Driving Pakistan’s Growth:Rodrik, BRI, and Pakistan’s Manufacturing Future
Dani Rodrik’s work on economic development and structural transformation rests on two interlinked propositions: first, that sustained growth, rapid poverty reduction, and structural transformation are fundamentally driven by industrialization and competitive manufacturing; and second, that well‑designed industrial policyselective, pragmatic, and learning‑oriented support for
Deterrence, Diplomacy, and Destiny: Pakistan in the Age of Multipolar Contestation
Pakistan is not merely a geographic construct bounded by frontiers; it is a sovereign strategic actor shaped by history, sacrifice, and an enduring security consciousness. In moments of global turbulence, when alliances are recalibrated and power centers renegotiate influence, nations are tested not
National Resilience in a Fracturing World: Governance, Economy, Defense, and Strategic Cohesion in Pakistan
The international system is entering a phase of prolonged instability marked not by a single hegemonic collapse, but by overlapping shocks: financial fragmentation, energy insecurity, militarized trade, and narrative warfare. For a state like Pakistanstrategically pivotal, economically constrained, and socially diverseexternal volatility does
Pakistan’s Strategic Balance Between Global Powers and Domestic Perceptions
The global geopolitical landscape in 2025 is, by almost any measure, in a state of profound flux. Longstanding post‑Cold War assumptions about the endurance of a U.S.‑centered unipolar world have been overtaken by a more complex, unevenly articulated multipolar reality. Deepening rivalry between
China’s Strategic Autonomy Proposition: Enabling Europe’s Multipolar Equilibrium Amid U.S.-China Rivalry
The contemporary international landscape is witnessing a profound realignment of global power structures. The post-Cold War order, defined by U.S.-led liberal internationalism and the premise of shared norms among allied states, is increasingly challenged by the structural ascent of China and the emergence
The Pick-a-Side Imperative: U.S. Strategic Pressure on Europe Amid the Sino-American Contest
The contemporary international system is undergoing a profound structural transformation. The post-Cold War era, characterized by a largely unipolar liberal order under U.S. hegemony, is giving way to a multipolar world in which systemic competition between great powers defines the architecture of global
Strategic Hedging Post-Iranian Crisis — How China and the Middle East Can Ensure Pakistan’s Stability in a Similar Situation
The ongoing turbulence in Iran has become a live demonstration of how pressure against states is now prosecuted in the modern international system. What is unfolding is not a classic confrontation of armies or borders, but a prolonged contest aimed at exhausting economic
Hybrid Intelligence Operations, Proxy Dynamics, and the Risk to Nuclear-Armed States
Across the cities and towns of Iran, from Tehran’s historic Grand Bazaar to the industrial belts of Isfahan and Mashhad, the economic crisis that has deepened since late 2025 has now erupted into the most significant wave of unrest the nation has seen
Disciplined Contention: Recalibrating Pakistan’s Public Sphere
Pakistan’s contemporary communicative landscape reflects a profound democratic paradox. The technological democratization of speech has multiplied voices, yet it has simultaneously intensified antagonism. Segments of the public sphere increasingly function not as arenas of deliberative exchange but as theatres of ideological mobilization. Hate
Grand Strategy – Beyond Strategy
By: Ijaz Naser The End of Strategic Fog: War After Elusiveness For most of recorded history, warfare has been governed by uncertainty. From Sun Tzu’s emphasis on deception, through Clausewitz’s “fog and friction,” to twentieth-century doctrines of surprise and maneuver, strategy has relied