By Our Correspondent
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — India and Pakistan have fought three wars and countless skirmishes since winning independence in 1947, yet every flare-up follows a familiar script that stops just short of catastrophe. Five factors explain the pattern.

Each country is believed to hold 170–180 nuclear warheads of varying ranges. The certainty that a major strike could trigger “mutual assured destruction” forces leaders in New Delhi and Islamabad to weigh every step. Because neither side can be sure the other lacks a second-strike capability, caution prevails.
Two of the three wars have revolved around Muslim-majority Kashmir, split by the heavily fortified Line of Control. Militant attacks or artillery duels along this frontier ignite retaliation, but actions stay limited to avoid a broader fight.
India spends about seven times more on defence and fields more than twice as many active troops. Pakistan compensates with compact geography—its long, narrow shape allows quick troop movements—and a military that dominates security policy. The imbalance pushes Islamabad to brandish its nuclear deterrent early, while Delhi tempers its replies to keep below that threshold.
Operations are staged late at night or in sparsely populated areas—air raids on alleged militant camps, artillery exchanges in remote mountains, or the suspected Indian drones that crashed in Lahore and Rawalpindi this week. Both capitals signal resolve without causing mass civilian casualties, then leave diplomatic space to cool tensions. Details often emerge hours or days later, letting leaders shape the story for domestic audiences.
Outside Kashmir, the rivals have no desire to seize territory or resources from one another. Stark ideological differences exist, but neither state seeks to govern the other. That absence of territorial ambition, combined with pressing development needs at home, blunts appetite for a prolonged campaign.
Taken together, these dynamics create a dangerous yet oddly predictable cycle: provocation, limited retaliation, and global anxiety, then quiet bargaining that restores an uneasy calm just as the world begins to fear the worst. Until the nuclear shadow lifts, the same script is likely to shape South Asia’s next crisis.
