Importing US crude oil may please US President Donald Trump,
but it could also annoy Saudi Arabia, especially given the special relationship
between Pakistan and the Kingdom, which includes:
Long standing
energy ties
Saudi Arabia is Pakistan’s largest crude oil supplier, often providing oil on
deferred payment (US$3 billion oil credit facility renewed multiple times).
Financial
assistance
Saudi Arabia has provided billions in loans, deposits, and grants to support
Pakistan’s economy, particularly during IMF negotiations.
Strategic
alignment
The Saudi-Pakistan relationship is not just economic but also political and
military, including defense cooperation and labor remittances.
Though, to begin with import of crude oil from United will
be small, the move could strain ties between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
Geopolitical
optics
Importing US crude might be seen as Pakistan pivoting westward, especially if
framed as part of a larger US trade deal.
Loss of
market share
Even a 10% reduction in demand from a long-time buyer like
Pakistan might raise commercial and symbolic concerns.
Trust
and alignment issues
If the decision isn't communicated diplomatically, Riyadh
may perceive it as ungrateful, especially if deferred payment oil continues.
Not necessarily a rupture
Scale
is limited
Pakistan is not replacing Saudi oil. The pilot phase is just 10% of imports.
It's a diversification move, not a shift in allegiance.
Economic
logic
The US crude provides lighter grades and higher gasoline yield, improving
domestic refining output. If positioned as a technical decision, it’s easier to
justify.
Diplomatic
communication
Pakistan can explain this as part of energy diversification—a common practice
by many countries—and reaffirm its strategic ties with Riyadh.
Pakistan should do:
Step |
Why it matters |
Engage Saudi leadership in advance |
Avoid surprises and reassure that US crude is a supplement, not a
replacement |
Reaffirm oil diplomacy |
Continue or even expand the deferred payment arrangement with Saudi Arabia |
Highlight refining needs |
Explain that lighter crude grades improve fuel mix, not reduce
strategic ties |
Balance optics |
Avoid appearing to pivot entirely toward US or using this purely as a
bargaining chip in US trade diplomacy |
Bottom Line
Importing US crude could cause diplomatic unease in Saudi
Arabia—especially if it's perceived as Pakistan drifting from its long-standing
partner. But the impact can be minimized through: 1) Transparent diplomacy, 2) Economic
rationale, and 3) Strategic reassurance
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