Srinagar, June 16 -- Signed in 1960 with the mediation of the World Bank, the Indus Waters Treaty has long served as a rare example of cooperation between India and Pakistan. The treaty allocates control over the six rivers of the Indus basin: India receives rights over the eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej), while Pakistan retains control over the western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab). Despite multiple wars and decades of enmity, the treaty endured until 2025, when India announced suspension in response to pahalgam terror attack.This suspension came in the immediate aftermath of the deadliest attack on tourists in India's recent history-when 25 tourists and one local pony walla were killed in Baisaran, Pahalgam. In a horrifying turn of...