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Opinion
Neeta Lal

Why India is rankled by Pakistan playing mediator in US-Iran war

Pakistan, with its contested reputation, leapt into diplomatic action while India, despite its heft and concerns, was absent from the frame

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English and Urdu newspapers at a roadside stall after the US-Iran peace talks in Islamabad on April 12. Photo: AFP
Delhi-based journalist and editor Neeta Lal has worked with India's leading publications in her three-decade career.
The quiet conclusion of US and Iranian backchannel engagements in Islamabad left more than diplomatic ambiguity. It crystallised a striking image: a financially strained, politically volatile Pakistan briefly positioning itself as a facilitator in one of the world’s most combustible rivalries. Substantive or symbolic, the episode underscores a deeper churn in West Asian geopolitics – one in which agility trumps credibility.

Pakistan’s role was not incidental. Islamabad offered itself as a conduit when formal channels between Washington and Tehran remained constricted. With tensions oscillating between escalation and uneasy restraint, even imperfect intermediaries could acquire utility. Pakistan stepped into that gap with calculated intent.

The motivations are not hard to decipher. Facing acute economic distress, Islamabad had few low-cost avenues to reassert geopolitical relevance. High-visibility diplomacy provided one. By leveraging geography, residual security linkages with the United States and its proximity to Iran, Pakistan inserted itself into a conversation where it had long been marginal.

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China’s shadow loomed. Pakistan’s deepening alignment with Beijing, anchored in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, had afforded it a degree of diplomatic cover. While China remained publicly detached from this specific initiative, Islamabad’s mediation posture aligned with Beijing’s preference for multipolar conflict management frameworks that diluted Western dominance. The convergence was hard to miss.

Yet Pakistan’s claim to peacemaking remains deeply contested. Its long-standing association with militant proxies continues to cast a shadow over its credibility. For Washington and its partners, engagement with Islamabad appeared driven less by trust than by expediency. Pakistan was not so much a mediator as a channel of convenience – useful, if not entirely reliable.

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It is precisely this paradox that rankles India. In New Delhi, the optics of Pakistan hosting sensitive diplomatic exchanges triggered a sharper-than-usual reaction across the political and strategic spectrum. The discomfort was rooted not in the substance of the talks but in the symbolism. A country with a contested reputation had managed to project itself as diplomatically proactive, while India, with far greater economic weight and regional stakes, was absent from the frame.

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