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Christopher Clary: Reflections on the May 2025 India-Pakistan Crisis

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0:00

Welcome back to Strategic Dialogues, a

0:02

series from the Simpson C Center's

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Strategic Learning Initiative. I'm your

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host, Elizabeth Thralk, director of

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South Asia Work at STEMson. On this

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show, we bring you regular candid

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conversations with experts on the most

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pressing security issues in Southern

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Asia. This is a special episode of

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Strategic Dialogues as we approach the

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one-year anniversary of the May 2025

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IndiaPakistan crisis. I can think of no

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better guest than our non-resident

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fellow, Dr. Christopher Clary who will

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help us revisit the May crisis and

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reflect on lessons that both sides are

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and are not learning. His working paper

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four days in May, the India Pakistan

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crisis of 2025 is the most read article

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in Stimson's history uh and provides an

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invaluable first take of history on the

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crisis. Um so Chris, thank you so much

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for joining us. It's really a pleasure

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to have you and I'm looking forward to

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the conversation.

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>> Thank you, Elizabeth.

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>> Great. For those who don't know Chris,

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uh, he is a non-resident fellow with

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Simpson South Asia program and an

1:00

associate professor of political science

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at the University of Albany, State

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University of New York. His research

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focuses on the causes and consequences

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of nuclear proliferation, US defense

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policy, and the politics of South Asia.

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His most recent book, which is a great

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read, is the difficult politics of

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peace, rivalry in modern South Asia, and

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was published in 2022.

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So on today's episode, we'll divide our

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conversation into roughly three parts.

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The first will revisit the May crisis

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and learnings over the past year. The

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second will cover how the ongoing Iran

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conflict may shape crisis dynamics in

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South Asia and the third will look

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towards the future of India Pakistan

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relations and broader regional

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stability. Um so with that let us dive

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right in. Um, now Chris, just to get us

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started, um, for those who haven't read

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Chris's paper, Four Days in May, um, it

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really was a remarkable, uh, early draft

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of history of what we knew and what we

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didn't know of the crisis that came out

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less than a month, uh, after the crisis

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played out in May. Um but now that we

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have a little bit more benefit of time

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and the dust has settled to an extent um

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I'd be curious for your reflections on

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that paper uh close to a year on now. So

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how did you do overall um in assessing

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where things stood uh over the course of

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the crisis and after it? You know what

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do you think you got right and um how

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much more do we know now that we didn't

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know at the end of May when uh we

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published it? Yeah, I go back uh to that

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working paper quite a bit. Uh I've I've

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tried to follow the developments that

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have occurred in the intervening we're

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almost up to an intervening year.

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Certainly at intervening 11 months since

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it came out. Um and I would say it is a

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little surprising how much the first

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draft of history has uh corresponded to

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maybe the second draft. Now that doesn't

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mean it's going to correspond to the

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final draft. There's still a lot that we

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don't know. But the things that we don't

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know today at the end of April when

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we're speaking in 2026 are pretty

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similar to the things we didn't know at

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the end of May in 2025. So in the

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immediate aftermath of the conflict, um

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we have a lot more details about things.

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We can see uh new images on commercial

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satellite imagery that weren't im

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immediately available. But the basic

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contours that this was uh a brief but

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very violent event that used new weapon

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systems that had not previously um been

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seen in the subcontinent and uh new

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weapon systems that had only been seen

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in a few you know conflicts globally. Uh

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that element that that brief conflict

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was also very violent um and had tested

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escalation in novel ways. that basic

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outline is is still there. Um, and what

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has perhaps changed is the politics of

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of remembering the conflict, the

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politics of the aftermath. And so those

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have evolved considerably um in part

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because of surprises uh relating to um

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how the US president would want to

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record his role in the conflict and how

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the regional you know the participants

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India and Pakistan would want to think

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about um their performance as well and

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that has that has continually played out

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but the the nooks and crannies of what

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took place there we've learned less in

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the last 11 months than you might

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expect.

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Um, I want to go back into this moment

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of crisis and as we're remembering how

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it took place from, you know, those four

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days of, as you say, uh, really

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unprecedented levels of

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violent kinetic action between the two

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sides. you know what is your assessment

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of how well both India and Pakistan read

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the signals that were being sent by the

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adversaries military operations after

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the onset of conflict and I asked that

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particularly in the context of um the

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work that we've done through the

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strategic learning initiative on the

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challenges the misperceptions that can

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creep in the difficulty of sending

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signals uh particularly in this sort of

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crisis environment so what is your sense

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of of how well the two sides ites were

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able to read one another.

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>> You know, it's interesting that both

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India and Pakistan used weapon systems

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that they had acquired for exactly these

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sorts of contingencies, but they did use

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them in ways that I think uh surprised

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the adversary if not the the manner of

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deployment um than the time of

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deployment in the crisis. You know,

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going back to when I started my career

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as a as a baby research assistant at the

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Stimson Center, I have been talking to

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Indians and Pakistanis about

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hypothetical crises in South Asia. And

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in those earliest conversations, the

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modalities were often thinking about

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ground combat or or manned aircraft um

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going on bombing raids in the other

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side. And uh there was always a sense

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that ground combat [snorts] created

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a set of forces that were very hard to

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control and that air power would be

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attractive to Indian decision makers

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looking to punish Pakistan as a way to

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more precisely calibrate the escalatory

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spiral they were about to enter into.

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And equally there was always a sense

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that Pakistan would want to deny India

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victory on the cheap and those forces

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did play out. The big development of the

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conflict was that it sort of enshrined

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air power as what the Indian air chief

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now refers to as the sword arm of the

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Indian state. Um but that

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doing so meant that large chunks of both

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countries were now exposed to violence

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from the other side. the air power um by

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more precisely limiting down to the aim

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points of what is hit uh versus ground

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power which has this tendency to

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horizontally expand

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um in in weird ways. It it meant that

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you know kind of 200 kilometers give or

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take from the international board and

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the LOC were fair game for violence and

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that played out more on the Pakistani

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side than the Indian side because

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Pakistan had more difficulty using its

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air power to reach deep into India than

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vice versa. Um but that dynamic is is

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maybe one of the most important

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breakthroughs of the conflict and

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there's a lot of reporting that as India

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thinks about how to rearrange its

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military it is leaning toward giving the

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Indian air force a greater role in in in

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confronting Pakistan contingencies.

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>> Yeah. Um, one of the other elements here

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of course that we were keeping a close

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eye on is the role or lack thereof of

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nuclear signaling. Um, and initially

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after the crisis you wrote that quote

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overt nuclear signaling was lower than

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in many prior India Pakistan crisis

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close quote. Um, how does that

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assessment uh shake out a year after?

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You know, how much do you think the

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