Pakistan Signals Trilateral Defence Pact With Saudi Arabia and Türkiye as Talks Advance
Islamabad says draft agreement exists with Riyadh and Ankara after months of negotiations to expand mutual security commitments beyond existing bilateral defence ties
Pakistan’s government has confirmed that Saudi Arabia, Türkiye and Islamabad are actively deliberating a trilateral defence agreement, with a draft accord circulating among the three capitals after nearly a year of discussions.
Defence Production Minister Raza Hayat Harraj said the proposed pact — separate from the existing bilateral Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia — is “already in the pipeline,” with draft text now in the hands of officials in Islamabad, Riyadh and Ankara as each party weighs the terms.
Harraj underscored that all three governments continue to deliberate and that final consensus remains necessary before any formal signing takes place.
The minister’s remarks reflect Islamabad’s willingness to deepen security cooperation beyond the existing Saudi-Pakistan framework, which commits each side to treat an act of aggression against one as an act against both and has been positioned as a cornerstone of shared regional deterrence.
Turkish officials have acknowledged ongoing discussions but emphasised that no agreement has yet been concluded.
Türkiye’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, said that while talks have taken place, Ankara’s vision extends toward a broader regional cooperation platform rather than an immediate trilateral pact, framing negotiations as part of a dialogue on cooperative security arrangements.
Observers note that the potential expansion of the pact to include Türkiye could weave together complementary strengths: Saudi financial resources, Pakistan’s large military and nuclear deterrent, and Türkiye’s extensive defence industry and operational experience.
Bloomberg and other sources have described the initiative as partly driven by shifting perceptions of traditional security guarantees and a desire among all three states to diversify their strategic partnerships.
The evolving discussions occur against a backdrop of growing geopolitical realignments spanning the Middle East and South Asia.
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan’s existing mutual defence agreement — formalised in September 2025 — marked an unprecedented codification of long-standing security ties.
Ankara’s interest in joining the pact reflects broader trends of regional powers seeking cooperative frameworks that can bolster collective defence and deterrence amid fluid global security dynamics.
All parties stress the talks’ exploratory nature and the need for a shared vision of cooperation before moving toward formalisation, underscoring the sensitive diplomatic and strategic considerations shaping the potential trilateral arrangement.