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    Home » Turkey’s balancing act
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    Turkey’s balancing act

    adminBy adminNovember 12, 2025Updated:November 28, 2025No Comments1 Views
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    There are moments in diplomacy when timing matters more than intent. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s decision to send a high-level delegation to Islamabad comes at such a moment — a time when the fragile peace between Pakistan and Afghanistan is unravelling under the weight of mistrust, border clashes and conflicting priorities. The mission, led by Turkiye’s foreign minister, defence minister and intelligence chief, is expected to arrive in the coming days, carrying a mandate that is both ambitious and uncertain: to nudge Islamabad and Kabul back to the table and salvage what little remains of dialogue. For months, talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan have been stalled. The Istanbul negotiations, once seen as a rare opportunity for meaningful engagement, ended in deadlock.

    Pakistan accuses the Afghan Taliban of harboring militants who attack across the border; Kabul, in turn, bristles at what it perceives as Pakistani interference. Each side insists on sovereignty. Each side accuses the other of betrayal. In this cycle of recrimination, even friends like Turkiye and Qatar — countries that have long maintained warm relations with both governments — have struggled to find common ground. President Erdoğan’s initiative, then, is not just another diplomatic overture. It is an act of faith in regional mediation at a time when faith itself is in short supply. Ankara’s involvement is rooted in a long history of balancing between conflicting Muslim nations, often leveraging its credibility as a NATO member with Islamic solidarity credentials. In this case, Erdoğan’s engagement seems personal as well as political.

    Turkish media report that he made the decision after consulting Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif upon returning from Baku — a sign of urgency, and perhaps, of worry that tensions along the border could escalate further. At stake is not just peace between two neighboring countries, but also the wider regional equilibrium. Pakistan’s patience with the Taliban regime has worn thin since the latter’s return to power in 2021. What began as cautious optimism has curdled into suspicion. Repeated cross-border attacks and the resurgence of militant networks have compelled Islamabad to take a harder line, launching limited military operations along the frontier and demanding that the Taliban curb groups using Afghan soil to attack Pakistan. But Kabul’s leaders — fractured, ideologically rigid and diplomatically isolated — have shown little capacity or willingness to act.

    Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif, in a recent television interview, acknowledged this painful reality. He admitted that while the Taliban’s leadership has given verbal assurances to address Pakistan’s concerns, it has repeatedly refused to sign written commitments. “The government in Kabul is not a single, unified entity,” Asif said, in what might be the most honest assessment of Afghanistan’s internal dysfunction to emerge from Islamabad in months. His admission that he regrets earlier comments made in the flush of the Taliban’s victory suggests a rare moment of introspection — one that recognizes how misplaced optimism gave way to bitter disillusionment. Yet even amid this frustration, Asif’s tone carried a trace of pragmatism. Pakistan, he said, cannot “turn its back on friends” like Turkiye and Qatar. His words, measured and conciliatory, hinted at an understanding that isolation is not an option.

    Pakistan’s geography and history bind it to Afghanistan; its diplomacy requires partners who can speak to both sides without prejudice. In Erdoğan’s overture, Pakistan sees not just friendship, but also a lifeline — a chance to reframe the narrative from confrontation to dialogue. Still, one must ask: can mediation succeed when the fundamental asymmetry of trust remains unresolved? Erdoğan’s confidence, while admirable, rests on fragile foundations. The Taliban leadership has shown an aversion to external pressure, often framing any suggestion of compromise as an affront to sovereignty. Pakistan, meanwhile, is caught in its own domestic turbulence — balancing economic fragility, political divisions, and growing security challenges along its western borders. These are not conditions conducive to bold diplomacy. Yet, perhaps it is precisely in such conditions that diplomacy matters most.

    Erdoğan’s approach may not yield immediate breakthroughs, but it reflects a deeper truth about the region: that without dialogue, the alternative is perpetual instability. The Turkish president’s move also signals Ankara’s ambition to reclaim its role as a regional peacemaker, not unlike its efforts in Libya, Syria and the Caucasus. Whether this ambition translates into tangible results depends on how far Ankara can go beyond symbolism. For Pakistan and Afghanistan, the calculus is even more complex. Pakistan’s insistence on written guarantees from Kabul is understandable, given the repeated failures of verbal promises. However, the Taliban’s internal fragmentation means that any written agreement, even if achieved, may be worth little without enforcement capacity. The Pakistani military establishment, once cautiously optimistic about the Taliban’s rise, now faces a grim reality: the same ideology that once promised strategic depth has instead become a security liability.

    Meanwhile, Afghanistan remains trapped in isolation. Its economy is broken, its people are hungry, and its rulers remain defiant in their insularity. Kabul’s refusal to engage meaningfully with Pakistan or to rein in militant groups risks deepening its isolation even further. If Erdoğan’s mission succeeds in bringing Afghan leaders to the table — even symbolically — it will be no small victory. Erdoğan’s gambit also underscores a broader geopolitical trend: middle powers like Turkiye are increasingly stepping into mediation roles once monopolized by the West. In South Asia’s volatile theatre, this is both refreshing and risky. Refreshing because regional actors often understand local sensitivities better than distant powers; risky because their influence, while moral and historical, may not always translate into leverage. For Islamabad, Ankara’s outreach offers a diplomatic breather.

    It allows Pakistan to project restraint — to show that it remains open to negotiation despite provocations. It also gives the government a chance to recalibrate its Afghanistan policy, perhaps moving from reactive military responses to proactive political engagement. But it will require patience, consistency, and above all, unity at home. The story of Pakistan and Afghanistan has too often been one of missed opportunities. Every attempt at reconciliation seems to falter at the edge of hope, undone by mutual suspicion or domestic politics. Erdoğan’s latest intervention may not change this story overnight, but it is a reminder that diplomacy, even when fragile, remains the only path to stability.

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