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FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Mist over mountains: Forecasting future of Kashmir conflict

Thoughts

Fazlul Halim Rana
29 April, 2025, 05:45 pm
Last modified: 29 April, 2025, 05:50 pm

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Mist over mountains: Forecasting future of Kashmir conflict

Fazlul Halim Rana
29 April, 2025, 05:45 pm
Last modified: 29 April, 2025, 05:50 pm
Security personnel inspect the site in the aftermath of the attack in Pahalgam on 23 April 2025. Photo: AFP via Bloomberg
Security personnel inspect the site in the aftermath of the attack in Pahalgam on 23 April 2025. Photo: AFP via Bloomberg

In the ancient valleys of Kashmir, where snow-fed rivers weave through timeless mountains, a new darkness has descended. The April 2025 attack on tourists in Gulmarg has triggered a chain reaction of military escalation, political hostility, and global polarization that threatens to shatter an already fragile peace.

Yet beyond the immediate tension, the more urgent question looms: What comes next?

Will Kashmir fall into another war? Will the crisis crystallize into a permanent frozen conflict? Or could this tragedy, paradoxically, lead to unexpected openings for peace?

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In an age where prophecy seems reckless and uncertainty reigns, serious reflection on the future of Kashmir has never been more vital.

Current landscape: A powder keg on the brink

Following the April 14th attack, India and Pakistan embarked on a sharp escalation along the Line of Control. Verified reports from the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP) indicate a 52% rise in cross-border firing incidents within three weeks.

India's leadership has adopted a stance of muscular retaliation. Prime Minister Narendra Modi proclaimed, "Kashmir's blood will not be bargained; it will be defended at all costs." In Pakistan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif countered, warning, "Any incursion will be met with a response the aggressor cannot imagine."

Global alliances have also shifted. The United States, France, and Australia have largely backed India's right to retaliate. Meanwhile, China, Turkey, and Iran have voiced sharp criticism of Indian actions, calling for international mediation. Russia, walking a delicate line, urges restraint but quietly accelerates arms sales to both sides.

Three prophetic paths: Hypotheses for Kashmir's near future

Given this perilous backdrop, several trajectories can be forecast. None are certain, but each reflects the underlying forces now at work.

The descent into limited war

History casts a long shadow over Kashmir. The Kargil conflict of 1999 remains a grim template: localized military clashes escalating into broader regional warfare. Analysts from the Carnegie Endowment predict that even a small border skirmish could escalate rapidly due to domestic political pressures in both India and Pakistan.

Already, satellite imagery confirms movement of Indian BrahMos missile batteries and Pakistani Nasr tactical nuclear systems closer to forward bases, a signal that neither side will tolerate deeper incursions without severe escalation.

Should another deadly incident occur, a border ambush, an airspace violation — the likelihood of a limited war lasting days or weeks becomes alarmingly real.

"In South Asia, limited war is a mirage. Fire once lit in these mountains is hard to control," warns historian Sushant Sareen.

The frozen conflict: A bleeding stalemate

A more likely hypothesis is the grim entrenchment of the status quo into an even colder, more volatile stalemate.

Both India and Pakistan may calculate that the costs of full-scale war are intolerable, especially under nuclear deterrence doctrines. Instead, they will intensify non-kinetic measures: cyberattacks, propaganda campaigns, proxy funding, and diplomatic offensives.

Kashmir's people, caught in the vise, would suffer the most. Curfews, economic collapse, and human rights violations would likely deepen. According to Amnesty International's 2024 report, Kashmir already ranks among the top five most militarized zones on Earth — a grim reality likely to worsen.

"The absence of bullets is not the presence of peace," notes Dr. Shujaat Bukhari of the Kashmir Peace Institute.

In this future, Kashmir becomes the new Berlin — a beautiful city turned into a frozen symbol of political failure.

The unlikely turn: Diplomacy rekindled

Despite the overwhelming clouds of war, history sometimes surprises. After the 2001 Indian Parliament attack — a moment equally explosive — back-channel diplomacy led to the Vajpayee-Musharraf peace process.

Similarly, under quiet mediation from Gulf countries like Qatar and the UAE, secret dialogues could restart. Confidence-building measures — such as joint anti-terrorism frameworks, trade agreements, and people-to-people exchanges — could thaw the present hostility.

However, for this hypothesis to materialize, bold leadership would be required: leaders willing to endure domestic backlash in the name of a broader vision.

"The road to peace runs through a minefield — but it is the only road worth walking," says former Indian diplomat Shivshankar Menon.

Global superpower alignments: A new cold war over kashmir?

Beyond South Asia, the Kashmir flashpoint is rapidly becoming a litmus test for a wider global realignment.

If India tilts further toward the West, and Pakistan deepens its strategic embrace with China and Iran, Kashmir could become the symbolic frontline of a new era of polarized blocs — much like Berlin during the Cold War.

The World Bank's recent "Fragility Monitor" report warns that regional conflicts like Kashmir could "trigger systemic shocks far beyond their immediate borders" in an interconnected global economy.

Already, oil prices have spiked 7% on fears of South Asian instability, and international investors are fleeing emerging markets in the region.

Civilian Tragedy: The invisible prophecy

Lost in the headlines of tanks and treaties is the silent prophecy being written on the faces of Kashmir's people.

UNICEF's April 2025 report warns that nearly 400,000 children in Kashmir are at risk of psychological trauma, displacement, or educational disruption if the current situation persists or worsens.

Local journalist Masrat Zahra captures it poignantly:

"In Kashmir, the future is a house where every window is broken, and every mirror cracked."

If policymakers ignore the human dimension, the seeds of future radicalization, alienation, and unrest will only deepen, ensuring that even if this war is averted, the next one becomes inevitable.

Between mist and memory

As spring hesitates over the mountains of Kashmir, the air is thick with the weight of unspoken futures. War, frozen hostility, fragile peace — each possibility dances like mist above the valley, uncertain, shifting, elusive.

Leaders on both sides, and across the world, must decide which vision they will pursue. Will they be prisoners of history, condemned to repeat the tragedies of the past? Or can they summon the imagination, the humility, and the courage to forge a different destiny?

In Kashmir, prophecy is not written in the stars. It is carved by the choices of men and nations.
And the snow, so pure and ancient, waits silently to bear witness — whether to hope or to heartbreak. 


The author is a faculty member in the Department of International Relations at Jahangirnagar University. He can be reached at fazlul@juniv.edu  

Kashmir

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