All Things Policy

The Nuclear Chess Game: Oil Money & Atomic Power

5 snips
Oct 3, 2025
Yusuf Unjhawala, a mechanical engineer and adjunct scholar at Takshashila, dives into a groundbreaking defense pact between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. This agreement may redefine nuclear deterrence, marking the first time a nuclear state pledges its arsenal to defend a non-nuclear ally. Key discussions include the implications for regional power dynamics, such as India's economic ties with Saudi Arabia, and how perceptions may catalyze arms races. Unjhawala also explores the evolving landscape of nuclear sharing and the potential risks involved for both nations.
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INSIGHT

Nuclear Arbitrage Emerges

  • The Saudi-Pakistan deal may create "nuclear arbitrage" where deterrence becomes a tradable commodity.
  • It rewrites assumptions about money, military power, and atomic weapons in modern geopolitics.
INSIGHT

Eroding Trust In US Guarantees

  • Gulf states distrust US security guarantees after perceived inaction around attacks on Qatar.
  • That distrust likely accelerated Saudi Arabia's move to seek alternate security arrangements with Pakistan.
ANECDOTE

Longstanding Saudi–Pakistan Ties

  • Saudi Arabia has long bankrolled Pakistan, including loans and past funding for Pakistan's nuclear program.
  • Pakistan has historically provided troops and senior officers to Saudi roles, showing deep defense ties.
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