry.
This is a way to sort out this rouge state. Do you agree? I wonder !!!
Very good analyses of holding IWT in abeyance, the best I read and came across. But don't agree that the Baloch and other groups have kept silent. The Balochs have sorted them out nice and proper atleast three major attacks including one of today, that killed their men in Uniform. The others may be waiting for a right opportunity, to make a impact. Their presence is a threat in itself. The details of dissension within society and Army is difficult to gauge.