By: News Desk 92Pavilion
The international structure has moved decisively away from the post-Cold War unipolarity toward a complex, fragmented multipolarity. This shift is characterized by the intensifying rivalry between the United States and China, the resurgence of middle powers, and the erosion of a single “rules-based” global order. For Pakistan, a nation historically adept at navigating great-power alliances, this evolving international structure has fundamentally altered the calculus of its foreign policy. No longer able to rely on a stable, binary alignment, Islamabad is forced to adopt a strategy of “strategic hedging,” attempting to maximize economic and security benefits from competing power centers while avoiding becoming a permanent casualty of their friction.
The most profound impact of the current international structure is the “China-US Row.” As the Asia-Pacific becomes the primary theater of global competition, Pakistan occupies a sensitive geostrategic position. China remains Pakistan’s “all-weather” strategic partner, with the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) serving as the backbone of its economic future. However, 2026 has also seen a surprising warming of ties with Washington. Following a pragmatic recalibration, the U.S. has recognized Pakistan’s utility as a functional intermediary in Middle Eastern disputes, particularly between Washington and Tehran. This has created a delicate balancing act: Islamabad must secure Western financial support and military technology without alienating Beijing, which views deepened U.S.-Pakistan security cooperation with inherent suspicion.
Furthermore, the rise of regional “middle powers” such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Turkey has provided Pakistan with more diplomatic breathing room. In the fragmented international structure of 2026, these nations are pursuing more autonomous foreign policies, often independent of Washington’s directives. Pakistan has leveraged this by positioning itself as a “security provider” and a “diplomatic bridge.” The country’s defense manufacturing depth and operational experience have made it a critical partner for Gulf states seeking to diversify their security arrangements. This regionalization of power allows Pakistan to diversify its dependencies, moving away from a narrow reliance on any single superpower and toward a more “non-aligned” pragmatism that prioritizes national interest over bloc politics.
However, the international structure also imposes severe constraints. The “India-centric” tilt of the U.S. and the strengthening of ties between New Delhi and Israel have reinforced a sense of strategic encirclement in Islamabad. The deadlock at the United Nations regarding Security Council reform—where Pakistan remains a vocal opponent of India’s permanent membership bid—underscores the friction between Pakistan’s regional objectives and the aspirations of rising global powers. Moreover, the erosion of international norms has meant that regional flashpoints, such as Kashmir and the western border with Afghanistan, are increasingly volatile. Without a robust multilateral framework to mediate these disputes, Pakistan finds itself forced to invest more in traditional military deterrence, even as its economy demands a shift toward “geo-economics.”
Ultimately, the impacts of the international structure on Pakistan’s foreign policy in 2026 are dualistic. While the chaos of a multipolar world offers unprecedented opportunities for mediation and strategic autonomy, it also exposes the nation to the risks of great-power entrapment and regional isolation. Success in this new era requires a foreign policy that is as agile as it is principled—one that leverages Pakistan’s unique geography not as a battleground for others, but as a bridge for global trade and regional stability. For Islamabad, the challenge is to convert its current geopolitical relevance into lasting economic resilience, ensuring that it remains a player in the international order rather than a mere pawn in its restructuring






