The deadly militant attack in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 26 civilians, has plunged India and Pakistan into another tense standoff—rekindling a familiar cycle of violence, diplomatic fallout, and military posturing.
For India’s security forces and diplomats, this is well-worn terrain. Similar incidents in the past have triggered swift and forceful responses. In 2016, after 19 Indian soldiers were killed in Uri, India launched cross-border “surgical strikes” against militant bases across the Line of Control. In 2019, the Pulwama bombing that claimed the lives of 40 Indian paramilitary personnel prompted airstrikes deep into Balakot, Pakistan—an unprecedented move since the 1971 war—and set off retaliatory actions, including an aerial dogfight.
Even earlier, the 2008 Mumbai attacks—a coordinated, 60-hour assault that killed 166 people—shocked the world and tested India’s diplomatic and military resolve.
Each time, India has pointed to Pakistan-based militant groups as the culprits, accusing Islamabad of offering them tacit support—a claim Pakistan has repeatedly denied. What’s changed since 2016 is the level of India’s response. Cross-border strikes, once extraordinary, are now almost routine, shifting the threshold for escalation and increasing the volatility in South Asia’s most dangerous rivalry.
Former Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan Ajay Bisaria, who witnessed the Pulwama aftermath firsthand, sees echoes of the past in the current crisis. “There are striking parallels between Pulwama and Pahalgam,” he said. But this latest attack, targeting civilians rather than soldiers, evokes an even darker memory—Mumbai 2008. “This attack carries elements of Pulwama, but much more of Mumbai,” he noted.
In the days following the Pahalgam attack, India acted swiftly: suspending key bilateral treaties, closing the main border crossing, expelling diplomats, halting most visas for Pakistanis, and banning Pakistani aircraft from its airspace. Pakistan responded in kind, suspending its own treaties and escalating retaliatory rhetoric.
These moves underscore how quickly both nations can veer toward confrontation. But history shows that despite fiery exchanges and military action, both sides have also shown an ability—however fragile—to pull back from the edge. Diplomatic backchannels, third-party mediation, and economic realities have often worked to de-escalate tensions, even if temporarily.With nuclear arms in play and civilian lives increasingly at risk, the stakes have never been higher. As the two nations once again edge toward conflict, the key question remains: will cooler heads prevail, or has the point of no return already been crossed?