Donald Trump repeatedly claimed credit for brokering the
India-
Pakistan ceasefire and offered to mediate on
Kashmir - a disputed region claimed by both countries. The remarks irritated Delhi, which has long rejected third-party mediation, and contributed to strains in
India-US ties.Clary notes that Trump's "apparent affection" for
Pakistan's army chief, now Field Marshal
Asim Munir, significantly shaped the post-conflict environment."The US president has strong impulses that are not always easy to explain in terms of grand strategy," Clary says. "His desire to be seen as a peacemaker affected how he handled the
May 2025 conflict."Michael Kugelman of The Atlantic Council think-tank says Trump appears to see
Pakistan's wartime performance as a "David-versus-Goliath story" - helping explain, at least partly, "his admiration for Munir".At the same time,
Pakistan used the
Iran crisis and Gulf tensions to position itself as a useful intermediary between Washington, Tehran and Arab capitals.Yet, analysts caution against overstating
Pakistan's gains. Much of Islamabad's renewed prominence may prove contingent on Trump's highly personalised style of diplomacy and the temporary strategic importance of the
Iran crisis."This is also a gamble for Munir," says Markey. "The shifting sands of Middle East politics are a dangerous game, and working with the Trump administration often brings surprises."AFP via Getty ImagesA man sits beside a poster featuring
Asim Munir, now chief of defence forces, in
Pakistan-administered KashmirEven so, the conflict unsettled
India's diplomatic assumptions. For years, Delhi believed its strategic partnership with Washington had transformed the regional equation. But Trump's public embrace of
Pakistan, repeated mediation claims and trade tensions with
India injected new unpredictability into the relationship."The credibility of the US established since
Kargil [the 1999 conflict between
India and
Pakistan] as a reliable interlocutor during crises has considerably gone down," says
Ajay Bisaria,
India's former high commissioner to
Pakistan.Clary argues the deterioration in ties accelerated a broader recalibration already under way in Delhi."Since May 2025, and reinforced by the subsequent US-
India mini-trade war,
India has rebalanced its global portfolio of relationships to be somewhat less dependent on the US," he says. That has involved "moving closer to the
European Union, accelerating diplomatic repairs with
China, and resisting American pressure to sever ties with Russia".Still,
India's larger strategic trajectory remains intact. "
India is a big enough power," Clary says, "that disequilibrium does not imperil its continued rise."NurPhoto via Getty ImagesTourists return to Pahalgam, where the militant attack that triggered the conflict took placeIf the diplomatic consequences remain contested, the military lessons are clearer. Analysts on both sides describe the conflict as South Asia's first truly networked, drone-heavy, high-tech clash."What we saw was a technologically different battlefield," says Bisaria. "No manned aircraft crossed the border." Both countries have upped defence spending, accelerated military modernisation and deepened ties with foreign defence partners since then. But Clary cautions against assuming the conflict fundamentally altered the regional balance of power."It caused important organisational, doctrinal and technological shifts in both militaries," he says, "but I do not believe either military has substantially changed its thinking about the relative balance of power between it and its neighboring foe."What may have changed instead is the threshold for future escalation. "
Pakistan's strategy has been to move rapidly up the escalation ladder so that the threat of nuclear war brings in the international community," he says.That belief appears widespread within
Pakistan's strategic community. Umer Farooq, an Islamabad-based analyst and a former correspondent of Jane's Defence Weekly, says there is growing confidence in Islamabad that Washington and Gulf capitals would intervene rapidly in any future crisis."In
Pakistan, there is a belief that Americans have forced
Pakistan and
India to the negotiating table before and they can do it again," he told the BBC.At the same time, he says,
Pakistan's military and political elite appear acutely conscious of the country's internal fragility."Our economy is in a shambles, society is deeply divided, we are facing two insurgencies," Farooq says. "There is a mainstream thinking in the political and military elite that we should not go for any conflict with
India."That tension - between deterrent confidence and economic vulnerability - may explain the carefully calibrated signals emerging from Rawalpindi in recent months.AFP via Getty ImagesPatrolling Indian soldiers in Indian-administered
Kashmir in May 2025Without naming
India directly,
Pakistan's corps commanders recently stressed the need for "restraint and avoidance of escalation", saying regional stability depends on "collective restraint, responsibility and respect for sovereignty".This statement, says Farooq, is a "continuation of what has already existed in the military - dialogue should continue".Even now, few believe the two sides can afford a complete diplomatic freeze indefinitely."The two countries have a long history of backchannel dialogues," Markey notes, "and these have at times been effective ways to mitigate hostility and even to set the stage for more formal dialogues."Bisaria also sees "a ray of hope" if the region avoids another major militant attack. He says
Pakistan may eventually see merit "not in normalising but stabilising the
India front". Kugelman argues that, for now, "the best possible outcome is that things don't get any worse".Ultimately, the future may depend less on geopolitics than on the calculations of two powerful leaders: Narendra Modi and
Asim Munir.