Publisher’s Message
Welcome to the inaugural issue of Pakistan Post — a magazine born from the desire to tell Pakistan’s stories with curiosity, depth, and integrity. In these pages you will find reporting that bridges communities, analysis that determines complexity, and storytelling that celebrates our people’s resilience and creativity.
- Ijaz Naser -
Editorial Note
Diplomacy Without Illusions Pakistan in the Age of Managed Rivalries
The illusion that diplomacy resolves conflict has quietly dissolved. What has replaced it is a far more complex and less comforting reality in which diplomacy regulates conflict rather than eliminates it. The emerging global order is not structured around peace settlements but around controlled rivalries, where adversaries remain locked in competition while simultaneously engaging in layered negotiation frameworks designed to prevent systemic rupture. This transformation marks a decisive shift from resolution to regulation, and Pakistan now finds itself positioned within this evolving architecture not as a passive observer but as a connective node within a dense web of strategic interactions.
The transition from trilateral engagements toward broader multi nodal diplomacy is not accidental. It is a structural response to a fragmented multipolar environment where no single actor possesses the capacity to impose durable outcomes. Instead, stability is produced through redundancy, overlapping dialogues, and continuous communication across rival blocs. In such a system the absence of engagement is more dangerous than the presence of tension. Diplomacy therefore becomes a mechanism of containment rather than reconciliation, a process of managing friction rather than resolving it.
Pakistan’s strategic relevance in this environment is defined by its ability to maintain simultaneous access across competing geopolitical spheres. It engages with Western power structures, maintains deep connectivity with China, and retains functional relationships with regional actors that often stand in opposition to one another. This multi vector positioning does not grant Pakistan dominance, but it does provide it with rare diplomatic elasticity. In a system where connectivity determines influence, such elasticity becomes a form of strategic capital.
However this positioning is not without risk. The same interconnectedness that enables Pakistan to function as a bridge also exposes it to systemic volatility. In a world of controlled rivalries shocks do not remain localized. They propagate through networks, affecting actors that are linked through diplomatic, economic, and security channels. Pakistan must therefore navigate a narrow strategic corridor where overexposure can generate vulnerability while under engagement can lead to marginalization.
The deeper challenge lies in understanding that the new diplomatic order rewards coherence and punishes inconsistency. Multi nodal engagement requires disciplined signaling, institutional coordination, and a clear articulation of strategic priorities. Without these elements connectivity can devolve into confusion, undermining credibility across all channels of engagement. Pakistan’s future role within this system will depend not on the breadth of its relationships but on the clarity with which it manages them.
Ultimately the age of controlled rivalries demands a recalibration of strategic thinking. Diplomacy is no longer about ending conflict but about preventing its escalation beyond acceptable thresholds. Pakistan’s opportunity lies in adapting to this reality with precision rather than illusion, positioning itself not as a mediator of peace but as a stabilizer within a continuously negotiated order where influence is measured not by control but by relevance.
Editorial & Management Masthead
Editorial Board
Chairman Board of Governor: Mrs. Zaba Ijaz
Vice Chairman: Walia Hesham
Managing Director: Ijaz Naser
Executive Editor: Hesham Sultan Ijaz
Chief Editor: Sadia Majeed
Director Finance: Mr. Tariq Naser
Director Publication: Dr. M. Ahsan Sardar
Director Research & Development: Yahya Sultan Ijaz
Director Creative / Designs: Dr. Marukh Ijaz
Legal Director: Advocate Maqbool Hussain Sheikh (Supreme Court of Pakistan)
Director Public Policy & Reforms: Barrister Syed M. Ali Mehdi Bukhari
Section Editor: Usman Qazi
Management
Chief Coordinator: Mr. Hafeez Amjad
Admin Manager: Ahmad Raza
Manager Accounts: Muhammad Usman
Public Relations Officer (PRO): Sadia Majeed
Contact: +92 42 32364549 / +92 308 6806985
E-mail: info@pak-post.com
Marketing & Communications
Director Publication/Marketing: Dr. Ahsan Sardar
Marketing Consultant: Zeeshan Sattar
Director Communication: Hesham Sultan Ijaz