A JAFAJ STRATEGIC ANALYSIS OF PAKISTANS POWER, NUCLEAR POSITIONING, AND STRUGGLE FOR REGIONAL RELEVANCE
IN-A-NUTSHELL
Pakistan’s attempt to position itself as a negotiating bridge between the United States and Iran is not driven by diplomacy, neutrality, or regional goodwill. It is driven by a deeper strategic calculation: Pakistan believes the regional order is changing rapidly, and if it does not force itself into the center of that transition now, it risks permanent strategic downgrade.
Pakistan wants five things from these negotiations:
- It wants to become strategically indispensable to the United States again after losing relevance following the Afghanistan withdrawal.
- It wants to prevent Iran from becoming a competing Muslim nuclear power.
- It wants leverage against India by forcing Washington to keep Pakistan inside major geopolitical calculations.
- It wants long-term economic stabilization through geopolitical relevance.
- It wants recognition as the dominant hard-power state in the Muslim world.
This is not a peace initiative.
It is a power-conversion strategy executed through diplomacy.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Pakistan’s behavior makes little sense if viewed as traditional diplomacy. It only becomes coherent when viewed as a response to structural insecurity.
Pakistan is a country of more than 240 million people, projected to exceed 300 million by 2050, yet it operates with a GDP of roughly $375 billion, external debt exceeding $125–130 billion, and recurring IMF dependency.¹ Pakistan has entered 23 IMF programs since 1958, one of the highest totals in the world.²
This creates a state that is simultaneously:
- too large to fail quietly,
- too nuclear to ignore,
- but too economically fragile to dominate conventionally.
Its strategy therefore centers on one objective:
converting geopolitical positioning into long-term power.
That is why Pakistan is attempting to mediate between the United States and Iran.
The negotiations themselves matter less than the role.
If Pakistan becomes necessary to managing one of the world’s most dangerous geopolitical conflicts, it regains leverage with Washington, gains visibility with global institutions, and reinforces its position as a nuclear power that cannot be bypassed.
At the same time, Pakistan faces a second calculation: Iran’s nuclear trajectory threatens Pakistan’s unique status as the only Muslim-majority nuclear state.³
This creates a paradoxical strategy:
- Pakistan wants engagement with Iran,
- but it does not want Iranian nuclear equality.
That contradiction sits at the center of the entire policy.
THE CORE PROBLEM: WHY PAKISTAN NEEDS THESE NEGOTIATIONS
The collapse of the Afghanistan war fundamentally changed Pakistan’s strategic value to the United States.
For nearly twenty years, Pakistan functioned as:
- a logistics corridor,
- an intelligence intermediary,
- and a military necessity.⁴
When the U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021, Pakistan lost the mechanism through which it had maintained strategic access to Washington.
At the same time:
- India’s importance to the U.S. increased dramatically through Indo-Pacific strategy,
- China deepened economic influence through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC),
- and Iran moved closer to nuclear threshold capability.
Pakistan suddenly faced a dangerous possibility:
It could become strategically secondary to both India and Iran simultaneously.
That is the real fear driving Islamabad.
WHY PAKISTAN WANTS TO BE THE NEGOTIATOR
Pakistan’s interest in mediation is not symbolic—it is transactional.
If Pakistan becomes a required communication channel between Washington and Tehran, it gains influence far beyond the negotiations themselves.
That influence includes:
- LEVERAGE WITH THE UNITED STATES
Pakistan understands how American power functions. States that become operationally necessary gain access, tolerance, and negotiating room.
If the United States needs Pakistan to:
- relay messages to Iran,
- facilitate de-escalation,
- or maintain backchannel communications,
then Pakistan regains:
- military relevance,
- intelligence value,
- and diplomatic leverage.⁵
This matters because Pakistan cannot compete economically with India.
India:
- Defense spending: ~$81 billion annually
- Active military personnel: ~1.45 million⁶
Pakistan:
- Defense spending: ~$10–11 billion
- Personnel: ~650,000⁷
Pakistan therefore uses geopolitical positioning to offset conventional weakness.
Mediation is not diplomacy.
It is leverage acquisition.
- ECONOMIC SURVIVAL THROUGH RELEVANCE
Pakistan’s economy remains structurally fragile.
- Inflation exceeded 25% in 2023
- Foreign reserves periodically fell below $10 billion
- Import coverage dropped below 2 months⁸
In this environment, geopolitical relevance becomes economically valuable.
Strategically important states:
- receive more favorable financing conditions,
- attract more external support,
- and are treated differently by international institutions.
Pakistan understands this.
Relevance lowers risk perception.
Lower risk perception improves economic survivability.
- PROTECTING ITS NUCLEAR MONOPOLY
Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal (~160–170 warheads) is not simply a military deterrent.⁹ It is the foundation of Pakistan’s strategic identity.
Pakistan is:
- the only Muslim-majority nuclear state,
- one of the world’s fastest-growing nuclear powers,
- and a recognized strategic actor because of that status.¹⁰
Iran threatens this position directly.
According to the International Atomic Energy Agency:
- Iran has enriched uranium to 60% purity,
- possesses enough material for multiple weapons if further enriched,
- and has reduced breakout time to near-zero in some assessments.¹¹ (House of Commons Library)
If Iran becomes nuclear:
- Pakistan loses exclusivity,
- loses symbolic leadership,
- and loses part of the geopolitical value that differentiates it from other Muslim-majority states.
This is the central strategic issue.
Pakistan does not want Iran destroyed.
It wants Iran constrained.
PAKISTAN–IRAN RELATIONS: THE REALITY UNDERNEATH THE DIPLOMACY
Pakistan and Iran publicly maintain diplomatic relations, but the relationship is fundamentally built on managed distrust.
Trade remains limited:
- approximately $2–3 billion annually, far below potential.¹²
The border region:
- experiences insurgent activity,
- smuggling networks,
- sectarian spillover,
- and recurring security incidents.¹³
Pakistan has built:
- approximately 900 km of fencing along the Iran border,
- part of a larger regional barrier system exceeding 3,500 km including Afghanistan.¹⁴
This is not what strategic trust looks like.
Pakistan is physically hardening itself against the same country it is diplomatically engaging.
That contradiction is not accidental.
It reflects Pakistan’s actual position:
- cooperate enough to avoid escalation,
- but never enough to permit strategic parity.
The distrust runs deeper historically as well. Pakistan has repeatedly attempted to balance its relationship with Iran against its ties with Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. Internally, segments of Pakistan’s military establishment have long viewed Iranian influence—particularly in Shia political and militant networks—as a potential destabilizing force.¹⁵
This is why Pakistan’s Iran policy always stops short of true alignment.
THE MUSLIM WORLD DIMENSION: PAKISTAN’S QUIET COMPETITION WITH SAUDI ARABIA
Pakistan’s ambitions are not limited to Iran.
There is also a broader competition unfolding inside the Muslim world itself.
Saudi Arabia dominates:
- oil markets (~10–11 million barrels/day production),
- sovereign wealth (~$700–900 billion),
- and religious legitimacy through Mecca and Medina.¹⁶
Pakistan cannot compete economically or religiously.
So it competes strategically.
Pakistan possesses:
- nuclear weapons,
- one of the largest militaries in the Muslim world,
- and a population projected to exceed 300 million by 2050.¹⁷
Its long-term objective is increasingly clear:
If Saudi Arabia leads financially and religiously, Pakistan wants to lead militarily and strategically.
That ambition becomes impossible if Iran also becomes nuclear.
THE 25-YEAR TRAJECTORY: WHAT PAKISTAN IS REALLY TRYING TO BUILD
Pakistan’s current diplomacy only makes sense when viewed over a 25-year horizon.
By 2050:
- Pakistan could become the world’s 4th most populous country,
- potentially exceed $1–1.5 trillion GDP if growth stabilizes,
- and remain one of the largest military powers in the Islamic world.¹⁸
But none of that happens automatically.
Pakistan faces:
- demographic pressure,
- debt dependency,
- climate stress,
- political instability,
- and growing competition from India and Iran.
This means Pakistan must create an alternative route to power.
That route is:
- Nuclear status
- Strategic geography
- Diplomatic indispensability
Pakistan understands that states with weak economies can still become system-level players if they control access, geography, or escalation management.
That is exactly what Islamabad is attempting.
RISK MATRIX — WHY THIS STRATEGY IS DANGEROUS
Pakistan’s strategy is sophisticated, but extremely unstable.
RISK 1 — CREDIBILITY COLLAPSE
If Iran views Pakistan as aligned with Washington, mediation credibility collapses.
RISK 2 — U.S. DISTRUST
If Washington views Pakistan as unreliable or overly aligned with China, leverage disappears.
RISK 3 — IRANIAN NUCLEAR BREAKOUT
If Iran achieves nuclear weapons capability:
- Pakistan loses exclusivity,
- and its strategic identity weakens dramatically.
RISK 4 — INTERNAL FAILURE
A state that has required 23 IMF interventions cannot sustain prolonged geopolitical overreach indefinitely.¹⁹
RISK 5 — STRATEGIC OVEREXTENSION
Pakistan is simultaneously trying to balance:
- the U.S.,
- China,
- Iran,
- Saudi Arabia,
- and India.
That balancing act becomes harder every year.
FORCED OUTCOME ANALYSIS — WHAT THE SYSTEM IS LIKELY TO PRODUCE
The most likely outcome is not Pakistani dominance.
It is partial success.
Pakistan will probably:
- regain visibility,
- re-enter strategic conversations,
- and maintain limited leverage with Washington.
But it is unlikely to fully control outcomes.
The more dangerous possibility is an Iranian nuclear breakout. If Iran crosses the threshold:
- Pakistan’s monopoly disappears,
- deterrence becomes multi-directional,
- and Pakistan’s long-standing claim to unique strategic leadership within the Muslim world collapses.
That is why Pakistan is mediating now.
Not because it trusts Iran.
Not because it trusts the United States.
But because the current moment may be the last opportunity to shape the regional order before it hardens permanently.
CONCLUSION: THE REAL ANSWER
So what does Pakistan actually want from U.S.–Iran negotiations?
It wants power.
Not symbolic power.
Not diplomatic prestige.
Real structural power.
Pakistan wants:
- renewed leverage with Washington,
- protection of its nuclear exclusivity,
- strategic offset against India,
- economic stabilization through geopolitical relevance,
- and long-term recognition as the leading hard-power state in the Muslim world.
That is the actual strategy.
Pakistan understands something fundamental:
In the modern international system, states that manage crises gain influence over the system itself.
By positioning itself between the United States and Iran, Pakistan is attempting to transform itself from a state reacting to global events into a state shaping them.
Whether it succeeds is uncertain.
But the motivation is not.
BOTTOM LINE
Pakistan is not mediating because it believes in peace.
It is mediating because:
- its economy requires relevance,
- its military requires leverage,
- and its nuclear status requires protection.
This is not neutral diplomacy.
This is a constrained nuclear state attempting to secure its place in the next regional order before the window closes.
REFERENCES
- International Monetary Fund, Pakistan Economic Outlook.
- IMF Historical Lending Database.
- SIPRI, World Nuclear Forces Report 2025. (SIPRI)
- Congressional Research Service, U.S.–Pakistan Relations.
- U.S. Institute of Peace, Mediation and Strategic Leverage.
- SIPRI Military Expenditure Database.
- IISS, Military Balance.
- World Bank Pakistan Data.
- Nuclear Threat Initiative, Pakistan Nuclear Overview.
- Carnegie Endowment, A Normal Nuclear Pakistan. (Carnegie Endowment)
- IAEA Reports on Iran Nuclear Enrichment. (House of Commons Library)
- Pakistan Ministry of Commerce.
- Chatham House, Iran–Pakistan Relations.
- Al Jazeera Border Security Analysis.
- Carnegie Endowment, Pakistan Internal Strategic Dynamics.
- OPEC Statistical Bulletin; Saudi PIF Reports.
- United Nations Population Projections.
- World Bank Long-Term GDP Forecast Models.
- IMF Lending History Database.