⏱ 5 minute read
The U.S. may be key. The world’s first drone war between nuclear-armed neighbors has erupted in South Asia as the India-Pakistan conflict grows into the most expansive in decades. Both countries have launched attacks at each other’s territories well beyond their disputed Kashmir border.
Could this conflict go nuclear? The risks are high as the two countries have similar nuclear weapons capabilities.
India currently reportedly possesses just two more nuclear warheads than Pakistan. This difference was established in 2024 when India added eight more warheads to its arsenal, slightly surpassing Pakistan’s count.
So where are we now in this conflict? Two weeks after a deadly terror attack against tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, India has launched a series of strikes on locations within Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
The nine Pakistani sites were described as “terrorist infrastructure.”
India claimed to have neutralized several Pakistani air defense radars and systems, including one in Lahore, which Islamabad denied.
Pakistan, which has denied any involvement in the attack, condemned the strikes as “unprovoked.” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif stated that the “heinous act of aggression will not go unpunished.”
Pakistan claimed it had shot down 25 Indian drones across various cities, including Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi. The drones – reportedly Israeli-made Harop drones – were reportedly intercepted using both technical and kinetic countermeasures.
On Thursday, India accused Pakistan of launching waves of drones and missiles at three military bases in Indian territory and Indian-administered Kashmir – which Islamabad denied.
BBC reported:
As Washington and other global powers urge restraint, the region is teetering on the edge of escalation, with drones – silent, remote and deniable – opening a new chapter in the India-Pakistan conflict.
“The Indo-Pak conflict is moving into a new drone era – one where ‘invisible eyes’ and unmanned precision may determine escalation or restraint. Thus, in South Asia’s contested skies, the side that masters drone warfare won’t just see the battlefield – they’ll shape it,” Jahara Matisek, a professor at the US Naval War College, told the BBC.
While India’s overall military capability significantly exceeds that of Pakistan, both nuclear-armed neighbors have steadily enhanced their military capabilities since their last major clash in 2019.
This is especially true of its drone forces. India’s drone fleet is largely built around Israeli-made reconnaissance UAVs like the IAI Searcher and Heron, along with Harpy and Harop loitering munitions – drones that double as missiles, capable of autonomous reconnaissance and precision strikes.
India is also developing swarm drone tactics – deploying large numbers of smaller UAVs to overwhelm and saturate air defenses, allowing higher-value assets to penetrate.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s drone fleet is “extensive and diverse,” consisting of both indigenous and imported systems, said Ejaz Haider, a Lahore-based defense analyst.
He noted that the inventory includes “over a thousand drones,” featuring models from China, Turkey and domestic manufacturers, including the Chinese CH-4, the Turkish Bayraktar Akinci, and Pakistan’s own Burraq and Shahpar drones.
It’s not only a drone war though. After the initial attack on Wednesday, Pakistan claimed it used Chinese-made fighters to shoot down five Indian Air Force jets – including three sophisticated French-made Rafales that New Delhi only acquired a few years ago.
Uncertainty continues to swirl around these claims, as India has remained silent, but both the US and France have assessed that Pakistan shot down at least one Rafale.
So where does this war go from here?
BBC added:
“The drone warfare we’re witnessing may not last long; it could be just the beginning of a larger conflict,” says Manoj Joshi, an Indian defense analyst. “This could either signal a de-escalation or an escalation – both possibilities are on the table. We’re at an inflection point; the direction we take from here is uncertain.”
“Drones lower the political and operational threshold for action, providing options to surveil and strike while trying to reduce escalation risks,” says Prof Matisek. “But they also create new escalation dynamics: every drone shot down, every radar blinded, becomes a potential flashpoint in this tense environment between two nuclear powers.”
So the risk of escalation continues.
NPR noted:
Praveen Donthi, a senior analyst for India with International Crisis Group, said the international community needed to take the conflict between India and Pakistan seriously.
“Both are nuclear powers. And all it takes is a miscalculation or a mistake,” Donthi said on NPR’s Morning Edition. “Both these powers are not completely in control of the escalation dynamics, which the world seems to believe. So there lies the risk.”
He said Washington had the best chance of ending the hostilities, because of the country’s historic ties with Pakistan, and its increasing closeness to India.
“Ultimately,” he said, “the U.S. is the superpower who can bring both the parties to the table.”
Direct US involvement though seems unlikely. On Wednesday, President Trump said he hoped the two countries will stop now after going “tit-for-tat.” The State Department urged both countries to work towards what Washington terms as a “responsible solution.”
Vice President JD Vance said on Thursday that India and Pakistan should de-escalate tensions, but he added that the US cannot control the nuclear-armed states and a war between them would be “none of our business.”
“We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can’t control these countries, though,” Vance said in an interview on Fox News.
“Our hope and our expectation is that this is not going to spiral into a broader regional war or, God forbid, a nuclear conflict,” Vance said.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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The U.S. may be key. The world’s first drone war between nuclear-armed neighbors has erupted in South Asia as the India-Pakistan conflict grows into the most expansive in decades. Both countries have launched attacks at each other’s territories well beyond their disputed Kashmir border.
Could this conflict go nuclear? The risks are high as the two countries have similar nuclear weapons capabilities.
India currently reportedly possesses just two more nuclear warheads than Pakistan. This difference was established in 2024 when India added eight more warheads to its arsenal, slightly surpassing Pakistan’s count.
So where are we now in this conflict? Two weeks after a deadly terror attack against tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, India has launched a series of strikes on locations within Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
The nine Pakistani sites were described as “terrorist infrastructure.”
India claimed to have neutralized several Pakistani air defense radars and systems, including one in Lahore, which Islamabad denied.
Pakistan, which has denied any involvement in the attack, condemned the strikes as “unprovoked.” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif stated that the “heinous act of aggression will not go unpunished.”
Pakistan claimed it had shot down 25 Indian drones across various cities, including Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi. The drones – reportedly Israeli-made Harop drones – were reportedly intercepted using both technical and kinetic countermeasures.
On Thursday, India accused Pakistan of launching waves of drones and missiles at three military bases in Indian territory and Indian-administered Kashmir – which Islamabad denied.
BBC reported:
While India’s overall military capability significantly exceeds that of Pakistan, both nuclear-armed neighbors have steadily enhanced their military capabilities since their last major clash in 2019.
This is especially true of its drone forces. India’s drone fleet is largely built around Israeli-made reconnaissance UAVs like the IAI Searcher and Heron, along with Harpy and Harop loitering munitions – drones that double as missiles, capable of autonomous reconnaissance and precision strikes.
India is also developing swarm drone tactics – deploying large numbers of smaller UAVs to overwhelm and saturate air defenses, allowing higher-value assets to penetrate.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s drone fleet is “extensive and diverse,” consisting of both indigenous and imported systems, said Ejaz Haider, a Lahore-based defense analyst.
He noted that the inventory includes “over a thousand drones,” featuring models from China, Turkey and domestic manufacturers, including the Chinese CH-4, the Turkish Bayraktar Akinci, and Pakistan’s own Burraq and Shahpar drones.
It’s not only a drone war though. After the initial attack on Wednesday, Pakistan claimed it used Chinese-made fighters to shoot down five Indian Air Force jets – including three sophisticated French-made Rafales that New Delhi only acquired a few years ago.
Uncertainty continues to swirl around these claims, as India has remained silent, but both the US and France have assessed that Pakistan shot down at least one Rafale.
So where does this war go from here?
BBC added:
So the risk of escalation continues.
NPR noted:
Direct US involvement though seems unlikely. On Wednesday, President Trump said he hoped the two countries will stop now after going “tit-for-tat.” The State Department urged both countries to work towards what Washington terms as a “responsible solution.”
Vice President JD Vance said on Thursday that India and Pakistan should de-escalate tensions, but he added that the US cannot control the nuclear-armed states and a war between them would be “none of our business.”
“We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can’t control these countries, though,” Vance said in an interview on Fox News.
“Our hope and our expectation is that this is not going to spiral into a broader regional war or, God forbid, a nuclear conflict,” Vance said.
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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Paul Crespo
Paul Crespo is the Managing Editor of American Liberty Defense News. As a Marine Corps officer, he led Marines, served aboard ships in the Pacific and jumped from helicopters and airplanes. He was also a military attaché with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) at U.S. embassies worldwide. He later ran for state and federal office, taught political science, wrote for the editorial board of a major newspaper and had his own radio show. A graduate of Georgetown, London and Cambridge universities, he brings decades of experience and insight to the issues that most threaten our American liberty – at home and from abroad. To read more go to: paulcrespo.com.
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