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Shashi Tharoor downplays Pak-Saudi defence deal: ‘We shouldn’t overreact'

Updated on: Sep 23, 2025 12:00 PM IST

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor termed the deal as formalisation of a long-standing relationship between the two nations.

Congress lawmaker MP Shashi Tharoor said that India should not overreact to the recent defence agreement between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. He termed the deal as a formalisation of a long-standing relationship between the two nations.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor. (PTI)

"Don't forget it is a formalisation of a long-standing arrangement. There was a time when there were 20,000 Pakistani soldiers stationed in Saudi Arabia. Pakistan has long tried to project itself as the sort of enforcement arm of the Muslim world," Tharoor said in an interview with the ANI.

"That kind of relationship has already been very well known to the world. And I don't think that we should overreact," Tharoor said as he cited a statement by the Saudi Crown Prince who allegedly said, "I don't need to make a bomb; if I want a bomb, I'll buy one from Pakistan."

Tharoor acknowledged the concerns about the clause in the pact that considers aggression against one country as aggression against the other. Yet, Tharoor expressed confidence in India's diplomatic efforts and India's strong ties with Gulf countries.

Similarly, he noted that the Saudi-Pakistan pact reflects their independent bilateral history rather than being targeted at India.

Last week, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a "Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement", pledging that any aggression against either nation would be treated as an attack on both.

The agreement was inked during a state visit by Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Riyadh at the invitation of Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud.

According to a joint statement issued following the visit, "This agreement, which reflects the shared commitment of both nations to enhance their security and to achieving security and peace in the region and the world, aims to develop aspects of defence cooperation between the two countries and strengthen joint deterrence against any aggression. The agreement states that any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both."

Hours after the announcement, the Ministry of External Affairs issued a response stating that it would closely study the pact's implications for India's national security and regional and global stability.

In a statement, MEA Spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal stated that New Delhi acknowledges the formalisation of what it described as a "long-standing arrangement" between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, while noting that it would closely examine its potential ramifications.

Jaiswal further emphasised that India's national security remains paramount in light of this development.

"We have seen reports of the signing of a strategic mutual defence pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. The Government was aware that this development, which formalises a long-standing arrangement between the two countries, had been under consideration. We will study the implications of this development for our national security as well as for regional and global stability. The Government remains committed to protecting India's national interests and ensuring comprehensive national security in all domains," the statement from the MEA read.

 
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