🚨🇵🇰🤝🇱🇾 BREAKING: Pakistan Secures Major Multi-Billion Dollar Defence Deal with Libyan National Army
Pakistan has reached a massive defence agreement valued at over 4 billion dollars with the Libyan National Army, following a high-level meeting in Benghazi between Pakistan’s COAS / CDF General Asim Munir and LNA Deputy Commander Saddam Khalifa Haftar.
This is being described as one of Pakistan’s largest weapons export deals to date and includes land, air and naval capabilities, with the possibility of JF-17 fighter jets also forming part of the package.
Pakistani officials stated that this agreement does not violate UN restrictions. While the embargo technically exists, Pakistan has clarified that it does not apply to this category of defence sales under the way the deal has been structured.
Libya and Pakistan share historic ties and deep brotherhood, and this deal stands as a remarkable testament to their long-standing relationship, mutual respect and growing defence cooperation.
@ThePulsePoint
Pakistan has reached a massive defence agreement valued at over 4 billion dollars with the Libyan National Army, following a high-level meeting in Benghazi between Pakistan’s COAS / CDF General Asim Munir and LNA Deputy Commander Saddam Khalifa Haftar.
This is being described as one of Pakistan’s largest weapons export deals to date and includes land, air and naval capabilities, with the possibility of JF-17 fighter jets also forming part of the package.
Pakistani officials stated that this agreement does not violate UN restrictions. While the embargo technically exists, Pakistan has clarified that it does not apply to this category of defence sales under the way the deal has been structured.
Libya and Pakistan share historic ties and deep brotherhood, and this deal stands as a remarkable testament to their long-standing relationship, mutual respect and growing defence cooperation.
@ThePulsePoint
👍4❤3
🇵🇰 25th December – Honouring the Father of the Nation, Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah
Today we remember the man who gave us identity, dignity and a homeland, the Father of the Nation, Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah. A leader whose determination, vision and courage carved Pakistan onto the map of the world.
Quaid… the nation misses you deeply. We truly wish you had lived longer… to guide what you created, to lead this nation to the heights it deserved, and to shape Pakistan into exactly what you dreamed for us. Your principles of Unity, Faith and Discipline remain a light for us, even today.
We owe you for every breath we take in a free homeland. Your struggle, sacrifice and leadership will never be forgotten.
May Allah grant you Jannatul Firdous. Ameen. 🇵🇰🤍
Pakistan Zindabad!
@ThePulsePoint
Today we remember the man who gave us identity, dignity and a homeland, the Father of the Nation, Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah. A leader whose determination, vision and courage carved Pakistan onto the map of the world.
Quaid… the nation misses you deeply. We truly wish you had lived longer… to guide what you created, to lead this nation to the heights it deserved, and to shape Pakistan into exactly what you dreamed for us. Your principles of Unity, Faith and Discipline remain a light for us, even today.
We owe you for every breath we take in a free homeland. Your struggle, sacrifice and leadership will never be forgotten.
May Allah grant you Jannatul Firdous. Ameen. 🇵🇰🤍
Pakistan Zindabad!
@ThePulsePoint
❤13
🚨🇵🇰🤝🇦🇪 NEW: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan is set to visit Pakistan on Dec 26 for an official visit.
Both sides are expected to review bilateral relations and discuss cooperation in trade, investment and development.
@ThePulsePoint
Both sides are expected to review bilateral relations and discuss cooperation in trade, investment and development.
@ThePulsePoint
❤7🤣3👎2
🇵🇰🇹🇷🇸🇦 A New Muslim Security Architecture in the Making?
According to Reuters and Bloomberg, Türkiye is exploring the possibility of joining the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence framework. If this materialises, it could mark the first real step toward a Muslim collective security bloc something resembling a Muslim-NATO.
Let’s be clear: this is not yet final, but the direction alone is geopolitically massive.
🔹 Why this matters
This isn’t just another defence MoU. What’s being discussed has Article-5-style style implications:
Attack one, and you provoke a collective response.
That principle alone would fundamentally change the strategic calculations of anyone threatening the Muslim world.
🔹 The strategic balance
Each country brings something critical to the table:
🇵🇰 Pakistan
- A battle-hardened military, actively engaged in counter-terrorism
- Decades of real combat experience, not just theory
- Nuclear capability, providing ultimate strategic deterrence
🇹🇷 Türkiye
- A rapidly advancing military-industrial base
- Indigenous drones, missiles, naval platforms, and air defence systems
- Strategic access to Europe, the Black Sea, and the Middle East
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia
- Financial and energy power
- Ability to sustain long-term defence infrastructure
- Strategic depth in the Arab and Islamic world
Manpower. Technology. Resources.
That is a complete security ecosystem.
🔹 A reality check
Yes, Türkiye and Saudi Arabia do not align on every regional issue. Their policies have clashed before, and that cannot be ignored.
However, Pakistan is uniquely positioned here:
- Trusted by Riyadh for decades, dating back to Pakistan’s founding
- Bound to Türkiye through deep historical, military, and economic ties
- Viewed by both as a neutral, reliable stabilising force
If anyone can act as the glue, it’s Pakistan not that it can intervene in their rivalry but rather bring them together on the table and apply diplomacy.
🔹 The bigger picture
NATO started with just a handful of countries. Expansion came later.
Now imagine a similar framework, exclusive to Muslim countries.
A unified defence umbrella based on collective security, not nationalism, but Ummah-centric security, would return the Muslim world to the global stage as a serious, unignorable force.
Not to threaten others.
Not to destabilise regions.
But to ensure security, deterrence, and sovereignty.
🔹 Final thought
Türkiye’s technology.
Pakistan’s manpower, experience, and deterrence.
Saudi Arabia’s economic and energy strength.
If Riyadh and Ankara resolve their differences, this triad could become the foundation of the most powerful Muslim security alliance in modern history.
From Pakistan’s perspective?
This is strategically brilliant and should be pursued decisively.
The world is changing.
And for once, the Muslim world may be changing together.
🔹 A note on realism and expectations
It’s important to be clear-eyed about this.
The Muslim world is not monolithic. Every Muslim country has its own political system, priorities, alliances, and way of doing things. Differences of opinion are natural and completely understandable. It’s unrealistic to expect that every Muslim country would immediately line up and say “yes, we want to join”.
There will be pushback.
There will be disagreements.
There will be political friction.
This is exactly what NATO experienced in its early years and throughout its expansion phases and any emerging alliance of this nature would face the same growing pains.
We’ve already seen discussions and speculation around other countries like Qatar potentially showing interest in deeper defence coordination. That alone tells us this is an evolving process, not something that happens overnight.
For now, the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence agreement, signed last year, remains untested and given current global dynamics, there has been no situation requiring it to be tested.
@ThePulsePoint
According to Reuters and Bloomberg, Türkiye is exploring the possibility of joining the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence framework. If this materialises, it could mark the first real step toward a Muslim collective security bloc something resembling a Muslim-NATO.
Let’s be clear: this is not yet final, but the direction alone is geopolitically massive.
🔹 Why this matters
This isn’t just another defence MoU. What’s being discussed has Article-5-style style implications:
Attack one, and you provoke a collective response.
That principle alone would fundamentally change the strategic calculations of anyone threatening the Muslim world.
🔹 The strategic balance
Each country brings something critical to the table:
🇵🇰 Pakistan
- A battle-hardened military, actively engaged in counter-terrorism
- Decades of real combat experience, not just theory
- Nuclear capability, providing ultimate strategic deterrence
🇹🇷 Türkiye
- A rapidly advancing military-industrial base
- Indigenous drones, missiles, naval platforms, and air defence systems
- Strategic access to Europe, the Black Sea, and the Middle East
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia
- Financial and energy power
- Ability to sustain long-term defence infrastructure
- Strategic depth in the Arab and Islamic world
Manpower. Technology. Resources.
That is a complete security ecosystem.
🔹 A reality check
Yes, Türkiye and Saudi Arabia do not align on every regional issue. Their policies have clashed before, and that cannot be ignored.
However, Pakistan is uniquely positioned here:
- Trusted by Riyadh for decades, dating back to Pakistan’s founding
- Bound to Türkiye through deep historical, military, and economic ties
- Viewed by both as a neutral, reliable stabilising force
If anyone can act as the glue, it’s Pakistan not that it can intervene in their rivalry but rather bring them together on the table and apply diplomacy.
🔹 The bigger picture
NATO started with just a handful of countries. Expansion came later.
Now imagine a similar framework, exclusive to Muslim countries.
A unified defence umbrella based on collective security, not nationalism, but Ummah-centric security, would return the Muslim world to the global stage as a serious, unignorable force.
Not to threaten others.
Not to destabilise regions.
But to ensure security, deterrence, and sovereignty.
🔹 Final thought
Türkiye’s technology.
Pakistan’s manpower, experience, and deterrence.
Saudi Arabia’s economic and energy strength.
If Riyadh and Ankara resolve their differences, this triad could become the foundation of the most powerful Muslim security alliance in modern history.
From Pakistan’s perspective?
This is strategically brilliant and should be pursued decisively.
The world is changing.
And for once, the Muslim world may be changing together.
🔹 A note on realism and expectations
It’s important to be clear-eyed about this.
The Muslim world is not monolithic. Every Muslim country has its own political system, priorities, alliances, and way of doing things. Differences of opinion are natural and completely understandable. It’s unrealistic to expect that every Muslim country would immediately line up and say “yes, we want to join”.
There will be pushback.
There will be disagreements.
There will be political friction.
This is exactly what NATO experienced in its early years and throughout its expansion phases and any emerging alliance of this nature would face the same growing pains.
We’ve already seen discussions and speculation around other countries like Qatar potentially showing interest in deeper defence coordination. That alone tells us this is an evolving process, not something that happens overnight.
For now, the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence agreement, signed last year, remains untested and given current global dynamics, there has been no situation requiring it to be tested.
@ThePulsePoint
❤8👍1
ThePulsePoint pinned «🇵🇰🇹🇷🇸🇦 A New Muslim Security Architecture in the Making? According to Reuters and Bloomberg, Türkiye is exploring the possibility of joining the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence framework. If this materialises, it could mark the first real step toward…»
⚡🇵🇰 Pakistan’s Defence Export Breakout Is No Longer Theoretical
The May conflict with India marked a turning point. Pakistan’s JF-17 Thunder, performed beyond global expectations and exposed a widening gap between perception and reality in South Asian air power. Despite its size disadvantage, Pakistan demonstrated superior operational integration and combat readiness, effectively showing who controls the region’s skies.
This matters because Pakistan is no longer just a defence consumer, it is becoming a defence exporter with momentum.
The results are visible:
- Azerbaijan has inducted JF-17 Block III and is reportedly satisfied
- Myanmar and Nigeria continue operating the platform
- Libya has already agreed a $4bn defence deal
- Indonesia, Bangladesh, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan are now in active negotiations
Secondary interest from Argentina, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Uzbekistan, Peru, South Africa, and Uruguay shows the programme’s growing global appeal.
Unlike many exporters, Pakistan doesn’t sell aircraft alone. Each deal includes training, maintenance, doctrine, and long-term operational support, exporting influence, not just hardware.
PAC’s expansion is a strategic indicator. Production capacity is being scaled to meet sustained demand, while revenues are being channelled into 4.5++ and 5th-generation fighter development, deeper cooperation with China, and future indigenous programmes.
Economically, defence exports won’t replace traditional sectors but they directly reduce loan dependence, improve the trade balance, and generate long-term foreign revenue. This is how states stabilise economies structurally, not rhetorically.
Pakistan is also uniquely positioned to supply the Muslim world with combat-proven systems free from Western political constraints. With Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and others aligning more closely, a new defence axis is emerging.
India’s ongoing struggles in fighter development, highlighted again by recent Tejas failures, show the contrast. Pakistan, by comparison, is exporting fighters while proving them operationally.
Pakistan is quietly climbing the global defence export ladder. In South Asia, no competitor comes close and this trajectory is only accelerating.
@ThePulsePoint
The May conflict with India marked a turning point. Pakistan’s JF-17 Thunder, performed beyond global expectations and exposed a widening gap between perception and reality in South Asian air power. Despite its size disadvantage, Pakistan demonstrated superior operational integration and combat readiness, effectively showing who controls the region’s skies.
This matters because Pakistan is no longer just a defence consumer, it is becoming a defence exporter with momentum.
The results are visible:
- Azerbaijan has inducted JF-17 Block III and is reportedly satisfied
- Myanmar and Nigeria continue operating the platform
- Libya has already agreed a $4bn defence deal
- Indonesia, Bangladesh, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan are now in active negotiations
Secondary interest from Argentina, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Uzbekistan, Peru, South Africa, and Uruguay shows the programme’s growing global appeal.
Unlike many exporters, Pakistan doesn’t sell aircraft alone. Each deal includes training, maintenance, doctrine, and long-term operational support, exporting influence, not just hardware.
PAC’s expansion is a strategic indicator. Production capacity is being scaled to meet sustained demand, while revenues are being channelled into 4.5++ and 5th-generation fighter development, deeper cooperation with China, and future indigenous programmes.
Economically, defence exports won’t replace traditional sectors but they directly reduce loan dependence, improve the trade balance, and generate long-term foreign revenue. This is how states stabilise economies structurally, not rhetorically.
Pakistan is also uniquely positioned to supply the Muslim world with combat-proven systems free from Western political constraints. With Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and others aligning more closely, a new defence axis is emerging.
India’s ongoing struggles in fighter development, highlighted again by recent Tejas failures, show the contrast. Pakistan, by comparison, is exporting fighters while proving them operationally.
Pakistan is quietly climbing the global defence export ladder. In South Asia, no competitor comes close and this trajectory is only accelerating.
@ThePulsePoint
❤3😁1
ThePulsePoint pinned «⚡🇵🇰 Pakistan’s Defence Export Breakout Is No Longer Theoretical The May conflict with India marked a turning point. Pakistan’s JF-17 Thunder, performed beyond global expectations and exposed a widening gap between perception and reality in South Asian air…»
ThePulsePoint
🇵🇰🇹🇷🇸🇦 A New Muslim Security Architecture in the Making? According to Reuters and Bloomberg, Türkiye is exploring the possibility of joining the Pakistan–Saudi Arabia mutual defence framework. If this materialises, it could mark the first real step toward…
🇵🇰🇸🇦/🇹🇷 Pakistan has confirmed that Turkey is in talks with Saudi Arabia & Pakistan regarding a NATO Article 5 type Muslim alliance.
Good days are coming.
@ThePulsePoint
Good days are coming.
@ThePulsePoint
❤3
ThePulsePoint
🚨🇵🇰🤝🇨🇳 China’s Big Defence Offer to Pakistan After May Clash — U.S. Report Confirms Major Package A new report submitted to the U.S. Congress has confirmed what many already knew: China stood firmly by Pakistan in the aftermath of the May Pak-India clash.…
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
❤1