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Pakistan and Turkey: A Brotherhood Forged in Fire

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Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : In international relations, genuine friendships are tested not during moments of comfort, but amid adversity. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s recent visit to Istanbul to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was not merely ceremonial—it was deeply symbolic and strategically significant. It came in the wake of the four-day military confrontation between India and Pakistan (May 5–10, 2025), during which Turkey stood firmly by Pakistan’s side. In doing so, Turkey did not just display diplomatic courtesy, but reaffirmed a timeless and resilient brotherhood.
Sharif’s meeting with Erdogan was marked by warmth and fraternity. A photo he posted on social media—walking hand-in-hand with Erdogan—went viral as a powerful image of solidarity. “Had the honour of meeting my dear brother President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul this evening,” Sharif wrote on X. “Thanked him for his resolute support to Pakistan in the recent Pakistan-India standoff which resulted in Pakistan’s overwhelming victory, Alhamdolillah! Conveyed the sentiments of gratitude from the people of Pakistan to their Turkish brothers and sisters.”
Turkey’s support for Pakistan extended beyond verbal endorsements. Reports suggest that Turkish-manufactured drones played a tactical role in the conflict, helping Pakistan gain an upper hand. Ankara’s vocal alignment with Islamabad, despite its formal ties with India, marked a bold geopolitical stance that came with repercussions.
India, a global economic heavyweight, responded swiftly. Calls for boycotting Turkish goods began trending across Indian media. Prime Minister Modi urged citizens to prefer domestic travel over international destinations such as Turkey. More consequentially, the Indian Bureau of Civil Aviation Security revoked the operating clearance of Turkish ground-handling firm Celebi, which serviced major Indian airports including Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru. These measures reflect growing diplomatic strain and an increasingly adversarial posture from New Delhi toward Ankara.
Yet, Erdogan stood his ground. In a response to Sharif’s message, he reiterated, “We reaffirmed and strengthened our determination to enhance the deep-rooted historical, human, and political relations between Türkiye and Pakistan in all areas. May our Lord make our unity, togetherness, and brotherhood everlasting…”
Turkey’s consistent alignment with Pakistan is not new. From the Kashmir issue to global Islamic causes like Palestine and Gaza, Ankara has persistently echoed Pakistan’s voice. This enduring partnership has transcended changing governments, strategic calculations, or economic dependencies.
During Pakistan’s power crisis when Turkish floating power plants provided electricity to Karachi. Similarly, during natural disasters and political isolation, Turkey has always extended its hand. This is not transactional diplomacy—it is principled alignment born of shared faith, common causes, and historical memory.
The emotional bond stretches back to the Khilafat Movement in the early 20th century, when Indian Muslims rallied to save the Ottoman Caliphate. Though the movement eventually faded, Turks never forgot the solidarity of South Asian Muslims—a memory that remains alive in the hearts of both nations.
Sharif’s visit also reinforced the institutional mechanisms that underpin this friendship. The High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council (HLSCC), co-chaired by both leaders, held its seventh session earlier this year in Islamabad, underscoring the continuity of engagement. Their recent discussions covered trade, defense, tourism, education, and media collaboration—areas ripe with potential.
Currently, the Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) between Pakistan and Turkey, signed in 2022, grants tariff concessions to various products. In 2023, bilateral trade reached $602.9 million—with Pakistan exporting $352.1 million and importing $250.8 million worth of goods. However, this figure represents a fraction of the potential that exists.
According to economic analysts, bilateral trade between Pakistan and Turkey can conservatively grow to $5 billion over the next five years if both sides implement the proposed Free Trade Agreement (FTA), ease non-tariff barriers, and create export facilitation zones. Pakistan’s textile, leather, and sports goods can find major Turkish markets, while Turkey’s automotive parts, construction materials, and advanced defense equipment can fill key gaps in Pakistan’s industrial ecosystem.
Investment potential is equally significant. Turkish companies have already shown interest in Pakistan’s energy, construction, food processing, and logistics sectors. If Pakistan offers dedicated Turkish Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and ensures policy continuity, foreign direct investment from Turkey could increase from the current $200 million to over $1 billion by 2030. Joint ventures in shipbuilding, cement production, and tourism infrastructure are also under discussion.
Turkey’s transformation under Erdogan—from a turbulent parliamentary system to a relatively stable presidential model—also offers instructive lessons for Pakistan. Turkey has successfully redefined its civil-military relations, with its armed forces now playing a stabilizing, rather than interventionist, role.
In contrast, Pakistan’s political ecosystem has been mired in cyclical instability. A strong, transparent, and accountable governance model—similar to Turkey’s balance between democratic authority and institutional support—could serve as a framework for reform and progress in Islamabad.
The people-to-people connection between Pakistan and Turkey is one of the strongest elements of this bilateral relationship. Turkish television dramas have become a staple in Pakistani households, with Diriliş: Ertuğrul enjoying a cult following. Similarly, Pakistani dramas—famous for their emotional depth—are gaining traction in Turkey. During the visit, Sharif proposed formal cooperation in media content exchange, film production, and cultural diplomacy that echoes shared values and aesthetics.
During the formal bilateral meetings, the leaders explored new horizons in educational exchange, tourism development, and counterterrorism. Erdogan emphasized the value of cooperation in intelligence, technology, and internal security. Turkey’s advanced UAV and cybersecurity infrastructure could benefit Pakistan’s national security framework, particularly in border management and urban counterterrorism.
Educational collaboration, including scholarships, student exchanges, and faculty training programs, was also discussed. Erdogan offered assistance in developing Pakistan’s tourism sector, drawing from Turkey’s world-class experience in heritage conservation and hospitality.
Tourism potential between the two countries is largely untapped. In 2024, less than 50,000 Pakistanis visited Turkey, and fewer than 10,000 Turks visited Pakistan. With targeted initiatives and improved flight connectivity, this number can increase tenfold over the next decade—bringing not just revenue, but also cultural enrichment.
The friendship between Pakistan and Turkey is not based on shifting interests or short-term gains. It is a profound relationship shaped by Islamic brotherhood, cultural closeness, and historical solidarity. It has translated into multifaceted cooperation in trade, investment, defense, education, and humanitarian causes—and it continues to evolve.
As Pakistan reflects with gratitude on this enduring support, it looks forward with optimism to a future of even stronger ties—a future where the Pakistan-Turkey partnership becomes a model of strategic brotherhood for the world to emulate. The visit of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Ankara was not just an act of appreciation—it was a reaffirmation of a shared vision: to build a just, prosperous, and peaceful world, side by side.

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Strategic Siege: Is Pakistan Being Surrounded

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Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : Geopolitics has never been governed by sentiment. Not religion, not shared history, not cultural brotherhood—only interests. The unfolding realignments across South Asia and the Middle East illustrate this truth with striking clarity. Alliances are shifting, rivalries are recalibrating, and Pakistan finds itself increasingly positioned at the intersection of competing strategic designs.
The roots of today’s complexity stretch back to 1979, when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. Pakistan became the frontline state in a U.S.-backed campaign to counter Moscow. Billions of dollars in American and Saudi assistance flowed through intelligence networks to arm and train Afghan fighters. The mobilization of religious ideology was not incidental—it was strategic. Fighters from across the Muslim world converged in Afghanistan. By 1989, the Soviet withdrawal marked a Cold War victory for Washington and its partners.
But militant infrastructures rarely dissolve once their immediate utility ends. The Taliban emerged in the 1990s from the ashes of war, establishing control over Kabul in 1996. Pakistan was among the few nations to recognize their regime. Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, however, the same Taliban became the primary target of American military intervention. The subsequent 20-year war cost over $2 trillion and claimed more than 170,000 lives before the U.S. withdrawal in August 2021.
The Taliban’s return to power reshaped the region yet again. Instead of ushering in stability for Pakistan, however, cross-border militancy intensified. The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), operating from Afghan soil, escalated attacks in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. Islamabad responded with cross-border airstrikes against militant sanctuaries. While tactically decisive, these actions strained relations with Kabul and risked civilian backlash.
Instead, Pakistan with its deep intelligence roots in Afghanistan, had the option to adopt the same tactics which Afghanistan is using by infiltrating Pakistani Taliban in Pakistan and killing innocent people mostly by detonating human bombs in Mosque. This could have been a more discrete way to weed out the menace of TTP. History suggests that purely kinetic responses can produce unintended strategic consequences. Airstrikes may eliminate immediate threats, but they can also deepen mistrust and create diplomatic openings for rival powers.
In geopolitics, tactical victories can sometimes yield strategic setbacks. By intensifying overt military pressure, Islamabad may have inadvertently accelerated Kabul’s search for diversified partnerships.
That diversification is perhaps the most striking development. The Taliban government, ideologically committed to Islamic governance, has increasingly explored diplomatic and economic engagement beyond traditional Islamic partners. India reopened diplomatic channels in Kabul and expanded humanitarian assistance. Israel has pledged billions of dollars of aid to Kabul in alignment with India. This is a profound geopolitical entanglement: an Islamic Emirate seeking expanded engagement with a Hindu-majority India and a Jewish-majority Israel, even as tensions simmer with neighboring Muslim Pakistan.
This underscores a fundamental principle of realpolitik: states pursue survival and leverage, not theological alignment. Religious brotherhood and shared culture matter, but only when they coincide with national interest calculations. Facing economic collapse, frozen reserves, and diplomatic isolation, Kabul seeks diversification. India offers infrastructure and access. Israel offers technological cooperation and strategic outreach. Ideology yields to necessity.
For Pakistan, however, the optics intensify concerns of encirclement. On its eastern border, India remains a strategic competitor, particularly over Kashmir. On its western frontier now stands an Afghanistan willing to engage Islamabad’s rivals. To the southwest lies Iran, itself navigating tense relations with the United States. This evolving geometry fuels perceptions of a tightening strategic ring.
An additional dimension complicates matters further: Bagram Airbase. During the U.S. presence in Afghanistan, Bagram served as the largest American military installation in the country, with dual runways capable of handling heavy aircraft and advanced surveillance platforms. Its geographic location—approximately 500 kilometers from China’s Xinjiang region—made it strategically significant.
U.S. President Donald Trump publicly criticized the abandonment of Bagram in 2021, arguing that retaining the base would have preserved American leverage, particularly in the context of intensifying U.S.-China rivalry. Bagram’s proximity to Central Asia, Iran, and western China positions it as more than a counterterrorism platform—it is a potential springboard in great-power competition.
While direct American military reentry into Afghanistan appears unlikely in the near term, evolving regional alignments could create indirect pathways of influence. The strengthening of India’s presence in Kabul, combined with Israel’s strategic engagement in broader Asian geopolitics, introduces analytical possibilities. Washington maintains deep defense partnerships with both New Delhi and Tel Aviv. If Afghanistan continues diversifying toward these actors, space may gradually reopen for U.S. strategic leverage—without formal troop deployments.
Interestingly, geopolitics often unfolds through indirect channels. For Washington, containing China remains a central strategic priority. For India, Afghanistan offers westward strategic depth. For Israel, expanded regional engagement broadens diplomatic influence. For Kabul, diversified partnerships reduce isolation. For Pakistan, however, these convergences heighten strategic anxiety.
For Israel, extending its engagement with Kabul through India would provide a strategic foothold in South Asia and enhance its capacity to deter Pakistan from aligning with Turkey and Saudi Arabia in any configuration perceived as intimidating to Israel. Such cooperation could be viewed as a counterweight to a potential alignment involving Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and nuclear-armed Pakistan, which some analysts argue might aim to exert strategic pressure or encirclement against Israel.
Simultaneously, the Persian Gulf remains heavily militarized. The U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain deploys advanced naval assets, while Iran has invested in ballistic missiles, drones, and anti-ship systems designed to offset conventional asymmetry. China, importing substantial Gulf energy supplies, and Russia, expanding ties with Tehran, both observe carefully.
Any escalation between Washington and Tehran would reverberate in Pakistan. The country already hosts approximately 1.3 million registered Afghan refugees. A major Iran conflict could trigger further displacement, compounding economic strain amid IMF-backed reforms and domestic political polarization.
Internally, Pakistan faces political turbulence, including debates surrounding the incarceration of former Prime Minister Imran Khan and federal-provincial tensions. External pressure combined with internal division magnifies vulnerability.
Yet one broader truth emerges from this complex web: strategic encirclement is not solely a product of adversarial design. It can also arise from miscalculation, overreliance on hard power, and insufficient diplomatic agility. States that rely exclusively on military tools risk narrowing their strategic options.
This is a defining moment. Great-power rivalry, regional insecurity, and ideological contradictions intersect at fragile fault lines. Afghanistan’s outreach beyond traditional religious alignments demonstrates the primacy of interest over identity. Bagram symbolizes the enduring shadow of great-power competition. India and Israel’s evolving engagement in Kabul reflects the fluidity of modern alliances.
But history offers a sobering lesson. From the Soviet-Afghan war to the U.S. intervention, military campaigns have reshaped borders without resolving deeper grievances. Stability requires not merely deterrence but diplomacy.
Encirclement strategies may promise leverage. Hybrid doctrines may promise precision. Yet sustainable security demands cooperation grounded in mutual recognition of vulnerabilities.
Geopolitics may be ruthless in its calculations, but peace remains the only enduring strategic victory.

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Pakistan and Russia deepen media and diplomatic dialogue ahead of PM Sharif’s visit to Moscow

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Monitoring Desk: The Moscow–Islamabad Media Forum will be held on February 27, 2026, to coincide with the official visit of the Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif, to Moscow, scheduled for the first week of March 2026.
The forum will serve as a platform for journalists, political experts, and diplomats from Pakistan and Russia to discuss the current state of bilateral relations, explore future opportunities, and analyze how the Russia–Pakistan partnership impacts global politics, the economy, and the contemporary media landscape.

Cooperation between Russia and Pakistan is of particular importance in the context of the transformation of international relations and the formation of a new system of global interaction. In recent years, contacts between the two countries have intensified at inter-parliamentary, expert, and media levels, while practical cooperation in the humanitarian and socio-political spheres continues to expand.
Within the framework of the forum, Russian and Pakistani journalists, political scientists, and representatives of diplomatic circles will discuss the current state and future prospects of bilateral relations, as well as the role of the Russia–Pakistan partnership in political, economic, and information processes shaping the modern world.
The event is timed to coincide with the official visit of the Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Shehbaz Sharif, to Moscow from March 3 to 5, 2026.
Admission for media representatives will be granted only through prior accreditation upon presentation of a passport and a valid editorial certificate confirming the journalist’s affiliation with the accredited media organization.
MSPC “Russia Today” reserves the right to refuse accreditation without providing an explanation.
This News is taken from
https://dnd.com.pk/pakistan-and-russia-deepen-media-and-diplomatic-dialogue-ahead-of-pm-sharifs-visit-to-moscow/328726/

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Pakistan launches strikes on Afghanistan, with Taliban saying dozens killed

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Pakistan has carried out multiple overnight air strikes on Afghanistan, which the Taliban has said killed and wounded dozens of people, including women and children.

Islamabad said the attacks targeted seven alleged militant camps and hideouts near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and that they had been launched after recent suicide bombings in Pakistan.

Afghanistan condemned the attacks, saying they targeted multiple civilian homes and a religious school.

The fresh strikes come after the two countries agreed to a fragile ceasefire in October following deadly cross-border clashes, though subsequent fighting has taken place.

The Taliban’s defence ministry said the strikes targeted civilian areas of Nangarhar and Paktika provinces.

Officials in Nangarhar told the BBC that the home of a man called Shahabuddin had been hit by one of the strikes, killing about 20 family members, including women and children.

Pakistan’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting said it had carried out “intelligence based selective targeting of seven terrorist camps and hideouts”.

In a statement on X, it said the targets included members of the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan, which the government refers to as “Fitna al Khawarij,” along with their affiliates and the Islamic State-Khorasan Province.

The ministry described the strikes as “a retributive response” to recent suicide bombings in Pakistan by terror groups it said were sheltered by Kabul.

The recent attacks in Pakistan included one on a Shia mosque in the capital Islamabad earlier this month, as well as others that took place since the holy month of Ramadan began this week in the north-western Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Pakistan accused the Afghan Taliban of failing to take action against the militants, adding that it had “conclusive evidence” that the attacks were carried out by militants on the instructions of their leadership in Afghanistan.

The Taliban’s defence ministry later posted on X condemning the attacks as a “blatant violation of Afghanistan’s territorial integrity”, adding that they were a “clear breach of international law”.

It warned that “an appropriate and measured response will be taken at a suitable time”, adding that “attacks on civilian targets and religious institutions indicate the failure of Pakistan’s army in intelligence and security.”

The strikes come days after Saudi Arabia mediated the release of three Pakistani soldiers earlier this week, who were captured in Kabul during border clashes last October.

Those clashes ended with a tentative ceasefire that same month after the worst fighting since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

Pakistan and Afghanistan share a 1,600-mile (2,574 km) mountainous border.

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