War Craving Psychology: Why We Yearn for Conflict in the India-Pakistan Narrative

War Craving Psychology: Why We Yearn for Conflict in the India-Pakistan Narrative

Play all audios:

Loading...

Newsletters ePaper Sign in HomeIndiaKarnatakaOpinionWorldBusinessSportsVideoEntertainmentDH SpecialsOperation SindoorNews ShotsExplainersBengaluruTrendingPhotosDH BrandspotHomeNews


ShotsTrendingMenu×ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENTHomeopinionWhy we yearn for warFor many, the ceasefire meant an abrupt end to India-Pakistan hostilities that were building towards


something bigger Follow Us :


Chiranjib HaldarLast Updated : 04 June 2025, 01:10 ISTCommentsADVERTISEMENTIndia NewsOpinionIn PerspectiveFollow us on : Follow Us IndiaSouthNorthWestEast & North EastOperation


SindoorOpinionEditorialSpeak OutCartoonKarnatakaBengaluruSportsCricketIPL 2025FootballEntertainmentMovie ReviewsPhotosTechnologyWorldSpecialsDH on SundayDH on SaturdaySign up for


NewslettersAll NewslettersTop News of the DayPolitical TheatreDH SportsletterExplainersThree major lapses: No coordination, no communication, no crowd managementExplained | Trump's new


travel ban: Who is exemptExplained | What we know about the attack against Jewish demonstrators in ColoradoDaughter or sister—how is Kannada related to Tamil?What's BrewingHad excellent


meeting with US Vice President J D Vance: TharoorDonald Trump, Xi Jinping agree to repair fraying trade truceChinnaswamy stampede | Case transferred to state CID: Karnataka govt informs High


CourtTMC leader Anubrata Mondal appears before police in connection with abusive call caseLatest NewsBengaluru netizens outraged over Dayananda's suspensionRBI MPC meeting: Repo rate cut by


50 bpsIndia, England to play series for Tendulkar-Anderson TrophyVishwaguru needs a new global visionThe Printers Mysore LtdPrajavaniSudhaMayuraEpaperClassifiedsContactAboutPrivacy


PolicyTermsDisclaimerGrievance Redressal