At a moment when the Gulf’s waters have ceased to carry commerce and instead transmit shockwaves through every energy market, Pakistan has quietly, deliberately, and without any grandstanding, done something few expected and fewer can now deny: it has placed itself at the very centre of a grave regional upheaval, not as a camp follower, not as a hired instrument of another power, but as the one capital where diplomacy still stands a chance before this crisis calcifies into a new normal.
Foreign ministers from Saudi Arabia, Türkiye and Egypt are physically present in the capital, engaged in structured consultations with Pakistan’s civilian and military leadership, not for optics, not for a photo-op, but to align positions ahead of a possible diplomatic opening between the US and Iran. Over the past several days, Islamabad has functioned as a relay point between competing capitals, carrying proposals, hosting consultations, and maintaining simultaneous lines of communication with Washington, Tehran and Riyadh.
And at the heart of that statecraft has stood Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, acting with a speed, composure and intellectual clarity that this moment demanded. In hours that required precision rather than hollow rhetoric, he has moved with uncommon diplomatic intelligence, helping Islamabad rise to the occasion.
There is, too, a larger point that deserves to be made without hesitation. Pakistan’s relevance in this crisis does not arise from press statements. It arises from credibility. Riyadh (and the regional players) know Pakistan understands the strategic anxieties of the Gulf. Tehran knows Pakistan speaks from proximity, history and consequence. And just as importantly, Washington knows Pakistan can still communicate where others can only pose.
It is in that context that one must read the predictable undertone of Indian propaganda. New Delhi’s discomfort is neither subtle nor surprising. Pakistan’s emergence as a necessary diplomatic pivot in a crisis of global consequence unsettles a regional narrative that has long depended on presenting Islamabad as peripheral, reactive or isolated. It is always difficult for a rival to watch the room it wanted to dominate convene elsewhere.
What Pakistan is doing is concrete. It is helping shape the minimum terms of de-escalation around maritime security, energy flows, and direct political contact. What Pakistan will do now is equally clear: keep the diplomatic track alive, push for restraint in the Gulf’s sea lanes, seek protection for energy infrastructure and preserve the possibility of direct engagement before military logic consumes political judgment.
None of this guarantees success. The conflict remains fluid as ever, mistrust between the two sides remains deep, while external actors still retain the capacity to derail any emerging understanding in the blink of an eye.
All said and done, we have not stumbled into this role. We have earned it and must now own it with confidence. In this crisis, the road away from escalation might run through Islamabad, and that is a fact of no small consequence for the region, for the wider world and, above all, for Pakistan’s place within it. *