HomeWorldTrump's short-term love affair with Asim Munir: Why Washington’s Pakistan crush always ends in a breakup

Trump's short-term love affair with Asim Munir: Why Washington’s Pakistan crush always ends in a breakup

Munir’s recent nuclear brinkmanship would have sparked an international crisis if uttered by an Iranian leader. Instead, with Pakistan, it barely registers in US public discourse.

August 13, 2025 / 16:35 IST
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File images of Pakistan Army chief Asim Munir and US President Donald Trump
File images of Pakistan Army chief Asim Munir and US President Donald Trump

When Pakistan’s Army chief Asim Munir, better to call him the country’s de factor ruler, stood on US soil and tossed out a nuclear threat against India, one might have expected the American President to publicly bristle. However, Washington’s reaction was telling, especially for a nation that once led global non-proliferation efforts. The response was not outrage or diplomatic coldness, but grinning photo-ops and warm handshakes.

It takes a special kind of hypocrisy that Trump, the man who has weaponised sanctions against Tehran for far less, remained conspicuously silent when a foreign army chief threatened to “take half the world down” from the American soil.

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The contrast could not be starker. When Iranian officials make even symbolic references to military action, Washington reacts with the full force of sanctions, diplomatic isolation, moral outrage, and this time even joining Israel’s war against Tehran. But when it comes to Pakistan -- a nuclear-armed state with a documented history of sheltering terrorists, proliferating nuclear technology, and blackmailing the West for aid -- the rules are different. In Pakistan’s case, provocation is rewarded with lavish welcomes, military cooperation, and a fresh round of flattery-driven diplomacy.

This is no coincidence or accident. It is the latest chapter in a decades-old pattern where Pakistan has perfected the art of playing America: offering “services” in conflicts of Washington’s choosing, pocketing billions in aid, and betraying those same American interests when the wind changes. What is new, and disturbing, is how shamelessly this dynamic is now playing out in the open, with Trump and Munir’s interactions bordering on mutual propaganda.