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Iran fired at Pakistan. Pakistan shot back. Can trust be rebuilt?

Iran and Pakistan have announced that ambassadors of both countries will “return to their respective posts” this week. That marks the end of a diplomatic crisis that began when Iran launched an unexpected missile and drone attack Jan. 16 in Pakistan’s sparsely populated Balochistan province. 

Iranian officials claimed the operation was aimed at neutralizing members of an obscure militant group, but commentators in Pakistan remain skeptical. “I think that it was a blunder from sections of the Iranian deep state who tend to be trigger-happy,” says Mushahid Hussain Syed, a Pakistani senator and foreign policy expert, noting that Iran is facing pressure from the United States and Israel over its support of Hamas in Gaza. 

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It took only 48 hours and two rounds of missiles for trust to break down between Iran and Pakistan. Understanding why Iran struck its neighbor – and what each country can do to boost security – will help in working to restore lost trust.

Mr. Syed says international and domestic security concerns led Tehran “to send a robust message that ‘look, we’ll not be trifled with.’”

The cost of that message was Pakistan’s trust and sense of security. 

Although Iran and Pakistan “have sought to quickly reengage and de-escalate tensions, the relationship has been damaged,” says Maleeha Lodhi, Pakistan’s former permanent representative to the United Nations. To repair it, she says Iran will need to “check smuggling and cross-border terrorism,” and ensure “Baloch militants don’t have a sanctuary in Iran’s border areas.”

After a week of hostility, including missile exchanges, there are welcome signs of a rapprochement between Iran and Pakistan. The two Muslim countries issued a joint statement yesterday announcing that the Iranian foreign minister, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, would visit Islamabad next week, and that the ambassadors of both countries would “return to their respective posts” by Jan. 26. 

The statement marks the end of a diplomatic crisis that began last Tuesday, when Iran launched an unexpected missile and drone attack that killed at least two children in Pakistan’s sparsely populated Balochistan province. Iranian officials claimed that the operation was aimed at neutralizing members of the obscure militant outfit Jaish al-Adl, which Iran holds responsible for past attacks on its side of the border. 

Commentators in Pakistan, however, remain skeptical about this explanation. “I think that it was a blunder from sections of the Iranian deep state who tend to be trigger-happy,” says Mushahid Hussain Syed, a Pakistani senator and foreign policy expert, noting that Iran is facing domestic pressure over recent security breaches inside its territory, as well as pressure from the United States and Israel over its support of Hamas in Gaza and the Houthis in Yemen.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

It took only 48 hours and two rounds of missiles for trust to break down between Iran and Pakistan. Understanding why Iran struck its neighbor – and what each country can do to boost security – will help in working to restore lost trust.

These circumstances, according to Mr. Syed, led Tehran “to send a robust message that ‘look, we’ll not be trifled with.’”

The cost of that message was Pakistan’s trust. 

“Although the two neighbors have sought to quickly reengage and de-escalate tensions, the relationship has been damaged,” says Maleeha Lodhi, Pakistan’s former permanent representative to the United Nations. 

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