China, Pakistan reaffirm ties as US outreach to Islamabad deepens

    China, Pakistan reaffirm ties as US outreach to Islamabad deepens


    U.S. President Donald Trump

    U.S. President Donald Trump
    | Photo Credit:
    Jonathan Ernst

    China ‍and Pakistan pledged on
    Monday to further deepen ties and expand cooperation,
    reaffirming to each other their ​historically “ironclad”
    friendship as signs of rapprochement between Islamabad and
    Washington grow.

    Pakistan is one ‌of China’s closest partners, diplomatically
    supporting Beijing on a wide range of ​internationally sensitive
    issues ranging from the status of Taiwan to Xinjiang, Tibet,
    Hong Kong and the South China Sea.

    In exchange, Beijing has poured billions of dollars into the
    South Asian country through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
    (CPEC) – a flagship project under China’s Belt and Road trade
    and infrastructure initiative.

    But repeated Islamist militant attacks on Chinese nationals
    working on the CPEC and other projects in Pakistan have become a
    major source of tension ​in recent years.

    Adding to the complexity in the Sino-Pakistani relationship,
    U.S.-Pakistani ties ⁠have warmed since President Donald Trump
    returned to the White House a year ago and landed a diplomatic
    victory in a region that China regards as within its sphere of
    influence.

    Pakistan even said it would recommend ​Trump for the Nobel
    Peace Prize for ⁠helping resolve a conflict it had with India.

    In a joint statement on Monday, China and Pakistan said they
    would build an upgraded version of the CPEC, focus on their
    cooperation on industry, agriculture and mining, and step up
    collaboration in the ‌financial and banking sector.

    China then praised Pakistan’s “comprehensive measures” to
    protect the safety ‌of Chinese personnel and projects, the
    statement read.

    Both sides also called for more “visible and verifiable
    actions to dismantle and eliminate all terrorist organisations”
    entrenched in ‍Afghanistan, which shares borders with both
    Pakistan and China. No details were given.

    ‘ALL-WEATHER STRATEGIC PARTNERS’

    Pakistan is among an exclusive group of countries that China
    regards as an “all-weather strategic partner”, ‍with close ties
    dating back decades.

    The first premier of the People’s Republic of China, Zhou
    Enlai, once credited Pakistan as a bridge in normalising
    Beijing’s relations with the U.S. in the 1970s, with Islamabad
    often acting as a channel of communication between Beijing and
    the outside world at the time.

    But warming U.S.-Pakistani ties since 2025 under the Trump
    administration are creating a counterweight to China’s so-called
    neighbourhood diplomacy with countries with which it shares a
    border.

    Pakistan last March hailed its counter-terrorism cooperation
    with Washington after the arrest of Mohammad Sharifullah, whom
    it ⁠blames for a 2021 attack on U.S. troops at Kabul airport.
    Trump publicly thanked Pakistan for its role in the capture.

    The Trump administration also ​released $397 million for a
    U.S.-backed programme in Pakistan that monitors use of F-16
    fighter jets in ⁠counter-terrorism efforts despite Washington’s
    global freeze in foreign aid.

    On Sunday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met with his
    Pakistani counterpart Ishaq Dar in Beijing to reaffirm the
    “ironclad friendship and strategic mutual trust” between the two
    neighbours.

    “China and Pakistan will further promote their ironclad
    ties, deepen mutually beneficial cooperation, and continue to
    strengthen their ⁠strategic cooperation to break new ground,” the
    joint statement said.
    (Reporting by Ethan Wang and Ryan Woo; editing by Christian
    Schmollinger and Mark Heinrich)

    Published on January 5, 2026



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