Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Asif posted on X that Israel is "evil and a curse for humanity" and described it as a "cancerous state on Palestinian land." He deleted the post; the screenshots circulated before he could. Benjamin Netanyahu's office called the remarks "outrageous" and declared Pakistan unfit as a neutral arbiter. Israeli Ambassador Leiter called Asif "the problem."
The Islamabad process was already structurally fragile. Asif's remarks removed any residual pretence of host-country neutrality and gave Netanyahu a pretext to delegitimise the process entirely, should talks fail. The damage is asymmetric: Iran has no objection to Pakistan's position, but Israel, whose cooperation is required for any deal addressing Lebanon, now holds a procedural weapon it can deploy at any moment.
With Qatar refusing mediation in March and no other capital with simultaneous standing in Washington and Tehran, the alternatives if Islamabad is discredited are nil. Netanyahu's statement was calibrated: it does not require withdrawal from talks, but it reserves the right to blame the venue if substance collapses. The post was deleted, but the diplomatic damage is structural and cumulative.
