Abstract
This article examines the relationship between United States financial assistance to Pakistan and documented instances where Pakistani state actors allegedly undermined American strategic interests. Based on government reports, congressional testimony, and academic research, this article presents evidence suggesting a pattern wherein Pakistan accepted substantial American aid, totaling approximately US$78.3 billion between 1948 and 2016, while elements within its security establishment simultaneously supported actors hostile to US interests. The article also documents specific incidents, including nuclear proliferation, harbouring of terrorist leadership, intelligence agency support for militant groups, and the deliberate obstruction of American counter-terrorism objectives. In a striking contemporary twist, however, the very same Pakistani military establishment that Washington once castigated as duplicitous has, by 2025-2026, reinvented itself as America’s indispensable diplomatic broker, mediating a ceasefire in the Iran war and hosting US-Iran talks in Islamabad. This paradox raises fundamental questions about the efficacy of transactional security partnerships, the durability of trust built on tactical convenience, and the ultimate limits of financial leverage in shaping the strategic behaviour of sovereign states.
Keywords: US-Pakistan Relations, Foreign Aid Conditionality, Transactional Security Partnerships, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Nuclear Proliferation, War on Terror, Iran war 2026, Diplomatic Mediation, Financial Leverage, Strategic Duplicity, South Asian Security












