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Pakistan may find common ground with Trump but won’t be ‘first priority’ — analysts

Special Pakistan may find common ground with Trump but won’t be ‘first priority’ — analysts
Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump gestures as he holds hands with his wife Melania during his rally, at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm Beach, Florida, US on November 6, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 November 2024

Pakistan may find common ground with Trump but won’t be ‘first priority’ — analysts

Pakistan may find common ground with Trump but won’t be ‘first priority’ — analysts
  • Republican nominee Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris in 46th US Presidential Election on Tuesday
  • Analysts predict Trump will not be able to normalize ties between nuclear-armed Pakistan and India

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani political analysts and foreign affairs experts on Wednesday predicted that Islamabad may find common ground with Washington under President-elect Donald Trump’s administration, however, the country will not be his “first priority” in the backdrop of more pressing global issues.
American billionaire and former president Donald Trump beat Vice President Kamala Harris in Tuesday’s race to get elected as the 47th US president after bagging key battleground states.
Victory in Wisconsin after earlier triumphs in Georgia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania saw the former president clear the threshold of the 270 Electoral College votes required to clinch the White House.
Pakistan places great value on its relations with the US. Once close allies, Washington and Islamabad have collaborated closely in the domains of militancy, economy, security, trade and global affairs. Ties between the two countries remained strained over the past couple of years as Washington remained suspicious of Pakistan’s alleged support to the Taliban in its takeover of Afghanistan in 2021.
“Well, I think Pakistan or the PTI [Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party] will not be President Trump’s first priority,” former Pakistani diplomat Javed Hafeez told Arab News.
“He has many other issues to tackle, be it Ukraine or be it the war in Gaza and Lebanon. So Pakistan would not be on top of his priorities but down the line somewhere,” he added.

Senior political analyst Zaigham Khan said Islamabad and Washington may improve their relations based on some common ground under a new American administration.
“We may find a common ground on Afghanistan because Trump is not very happy with the Taliban,” Khan said. “So that could be one area of convergence between the US and Pakistan.”
Dr. Qamar Cheema, executive director of the Islamabad-based Sanober Institute which holds dialogues on geopolitics and governance, said Trump would not be able to normalize ties between India and Pakistan.
Relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, who have fought two wars over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir they administer in parts, have been strained since 2019. 
Islamabad has asked New Delhi to reverse its controversial 2019 decision to strip Indian-administered Kashmir of its autonomy for it to normalize relations with its neighbor. India refuses to do so.

“US President Donald Trump will not be able to play a role in normalizing Pakistan-India relations,” Cheema told Arab News.
“The reason for this is that in the past, he tried to normalize Pakistan-India relations, but India rejected it and said it is a bilateral issue and that it will not normalize relations with Pakistan.”
Former prime minister Imran Khan’s PTI party, which has blamed Joe Biden’s administration for orchestrating his removal from office in 2022 via a “foreign conspiracy,” has expressed hope Trump would pressurize Pakistani authorities to order his release from prison.
Imran Khan has been in jail since August 2023 after he was convicted on charges ranging from corruption to violating Pakistan’s marriage laws, which he says are politically motivated. 
As prime minister, Imran Khan met Trump in 2019 for the first time during which the two leaders praised each other. 
Cheema, however, thought Trump will not call for Khan’s release from prison. 
“I don’t think Trump will be able to do anything for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf but since former prime minister Imran Khan met Trump in the past, maybe he thinks that some role could be played,” he said. 
Khan agreed, saying that Washington did not enjoy the same “leverage” it did with Pakistan years ago. 
“I don’t think America enjoys that kind of leverage any longer,” he said. “It enjoys that when it’s giving generous aid to Pakistan.”


German biathlete’s body left on Pakistani peak due to risk and respect, say fellow climbers

German biathlete’s body left on Pakistani peak due to risk and respect, say fellow climbers
Updated 20 sec ago

German biathlete’s body left on Pakistani peak due to risk and respect, say fellow climbers

German biathlete’s body left on Pakistani peak due to risk and respect, say fellow climbers
  • Laura Dahlmeier, double Olympic biathlon champion, died in a rockfall on Laila Peak in Pakistan
  • Other mountaineers say recovering her body was too risky and not what she would have wanted

SKARDU, Pakistan: German Olympic champion Laura Dahlmeier’s climbing partners said on Thursday the decision to leave her body on a remote peak in Pakistan was based on dangerous conditions and her own written wishes that no one should risk their life in a recovery attempt.

Dahlmeier, a double gold medalist in biathlon, was struck by a falling rock on July 28 while descending Laila Peak in the Karakoram range. She lost consciousness immediately and showed no signs of life, according to her climbing partner

Marina Eva Krauss, who said she was unable to reach her without endangering herself amid an ongoing rockfall.

“It was clear to me that the only way to help her was to call the helicopter,” Krauss told Reuters in Skardu. “I called her and there was no response and she had just stopped moving … I saw that she had been hit on the head and that she only had a chance if help arrived immediately.”

Marina Eva (second right) mountaineering partner of German Olympic biathlon champion Laura Dahlmeier, looks on during a press conference along with the rescue team members in Skardu in Pakistan’s mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan region on July 31, 2025. (AFP)

Laila Peak, a dramatic 6,069-meter spire in Gilgit-Baltistan’s Hushe Valley, is known for its steep and technical routes. Dahlmeier was descending at roughly 5,700 meters when the rockfall occurred. Poor weather conditions prevented helicopter access, and two expert teams from Germany and the United States later confirmed her death on July 30.

Speaking alongside Krauss, German climber and rescue team member Thomas Huber said the rockfall had continued after Dahlmeier was struck.

“So, she was in a kind of safe spot and every attempt to go to Laura would cause her life [to be in danger],” he said.

Huber added that Dahlmeier, 31, was deeply aware of the risks of mountaineering and had made her wishes known in case of such an outcome.

“We discussed this matter to recover the body, of course, but we [knew] Laura — how her mentality [was] — and we [knew] exactly if the body recovery were a risk, she wouldn’t want this, because she [was] a mountain girl.”

Dahlmeier’s management had earlier confirmed her position, saying that she had left written instructions requesting that no one risk their life to retrieve her body, and that she wished to remain on the mountain in such a case — a sentiment her fellow climbers repeated.

“Now she is on a beautiful mountain, and we should respect this,” Huber said.

The rescue mission was officially called off on July 30, according to Kamal Khan, commissioner of Baltistan Division.

“They tried their best… but Miss Laura was stuck in a place which is inaccessible and the rocks were still falling at that place,” he told reporters.

Krauss, who was unharmed, descended safely to base camp and is in good health, officials said.

Dahlmeier was one of Germany’s most decorated biathletes, winning two golds and one bronze at the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics. She retired in 2019 at the age of 25 and had since taken up mountaineering.

Tributes have poured in from across the sporting world.

“She was ambitious and successful, yet always remained humble and close to her homeland,” said Markus Soeder, premier of her home state of Bavaria.

The International Biathlon Union also expressed its condolences.


Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series
Updated 01 August 2025

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan will play opening match of tri-series tournament on August 29
  • The tournament will help teams prepare for the Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup

KARACHI: Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United Arab Emirates will participate in a tri-series of Twenty20 international matches to tune up for next month’s Asia Cup followed by the World Cup next year.

“The tri-series will feature teams from Pakistan, Afghanistan and the UAE from 29 August to 7 September at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium,” the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said on Friday.

The T20I tournament will serve as a launching pad for the teams to prepare for the Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup, scheduled to take place in the UAE from September 9 to 28, it added.

India and Sri Lanka will co-host the Twenty20 World Cup in February-March next year.

The opening match of the tri-series tournament will be played between Afghanistan and Pakistan on August 29.

Each team will play the others twice, giving all sides at least four matches before the top two teams qualify for the final, scheduled on September 7.

Tournament schedule (all matches at Sharjah Cricket Stadium):

29 August — Afghanistan v Pakistan

30 August — UAE v Pakistan

1 September — UAE v Afghanistan

2 September — Pakistan v Afghanistan

4 September — Pakistan v UAE

5 September — Afghanistan v UAE

7 September — Final


Pakistan issues fresh call for Afghans to leave

Pakistan issues fresh call for Afghans to leave
Updated 01 August 2025

Pakistan issues fresh call for Afghans to leave

Pakistan issues fresh call for Afghans to leave
  • The head of Refugee Registration in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province says they are aware of an increase in returning Afghans
  • In total, more than one million Afghans have left Pakistan since 2023, including more than 200,000 since renewed push in April

QUETTA: Pakistan issued a new call on Friday for Afghans living in the southwest to leave the country, triggering thousands to rush to the border, officials said.

Millions of Afghans have poured into Pakistan over the past several decades, fleeing successive wars, as well as hundreds of thousands who arrived after the return of the Taliban government in 2021.

A deportation drive first launched in 2023 was renewed in April when Pakistan’s government rescinded hundreds of thousands of residence permits for Afghans, threatening to arrest anyone who did not leave.

“We have received directives from the home department to launch a fresh drive to repatriate all Afghans... in a respectful and orderly manner,” Mehar Ullah, a senior government official in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, told AFP.

The province borders Afghanistan and there are significant ties between the regions.

On Friday, there were “around 4,000 to 5,000 people at the Chaman border” waiting to return, said Habib Bingalzai, a senior government official in Chaman.

Abdul Latif Hakimi, the head of Refugee Registration in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province across the border, said they were aware of an increase in returning Afghans on Friday.

Islamabad has labelled Afghans “terrorists and criminals,” but analysts say the expulsions are designed to pressure neighboring Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities to control militancy in the border regions.

In total, more than one million Afghans have left Pakistan since 2023, including more than 200,000 since April.

The campaign launched in April targeted the more than 800,000 Afghans with temporary residence permits, some of whom were born in the country or have lived there for decades.

Some Pakistanis have grown weary of hosting a large Afghan population as security and economic woes deepen, and the deportation drive has widespread support.

Pakistan’s security forces are under enormous pressure along the border with Afghanistan, battling a growing insurgency by ethnic nationalists in Balochistan in the southwest, and the Pakistani Taliban and its affiliates in the northwest.

Last year, Pakistan recorded the highest number of deaths from attacks in a decade and the government frequently accuses Afghan nationals of taking part in attacks.

Iran has also launched a large-scale deportation campaign of Afghans, which has seen more than 1.5 million sent back across the border.


Islamabad says new tariff arrangement to help Pakistan expand footprint in US market

Islamabad says new tariff arrangement to help Pakistan expand footprint in US market
Updated 01 August 2025

Islamabad says new tariff arrangement to help Pakistan expand footprint in US market

Islamabad says new tariff arrangement to help Pakistan expand footprint in US market
  • The US is Pakistan’s top export destination, with shipments totaling $5.44 billion in fiscal year 2023-2024, according to official data
  • It is now essential for Pakistani exporters to adopt focused marketing strategy to capitalize on this development, Pakistani ministry says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s new trade tariff arrangement with the United States (US) will help expand its footprint in the US market, the Pakistani finance ministry said on Friday.

The statement came a day after the White House said the US will charge a 19 percent tariff on imports from Pakistan, compared to a 29 percent reciprocal tariff announced in April that had raised alarm in Islamabad.

The US is Pakistan’s top export destination, with shipments totaling $5.44 billion in fiscal year 2023-2024, according to official data. From July 2024 to February 2025, exports rose 10 percent from a year earlier.

Pakistan’s finance ministry said the White House decision reflects a “balanced and forward-looking approach” by US authorities that kept Pakistan competitive in relation to other South and Southeast Asian nations.

“In particular, this tariff level is expected to support Pakistan’s export potential, especially in key sectors such as textiles, which remain the backbone of the country’s export economy,” the ministry said.

“The Ministry of Finance... believes that the current tariff arrangement presents a significant opportunity to expand Pakistan’s footprint in the US market.”

The previous US announcement of 29 percent tariff shook Pakistan, currently on a path to economic recovery under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.

The two nations reached the deal just ahead of the August 1 deadline, followed by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb’s talks with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Washington.

“It is now essential for Pakistani exporters and trade bodies to adopt an aggressive and focused marketing strategy to capitalize on this development,” the Pakistani finance ministry said.

“In addition to textiles, there is substantial potential for growth in other sectors, and the government is committed to facilitating exporters through policy support, market intelligence, and trade promotion initiatives.”

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s largest refiner Cnergyico will import 1 million barrels of oil from Vitol in October, Reuters reported, citing its Vice Chairman Usama Qureshi.

Qureshi said the West Texas Intermediate light crude cargo will be loaded from Houston this month and is expected to arrive in Karachi in the second half of October, marking the country’s first-ever purchase of US crude following the trade deal.

“This is a test spot cargo under our umbrella term agreement with Vitol. If it is commercially viable and available, we could import at least one cargo per month,” he said, adding that the shipment was not meant for resale.

The finance ministry said it was looking forward to further positive engagements and close cooperation with the US in areas of investment, artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, mines and minerals, energy and other emerging sectors.

“Pakistan will continue to engage closely with President Trump and the US administration to promote the shared goals of economic development and mutual prosperity,” it said.


State Minister Saqib, Trump aide discuss Pakistan plans to become regional Web3 innovation hub

State Minister Saqib, Trump aide discuss Pakistan plans to become regional Web3 innovation hub
Updated 01 August 2025

State Minister Saqib, Trump aide discuss Pakistan plans to become regional Web3 innovation hub

State Minister Saqib, Trump aide discuss Pakistan plans to become regional Web3 innovation hub
  • Web3 is a decentralized Internet built on blockchain, giving users control over data, identity and assets
  • The move follows landmark trade deal between Pakistan and United States, which includes reduced tariffs

KARACHI: Pakistan’s State Minister for Crypto and Blockchain Bilal bin Saqib has met with Bo Hines, President Donald Trump’s adviser on digital assets, and discussed with him Pakistan’s plans to become a regional Web3 innovation hub, the Pakistani finance ministry said on Friday, amid efforts by both countries to cooperate on crypto policy and legislation.

Web3 is a decentralized Internet built on blockchain, giving users control over their data, identity and digital assets by using peer-to-peer networks, smart contracts and cryptocurrencies to enable intermediary-free interactions. It supports decentralized apps like NFTs and DAOs to promote transparency and user ownership unlike Web2 which is dominated by platforms like Google and Facebook.

The move follows a landmark trade deal between Pakistan and the US, which includes reduced tariffs and a new partnership to develop Pakistan’s oil reserves, and the Pakistani ministry said the developments were discussed during Saqib’s meeting with Hines, executive director of Trump’s Council of Advisers on Digital Assets.

“The discussion centered on the global coordination of crypto policy and Pakistan’s ambitious plans to become a regional hub for Web3 innovation,” the Pakistani finance ministry said. “The alignment sends a strong signal: Pakistan and the US are no longer just trading partners. They are exploring now on how they can collaborate on crypto legislation.”

The meeting took place a day after the US unveiled its Digital Asset Framework, a blueprint for global regulation of digital assets.

Saqib and Hines also met in June at the White House to discuss aligning strategies on decentralized technology, fostering regulatory harmony and promoting innovation for youth engagement and financial inclusion.

While cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are not officially regulated in Pakistan, they are not banned and the State Bank of Pakistan has not authorized any entity to trade or invest in digital assets.

In March, Islamabad launched the Pakistan Crypto Council (PCC) to develop a legal framework for cryptocurrency trading and attract global investment, with Binance co-founder and former CEO Changpeng Zhao appointed the PCC’s strategic adviser.

Pakistan introduced in April its first-ever policy framework to regulate virtual assets and service providers, aligning with compliance and financial integrity guidelines of the global Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

The country’s digital asset strategy includes allocating 2,000 megawatts of surplus power for Bitcoin mining and AI data zones to convert unused energy into economic growth, jobs and digital infrastructure.