Pakistan’s reported proposal to grant the United States a development and management role at Pasni port, as reported by the Financial Times, marks one of the most consequential geopolitical developments in recent years.
Situated along the Arabian Sea – just 113 kilometers from China-operated Gwadar port, 161 km from Iran and approximately 286.5 km from India’s Chabahar port – Pasni’s geostrategic position places it at the intersection of major regional rivalries involving China, India, Iran, the United States and other key actors such as Saudi Arabia and Gulf investors.
The port’s location also carries implications for Afghanistan, Central Asia and broader maritime security in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean.
This development follows the September 25 meeting between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Army Chief General Asim Munir and US President Donald Trump, signaling a potential new phase in US-Pakistan geostrategic engagement.
The proposal, which had already been floated and discussed with US officials before the meeting, is part of Islamabad’s broader attempt to diversify its foreign partnerships, reduce reliance on Beijing and attract US, Iranian, and Saudi investments amid deepening economic challenges.
While significant, the plan remains exploratory, with no formal agreement yet confirmed by either Pakistan or the US. However, if realized, it would mark a geopolitical earthquake, reshaping regional power dynamics with implications far beyond.
New Strategic Pivot
The blueprint envisions transforming Pasni — currently a modest fishing town — into a strategic logistics and mineral export hub. The project aims to link the port to Balochistan’s vast mineral reserves, including the Reko Diq copper and gold mines, through a new railway network. Estimated at US$1.2 billion, the project is expected to be financed through a combination of Pakistani federal funds and US-backed development finance.
The US interest in Pasni is both economic and strategic. According to the Financial Times report, the port would serve as a gateway for exporting critical minerals such as copper, antimony and neodymium — key inputs for battery technology, missile production and advanced electronics.
On September 8, 2025, Pakistan exported a small trial shipment of these minerals to Missouri-based US Strategic Metals (USSM), following the signing of a $500 million memorandum of understanding with Pakistan’s Military Engineering Corps.
The partnership, aimed at developing and refining Balochistan’s critical mineral resources, marks a major step in expanding US–Pakistan economic engagement. USSM’s commercial director, Mike Hollomon, described the collaboration as an effort to “rekindle a dormant friendship” between Washington and Islamabad.
Strategic blow to China’s CPEC vision
For China, the Pasni development represents a strategic setback. The port’s proximity to Gwadar — the flagship of Beijing’s China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) — directly undermines China’s long-term strategic objectives in the Arabian Sea. A US presence in Pasni would not only counterbalance Gwadar but could also reduce Beijing’s leverage over Pakistan’s critical infrastructure and mineral supply chains.
Over the years, China has invested over $60 billion in the CPEC, deploying personnel, technology and capital to secure a reliable trade and energy corridor to the Arabian Sea. Many Chinese workers have been killed in Balochistan in terrorist attacks while working on these projects. Pakistan’s move to invite American strategic and commercial involvement so close to Gwadar amounts to a significant betrayal of Beijing’s trust.
Earlier, the US and Pakistan signed a mineral deal in Balochistan — a region where China already has substantial investments and stakes, including the Saindak Copper-Gold Mine and the Reko Diq copper and gold project.
This demonstrates Islamabad’s willingness to prioritize immediate financial incentives from Washington over long-term commitments to Beijing, especially after China indicated it could not fund certain sections of CPEC, after which Pakistan turned to the Asian Development Bank (ADB) for funding. Beijing and Islamabad have wrestled over CPEC debt terms, with Pakistan asking for forbearance on payments and Beijing declining.
The reality is stark: the United States and China remain geostrategic rivals in the region, and it is inherently unnatural for two competing powers to coexist in the same strategic space.
By aligning with the US in Pasni, Pakistan would not only undermine Chinese interests in Balochistan and the Arabian Sea but also signal a transactional approach to its alliances, leveraging dollars from Washington when Beijing cannot meet Islamabad’s immediate needs.
For China, this should be a moment of strategic reckoning and a reminder that Islamabad’s loyalty is conditional, driven more by short-term economic gain than by enduring partnership.
Regional implications
The implications of the Pasni deal extend far beyond Pakistan and China.
For India, this development could complicate strategic connectivity projects such like Chabahar port in Iran, located just across the border from Pasni. Notably, the US recently revoked sanctions waivers for Chabahar, signaling waning American support for India’s westward connectivity efforts and its broader strategic interests in the region.
At the same time, a US presence at Pasni advances American interests in the Arabian Sea and indirectly strengthens Pakistan by providing Islamabad with enhanced strategic confidence and leverage. While India and the US are strategic partners in the Indo-Pacific, strategic cooperation between the US and Pakistan carries fundamentally different implications.
A US foothold at Pasni may allow Washington to reassert its influence in the region, but it could also institutionalize US-Pakistan defense engagement and boost Pakistan’s geopolitical confidence, strengthening its position vis-à-vis India.
Moreover, an American presence at such a strategic location at the mouth of the Arabian Sea — where India has vital maritime and energy interests — carries significant implications for regional power dynamics, simultaneously undermining India’s connectivity initiatives while advancing US and Pakistani interests.
For Iran, the move is alarming. Pasni offers Washington a potential maritime platform to monitor or pressure Tehran’s coastal infrastructure and shipping lanes. The port’s location would also enhance US operational flexibility in the event of a regional conflict involving Iran.
For Afghanistan, the development may herald a new era of US re-engagement. Reports that Washington is considering re-establishing access to Bagram Air Base suggest a broader military recalibration. A US logistical node at Pasni would significantly improve its ability to project power across Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf, using Pakistan’s geography as a strategic launchpad.
Islamabad has framed its Pasni initiative as an exercise in “strategic diversification.” However, it appears more as a calculated geopolitical gamble. Historically, Pakistan has aligned with whichever power offers the greatest financial or military benefits — from being a US Cold War ally to joining China’s Belt and Road Initiative and now seemingly swinging back toward Washington.
While such balancing may bring short-term rewards, it often results in long-term instability. China has consistently supported Pakistan — diplomatically, economically, and militarily — even during Islamabad’s periods of isolation.
Beijing provided critical aid, defended Pakistan at multilateral forums and backed its security interests vis-à-vis India. Yet, despite this “iron brotherhood,” Pakistan’s recent moves show that geopolitical loyalty in Islamabad is negotiable.
America’s entry into Pasni would mark a decisive moment in Asia’s geopolitics. It would represent not just an economic collaboration but a strategic realignment with the potential to reshape power dynamics across the Arabian Sea, Central Asia, the Gulf and beyond.
For the US, Pasni offers a dual advantage — access to critical minerals and a strategic maritime presence near Iran, the Gulf and Chinese infrastructure. For Pakistan, it provides short-term relief and renewed American attention. For China, however, it is a strategic nightmare — a symbol of betrayal that undermines years of investment and trust.
In the final analysis, the Pasni plan underscores a fundamental truth of geopolitics: in an age of great-power rivalry, alliances built on interest rather than trust seldom endure.
Imran Khurshid (PhD) is an associate research fellow at the International Centre for Peace Studies (ICPS), adjunct fellow at the Peninsula Foundation and visiting faculty at Nalanda University, Rajgir, Bihar. His work has been published in Asia Times, The Diplomat Firstpost and peer-reviewed journals focused on India-US relations and Indo-Pacific security.
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Fascinating piece and some excellent comments. As one who keeps hoping for more rapprochement between India and China, I can’t help seeing a possiblity here.
An extremely myopic move by Pakistan.Once again the generals and the politicians are looking to make dollars and move out of Pakistan. there is no longterm thinking. The US will be out of that region when it either solves the Iran situation or finds that it can’t help Israel deal with Iran.
Pakistan will regret this sooner rather than later. And China may decide to let India deal with Pakistan as it wants to.
That is a clever move, the United States playing chess for a change.
The Baloch terrorists hate America more. They will have a new target.
I think that is totally the wrong way of looking at the problem, Pakistan is so heavily in debt, China would actually welcome anyone the share the burden of financially supporting Pakistan.
There are plenty of rare earth all over the place,China’s key pressure points are in separation and refining technology, equipment, capacity and human expertise.
And it is never the intention for China to control Pakistan nor to mold Pakistan into some sort of client state. China also don’t want to obligate itself to bail out Pakistan’s financial woes every time Pakistan is in trouble. And Pakistan should have the freedom to choose what ever its foreign policy it thinks is the most suitable for its national interest, an improve relation with the US would actually provide additional financial stability and commercial viability to Chinese investments inside Pakistan.
Good post.
Well said.
wow why is china imposing a rare earth embargo on the USA but allow the USA to take a rare earth mining and port?
Must be because of the debt lol
I think that is totally the wrong way of looking at the problem, Pakistan is so heavily in dept, China would actually welcome anyone the share the burden of financially supporting Pakistan.
There are plenty of rare earth all over the place,China’s key pressure points are in separation and refining technology, equipment, capacity and human expertise.
Modi is just getting kick after kick from Trump. yet he’s probably still yearning for a pat on the head from his American master. Next chance he gets he’ll again play the spoiler, and become an obstacle to the Brics agenda. One Indian who never learns.
Great strategy from Chump. He’s going to get rare earth from Pakistan. They got boat loads of that things. Wink wink. 🤪🤪🤪🤪
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Pakistan has China’s blessing. 🤣🤣🤣
So much winning. 🤣🤣🤣
Woe it is for the toilet hands.
Poor Indians. They’re all scratching their heads wondering where it went all wrong. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
China playing 5D chess, India playing with shovel the 💩💩💩
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Very naive. This is not a pivot. The US invests nowhere near the funds as China does in Pakistan. Remember, the US does not build, it only uses and destroys. Americans only die defending Jewish settlements in Palestine, everyone else is expendable. This is aimed at India.
Definitely a slap in the face for Modi.
Very true, indeed.
Who is the author? So naive. He doesn’t understand that strengthening ties reduces confrontation, which is why China and the US haven’t gone to war yet. So many companies are in each other’s countries. American involvement in the Belt and Road Initiative isn’t a bad thing; it’s far better for it to be a stakeholder than a disruptor.
Well said.
Perfect. One fraud doing business with another. Pakistan selling the same real estate to multiple buyers. Just like Zelensky. What can go wrong?
Nothing, Pakistan is doing right thing throwing the bones to hungry wolfs and checking which one has more muscles and meat, that is exactly what regional powers should do.
(Btw do not understand reference to Zelensky, he is good example how to deal with wanna be great powers like US, China, Russia and co…)
First off, like Gwadar, Pasni is not “Pakistan” proper. It is in Balochistan, which rejects the corrupt Punjabi/Sindhi military. Second, these two are very close to each other, Gwadar having been sold to the Chinese. Third, Balochistan sought independence like Nepal after the British left, but M.A. Jinnah refused to honor the promise and forcibly occupied it. That dispute never resolved and there is a serious insurgency in Balochistan for liberation. Like other frontier provinces in Pakistan, the Punjabi/Sindhi group steals all natural resources from these regions to fatten itself. The Baloch want sovereignity over their natural resources, which are the ones the current Pakistani government is selling to the Chinese and the US.
The Zelenski reference is about him selling Donbas minerals (of which he has no control and which are now part of Russia) first to the Germans, then to Blackstone etc and recently to Trump. Good luck if they can get anything out of it, unless they kill every living thing in the area. It is similar in terrain to Afghanistan, and US should have fond memories about how that went.
don’t get jealous that the US ditched India, deported its citizens and now friendly with Pakistan. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Politics is complicated. There are no true friends and no long-term foes