National Threshold of Pain in Hybrid Warfare: How Iran and Pakistan Endured, While India and Israel Faltered
In the evolving domain of hybrid warfare, the idea of a nation’s “threshold of pain” has become central to understanding modern conflict. This is not merely about death tolls or...
In the evolving domain of hybrid warfare, the idea of a nation’s “threshold of pain” has become central to understanding modern conflict. This is not merely about death tolls or economic cost; it is about how long a society can endure pressure before it breaks. The threshold is defined by psychological stamina, strategic patience, ideological conviction, and most importantly, narrative control. As the late Thomas Schelling noted, wars are often won not by inflicting the most pain, but by outlasting the opponent’s will to continue.
The 2025 Iran-Israel conflict and India-Pakistan confrontation offer a clear juxtaposition. These episodes reveal not only the raw firepower of the actors involved but also the depth, or fragility, of their national resilience. While Iran and Pakistan demonstrated fortitude in the face of overwhelming pressure, India and Israel revealed cracks under the weight of hybrid warfare.
The Indo-Pakistan conflict of May 2025 was triggered by India’s reckless launch of “Operation Sindoor” following the tragic Pahalgam terror incident. New Delhi’s decision to strike near Pakistan’s nuclear infrastructure was a calculated provocation, yet its consequences exposed India’s vulnerabilities. Pakistan, despite immense pressure, did not crumble. Rather, it responded with calibrated resolve, using drone retaliation, psychological operations, and diplomatic leverage to push India into a strategic retreat.
India’s ambitions collapsed under their weight. As economic panic spread, the Bombay Stock Exchange witnessed a record dip, fuel prices soared, and the specter of nuclear retaliation terrified its urban middle class. Protests broke out in multiple cities, revealing how shallow India’s pain threshold truly is. For a country that aspires to regional hegemony, India showed a surprising lack of strategic stamina. Behind its bravado lay a fragile core, unprepared for the endurance required in real conflict.
In stark contrast, Pakistan revealed a far deeper national capacity to absorb pain. Having faced decades of Indian aggression and proxy destabilization, the Pakistani state and society are hardened. National cohesion was maintained through disciplined media strategy, the symbolic centrality of Kashmir, and a collective commitment to justice. Civilians in border regions stood firm. The unity between Pakistan’s civil and military leadership ensured a measured but determined stance that eventually forced India to seek de-escalation.
Crucially, Pakistan’s control over the water narrative, reminding the world of Indian violations of the Indus Waters Treaty, added a strategic layer to its deterrence. Economic disruptions were absorbed, and China’s timely support reinforced Islamabad’s diplomatic position. Unlike India, which blinked first, Pakistan endured and prevailed.
The Israel-Iran conflict, unfolding just months earlier, illustrated a similar dynamic, but on a larger and more complex scale. Israel’s attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities were met with coordinated Iranian retaliation: waves of precision missiles, drone swarms, cyber strikes, and regional proxy activation. Tehran’s strategy wasn’t just military, it was psychological. It aimed to fracture Israeli morale and expose its illusion of invulnerability.
While Israel touts itself as a regional superpower with unmatched defense systems like the Iron Dome, the war exposed painful truths. Iranian missiles breached Israeli defenses, striking deep into civilian areas. Dozens were killed. Bomb shelters overflowed. For a nation obsessed with security, this was a rude awakening. The psychological shock far outweighed the physical damage.
Though Israeli society temporarily rallied, this unity masked deeper fractures. Existing political divisions were amplified, and international criticism mounted. Israel’s legitimacy, already under fire for its apartheid policies and human rights abuses, faced a renewed global reckoning. The war may have reinforced Israel’s deterrence narrative for now, but the long-term damage to its global image and internal cohesion remains.
Iran, meanwhile, showed strategic patience and ideological cohesion. The Islamic Republic, under siege for decades through sanctions, sabotage, and isolation, did not collapse. On the contrary, it activated its axis of resistance with calculated timing. Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iraqi militias served as force multipliers. Domestically, the regime maintained order through information control and ideological messaging. The Revolutionary Guard’s ability to manage both military retaliation and civil resilience proved decisive.
Of course, the Iranian people bore heavy losses. Civilian casualties mounted but instead of fragmenting, the Iranian state absorbed the pain and weaponized it, transforming suffering into a narrative of resistance. While dissent simmered in some quarters, the broader populace, wearied by decades of Western hostility, understood the stakes. Iran endured not just with bombs, but with belief.
Both Pakistan and Iran emerged from these conflicts with enhanced strategic profiles. They demonstrated that endurance, not aggression, is the real currency of modern conflict. India and Israel, for all their technological might, were unprepared for the psychological and political dimensions of hybrid war. Their desire to dominate met the wall of resilient adversaries unwilling to break.
What these conflicts teach us is clear: hybrid warfare is not just about missiles or markets, it’s about managing the human spirit under siege. States win not by overwhelming others, but by surviving what others cannot. Pakistan and Iran showed the world that dignity, discipline, and national purpose can outlast military aggression and propaganda. For future conflicts, strategists must reorient their lens. Victory is no longer about the first strike, it’s about the last stand and in 2025, the last stand belonged to those who had been tested the longest.

