Saudi Arabia and Pakistan signed a strategic defense agreement on Wednesday that commits the two countries to treat any armed attack on one as an assault on both, in a move underscoring deepening military ties between the long-time partners.
The “Joint Strategic Defense Agreement” was signed in Riyadh by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif following formal talks, Saudi state news agency SPA reported.
The two leaders discussed what Riyadh described as their “close bilateral ties,” cooperation in security and defense, and regional and international developments.
The deal crowns decades of military cooperation that began in the 1960s and has included joint training, exercises, and defense production projects. Officials and analysts said the new deal - pledging a collective response to external aggression -marks an unprecedented step that raises commitments to the level of major defense alliances.
Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman hailed the pact in a post on X, saying: “Saudi Arabia and Pakistan... One front against any aggressor... Always and forever.”
Ali Awadh Asseri, former Saudi ambassador to Pakistan, said the agreement reflects a blend of Pakistan’s military expertise and Saudi Arabia’s financial strength and strategic location, bound by enduring political trust. “No matter how leadership changes in either country, ties only grow stronger,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.
Analysts said the accord does not target any specific party or replace existing security arrangements with other states, but rather signals recognition that modern threats cut across borders and require shared deterrence.
Saudi-Pakistani defense cooperation stretches back more than half a century, with both nations conducting regular air, land and naval drills. The Crown Prince’s visit to Islamabad in 2019 established a Supreme Coordination Council and ushered in $20 billion in Saudi investment pledges, cementing the link between security and economic partnership.
The latest agreement, officials said, positions the two countries in a “single defensive front” at a time of shifting global alliances. Its effectiveness, however, will hinge on follow-up mechanisms, including intelligence sharing, joint command structures and operational coordination.
Sharif arrived in Riyadh earlier on Wednesday on a state visit, escorted into Saudi airspace by Royal Saudi Air Force F-15 fighter jets. His trip came two days after meeting the Crown Prince in Doha on the sidelines of an Arab-Islamic summit, where they discussed regional tensions.
For both governments, analysts say, the signing is not just a legal step but a political signal that Riyadh and Islamabad have elevated their defense partnership to a new phase - one built on deterrence, joint security and shared strategic vision.