22 April 2026

Pakistan in the Eye of the Storm


No country in the world is navigating the 2026 Iran war on as many simultaneous fronts as Pakistan. It is a diplomatic broker and a domestic powder keg. An energy crisis victim and an active belligerent on its own eastern front. A nation with a defence pact with Saudi Arabia, a nine-hundred-kilometer border with Iran, a restive Shia minority, an IMF program on life support, and an ongoing war with Afghanistan. To call Pakistan a bystander to the Iran conflict would be a category error. It is one of the conflict’s most consequential characters, threading a needle no other country is even attempting, and doing so without a safety net.

The story of Pakistan in this war cannot be told through a single lens. It requires holding several contradictory truths at once: that Islamabad is simultaneously the most promising diplomatic actor in the conflict and one of its most vulnerable victims; that its army chief is shuttling between Tehran and Washington while Pakistani soldiers die on the Afghan border; that its stock market hit a record high this week while ordinary citizens are rationing fuel. This is not a country at the margins of the Iran war. It is one of the war’s central plots.

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