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    Home » Modi’s escalation game
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    Modi’s escalation game

    adminBy adminNovember 20, 2025Updated:November 28, 2025No Comments1 Views
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    US President Donald Trump’s extraordinary claim that India was once again on the verge of launching a war on Pakistan has reopened a long-standing wound in South Asian politics — one that is kept alive as much by political theatre as by genuine military peril. Trump, speaking casually alongside Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the White House, seemed almost eager to present himself as a man who had single-handedly prevented global catastrophe. Yet behind his boast that he “stopped eight major wars”, and behind his assertion that he halted not only the last Pakistan-India confrontation but “the war that was about to begin again”, lies a story that deserves more than headline-grabbing bravado.

    It is a story about how easily political posturing in New Delhi and Islamabad can turn into real risk, and how the world is often left guessing whether the next crisis will be bluster or disaster. The US president’s version of events has unsettled India more than Pakistan. In India, where politics has long been saturated with militarized nationalism, Trump’s remarks have forced analysts to confront uncomfortable questions. If New Delhi truly stood on the brink of another conflict, as Trump suggests, what purpose did such brinkmanship serve? Was the threat of military escalation a product of strategic calculation or simply an extension of the Modi government’s habit of drawing domestic applause through combative rhetoric?

    Moreover, if India was genuinely preparing for another confrontation, what does that say about its readiness, its capacity and its willingness to sustain a conflict that could spiral far beyond its control? For a decade, India’s political climate has been shaped by the idea that muscular nationalism is synonymous with strength. Television studios, party loyalists and government-friendly commentators have all fed a narrative that India, under Narendra Modi, is prepared to settle scores by force if necessary. Yet Trump’s intervention exposes a different reality — one in which the performance of power does not always translate into strategic advantage. Beneath the government’s swagger lie persistent doubts about India’s military preparedness, its ability to manage escalation dynamics and its understanding of Pakistan’s own strategic calculations.

    As Indian commentators now privately concede, the country may be far more vulnerable than its ruling party cares to admit, particularly when political incentives push leaders to create the perception of imminent conflict. In Pakistan, the reaction to Trump’s claim is more complex. Officials, current and former, insist that Pakistan was neither intimidated nor caught off guard by the possibility of renewed hostilities. They argue that the state, having navigated previous escalations with India, was fully prepared this time as well. Pakistan’s military officials often frame wartime morale through a blend of history, faith and institutional discipline — drawing on examples such as the Battle of Badr, where a small force triumphed against overwhelming odds.

    These references, while symbolic, reveal something fundamental about Pakistan’s strategic mindset: that deterrence is not only a matter of weapons and troop numbers but of psychological conviction and a belief that the state’s survival is intertwined with its military resilience. For those close to the security establishment, this conviction is what guarantees that India would face consequences far beyond diplomatic embarrassment if it ever attempted a decisive strike. Still, Trump’s remarks carry an air of rebuke directed at Narendra Modi personally. In portraying the Indian prime minister as a leader susceptible to impulsive decisions — even suggesting he was operating under the influence of “cheap intoxication” — Trump has touched a nerve in India’s political class.

    The comparison of Modi’s late-tenure governing style to Mikhail Gorbachev’s chaotic final years is not merely dramatic; it speaks to growing unease inside India about the country’s internal cohesion. A decade of polarizing policies, centralized power and identity-based mobilization has left India more fragmented than at any point since the early 1990s. Regional unrest, social division and economic stratification have eroded the stability that once allowed India to present itself as an emerging, unified power. This fragility becomes even more apparent when viewed through the lens of foreign policy. India’s neighborhood strategy, which has oscillated between outreach and quiet coercion, has not delivered the influence New Delhi once imagined for itself. Relations with Pakistan remain brittle.

    Ties with smaller neighbors such as Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Maldives have grown unpredictable, often strained by anxieties over Indian dominance. And recent allegations of covert interventions abroad — ranging from Canada to the UK — have cast a long shadow over India’s global standing. Trump’s account of having to step in to prevent India from taking reckless military action only reinforces a perception that New Delhi is flirting with a brand of assertiveness that its institutions may not be fully equipped to manage. If there is a lesson in Trump’s claims, it is not about his diplomacy but about the dangers of confusing political spectacle with strategic strength. South Asia has experienced enough crises to know that wars in the region rarely begin with formal declarations.

    They begin with missteps, with misread intentions, with leaders who overestimate their room for maneuver. They begin when political advantage overshadows the painstaking work of dialogue. Trump’s boastful tone may obscure the seriousness of the episode, but the underlying message is clear: geopolitical bravado in a nuclear-armed environment is not simply irresponsible; it is potentially catastrophic. India, for its part, must decide what kind of regional power it wants to be in the years ahead. If it continues down the path of using military posturing as a domestic political instrument, it risks locking itself into confrontations from which it cannot easily retreat. Pakistan, too, faces its own challenges — political instability, economic volatility and the ever-present threat of terrorism — yet its foreign policy in moments of crisis has often shown a greater awareness of escalation limits.

    Both states would do well to remember that the subcontinent cannot afford another conflict shaped by misjudgment and inflated rhetoric. Trump’s comments may well be exaggerated; they may even serve his own political vanity. But the debate they have triggered in India and Pakistan is both overdue and necessary. For India, the episode is a reminder that strength measured in slogans can crumble when tested in the real world. For Pakistan, it reinforces the belief that deterrence must be matched with political clarity. And for the region as a whole, it is a warning that the fingerprints of global leaders — however casually they speak — can still press dangerously close to the triggers of war.

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