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Pakistan's dual role as Saudi military ally and U.S.-Iran mediator is a masterstroke of strategic diplomacy that the White House has called "incredible." Saudi Arabia's $3 billion deposit securing Pakistan's foreign reserves proves Islamabad's balancing act is delivering real results. Keeping all sides talking while honoring defense commitments is exactly the kind of disciplined, high-stakes diplomacy the region desperately needs.
Pakistan's secret defense pact with Saudi Arabia — never reviewed by parliament — puts Islamabad in an impossible position as a so-called neutral mediator. Deploying fighter jets to Saudi Arabia on the same day ceasefire talks were underway in Islamabad is a glaring conflict of interest that severely undermined any credibility Pakistan had with Tehran. A country bound by treaty to defend one side of a war cannot credibly act as a broker for peace.
Pakistan’s deepening defense ties with Saudi Arabia reflect a regional order no longer anchored solely in Western security guarantees. As Riyadh recalibrates between Washington, Beijing and a cautious de-escalation with Iran, long-standing military pacts with Islamabad take on new weight. What appears as bilateral defense cooperation is part of a broader shift where traditional alliances are quietly reconfigured without formally breaking from the Western system.