I fully agree... i don't know, why army is acting pussy in this regard.
Everyone might have listen to the interview of ex Indian army chief bikram singh.... he openly confess of Indian state policy of spreading terrorism in Pakistan.
Indian politicians openly say... they are waging water war on Pakistan, while in Pakistan people are busy watching cable tv.
My Freind Pak Army is very smart and our GHQ General is not like a ordinary politician . I'll give you very small hint and you get the idea what is going on in background. After seven decades of friendship, Pakistan and China are cementing their bilateral engagements by the initiation of the China-Pakistan-Economic-Corridor (CPEC). China remains the most valuable investor and facilitator in overcoming Pakistan’s existing acute shortage of energy. CPEC not only includes many coal based power plants (e.g., Sahiwal, Engro Thar, Port Qasim etc.) but it also some hydropower projects like the
Suki Kinari and Karot projects. These would be jeopardized if India were to interrupt water flows.
Last year,
China blocked a tributary of the Brahmaputra River in Tibet, which sent shockwaves to India. Pakistani media perceived the blockage as deliberate Chinese pressure to ease mushrooming Indian pressure on Pakistan. China, though, asserted that the move was necessary to construct the long-planned
Lalho hydroelectric project and that the construction would not interrupt water flow toward India. Still, many saw the move as a “soft” message that India should refrain from instigating water wrangles with Islamabad. This interpretation is largely buttressed by the timing: the initial work on the Lalho project started back in
2014, but the blockage came immediately after Modi’s water warnings to Pakistan. China’s
Zam Hydropower Station, which became operational in 2015 on the Brahmaputra River, also raised Indian eyebrows over the prospect of disrupting water supplies.
Starting from Tibet, the Brahmaputra River flows into Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, and later into Bangladesh. With control of the Tibetan headwaters, China could block the water flow at any time. Unlike Pakistan and India, there is no water treaty between China and India; however, both established an Expert Level Mechanism (ELM) in 2013 by which Beijing would provide India with data on water flows. Indian utilization of a water blockade against Pakistan could thus invite China to retaliate in kind, making things worse for the entire region.