Opinion | Lunch, Now A State Award: What's With The Growing Pakistan-US Lovefest?
After years of being ignored publicly by recent American administrations, the turnaround in established policy is baffling. What gives?

In terms of sheer turnaround in established policy, it beats description. Recently, the Pakistani Foreign Minister was in Washington, shaking hands with the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, even as American delegations arrived in strength in Pakistan after years of being ignored by previous American administrations. Even heavier for the Pakistanis was the bestowing of Pakistan's highest military honour on General 'Mike' Kurilla. It's enough to make one wonder what the Field Marshal is up to.
Pakistan Brings Out the Champagne
The Foreign Ministry is, of course, portraying the whole saga as a success of no mean order. At one level, that is entirely justified. The Biden administration never invited even the Prime Minister of Pakistan, let alone meet any of their officials. Now there is the highly unprecedented lunch of a sitting Army Chief with the US President and his cringeworthy batting for a Nobel Peace Prize for Trump. Despite the US then bombing a 'brotherly' Muslim country next door - Iran - the Pakistani administration continued to bend over backwards to thank Trump for his 'pro-active role' for peace in the region.
And now comes the final, almost comical gesture: the award of the highest military honour for US CENTCOM commander General 'Mike' Kurilla. The sight of a US General representing the most powerful democracy in the world standing at attention in front of a powerless President Zardari is even more cringeworthy. As Kurilla well knows, it is Field Marshal Munir who is in charge, together with Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Chief Lt Gen Asim Malik as National Security Advisor. Earlier, Kurilla had praised Pakistan to the skies for its 'cooperation' in fighting terrorism - this after it handed over one lone terrorist allegedly responsible for a bombing of US troops as they left Afghanistan. This gesture apparently made up for the decades when it facilitated al Qaeda's top leadership on its territory and thereby was directly responsible for some 3,000 dead troops, over 20,000 wounded, not including 26 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) personnel. Now, Pakistan is a 'phenomenal partner'. It's enough to make one gag.
Pakistan's Premature Ululations
Now comes the bitter truth. The read-out of the meeting between Dar and Rubio is terse and to the point, and sheds light on that mysterious lunch. It expresses 'appreciation' for Pakistan's 'constructive role in mediating conversations with Iran'.
That's interesting. As of last week, Pakistan-based Jaish ul Adl had claimed an attack across the border on a packed courthouse. Again, on July 28, Pakistan suspended road travel between the two countries. But here's something to note: not too long ago, Iran's General Mohsen Rezae had claimed that Pakistan had said that if Israel launched nuclear weapons at Iran, Islamabad would nuke Israel. In short, this is Pakistan at its usual game, playing all sides, one against the other. The US read-out also mentions counterterrorism operations against Islamic State-Khorasan; that means there's a US hand in Afghanistan, which has been resisting Pakistani pressures for quite a while. So, here, too, Pakistan gets its pound of flesh, not to mention possible funds for all of this, at the upcoming US-Pakistan Counterterrorism Dialogue in August. If the US doesn't get this, it needs to look up its files.
The Minerals Hook
There's another 'hook' to reel in the US. Rubio mentions "exploring prospects for enhancing collaboration in the critical minerals and mining sectors". Earlier, a senior State Department official had travelled to Pakistan - again, in April - to "advance U.S. interests in the critical minerals sector at the Pakistan Minerals Investment Forum". Naturally, he met with the Army chief, as did a US Congressional delegation, which included the co-chairs of the Pakistan Caucus, Congressmen Jack Bergman and Tom Suozzi. The irony inherent in this was the Pakistani interior minister's statement that his country "stood as a wall between terrorism and the rest of the world".
Meanwhile, it seems that Balochistan has the largest copper and gold resources in the world, according to the CEO of America's Barrick Mining Corporation, which is exploiting the Reko Diq mines. Balochistan reportedly has $6 to $8 trillion worth of untapped mineral wealth, including vital rare earth elements like dysprosium, terbium, and yttrium. The fact that the Baloch are being harried and killed by the hundreds doesn't seem to bother Washington at all.
The problem? China is also heavily invested in the same region of Chagai with not just its Saindak mine, but also a host of power projects, not to mention the Gwadar port. Beijing is not going to take such an ingress lightly, especially since its workers continue to be attacked in the province. Recently, the newly minted Field Marshal Munir was summoned to Beijing, where the declaration of 'iron brothers', etc, aside, it was rumoured that China was deeply unhappy with Rawalpindi's inability to protect its citizens.
Crypto Capital
There's more. Just after Operation Sindoor ended, a newly appointed Pakistani head for Crypto and Blockchain, Bilal Saqib, was touring the US, where he addressed an elite audience that included the Vice President JD Vance and Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr, at the Bitcoin Vegas 2025 in Las Vegas. There, Saqib sold Pakistan as one of the largest freelance markets with 40 million cryptowallets. With a Minister of State rank and an Order of the British Empire under his belt, Saqib is 'sellable' abroad, especially as he also thanked Trump for his 'peacemaking' skills.
None of this crypto talk, however, was backed by Pakistani law, as the State Bank of Pakistan pointed out. It was not until July that an ordinance was promulgated by the President to establish a regulatory authority for the purpose. But Pakistan's regulations are a mess, and the need to push through an ordinance rather than a Parliament-based legislation is being questioned by critics and likened to the Army-controlled Strategic Facilitation Council (SFC), which is completely opaque in its dealings. Pakistan already had a crypto holding of about $10 billion, even before it was legalised, and ranked third in the Global Crypto Adoption Index in 2020-2021.
Consider that all this activity actually began in April, when the Texas-based logistics firm Fr8Technologies offered to help Pakistan in setting up blockchain products and crypto advice. The firm is linked to World Liberty Financial (WLC), which is owned by members of Trump's family. Since then, given the clear US interest in using Pakistan as a base for its crypto ambitions, other massive names like Binance have weighed in. Irony is that, knowing cryptocurrencies are much in use by terrorists and the criminal underground - as the Financial Action Task Force points out - the US deliberately chose a country that has loose financial oversight (at best) and is entirely army-controlled, to push in billions in potential investment. Nice.
Pakistan Has Overestimated Itself - Again
In sum, what is notable is that America's 'interests' in Pakistan - none of which may have anything to do with India - have preceded the Pahalgam attack. Even so, amid the choppy regional dynamics, there is one constant: Pakistan, as always, seems to have bitten off more than it can chew. To keep Iran, the US and China all happy at once - even as its debts to Beijing in just the power sector touch PKR 423 billion - may be too much even for its inventive powers. Something has to give.
Delhi's reason for worry is that the new Cold War has almost arrived in the West, even as it creates strong uncertainties towards the East. But every change has opportunities.
(Tara Kartha was with the National Security Council Secretariat)
Disclaimer: These are the personal opinions of the author
-
Opinion | The 'Real' Bengali: On Migrant Politics In Bengal And Assam
West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee has exhorted her party members to continue the "movement" against the detention of Bengali-speaking migrant workers in other states. But will that be enough to bring in votes?
-
Inheritance Wars: Ambani, Modi, Now Kapur. India's Mega Family Feuds
Rani Kapur, the mother of late businessman Sunjay Kapur, said "some people" (seen as a reference to her daughter-in-law Priya) were trying to "usurp the family legacy".
-
MiG-21's Final Flight: Why Training, Not The Jet, Failed Air Force Pilots
With just two months until the final flight on September 19, historian and Indian Air Force expert Anchit Gupta joined NDTV to provide a detailed perspective on the MiG-21's legacy.
-
Exclusive: Blank Papers, Multiple Credits - Manipur's Multi-Crore Highway Compensation Mystery
A beneficiary told NDTV he received Rs 3.8 lakh instead of at least five times the amount he deserved to get, and all objections to land acquisition fell silent over time after an insurgent group got involved
-
Earth Imaging Satellite NISAR Exposes NASA's Weaknesses, ISRO's Strengths
Wendy Edelstein, NISAR's Deputy Project Manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), asserted, "NISAR is a 50-50 partnership between NASA and ISRO".
-
Blog | Saiyaara, And The Taming Of The Tortured-Male-Rockstar
Mohit Suri's film flips the script, in that it allows the girl to bypass conventions and extract an Aditya Chopra hero, prone to seeing the divine in the person he loves, from Sandeep Reddy Vanga's universe of God-complexed lovers.
-
While Shubhanshu Shukla Was Away, Another Astronaut Simulated Space On Earth
Analogue missions take place in locations that have natural or engineered physical similarities to extreme space environments
-
Opinion | Rahul's 'Masterly Inaction' Can Cost Congress More Than Just Karnataka
The prospects of a repeat of Madhya Pradesh cannot be ruled out in Karnataka. Rahul is running out of both time and options.
-
Blog | Sky-High Rent, Choked Roads: How Bengaluru, Mumbai, Delhi Became India's Chaos Capitals
Your office may be cool and your home furnishings plush, but there is little you can do about the confusion outside.
-
From A Fake Embassy In Ghaziabad To The Weird World Of Micronations
A micronation is an aspirant state, a wedge of unclaimed land or an abandoned structure, or even a disputed piece of farmland that claims sovereignty.