In the swirling currents of global diplomacy, where alliances shift like desert sands, Pakistan has emerged as an unlikely beacon of mediation. The announcement that Islamabad will host high-stakes talks between the United States and Iran marks a seismic realignment in South Asia’s power dynamics. What began as a tentative overture has blossomed into a full-fledged diplomatic coup, positioning Pakistan not as a peripheral player, but as a pivotal hub for peace negotiations between two longstanding adversaries. This is no small feat for a nation long painted by its rivals as unstable or unreliable. Instead, it catapults Pakistan into the league of world-leading mediators—think Oman in its Yemeni brokering or Switzerland in Cold War espionage—capable of bridging the chasm between hardline stances to avert catastrophe.
The irony is palpable: a country once accused of harboring extremism now stands as the fulcrum for de-escalation in a region teetering on the brink. This triumph comes at India’s expense, shattering Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meticulously crafted strategy to isolate its neighbor. For years, Modi’s government has pursued a doctrine of encirclement, leveraging ties with the US, Israel and Gulf states to squeeze Pakistan on issues from Kashmir to terrorism. Operations like the 2019 Balakot airstrikes were meant to project unassailable strength, while backchannel pressures aimed to render Pakistan a diplomatic pariah. Yet, in a classic reversal of fortunes, Pakistan’s deft maneuvering has turned the tables.
By offering neutral ground for US-Iran discussions—talks that could ease tensions over Tehran’s nuclear program and Washington’s sanctions—Pakistan has not only burnished its credentials but exposed the hollowness of India’s regional hegemony. New Delhi finds itself sidelined, its invitations to global summits ringing increasingly hollow as world powers bypass it for Islamabad’s more pragmatic embrace. Indian media, usually a bulwark for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) narrative, has begun holding up an unflattering mirror. Outlets like The Hindu and The Indian Express have dissected the Modi government’s faltering foreign policy with uncharacteristic candor, questioning why India, with its economic heft and military might, has been leapfrogged in this critical dialogue.
The opprobrium has spilled into the political arena, where opposition leaders smell blood. Rahul Gandhi, the Congress scion whose family once dominated Indian politics, has branded Modi’s approach a “joke”—a blind fealty to Washington and Tel Aviv that has left India out in the cold. “This is what happens when you outsource your foreign policy,” Gandhi thundered at a rally in Uttar Pradesh, his words resonating amid the BJP’s domestic struggles. His colleague Poonam Khetra, ever the sharp-tongued critic, piled on with mockery: the BJP’s “mythical strongman” image crumbles as Pakistan claims a seat at the table during one of the world’s most fraught geopolitical junctures.
These barbs underscore a deeper malaise: India’s aggressive posturing, from abrogating Kashmir’s autonomy to needling China along the Ladakh border, has bred isolation rather than the influence it craved. The reversal is more than symbolic; it strikes at the heart of India’s economic vulnerabilities. As The New York Times cautioned in a recent analysis, the escalating shadow war in the Gulf—fueled by Iranian proxy attacks and US retaliatory strikes—delivers a body blow to New Delhi’s fragile finances. India imports over 80 per cent of its oil from the region, and any prolonged disruption could send energy prices spiraling.
Domestic gas shortages are already biting: households in Mumbai and Delhi queue for cylinders, while factories idle amid power cuts. Exports to the Gulf, worth billions, teeter on the edge, as do the remittances from millions of Indian workers in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar—lifelines that prop up rural economies back home. Over the past month, the Sensex has plunged nearly 10 per cent, wiping out investor confidence and amplifying fears of stagflation. Small wonder that business lobbies like the Confederation of Indian Industry are urging a recalibration, warning that Modi’s “neighborhood first” rhetoric rings false when neighbors like Pakistan steal the spotlight.
Pakistan’s ascent, by contrast, feels like a masterclass in subtlety over bluster. Islamabad has played its cards with quiet assurance: mending fences with Saudi Arabia and the UAE through economic pacts, while extending an olive branch to Iran via border trade. Army chief General Asim Munir, often criticized for his iron-fisted domestic style, has revealed a nuanced international touch, hosting US envoys and Iranian officials with equal aplomb. This isn’t mere opportunism; it’s the fruit of years rebuilding credibility post-Afghanistan withdrawal, when Pakistan facilitated the Taliban’s Doha talks. Now, as US-Iran negotiations unfold under its roof, Pakistan reaps the rewards: enhanced aid prospects from Washington, warmer ties with Tehran, and a narrative reboot from “troublemaker” to “peacemaker.”
For India, the lesson is stark. Modi’s worldview, steeped in muscular nationalism, assumed that economic size and military parades would compel deference. Yet diplomacy thrives on trust, not tantrums. The Balakot bravado once rallied voters, but it alienated mediators like Turkey and even strained US-India bonhomie over Pakistan’s counter-narratives on terrorism. Beijing watches gleefully, its Belt and Road investments in Pakistan deepening the encirclement. In addition, as Gulf states hedge bets amid the US-Iran thaw, India’s monopoly on their affections frays. This isn’t to say Pakistan is flawless. Corruption scandals and economic woes persist, with inflation gnawing at public patience. However, in the diplomatic arena, perception is power, and Islamabad has seized it.
Rahul Gandhi’s jibes may rally the opposition ahead of state elections, but they also highlight a BJP hubris that prioritizes domestic applause over global nuance. Poonam Khetra’s barbs sting because they ring true: crowing over airstrikes while Pakistan hosts world powers exposes the emperor’s new clothes. In this shifting landscape, Pakistan’s gains illuminate India’s missteps—a poignant reminder that true clout demands the art of listening, not lecturing. As US-Iran delegates touch down in Islamabad, the world will note who brokers peace and who fumes on the sidelines. For Modi, the coming months demand introspection: pivot to subtlety, or risk further isolation in a multipolar South Asia where even old foes like Pakistan can outmaneuver the self-proclaimed giant. The hub of peace has a new address, and it’s not in New Delhi.


