
By Abdul Rehman Patel
In American politics, influence is often less about formal titles than about access, networks, and the ability to shape the levers of decision-making. Senator Marco Rubio is one such figure. A senior power broker with deep connections to Washington’s foreign-policy and security establishment, his words carry weight beyond the soundbite. When Rubio recently claimed, at a press conference, that Pakistan itself had offered military services to the United States, the statement demanded more than a cursory glance. This was not casual rhetoric; it was a window into how Pakistan’s position on global conflicts may be understood within corridors of power far from Islamabad.
For decades, Pakistanis have been told that Palestine lies at the heart of the nation’s conscience. Al-Aqsa is framed as a red line. Pakistan is cast as a defender of the oppressed. Yet in the arena of international politics, such slogans are insufficient. Global actors do not measure commitment by rhetoric—they look to action, to consistent policy, to the record on the ground. Palestine was never merely a flashpoint in diplomatic correspondence. It was a society, vibrant and complex, with cities, marketplaces, schools, and cultural continuity. Gaza, in particular, was once a coastal city alive with normality. Today, it is an open-air prison, where access to electricity is a headline, where water has become a weapon, and where the very rhythms of life are dictated by external power structures.
This transformation did not happen by accident. It is the product of decades of international power politics, compounded by the sustained silence of the Muslim world. The question for Pakistan, then, is practical rather than sentimental. Across the decades-long Israel–Palestine conflict, what tangible role has the country played? Has Pakistan convened international forums, led coordinated diplomatic campaigns within the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, or invested political and economic capital to shift the status quo? Has Palestine ever been treated as more than an emotional touchstone at home? The record is stark. At the state level, the Palestinian cause has remained symbolic.
Media and public discourse were carefully managed; streets were never allowed to boil over; confrontations with global powers were consciously avoided. This was not oversight—it was deliberate policy. History offers troubling echoes. The massacre at Sabra and Shatila, in the refugee camps of Lebanon, remains a haunting episode. Responsibility lay with Lebanese militias under Israeli oversight, yet the broader Muslim world, including Pakistan, remained publicly silent. There was no official reckoning, no transparent engagement, and over time, the silence itself became a statement. It is the persistence of such historical patterns that gives Rubio’s claim renewed significance: if Pakistan offered military services, it is crucial to ask for whom.
Was it in support of Palestinians, or for a global security framework in which Israeli occupation is treated as fixed and Palestinian resistance is problematized? States, ultimately, are judged by action rather than by declaration. A nation that truly stands with a cause is prepared to bear cost—diplomatic, political, or economic. Pakistan has paid none for Palestine. Statements were issued, resolutions adopted, speeches delivered—but no tangible risk was taken, no measurable price paid. This raises a broader ethical question for citizens and policymakers alike. If Pakistan is indeed poised to play a role that prioritizes “security” and “stability” in ways that may serve the interests of Israel and its allies while adversely affecting Palestinian civilians, it would be consistent with a long-standing posture of quiet accommodation.
It would not be a sudden departure, but the logical extension of decades of calculated silence. This editorial does not level accusations. Its purpose is to interrogate, to shine light on the policy of silence and to ask where responsibility lies. Questions are the currency of living societies. When silence itself becomes a form of policy, citizens have a right to know where their nation truly stands—and whom that silence serves. Ultimately, this is about more than headlines or political maneuvering. It is a matter of state conscience, of moral direction, and of historical accountability. A nation is not defined by slogans. It is measured by its record. In the case of Pakistan and Palestine, the record remains, at best, incomplete and, at worst, complicit.
(The Pakistani-origin American writer and columnist, sheds light on various social and political issues, can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)

