Addressing growing security threats in South and Central Asia makes Russiaâs intensifying cooperation with Pakistanâs counterterrorism programs in the 2020s more plausible, and an analytical evaluation of this cooperation is the focus of this paper. Extremist groups such as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), and the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP) in Afghanistan, emerging after the U.S. withdrawal, are direct threats to Russiaâs interests. Both countries work through programs involving mutual intelligence-sharing, military alliance, and diplomatic defence arrangements to fight against threats. The paper introduces an overview of Pakistan-Russia diplomatic history and examines modern practical cooperation, which overcame their earlier Cold War animosities. Using a geopolitical angle, this evaluation considers Russiaâs importance in Pakistanâs counterterrorism efforts, conditions that affect regional stability and peace, US-Pakistan historical relations, and Russia-India connections. The research demonstrates that Russiaâs growing alliance with Pakistan against terrorism creates impacts across South Asia.
Ali et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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