Saudi-Pakistan 2025 Defence Pact: Tension in West Asia has gone up again, so people are once more talking about the reported Saudi Arabia-Pakistan defence deal from 2025. The new attention came after Saudi Arabia took a much harder line against Iran in recent days. Riyadh ordered several Iranian embassy officials to leave and said it keeps the right to respond militarily if attacks continue.
The agreement is often described as a “strategic mutual defense agreement”. Reports and analysis published after the signing said Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed it on September 17, 2025, and that it was meant to deepen defence ties and improve joint deterrence. But the full text has not been made public, so a lot of what people say about it is still based on expert reading and media reports, not on complete official details.
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Because of that, there is still uncertainty. Some experts think the deal could cover emergency coordination, military support, and stronger planning between both sides. Some have even suggested it may give Saudi Arabia a stronger security shield in the region. But there is still no public proof that Pakistan has promised automatic military action in a future war with Iran. That part remains unclear.
Could Pakistan Really Join a Bigger Fight?
Right now, Pakistan looks careful, not eager. Recent reporting shows Islamabad has tried to balance ties with Saudi Arabia, Iran, and other major players instead of jumping into the conflict. Reuters reported that Iran’s foreign minister acknowledged Pakistan’s neutrality and support, which shows Pakistan is still trying to stay in the middle rather than openly pick a side.
This careful stand makes sense for many reasons. Pakistan shares a 909-km border with Iran, so any direct fight could quickly become dangerous. It also already faces security pressure on other fronts, including tensions with India, problems linked to Afghanistan, and internal militancy. Opening another major front would be risky for Islamabad.
There is also the home situation. Pakistan has a very large Shia population, though exact figures differ by source. Some widely cited estimates put Shias at about 10% to 15% of the country, which means any move against Shia-majority Iran could raise sectarian tension inside Pakistan itself. On top of that, Pakistan depends heavily on Gulf energy supplies, so a wider regional war could badly hurt its economy through oil shocks and trade disruption.
What Pakistan is Most Likely to do?
Pakistan does not look ready for a full military move against Iran. Its more likely path is to protect its own interests, keep diplomacy alive, and avoid making the crisis worse. That fits with recent events. A Pakistan-bound oil tanker named Karachi passed through the Strait of Hormuz on March 16, showing how important safe shipping is for Islamabad and why it wants stability more than escalation, reported Sunday Gaurdian live.
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The Strait of Hormuz matters hugely because around 20% of the world’s oil and gas trade normally moves through it, and the current conflict has already badly shaken shipping there. So Pakistan has a strong reason to stay practical and avoid any decision that could make the route even more dangerous.
There is one more point to treat carefully. The claim that Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei called Pakistan a “beloved” nation comes from recent media reports, but that detail is harder to verify through direct official records than the other facts above.

