Site icon

Saudi Arabia Says Pakistan Sends Fighter Jets to Kingdom Under Defence Pact

April 11 (Reuters) – Pakistan has sent fighter ⁠jets ⁠and other military forces ⁠to Saudi Arabia to boost security under a ​defence pact between the two countries, the Saudi defence ministry said ‌on Saturday, as Islamabad hosted ‌talks aimed at ending the Iran war.

The deployment ⁠follows ⁠a wave of Iranian talks on the Gulf kingdom over ​the past weeks that struck https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/operational-activities-halted-several-energy-facilities-saudi-arabia-state-news-2026-04-09/ key energy infrastructure and killed a Saudi national.

Riyadh and Islamabad signed a mutual defence pact ​in September 2025, committing both sides to treat any aggression against ⁠either country ⁠as an attack on ⁠both. ​That significantly deepened a decades-old security partnership.

Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry said ​in a statement ⁠that Pakistani fighter jets and support aircraft had arrived at the King Abdulaziz Air Base in the country’s eastern province.

It said the Pakistani deployment aimed to strengthen joint defence cooperation ⁠and support regional and international security and stability.

Pakistan has long ⁠provided military support to the kingdom, including training and advisory deployments, while Saudi Arabia has repeatedly stepped in to support Pakistan financially during periods of economic stress.

Saudi Arabia’s finance minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan was in Pakistan on Friday to demonstrate economic support for the country, a source familiar with the situation said.

In 2018, Riyadh ⁠announced a $6 billion support package https://www.reuters.com/article/world/saudis-offer-pakistan-6-billion-rescue-package-to-ease-economic-crisis-idUSKCN1MX2AB/?utm_source=chatgpt.com for Pakistan, including a $3 billion https://www.reuters.com/world/saudi-arabia-extends-term-3-bln-deposit-with-pakistan-another-year-2024-12-05/ deposit at the central bank and $3 billion worth of oil supplies on deferred payment.

(Reporting by ​Asif Shahzad, Mubasher Bukhari and Saad Sayeed in ​Islamabad; Editing by Alexander Smith)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Exit mobile version