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Fragile Commitment

The Statesman Bhubaneswar

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July 11, 2025

The recent U-turn by US President Donald Trump on the suspension of arms shipments to Ukraine is more than just a course correction — it is a revealing glimpse into the evolving calculus of American foreign policy, and more precisely, the tightrope that US leadership walks in balancing public sentiment, strategic interests, and unpredictable allies.

Pakistan and the United States — capped by visits from Pakistan's Army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir and Air Chief Zaheer Babar — marks a calculated effort by Islamabad to reposition itself within Washington's strategic radar. This warming of ties, coming after a decade of drift, reveals more about Pakistan's anxiety over lost relevance than any realignment of American priorities in South Asia. The warming of ties has not occurred in isolation. It follows India's forceful military action under Operation Sindoor, which targeted high-value terror infrastructure within Pakistan. In its aftermath, as tensions spiked and US airstrikes hit Iranian nuclear sites, Islamabad saw an opportunity to reinsert itself into Washington's regional calculations. Pakistan's swift nomination of President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, just days after Field Marshal Munir's White House lunch, was more than diplomatic flattery — it was a signal of strategic intent. For Pakistan's military, which has long viewed engagement with America as a validation of its regional importance, these meetings offer both symbolic recognition and the promise of renewed material support. Yet the choreography of back-to-back military visits suggests more than symbolism — it signals an active bid by Pakistan's military establishment to reclaim strategic space lost over years of diminished credibility and shifting US priorities in South Asia.

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