Pakistan's Propaganda Diplomacy Exposed as Gulf Influence Declines

Iran has bluntly rejected Pakistan's attempt to mediate in regional conflicts, including blocking a Pakistani tanker and dismissing its role. A report argues this exposes Pakistan's "propaganda-driven diplomacy," which aims to create a spectacle but lacks strategic substance and credibility. The analysis contrasts Pakistan's approach with Qatar's, which is built on reliability and acting as an honest broker. It notes that major diplomatic breakthroughs, like the Saudi-Iran deal, were brokered by China, sidelining Pakistan despite its previous offers to mediate.

Key Points: Pakistan's Declining Strategic Role in Gulf Amid Iran Snub

  • Iran rebuffs Pakistan's mediation
  • Pakistan's Gulf influence declining
  • Diplomacy lacks strategic relevance
  • Qatar cited as honest broker contrast
  • China brokered Saudi-Iran deal
3 min read

Pakistan's 'propaganda diplomacy' aimed at preserving its declining strategic importance

Iran rejects Pakistan's mediation, tanker blocked. Report details Pakistan's waning influence and "propaganda diplomacy" in the Gulf region.

"Pakistan once again engages in a pointless spectacle that emphasises nuisance over substance. - India Narrative report"

Islamabad, March 27

Despite Islamabad's attempt to position itself as mediator in the US-Iran conflict, Tehran returned Pakistan's tanker and blocked its passage through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran also turned down proposals for talks, including the US ceasefire attempts, by dismissing Trump's 15-point peace proposal.

According to a report in India Narrative, the pushback of a Pakistani vessel and the Iranian envoy's blunt rejection of Pakistan's role in mediation reflect evolving regional dynamics. It argued that Pakistan's influence and importance in the Gulf remains limited and gradually declining.

The report also stated that the development exposes Pakistan's propaganda-driven diplomacy, which Islamabad perceives as diplomatic strength but in reality, it is further eroding the country's remaining influence in the Gulf and portraying it as a propagandist actor.

"Pakistan once again engages in a pointless spectacle that emphasises nuisance over substance. The propaganda-driven diplomacy aimed at preserving its declining strategic importance and handling backlash is nothing new. The current instance of Pakistan's involvement in the Gulf, aimed at securing a major diplomatic event for itself, hardly holds strategic significance. Its diplomatic tactics lack the value and depth needed to establish itself as a key mediator in high-stakes conflicts," the report detailed.

"Pakistan's diplomacy in the Gulf relies on two strategies: first, symbolic outreach, and second, ideological appeal. Both traditional factors have been waning for decades; the main reason is the lack of strategic reliability and relevance, which are crucial for diplomacy to have persuasive value. The major example of a persuasive diplomatic actor in the region is Qatar, which has strategically built its diplomatic tactics and policies on reliability and relevance rather than on purely ideological appeal," it added.

Qatar's strategic reliability, the report said, is rooted in its image as an "honest broker" that maintains open communication channels with a wide range of adversarial actors, including the United States, Iran, the Taliban, and Hamas.

By contrast, Pakistan's "propaganda diplomacy" largely depends on ideology, communication, and media rather than on "strategic, niche, and persuasive diplomacy" grounded in relevance and credibility.

"This approach ultimately diminishes its legitimacy as a mediator, unlike Qatar's case. In Pakistan's situation, relevance, credibility, and especially a strategic niche are missing. The only factor supporting Pakistan's influence is ideology, which does not make it an effective or persuasive diplomatic actor. The longstanding tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran, simmering for years, were escalated by a new mediator: Pakistan," the report mentioned.

"Former Prime Minister Imran Khan repeatedly offered to mediate between the two regional rivals, but Saudi Arabia outrightly refused. The real breakthrough came in 2023 when China brokered an agreement, with Pakistan largely sidelined. The well-known Afghan peace process, where Pakistan claimed to be the primary mediator between the US and the Taliban, also failed as its ties with the TTP and the Afghan Taliban gradually worsened," it noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
From an outside perspective, it's fascinating to see the regional shift. The article makes a strong case comparing Qatar's success to Pakistan's struggles. It seems credibility is earned through consistent, neutral action, not just through media statements and ideological posturing.
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Priya S
It's a classic case of overreach. When China, with its economic heft, steps in to broker the Saudi-Iran deal, it shows where real influence lies. Pakistan's attempts just come across as desperate for relevance. The Gulf nations are pragmatic; they go where the value is. 🤷‍♀️
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Rohit P
The part about the Afghan peace process is key. They claimed so much credit, but what was the result? Chaos and the return of the Taliban. Their diplomacy creates more problems than it solves. It's good that regional powers are seeing through this now.
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Aditi M
While the analysis seems valid, I hope we in India don't become overconfident. Our focus should be on strengthening our own economic and strategic ties in the Gulf, not just commenting on a neighbor's failures. We have our own challenges to handle.
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Karthik V
The blunt rejection by Iran says it all. When your 'friendly' neighbor won't even let your tanker pass and dismisses your peace proposals publicly, it's a massive diplomatic snub. This "propaganda diplomacy" is backfiring spectacularly. Time for a reality check in Islamabad.

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