In his recent article for The Hill titled “America’s double standard on nuclear Islamism” (April 2026), Brahma Chellaney argues that the United States defies strategic logic by relentlessly sanctioning Iran while having “indulged, armed, and repeatedly excused” Pakistan despite both being authoritarian “Islamic republics.”
However, this argument rests on a fundamentally flawed premise. The comparison is analytically fragile because it ignores the legal, strategic, and institutional differences that actually define nuclear politics. This is not a matter of interpretation but of basic treaty architecture. Pakistan cannot be accused of violating the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) because it is not a signatory to the treaty. Iran, by contrast, is a signatory and therefore bound by its obligations regarding enrichment, monitoring, and safeguards.
Iran’s nuclear program has been evaluated through a formal treaty-based compliance mechanism involving the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and international oversight. That single distinction undermines the central claim of a uniform US “double standard.” States that occupy fundamentally different legal positions in the global nonproliferation regime cannot be expected to receive identical treatment. To demand otherwise collapses nonproliferation law into political rhetoric.
The claim of bias toward Pakistan also ignores the geopolitical context that has consistently shaped Washington’s policy. US engagement with Pakistan has been episodic and driven by strategic necessity rather than ideological alignment. During the Cold War, Pakistan was a frontline state against Soviet expansion. In the 1980s, it became central to the Afghan jihad strategy. After 9/11, it again emerged as a key counterterrorism partner.
In each phase, nonproliferation concerns were alternately enforced or deprioritized depending on immediate strategic needs. This may indicate inconsistency, but inconsistency is not equivalent to indulgence or favoritism. Framing it as a neat moral contrast with Iran ignores the fact that these cases exist in different legal systems, regional environments, and security imperatives.
Pakistan’s nuclear program emerged in direct response to an immediate and existential strategic rivalry with India. India’s 1974 “peaceful nuclear explosion” was itself a catalytic event that later contributed to the formation of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). Pakistan’s nuclear development followed within a South Asian security environment defined by asymmetric power and enduring conflict.
Iran’s nuclear trajectory, by contrast, developed in a different regional balance and within a treaty-bound compliance framework. Flattening these distinct histories into a single moral narrative produces a fundamentally weak comparison and therefore a flawed conclusion. If the real concern is selective nonproliferation enforcement, the more substantial case lies not in Pakistan but in India.
India’s 1974 test was one of the key drivers behind the creation of the NSG. Yet in 2008, India received an extraordinary NSG waiver despite remaining outside the NPT framework. This exception was further reinforced by the US through expanded civil nuclear cooperation, including American-designed reactors and broader strategic technology transfers announced as recently as February 2025. At the same time, India continues to operate nearly a dozen nuclear reactors outside full IAEA safeguards while expanding its strategic arsenal.
According to SIPRI 2025 estimates, India possesses at least 180 nuclear warheads, while Pakistani academic assessments place India’s arsenal between 300 and 450 warheads, with continued growth. India has also advanced its missile capabilities significantly, including the Agni-5 test with MIRV capability in August 2025 and systems with ranges exceeding 8,000 km, approaching intercontinental reach. Yet India remains a key strategic partner of the United States, illustrating that nonproliferation enforcement is deeply entangled with geopolitical alignment.
Nuclear weapons are controlled by states, institutions, command-and-control systems, and deterrence doctrines—not by religious identity. Once religion becomes the organizing principle of analysis, the argument quickly collapses under its own selectivity.
If the same lens is applied consistently, India’s nuclear identity—framed in part through civilizational rhetoric during the 1998 tests and increasingly intertwined with Hindutva-aligned political discourse—would also come under scrutiny. Similarly, Israel, another nuclear-armed state outside the NPT, also fits into this logic if religious identity were a genuine analytical basis. Yet these comparisons are avoided, revealing the inconsistency in framing.
Historical claims about proliferation networks also require careful handling. While Pakistan is often associated with A.Q. Khan, analyses such as Joshua Pollack’s 2012 article suggest that India was also a customer within the same network and that Khan’s activities were largely independent before he was eventually held accountable by Pakistani authorities.
Ultimately, a relative comparison of the nuclear policies of two Islamic states does not expose double standards in the global nonproliferation regime. By focusing narrowly on Pakistan and employing the language of “nuclear Islamism,” it diverts attention from the broader structural realities of nuclear politics in South Asia.
The Mirage of “Nuclear Islamism”: Why the Pakistan-Iran Comparison Fails
In his recent article for The Hill titled “America’s double standard on nuclear Islamism” (April 2026), Brahma Chellaney argues that the United States defies strategic logic by relentlessly sanctioning Iran while having “indulged, armed, and repeatedly excused” Pakistan despite both being authoritarian “Islamic republics.”
However, this argument rests on a fundamentally flawed premise. The comparison is analytically fragile because it ignores the legal, strategic, and institutional differences that actually define nuclear politics. This is not a matter of interpretation but of basic treaty architecture. Pakistan cannot be accused of violating the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) because it is not a signatory to the treaty. Iran, by contrast, is a signatory and therefore bound by its obligations regarding enrichment, monitoring, and safeguards.
Iran’s nuclear program has been evaluated through a formal treaty-based compliance mechanism involving the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and international oversight. That single distinction undermines the central claim of a uniform US “double standard.” States that occupy fundamentally different legal positions in the global nonproliferation regime cannot be expected to receive identical treatment. To demand otherwise collapses nonproliferation law into political rhetoric.
The claim of bias toward Pakistan also ignores the geopolitical context that has consistently shaped Washington’s policy. US engagement with Pakistan has been episodic and driven by strategic necessity rather than ideological alignment. During the Cold War, Pakistan was a frontline state against Soviet expansion. In the 1980s, it became central to the Afghan jihad strategy. After 9/11, it again emerged as a key counterterrorism partner.
In each phase, nonproliferation concerns were alternately enforced or deprioritized depending on immediate strategic needs. This may indicate inconsistency, but inconsistency is not equivalent to indulgence or favoritism. Framing it as a neat moral contrast with Iran ignores the fact that these cases exist in different legal systems, regional environments, and security imperatives.
Pakistan’s nuclear program emerged in direct response to an immediate and existential strategic rivalry with India. India’s 1974 “peaceful nuclear explosion” was itself a catalytic event that later contributed to the formation of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). Pakistan’s nuclear development followed within a South Asian security environment defined by asymmetric power and enduring conflict.
Iran’s nuclear trajectory, by contrast, developed in a different regional balance and within a treaty-bound compliance framework. Flattening these distinct histories into a single moral narrative produces a fundamentally weak comparison and therefore a flawed conclusion. If the real concern is selective nonproliferation enforcement, the more substantial case lies not in Pakistan but in India.
India’s 1974 test was one of the key drivers behind the creation of the NSG. Yet in 2008, India received an extraordinary NSG waiver despite remaining outside the NPT framework. This exception was further reinforced by the US through expanded civil nuclear cooperation, including American-designed reactors and broader strategic technology transfers announced as recently as February 2025. At the same time, India continues to operate nearly a dozen nuclear reactors outside full IAEA safeguards while expanding its strategic arsenal.
According to SIPRI 2025 estimates, India possesses at least 180 nuclear warheads, while Pakistani academic assessments place India’s arsenal between 300 and 450 warheads, with continued growth. India has also advanced its missile capabilities significantly, including the Agni-5 test with MIRV capability in August 2025 and systems with ranges exceeding 8,000 km, approaching intercontinental reach. Yet India remains a key strategic partner of the United States, illustrating that nonproliferation enforcement is deeply entangled with geopolitical alignment.
Nuclear weapons are controlled by states, institutions, command-and-control systems, and deterrence doctrines—not by religious identity. Once religion becomes the organizing principle of analysis, the argument quickly collapses under its own selectivity.
If the same lens is applied consistently, India’s nuclear identity—framed in part through civilizational rhetoric during the 1998 tests and increasingly intertwined with Hindutva-aligned political discourse—would also come under scrutiny. Similarly, Israel, another nuclear-armed state outside the NPT, also fits into this logic if religious identity were a genuine analytical basis. Yet these comparisons are avoided, revealing the inconsistency in framing.
Historical claims about proliferation networks also require careful handling. While Pakistan is often associated with A.Q. Khan, analyses such as Joshua Pollack’s 2012 article suggest that India was also a customer within the same network and that Khan’s activities were largely independent before he was eventually held accountable by Pakistani authorities.
Ultimately, a relative comparison of the nuclear policies of two Islamic states does not expose double standards in the global nonproliferation regime. By focusing narrowly on Pakistan and employing the language of “nuclear Islamism,” it diverts attention from the broader structural realities of nuclear politics in South Asia.
SAT Commentary
SAT Commentary
SAT Commentaries, a collection of insightful social media threads on current events and social issues, featuring diverse perspectives from various authors.
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The Mirage of “Nuclear Islamism”: Why the Pakistan-Iran Comparison Fails
This commentary critiques Brahma Chellaney’s “nuclear Islamism” narrative, arguing that grouping Pakistan and Iran ignores critical legal and strategic realities. It highlights the disparity in non-proliferation enforcement, specifically contrasting the treatment of NPT signatories with the strategic exceptions granted to India. By deconstructing ideological framing, the text advocates for a foreign policy analysis rooted in treaty architecture rather than religious identity.
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