
By Uzma Ehtasham
There is a particular art to the diplomacy of the anxious. It is the art of the phone call made before the fire reaches the fuel depot. It is the craft of the handshake offered in a capital whose radar systems are already blinking amber. For months, the world has watched the ridge of the Gulf narrow into a knife edge, with the United States and Iran trading threats across a table of broken trust, while Israel’s war on Iranian positions – which began in late February – threatened to pull every loose thread in the region into a single, burning knot. And yet, from a country often portrayed in Western headlines as perpetually on the brink of its own crisis, a different signal has emerged. Pakistan, it turns out, has been working the phones, the runways and the royal courts with a focus that has left diplomats from Doha to Washington quietly exhaling.
Consider the choreography of the past forty-eight hours. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has been touring the region’s nervous capitals – Riyadh, Doha and Ankara – with a schedule that would exhaust a far younger person. His meeting in Riyadh with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and his own deputy, Ishaq Dar, was not the usual exchange of pleasantries about bilateral trade. According to those briefed on the conversation, the discussion cut straight to the bone: the US-Iran negotiations, the bleeding wound of Gaza, and the question of whether any common ground still exists between Tehran and Washington. The Crown Prince, no stranger to regional brinkmanship himself, publicly praised Islamabad’s exertions. That is not nothing. When a man of his position uses the word “splendid” about another country’s mediation, he is not being polite. He is signaling.
But the real poetry of this moment is the dual track. On the same day that Sharif was shaking hands in Riyadh, Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir, landed in Tehran alongside the interior minister, Mohsin Naqvi. They were met at the airport by Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, with the kind of fanfare usually reserved for allies in wartime. The discussions were not abstract. They dissected the standoff, the security gaps, the mutual suspicion that has made every communication between Washington and Tehran feel like two people shouting through a wall. Araghchi, for his part, was effusive. He called Pakistan’s hosting of earlier talks a hallmark of the profound bond between the two neighbors.
That word – neighbor – matters. For all the grandiosity of great power rivalry, it is often the country next door that pays the first and heaviest price when things go wrong. And then there is the quiet ripple from the UAE. Deputy President Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed picked up the phone and called Iran’s parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. It was the first high-level contact between the Emirates and Iran since Israel’s war on Iranian positions began on 28 February. That call did not happen in a vacuum. It happened because someone credible convinced both sides that the alternative was a crater. Pakistan, by all accounts, was that someone.
What is unfolding here is not the usual theatre of summit photographs and communiqués that say nothing. This is a country with its own deep fractures – political unrest, economic turbulence, a civilian government that often seems to be walking a tightrope between the military establishment and the street – deciding to use what little capital it has left to buy time for everyone else. And it is working. President Trump’s recent remark that “the end of the war is near” was not merely a piece of campaign rhetoric. It reflected real movement. Tehran, too, has signaled its own yearning for a ceasefire, not out of weakness but out of the exhaustion that comes from staring into the abyss for too long.
None of this is accidental. What makes Pakistan’s intervention different from the dozens of other mediation attempts in the region is the seamless civil-military synergy that Sharif, Munir and Dar have managed to project. In many countries, a prime minister and an army chief operating on parallel diplomatic tracks would be a recipe for confusion, if not outright rivalry. Here, it has become a strange kind of strength. One track talks to the Saudis and the Turks, the other to the Iranians, and neither contradicts the other. That is not luck. That is discipline.
However, discipline abroad requires stability at home. The greatest risk to Pakistan’s newfound role as a regional firefighter is not a miscalculation in Tehran or a hawk in Washington. It is the possibility that domestic fractures – a tanking economy, political vendettas, the perennial question of who really runs the country – will undo the very credibility that makes this mediation possible. No one trusts a mediator who cannot govern their own house. Sharif knows this. Munir knows this. The question is whether Lahore and Islamabad can hold themselves together long enough for Riyadh and Tehran to sign something real.
For now, though, there is a rare and precious thing in the air: the sense that a second round of talks, to be hosted again by Pakistan, might actually produce a durable ceasefire. Not a pause. Not a fudge. A proper, verifiable, mutually agreed silence of the guns. If that happens, historians will not remember the economic growth figures of 2026 or the political scandals of the season. They will remember that when the Gulf was holding its breath, it was a country of two hundred and forty million people, perched on the edge of its own chaos that lit a match not to start a fire but to guide everyone home.
(The writer is a public health professional, journalist, and possesses expertise in health communication, having keen interest in national and international affairs, can be reached at uzma@metro-morning.com)


