01 March 2026
Austin, Texas, USA

UN Experts Warn India?s Cross-Border Strikes May Violate International Law; Call for Explanations and Peaceful Resolution

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UN human rights experts have stated that India?s reported cross-border military strikes into Pakistan following the April 22 Pahalgam attack may have breached international law.

In a 17-page communication dated October 16 and released December 15, five UN special rapporteurs and one independent expert said India provided no publicly verifiable evidence linking Pakistan to the attack and did not notify the UN Security Council under Article 51 of the UN Charter, raising concerns over unlawful use of force and violations of the right to life.

The experts warned that counter-terrorism actions must comply with international humanitarian and human rights law, including necessity, proportionality, and distinction.

They also expressed serious concern over India?s decision to hold the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in abeyance, noting that unilateral suspension of a binding international water treaty could endanger the human rights of millions in Pakistan who depend on the Indus River system for drinking water, agriculture, food security, and livelihoods.

The communication emphasized that access to safe drinking water is a fundamental human right and cautioned against ?weaponizing water,? highlighting potential humanitarian, economic, and environmental harm, as well as violations of obligations governing transboundary rivers.

The experts asked India to clarify the legal basis for its military actions, justify the IWT suspension, outline safeguards to prevent harm, pursue treaty dispute-resolution mechanisms, and explain steps toward peaceful settlement of the Kashmir dispute in line with international law and self-determination.

While not legally binding, the UN experts? findings are considered authoritative and may influence discussions at UN forums amid heightened India-Pakistan tensions.

Tom Cooper is a Vienna-based independent military analyst, historian, and author specializing in post-Cold War air warfare, Middle Eastern conflicts, and the armed forces of Central and Eastern Europe. With over 25 years of field research and analysis, he is a frequent contributor to specialized publications like Jane's Intelligence Review, Combat Aircraft Magazine, and the Central European Journal of Strategic Studies. A former Austrian Army reservist (military intelligence), Cooper combines boots-on-the-ground technical intelligence (TECHINT) collection—photographing and analyzing equipment—with open-source intelligence (OSINT) and deep archival research. He is renowned for his meticulous "order of battle" analyses, tracking the deployment and attrition of military units in conflicts from the Balkans to Syria and Ukraine.


Vienna, Austria

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