India rebukes US-Pakistan rapprochement and launches aggressive global diplomacy

By Brett MacDonald
Published June 22, 2025
Last updated 7/1/25 @ 8:58 AM

India rebukes US-Pakistan rapprochement and launches aggressive global diplomacy

By Brett MacDonald · Published on June 22, 2025 · Updated: 7/1/25 @ 8:58 AM

Share:

UNKNOWN – Links to New Indian Express confirming the trip added.

3:13 – Feature image corrected.

Depending on the nature of this post, partisan commentary may not be available or even necessary.

Depending on the nature of this post, partisan commentary may not be available or even necessary.

Pakistan has emerged from its conflict with India, while seemingly wielding new influence in the United States. At least, that’s what ruffling feathers in New Delhi after the United States intervened in May to prevent an escalation between the two nuclear powers.

A series of high-level exchanges has characterized this apparent shift. Most notably, the June 2025 visit by General Asim Munir, Pakistan’s Army Chief, who held meetings with US defense officials and President Trump. Such direct engagement between the Pakistani military leadership and the president has been rare since the early years of the War on Terror.

Pakistan’s finance ministry also sent personnel to court investment in critical minerals. Pakistani parliament members also traveled to Washington and met with both Democrat and Republican lawmakers.

Reactions across South Asia have been mixed. New Delhi has registered cautious skepticism regarding the revived dialogue, while segments of the Pakistani diaspora have voiced concern over the military’s preeminence in civilian diplomacy.

To counter the strengthening of relations, India has launched a coordinated diplomatic offensive to reinforce its alternative partnerships and signal disapproval of Washington’s outreach to Islamabad’s military leadership.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor has been tasked with a two-week mission to Russia, the UK, and possibly Greece. This initiative underscores New Delhi’s intent to reassure allies and project continuity in its anti-terrorism narrative after Pakistan’s Army Chief met privately with President Trump for over two hours.

Tharoor’s team previously met Vice President JD Vance and Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau to articulate India’s perspective on the conflict’s origin as an anti-terrorist operation.

While the US-Pakistan thaw aims to stabilize South Asia’s security landscape, India’s parallel outreach demonstrates its resolve to counterbalance any erosion of its status within Washington.