Calling President Trump together from Kyiv.
— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) May 10, 2025
Our joint call: there must be a 30-day ceasefire starting Monday, unconditional, that paves the way for a solid and lasting peace in Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/MloOm6YYHj
- 1949 Ceasefire: Following the first India-Pakistan war, the UN-brokered ceasefire established the Line of Control (LoC), monitored by the UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP).
- 2003 Ceasefire: After years of cross-border violence, India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire along the LoC, which held relatively well until violations escalated in the 2010s.
- 2021 Ceasefire Reaffirmation: Both countries recommitted to the 2003 ceasefire, reducing border skirmishes significantly, though tensions persist.
- Context: The Russia-Ukraine conflict, ongoing since 2014 and escalating in 2022, has seen ceasefire proposals (e.g., Minsk agreements, 2025 U.S.-backed 30-day ceasefire proposal).
- Lesson: A ceasefire can halt active fighting, as proposed in 2025, but Russia’s demands (e.g., recognition of occupied territories, Ukrainian neutrality) and Ukraine’s conditions (e.g., full Russian withdrawal, security guarantees) mirror the irreconcilable territorial and ideological divides in India-Pakistan. A ceasefire without a framework to address these core issues risks becoming a “frozen conflict,” as seen in Donbas post-Minsk.
- Actionable Step: Both sides need a ceasefire with clear monitoring mechanisms (e.g., neutral international observers, unlike NATO peacekeepers Russia opposes) and parallel negotiations on contentious issues like territorial status and sanctions relief, learning from India-Pakistan’s failure to sustain dialogue post-ceasefire.
- Context: The Israel-Gaza conflict, marked by recurring violence (e.g., 2023–2024 war), saw a fragile ceasefire in January 2025.
- Lesson: Ceasefires in Gaza (e.g., post-2014, 2021) have paused hostilities but failed to address root causes like Israel’s occupation, Palestinian self-determination, and Hamas’s military capabilities. India-Pakistan’s experience shows that ceasefires without political progress (e.g., Kashmir resolution) lead to renewed violence when underlying grievances fester.
- Actionable Step: The 2025 ceasefire must be paired with immediate humanitarian aid and reconstruction, as India-Pakistan’s 2003 ceasefire enabled some cross-border cooperation. Long-term, negotiations must tackle structural issues (e.g., occupation, blockade) to avoid India-Pakistan’s cycle of temporary truces.
- Context: Mutual accusations of ceasefire violations (e.g., 2025 72-hour truce) reflect deep distrust.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s CBMs show that small, reciprocal steps (e.g., prisoner exchanges, humanitarian corridors) can build goodwill during a ceasefire. Ukraine’s proposal for a Black Sea maritime ceasefire and prisoner swaps is a start, but Russia’s insistence on sanctions relief complicates trust.
- Actionable Step: Both sides should prioritize verifiable CBMs, such as joint demining or energy infrastructure protection, monitored by neutral parties (e.g., UN or BRICS nations like India). India-Pakistan’s failure to sustain CBMs warns against neglecting domestic spoilers who may sabotage agreements.
- Context: The 2025 ceasefire includes hostage exchanges, but distrust between Israel and Hamas remains high.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s cross-LoC initiatives suggest that humanitarian CBMs (e.g., aid delivery, family reunifications) can humanize the conflict. However, hardline factions (e.g., Israeli settlers, Hamas militants) may derail progress, as seen in India-Pakistan’s stalled trade initiatives.
- Actionable Step: Expand CBMs like Gaza’s reconstruction under international oversight (e.g., Egypt, Qatar) and ensure both sides avoid provocative rhetoric, learning from India-Pakistan’s partial success in reducing LoC tensions through dialogue.
- Context: The U.S. has pushed ceasefire proposals (e.g., 2025 30-day plan), but Russia views it as biased toward Ukraine. India, China, and Brazil have been floated as mediators due to their neutrality.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s experience shows that mediators must be perceived as impartial. India’s role as a potential mediator, given its ties with both Russia and Ukraine, could mirror Norway’s neutral facilitation in other conflicts.
- Actionable Step: Engage neutral mediators (e.g., India, Turkey) to broker and monitor ceasefires, avoiding veto-wielding powers like the U.S. or China, whose involvement in India-Pakistan has been divisive.
- Context: Egypt and Qatar have mediated Gaza ceasefires, but their regional ties limit perceived neutrality. Russia’s symbolic support for Palestine has little practical impact.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s UN-brokered 1949 ceasefire suggests that multilateral mediators (e.g., UN, Arab League) can lend legitimacy. However, mediators must avoid aligning with either side, as U.S. support for Israel has undermined its credibility in Gaza talks.
- Actionable Step: Strengthen Egypt-Qatar mediation with UN backing, ensuring ceasefire terms address both Israeli security and Palestinian humanitarian needs, avoiding India-Pakistan’s stalemate over biased mediation.
- Context: Putin’s domestic narrative frames the war as existential, while Zelenskyy faces pressure to reclaim all territories. Public war fatigue in both countries could support a ceasefire, but nationalist factions resist compromise.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s 2003 ceasefire succeeded due to leaders’ willingness to prioritize stability. Russia and Ukraine need leaders to sell ceasefire benefits (e.g., economic recovery, reduced casualties) to their publics, countering hardline voices.
- Actionable Step: Leaders should use media to emphasize ceasefire benefits, as India’s Vajpayee did in 2003, while engaging civil society to build grassroots support, avoiding India-Pakistan’s vulnerability to spoiler attacks.
- Context: Netanyahu’s coalition relies on hardline support, while Hamas faces internal and public pressure to resist Israel. War fatigue among Gazans and Israelis could drive ceasefire support.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s 2021 ceasefire reaffirmation shows that public exhaustion can pressure leaders. Israel and Hamas must frame the ceasefire as a step toward security and survival, respectively, to gain domestic buy-in.
- Actionable Step: Both sides should engage moderate voices (e.g., Palestinian civil society, Israeli peace groups) to advocate for the ceasefire, learning from India-Pakistan’s occasional success in leveraging public sentiment.
- Context: Russia’s territorial ambitions and Ukraine’s NATO aspirations are core issues. A minimalist ceasefire (e.g., troop withdrawal without territorial resolution) risks freezing the conflict, as in Donbas.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s incremental CBMs suggest that addressing manageable issues (e.g., prisoner exchanges, demining) during a ceasefire can build momentum for tackling territorial disputes later.
- Actionable Step: Start with a ceasefire and phased negotiations, as proposed in 2022 Belarus-Turkey talks, prioritizing humanitarian and technical issues before territorial or NATO disputes.
- Context: The occupation, Palestinian statehood, and Israeli security are root causes. The 2025 ceasefire addresses immediate needs but not structural issues.
- Lesson: India-Pakistan’s failure to resolve Kashmir shows that deferring root causes risks renewed conflict. Incremental steps, like Gaza’s reconstruction, can build trust for broader talks on statehood.
- Actionable Step: Pair the ceasefire with a roadmap for political negotiations, as India-Pakistan’s 2004 dialogue attempted, addressing Gaza’s governance and Israel’s security in phases.
- Contextual Differences: India-Pakistan’s conflict is primarily territorial with nuclear deterrence, unlike Russia-Ukraine’s ideological and geopolitical dimensions or Israel-Gaza’s asymmetric occupation dynamics. Ceasefire lessons apply, but solutions must be tailored.
- Spoiler Risks: In all three conflicts, non-state actors (e.g., Pakistani militants, Russian proxies, Hamas) can derail ceasefires. India-Pakistan’s experience with terrorist attacks (e.g., 2008) highlights the need for robust monitoring and enforcement.
- International Environment: India-Pakistan’s ceasefires benefited from relative global stability, unlike the polarized geopolitics surrounding Russia-Ukraine (U.S.-Russia tensions) and Israel-Gaza (U.S.-Iran rivalry). Neutral mediators are thus critical.
- Frozen Conflicts: India-Pakistan’s Kashmir stalemate warns against ceasefires that merely pause fighting without progress toward resolution, a risk for both Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Gaza.
- Robust Ceasefire Agreements: Include clear terms, neutral monitoring (e.g., UN, BRICS), and enforcement mechanisms to prevent violations, as India-Pakistan’s 2003 ceasefire attempted.
- Parallel CBMs: Implement humanitarian and economic measures (e.g., aid, prisoner exchanges) during ceasefires to build trust, learning from India-Pakistan’s cross-LoC initiatives.
- Neutral Mediation: Engage impartial mediators (e.g., India, Turkey, Egypt) to facilitate dialogue, avoiding India-Pakistan’s deadlock over biased actors.
- Domestic Engagement: Leaders must counter hardline narratives and build public support, as India’s Vajpayee did in 2003.
- Incremental Roadmaps: Address manageable issues first (e.g., humanitarian aid, demining) while planning phased negotiations on root causes, avoiding India-Pakistan’s failure to resolve Kashmir.
30 Day Ceasefire To A Lasting Peace In Ukraine https://t.co/naLr9EpUCy
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 10, 2025
