Sunday, April 12, 2026

Pakistan sends fighter jets to Saudi Arabia amid fragile US-Iran ceasefire




Pakistan sends fighter jets to Saudi Arabia amid fragile US-Iran ceasefire


Deployment under mutual defence pact comes as Islamabad hosts US-Iran ceasefire talks


Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance. [Jacquelyn Martin Pool/Reuters]



By Faisal Ali
Published On 11 Apr 2026


Pakistan has deployed fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, its first visible military move under a mutual defence pact between the two countries, as it hosts ceasefire talks aimed at ending weeks of regional fighting between the US, Israel and Iran.

The aircraft — a mix of fighter and support jets — landed at King Abdulaziz Air Base in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province on Saturday, the Saudi Ministry of Defence announced.

The deployment came under a collective defence agreement signed in September 2025, which commits each country to treat an attack on the other as an attack on itself.

The pact was signed during a visit by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Riyadh last September, where he met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.



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As the jets touched down in the kingdom, Pakistan was hosting direct negotiations between the United States and Iran in Islamabad, with senior delegations from both sides at the table and Pakistani mediators in the room, working on ending the weeks-long war.

Since Iran launched missile and drone strikes on what it described as US targets in Gulf states following the US-Israeli killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on 28 February, Pakistan has been balancing its commitments on both sides.

Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said he personally warned Iranian leaders that Islamabad was bound by its obligations to Riyadh under the agreement in early March.

Iran sought guarantees that Saudi territory would not be used to attack it, Dar said, adding that he secured those assurances.

Iranian attacks on targets in Saudi Arabia, however, have continued, including key bases and a US embassy building.

Army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir flew to Riyadh in early March to discuss measures to halt Iranian strikes under the pact’s framework.

Four days before Saturday’s fighter jet deployment, Sharif called the crown prince to pledge Pakistan would stand “shoulder to shoulder” with the kingdom.

The two countries also agreed to expedite a pledged Saudi investment package for Pakistan worth $5bn.

Earlier on Saturday, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan had met Prime Minister Sharif in Islamabad alongside Dar and Munir.

Saudi Arabia is home to some 2.5 million Pakistani workers whose remittances help sustain a fragile economy, and has provided Islamabad with repeated financial assistance.

Imtiaz Gul, an Islamabad-based security analyst, told Al Jazeera the deployment was not a military escalation, but an attempt to communicate Pakistan’s commitments to Iran.



Vance arrives in Pakistan for talks with Iran


“Three jets won’t make much of a difference militarily,” he said, given the scale of Saudi Arabia’s own air force.

“It’s messaging Tehran to be flexible in these talks, but also it is underlining to them that Pakistan has obligations under the mutual strategic agreement it has with Riyadh,” he said.

Michael Kugelman, a resident senior fellow for South Asia at the Atlantic Council, told Al Jazeera that Pakistan’s move was “a bit of a risky gambit”.

“This is Pakistan signalling to Iran that if Iran is not willing to make the types of concessions that lead to a deal and the conflict resumes and escalates, there is a chance that Pakistan could move itself closer to Saudi Arabia and conceivably invoke the mutual defence pact,” Kugelman said.


11 comments:

  1. Thank You 47.

    TATA Trump Always Take Action.

    Where is No Action Talk Only?

    Or ROW?

    CENTCOM Commander Brad Cooper announced that the United States has begun establishing a new safe passage for commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. The route will be shared soon to restore confidence and ensure the free flow of commerce.

    U.S. forces have already begun clearing Iranian-laid sea mines. Two Navy destroyers have transited the strait and are operating in the Gulf to secure the corridor.

    Underwater drones are now being deployed to accelerate the mine-clearing effort.

    https://x.com/doranimated/status/2043014176247845290?s=46&t=8K6fzabO3g6uaj4KxwSSjg

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. TS, you're now like Vance and Hegseth, saying an obsequious 'Thank You' to the MAGA-Idiot, wakakaka

      Delete
    2. Er....any problem with thanking someone doing something to open the SOH?

      Delete
  2. Thank You 47 TATA.

    BREAKING: Qatar’s Ministry of Transport says maritime navigation will resume “for all types of maritime vessels and ships” from 6am-6pm local time (03:00-15:00 GMT) on Sunday.

    https://x.com/ajenglish/status/2043042059666227550?s=46&t=8K6fzabO3g6uaj4KxwSSjg

    ReplyDelete
  3. Proof of TATA.

    Still no sign of Wanker’s Dragon,

    🚨 JUST IN: In a jaw-dropping announcement, U.S. Central Command announces the start of a "mine-clearance mission" in the "Strait of Hormuz".

    CENTCOM reports that two U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers, the USS Frank E. Peterson Jr. and the USS Michael Murphy, transited the Strait of Hormuz on April 11, 2026, beginning operations to clear sea mines laid by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

    The mission aims to establish and publicize a safe maritime passage, restoring the free flow of commerce through this critical chokepoint. Additional U.S. forces, including underwater drones, are expected to join the effort in the coming days.

    https://x.com/_maga_news_/status/2043018224812642782?s=46&t=8K6fzabO3g6uaj4KxwSSjg

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. mfer, fart only when that 'alternative' passage is been established lah

      Delete
  4. Syria (Aleppo) in the 1950s, when 40% of the population was Christian. Today, it’s less than 1%. This is the case for all the Middle East under Islam. Funny how no one cares about this genocide.

    https://x.com/realmaalouf/status/2043067540121751966?s=46&t=8K6fzabO3g6uaj4KxwSSjg

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. funny, before the coming of the zionists into the land of Palestine let in by the pommie, most of the natives were Muslim.

      Now, what's the percentage of muslim in that land occupied illegally & known as zionist state?

      How come no one, especially a mfering u cares about this genocide?

      Delete
  5. No destroyer was forced to retreat, nor did any Iranian threat occur in the Strait of Hormuz

    ‎The negotiating team in Pakistan is begging America to remove the mines,

    ‎as it has been revealed that the defeated Iranian regime planted random mines on the Omani side and does not know their locations, and there is no technology, or capabilities to remove them except for American capabilities to clear them, and for this reason they are making excuses with Lebanon and other pathetic files, claiming that the Strait is still closed

    ‎And to cover up this scandal, setback, and catastrophe, the remnants of the defeated Revolutionary Guard in Iran spread false news about the retreat of the American destroyer that sweeps away mines

    ‎Excuse them; their collapsed gang cannot bear more defeats and setbacks, so they needed to boost their morale through a fabricated story of alleged American fear

    https://x.com/mirsadeye/status/2042980797280399682?s=46&t=8K6fzabO3g6uaj4KxwSSjg

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. wakakakaka… gullible gullie of fart

      Delete