How Islamabad Just Sidestepped Decades of Failed Middle East Policy


The recent announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran has been met with a predictable mix of relief and skepticism. President Trump has framed the pause as a definitive military victory, stating earlier today that “we are witnessing the triumph of American strength over chaos, and the world is finally coming to its senses.” Tehran, meanwhile, has presented its 10-point peace plan as a set of non-negotiable conditions for a sovereign power. Yet the most striking development of the last 12 hours is not found in the rhetoric from Washington or the demands from the Revolutionary Guards. It is found in the location of the upcoming talks: Islamabad.

For decades, the architecture of global diplomacy has rested on a Western foundation. When crises erupted in the Persian Gulf, the world looked to the traditional powers of London, Paris, and Berlin, or perhaps the corridors of the United Nations in New York, to provide the mediating spark. That era appears to have ended. The Islamabad Accord, as the framework is being called, was not crafted by European diplomats or career officials at the State Department. It was brokered through an intense, overnight shuttle diplomacy involving Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir, with the quiet but unmistakable backing of Beijing.

This is a pivot that demands a clear-eyed assessment of the new reality. This is the birth of a post-Western diplomatic order , where the primary mediators of global conflict are no longer the traditional guardians of the liberal international system.

The mechanics of this ceasefire reveal a profound shift in leverage. According to recent reports, the sole communication channel for the finalization of the memorandum of understanding was Islamabad. Although Vice President JD Vance and special envoy Steven Witkoff were engaged in the discussions, the bridge to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was a Pakistani one. This was not a matter of convenience; it was a matter of necessity. Pakistan possesses a unique combination of a long-standing security relationship with the United States and a functional, high-level dialogue with the Iranian leadership that Washington simply lacks.

There is a certain common sense logic to this development that often eludes the foreign policy establishment. For years, the prevailing wisdom in Washington has been that global stability requires Western management. But the reality on the ground in the Middle East has changed. The regional powers and their immediate neighbors now have more stake in the outcome and more direct influence over the combatants than any envoy from Brussels. By facilitating the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz , Prime Minister Sharif and Field Marshal Munir have done more for global energy security in 12 hours than years of European de-escalation efforts managed to achieve.

However, this is no simple administrative change. The involvement of China as a shadow guarantor of this process introduces a new layer of complexity. For Beijing, a stable Middle East is essential for its energy needs and its Belt-and-Road ambitions. By supporting a Pakistani mediated solution, China is effectively demonstrating that it can provide the security architecture for the Global South without the moralizing or the military entanglements that often accompany Western intervention.

Iran’s 10-point plan itself reflects this new landscape. Although many of its demands—such as the full withdrawal of U.S. forces and reparations for war damages—are likely non-starters in Washington, the fact that they are being discussed in Islamabad rather than Geneva gives them a different weight. In this setting, Iran is not a pariah state being lectured by a superpower; it is a regional actor negotiating through a friendly neighbor. Abbas Araghchi underscored this shift when he remarked that “the era of Western dictation is over; we are now speaking through those who understand the sovereignty of our region.” This change in optics matters. It provides Tehran with the domestic cover to make concessions that it would view as a humiliation if dictated by the West.

This does not mean the path ahead is easy. The ceasefire is described as fragile for a reason. The gap between the American demand for a total end to enrichment and the Iranian insistence on the acceptance of enrichment remains a chasm. There is also the reality of the regional Axis of Resistance, which continues to operate under its own logic regardless of what is signed in Pakistan. The United States must remain vigilant, recognizing that a pause in hostilities is not the same as a permanent settlement.

Yet the broader lesson of the last few hours remains. The West no longer holds a monopoly on the tools of peace. If the United States wants to protect its interests in an increasingly multipolar world, it must learn to navigate this new terrain. This requires a departure from the old playbook of therapeutic politics in which negotations take place only with those who share Western values or follow Western rules. Instead, it requires the kind of hard-nosed, transactional diplomacy that recognizes the utility of partners like Pakistan, even when their interests do not perfectly align with the United States or Europe.

The administration’s decision to engage with Islamabad and delay further strikes is a recognition of this reality. It is an admission that, in the current global climate, the most effective route to de-escalation may not lead through the traditional halls of power. As the two-week window begins, the world will be watching to see if this new diplomatic model can produce a lasting result. If it succeeds, the Islamabad Accord will be remembered as the moment the post-Western world finally arrived. If it fails, then even the most innovative diplomacy cannot overcome the deep-seated animosities of the Middle East. But for now, the guns are silent, the tankers are moving, and the center of the diplomatic world has shifted.

The post How Islamabad Just Sidestepped Decades of Failed Middle East Policy appeared first on Foreign Policy In Focus .

Published: Modified: Back to Voices