ISLAMABAD
The newfound camaraderie between the US and Pakistan was on full display this week as US President Donald Trump welcomed Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Field Marshal Asim Munir, into the Oval Office, heralding them both as “great leaders”, The Guardian reported.
Having been cold-shouldered by successive US presidents, this was the first time a Pakistani prime minister had been invited to Washington in more than six years. It was also the unprecedented second time this year that COAS Munir held an intimate meeting with President Trump.
Islamabad’s charm offensive with Trump since his re-election has included handing over to the US a high-profile member of the Daesh affiliate in Afghanistan and publicly crediting the US president with preventing hostilities between India and Pakistan escalating into all-out war, even nominating Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts. Yet what has appeared most effective is Pakistan’s touting of its allegedly untapped natural resources — namely oil, minerals and gas — for US exploration.
In July, Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social that “we have just concluded a Deal with the Country of Pakistan, whereby Pakistan and the United States will work together on developing their massive Oil Reserves. We are in the process of choosing the Oil Company that will lead this partnership”. The messaging was affirmed by Natalie Baker, the US charge d’affaires in Islamabad, who told local media that US firms had been “showing keen interest in Pakistan’s oil, gas and mineral sectors, in line with Donald Trump’s vision”.
Pakistan has already reaped rewards from its promise of oil. After an agreement in August, Trump gave Pakistan a generous 19% tariff on imported goods, the lowest of all south Asia nations and far below the punitive 50% tariffs that its neighbour and nemesis India is facing. This month, a $500m (£370m) deal for the US to invest in Pakistan’s nascent minerals sector — including copper and rare earths — was announced, despite a lack of definitive data on the country’s mineral reserves.
Yet it is the promise of oil that has left experts and former government ministers even more baffled. They stress that there is no reliable proof that Pakistan has any substantive, untapped oil reserves, despite years of the world’s biggest oil companies attempting to find them. Moin Raza Khan, a geoscientist and former managing director at Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), which has been at the forefront of oil exploration, said: “What Trump is claiming about Pakistan’s massive oil reserves has nothing to do with reality.
It is without the support of any data or evidence. We don’t even know where these massive reserves would be, as we don’t have any surveys and studies so far that show us”. Khan was among the experts who emphasised that despite more than half a century of exploration and drilling onshore and offshore, no large-scale commercially viable oil wells had been discovered on Pakistani soil.





