Palestine policy: A non-negotiable imperative
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
FOREIGN policy, nowadays, is routinely reduced to a transactional ledger of macroeconomic dependencies and shifting geopolitical alliances. Under severe fiscal duress, states frequently compromise on long-held ideals in exchange for economic lifelines or strategic access. Yet, Pakistan’s absolute refusal to extend diplomatic recognition to Israel (Occupied Palestine) stands as a profound anomaly. It is a strategic posture built not on contemporary political dynamics, but on an unyielding anti-imperial architecture laid down decades before 1947. Central to this enduring stance is a foundational principle of Islamabad that found its ultimate expression in a historic letter by Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah to US President Harry Truman. The baseline of Pakistan’s Middle East policy was forged in an acute awareness of Western imperial duplicity. While Great Britain secured Arab military mobilization against the Ottoman Empire during World War I by promising a unified Arab state, it concurrently partitioned the region alongside France via the clandestine Sykes-Picot Agreement. This betrayal culminated in the Balfour Declaration of 1917, an imperial decree promising a national home for the Jewish people on sovereign territory Britain did not own. The Muslim leadership of the undivided subcontinent, led by Dr. Allama Muhammad Iqbal and Mr. Jinnah, aggressively countered this colonial maneuvering. Dr. Iqbal rejected any legal or moral basis for a Zionist entity, warning that “the formation of a Western base on the very gates of the East is a menace to both.” Dr. Iqbal exposed the logical fallacy of Zionist claims, arguing that if an ancient historical footprint gave the Jewish diaspora an inherent right to Palestinian soil, then by that exact legal logic, Arab Muslims possessed an undeniable right to reclaim Spain, where they had ruled gloriously for eight centuries. This intellectual indictment transformed into unyielding statecraft under Mr. Jinnah. In November 1947, wh