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Offshore balancing: a blueprint for Pak-US ties


Offshore balancing: a blueprint for Pak-US ties

A strategic compact between Pakistan and the US is a real possibility, and it needs to be viewed through the lens of American security and geopolitical interests at a time when multilateralism and international law are in retreat.

Washington’s stake in the stability of South Asia — particularly Pakistan and its volatile neighbour, Afghanistan — is shaped by broader great-power competition. Instead of a wasteful rivalry, Professor Stephen Walt’s theory of offshore balancing offers a more pragmatic, cooperative alternative.

Walt argues that the US should maintain a light offshore presence, backed by regional bases that reassure allies rather than provoke rivals, while avoiding a dangerous head-on military build-up against China. Pakistan’s own alliance-building reflects a similar logic. Walt’s ‘balance of threats’ theory holds that India’s aggressive posture, geographic proximity and growing power push Pakistan to carefully balance its ties with both China and the US.

This dynamic opens space for a degree of US-China convergence in South Asia: Washington does not want to cede the region to a rival power, while Beijing wants to protect its Global Development Initiative, built around what it calls ‘corridor economics’.

Afghanistan is often called the ‘graveyard of empires’, but that label undersells its history — it has instead been fertile ground for competing global powers. In this contest, a stable Pakistan is well placed to serve as a geoeconomic bridge that also serves US interests.

Afghanistan itself remains unstable, ruled by a regime that took power by force and has since become a haven for terrorism and organised crime — a threat not just to Pakistan but to the wider world. The Taliban’s worldview is rooted in medieval cultural norms that treat violence, patriarchy and misogyny as cultural preferences. Its distorted understanding of religion, and its treatment of dissent as apostasy, has allowed it to stall or renege on its commitments.

The Taliban have broken their promises to virtually every party they have negotiated with, and are aligned with more than 20 terrorist and militant groups. These groups are not only tolerated but allowed to profit from organised crime — narcotics trafficking, kidnapping for ransom, and arms smuggling. Terrorist networks rarely stay confined within borders: violence targeting Pakistan can easily spill into a broader regional and transnational threat, one that concerns the security of the international community, including the US.

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