Forwarded from Clash Report
Iran's new Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei approved Pakistan’s 2-week ceasefire proposal, after intense diplomacy and last-minute pressure from China.
Source: NYT
Source: NYT
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Forwarded from Intel Slava
🇮🇷🇺🇸❗️ — Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated that for a period of two weeks, safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz would be possible with coordination from Iran’s Armed Forces and taking into account technical limitations.
Forwarded from Market News Feed
🔴 IRAN CEASEFIRE WILL ALSO INCLUDE LEBANON - ISRAEL'S YNET, CITING SECURITY SOURCES. ...
✍️🇵🇰 Why Pakistan as a mediator and not India?
The Middle East is already deep in conflict. Traditionally, countries like Qatar, Oman, or even Turkey would step in to mediate. But with the current situation, and Turkey itself under pressure, the space opened up for another player.
That’s where Pakistan comes in.
Pakistan sits in a unique position. It maintains working relations with the US, strong ties with Iran, and broader neutrality across multiple blocs. That balance matters in mediation because the moment you are seen as leaning too far one way, you lose credibility.
Now compare that with India.
India has very close ties with Israel politically, militarily, and ideologically. That alone makes it a non-starter in any negotiation involving Iran and its allies. You cannot walk into mediation already perceived as aligned with one side. That is not neutrality, that is bias.
Pakistan, on the other hand, does not even recognise Israel. That immediately shifts the dynamic. It removes influence and pressure that could otherwise shape the outcome of negotiations.
Even in official language, you can see the difference. References to “US and allies” instead of directly naming Israel show a deliberate positioning that keeps Pakistan outside of Israel’s political orbit.
At the same time, Pakistan maintains strong relations with Iran while also keeping functional ties with the US. That balance is rare, and it is exactly what makes a mediator viable.
Then there is the security factor.
Any negotiation needs a safe environment. Pakistan can provide that. Once parties are under its protection, the risk of interference drops significantly. That level of deterrence matters more than people realise.
So when you break it all down, it is not random, and it is not surprising.
@ThePulsePoint
The Middle East is already deep in conflict. Traditionally, countries like Qatar, Oman, or even Turkey would step in to mediate. But with the current situation, and Turkey itself under pressure, the space opened up for another player.
That’s where Pakistan comes in.
Pakistan sits in a unique position. It maintains working relations with the US, strong ties with Iran, and broader neutrality across multiple blocs. That balance matters in mediation because the moment you are seen as leaning too far one way, you lose credibility.
Now compare that with India.
India has very close ties with Israel politically, militarily, and ideologically. That alone makes it a non-starter in any negotiation involving Iran and its allies. You cannot walk into mediation already perceived as aligned with one side. That is not neutrality, that is bias.
Pakistan, on the other hand, does not even recognise Israel. That immediately shifts the dynamic. It removes influence and pressure that could otherwise shape the outcome of negotiations.
Even in official language, you can see the difference. References to “US and allies” instead of directly naming Israel show a deliberate positioning that keeps Pakistan outside of Israel’s political orbit.
At the same time, Pakistan maintains strong relations with Iran while also keeping functional ties with the US. That balance is rare, and it is exactly what makes a mediator viable.
Then there is the security factor.
Any negotiation needs a safe environment. Pakistan can provide that. Once parties are under its protection, the risk of interference drops significantly. That level of deterrence matters more than people realise.
So when you break it all down, it is not random, and it is not surprising.
@ThePulsePoint
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🏝️🇵🇰💸 Can Astola Island Become Pakistan’s Maldives?
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi recently pointed out that Astola Island could be developed into a Maldives-style luxury destination, and the opportunity is genuinely massive.
Where Pakistan tourism stands today
Tourism contributes around 6% of GDP, roughly $25 billion annually Over 90% of this is domestic tourism International tourism is still largely untapped.
Meaning Pakistan has huge room to grow.
What if Astola became Pakistan’s Maldives?
If developed properly, Astola could become a high-end tourism hub, attracting international visitors and premium spending.
Think of a complete tourism model:
♦️Northern areas for adventure
♦️Cities for culture and history
♦️Astola as the luxury finish
A project like this could generate hundreds of millions to $1B+ annually long term, create jobs, and bring in valuable foreign exchange.
⚠️ The real challenges
This is where reality kicks in:
♦️Security and stability
Without trust, investors and tourists will not come
♦️Infrastructure
No airport, no water systems, no power, everything needs to be built from scratch
♦️Environmental protection
Astola is a sensitive marine area, development must be sustainable
♦️Investment reality
Requires hundreds of millions to billions in long-term, consistent funding
✍️
Pakistan does not lack beauty or potential. We have mountains, deserts, coastline, history.
What we lack is execution, stability, and long-term planning.
Fix those, and projects like Astola are not just ideas.
They become inevitable.
@ThePulsePoint
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi recently pointed out that Astola Island could be developed into a Maldives-style luxury destination, and the opportunity is genuinely massive.
Where Pakistan tourism stands today
Tourism contributes around 6% of GDP, roughly $25 billion annually Over 90% of this is domestic tourism International tourism is still largely untapped.
Meaning Pakistan has huge room to grow.
What if Astola became Pakistan’s Maldives?
If developed properly, Astola could become a high-end tourism hub, attracting international visitors and premium spending.
Think of a complete tourism model:
♦️Northern areas for adventure
♦️Cities for culture and history
♦️Astola as the luxury finish
A project like this could generate hundreds of millions to $1B+ annually long term, create jobs, and bring in valuable foreign exchange.
⚠️ The real challenges
This is where reality kicks in:
♦️Security and stability
Without trust, investors and tourists will not come
♦️Infrastructure
No airport, no water systems, no power, everything needs to be built from scratch
♦️Environmental protection
Astola is a sensitive marine area, development must be sustainable
♦️Investment reality
Requires hundreds of millions to billions in long-term, consistent funding
✍️
Pakistan does not lack beauty or potential. We have mountains, deserts, coastline, history.
What we lack is execution, stability, and long-term planning.
Fix those, and projects like Astola are not just ideas.
They become inevitable.
@ThePulsePoint
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Forwarded from Intel Slava
🇵🇰🇨🇳 The AVIC J-35AE Stealth Multirole Fighter has been unveiled. Designed specifically for export, the aircraft is expected to attract its first customer soon, with Pakistan considered a likely launch buyer for the 5th generation platform.
@IntelSlava
@IntelSlava
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Forwarded from ResistEye
🇵🇸 Today marks the 78th anniversary of the Nakba, during which more than 750,000 Palestinians were displaced and over 400 villages were destroyed during the establishment of the State of Israel.
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