{"id":74280,"date":"2026-04-20T09:33:17","date_gmt":"2026-04-20T09:33:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/74280\/"},"modified":"2026-04-20T09:33:17","modified_gmt":"2026-04-20T09:33:17","slug":"iran-and-the-indispensable-broker-how-pakistan-outmaneuvers-india-on-the-world-stage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/74280\/","title":{"rendered":"Iran and the Indispensable Broker: How Pakistan Outmaneuvers India on the World Stage"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In Sept. 2025, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a mutual defense pact, formalizing what decades of quiet cooperation had already made real. The <a href=\"https:\/\/thebulletin.org\/2025\/10\/the-saudi-pakistani-strategic-mutual-defense-pact-that-no-one-saw-coming\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">defense pact signed in Riyadh<\/a> was presented in official communiqu\u00e9s as a natural deepening of bilateral ties. It was that, but it was also something larger: The latest installment in a pattern that has persisted for half a century and that continues to confound the logic of power politics. Pakistan, a state dependent on International Monetary Fund bailouts and outmatched conventionally by its larger neighbor, has once again positioned itself at the center of a consequential security arrangement. India, a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.statista.com\/statistics\/263771\/gross-domestic-product-gdp-in-india\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">$3.5 trillion economy<\/a> with a presence at every major multilateral table, was not in the room. This is not an accident of diplomacy. It is a structural pattern \u2014 produced by nuclear security, chronic economic fragility, and geographic pivotality \u2014 and converted into leverage by Pakistani actors who have translated these conditions into diplomatic capital with remarkable consistency across every configuration of leadership and regional power. The most important of those actors is the Pakistan Army, whose military capacity has functioned as an exportable service to multiple competing powers at once. Six months later, that same pattern would put Pakistan at the center of the effort to secure a ceasefire between the United States and Iran.<\/p>\n<p>The standard explanation leans on a contingency: The right leader at the right moment, an opportunistic military, and American Cold War patronage that created habits of collaboration. These explanations are not wrong so far as they go, but they do not go far enough. Pakistan\u2019s diplomatic reach has held across civilian governments and military dictatorships, across American patronage and American sanctions, across periods of relative stability and acute internal crisis. Contingency explains episodes, but it does not explain half a century of deep diplomatic and military ties.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>The Puzzle of the Weaker Power<\/p>\n<p>The empirical record is striking. Beginning in 1969, Pakistani Ambassador to the United States Agha Hilaly carried <a href=\"https:\/\/www.brookings.edu\/books\/deadly-embrace\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Washington\u2019s initial feelers to Beijing<\/a>. Pakistani President Yahya Khan personally delivered President Richard Nixon\u2019s messages to Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai during his 1970 visit, laying the groundwork for National Security Advisor Henry <a href=\"https:\/\/nsarchive.gwu.edu\/briefing-book\/cold-war-henry-kissinger\/2023-05-25\/henry-kissingers-documented-legacy\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Kissinger\u2019s secret July 1971 flight to Beijing<\/a> \u2014 the back channel maneuver that cracked open the most consequential diplomatic realignment of the twentieth century. In the same year, Pakistan lost half its territory in the war over East Pakistan and brokered a geopolitical revolution. Through the 1980s, Pakistan\u2019s Inter-Services Intelligence served as the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.brookings.edu\/books\/deadly-embrace\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">indispensable conduit<\/a> for American and Saudi support to the Afghan mujahideen \u2014 managing a covert operation that reshaped Central Asia and cemented Islamabad\u2019s reputation as a state that great powers need. Since 2001, it has oscillated between partner and adversary to Washington in ways that have infuriated American officials and yet kept Islamabad relevant to every serious conversation about the region\u2019s future. And now it is deepening security ties with the Gulf at a moment when the architecture of Middle Eastern security is being redrawn.<\/p>\n<p>India\u2019s record over the same period is one of conspicuous abstention. In the Persian Gulf, where millions of Indian nationals generate remittance flows exceeding <a href=\"https:\/\/economictimes.indiatimes.com\/nri\/invest\/india-remittance-flows-under-pressure-gulf-middle-east-war-iran-us-israel-economic-impact\/articleshow\/129941975.cms?from=mdr\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">$40 billion<\/a> annually, India has deepened its economic ties and cultivated warm bilateral relationships, but has never converted that weight into a security role. There is no defense pact, no troops stationed on Gulf soil, no joint command structure. Pakistan, with a fraction of India\u2019s economic footprint in the region, has all three. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has cultivated personal relationships with Gulf leaders assiduously \u2014 the visits, the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.reuters.com\/world\/india\/india-gulf-cooperation-council-agree-terms-start-free-trade-pact-talks-2026-02-05\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">investment pledges<\/a>, the carefully staged bilaterals. What he has not built is the architecture that would make India indispensable rather than merely welcome. India has built relationships everywhere and obligations nowhere.<\/p>\n<p>The standard response to this comparison is to invoke India\u2019s democratic complexity, its federal constraints, its tradition of Nehruvian non-alignment. These explanations have merit, but they do not account for the consistency of the gap. India has had governments of radically different ideological orientations \u2014 socialist, market-liberal, Hindu nationalist \u2014 and all of them have produced roughly the same foreign policy footprint relative to the country\u2019s capabilities. This is not a failure of leadership or ideology, India has never been constrained enough to be entrepreneurial.<\/p>\n<p>The Architecture of Indispensability<\/p>\n<p>Pakistan occupies a position that is, even among nuclear-armed states, almost without parallel. It is nuclear-armed, economically fragile, and geographically pivotal, and the combination matters more than any single element.<\/p>\n<p>The nuclear deterrent is the foundation. Since 1998, Pakistan has possessed the one capability that neutralizes India\u2019s conventional dominance \u2014 an <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/politics\/eating-grass\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">arsenal that makes full-scale war<\/a> catastrophically costly for both sides. In May 2025, that logic was tested in ways it never had been before. As <a href=\"https:\/\/theconversation.com\/india-pakistan-ceasefire-shouldnt-disguise-fact-that-norms-have-changed-in-south-asia-making-future-de-escalation-much-harder-256285\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">I argued at the time<\/a>, the conflict represented a dangerous departure from past patterns \u2014 direct missile exchanges between nuclear rivals for the first time, across multiple domains simultaneously. <a href=\"https:\/\/abcnews.com\/International\/india-fires-missiles-terrorist-infrastructure-pakistan-india\/story?id=121535137\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Pakistan responded to Indian strikes<\/a>, held its ground, and accepted a ceasefire after demonstrating it could absorb and respond to Indian military action. The deterrent was no longer merely a ceiling on Indian escalation. It had become the floor of Pakistani confidence and India\u2019s conventional dominance was strategically capped.<\/p>\n<p>Here is what most analyses of Pakistan get wrong: Pakistan is not a dependent state seeking patrons because it cannot defend itself. It seeks patrons because its deterrent secures its borders but does not pay its bills, train its officer corps in foreign academies, fund its infrastructure, or service its debt to the International Monetary Fund. A state that needs patrons to survive is a supplicant. Pakistan needs patrons for everything except survival \u2014 that makes it a broker. Pakistan has operated as the latter more consistently than its reputation suggests and more consequentially than its capabilities would predict.<\/p>\n<p>Pakistan cannot afford geopolitical passivity. It received a record <a href=\"https:\/\/www.arabnews.com\/node\/2607475\/pakistan\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">$38.3 billion<\/a> in workers\u2019 remittances in FY25 \u2014 more than the entire International Monetary Fund loan package that Islamabad negotiated that same year \u2014 and the Gulf states account for the dominant share of that flow. Keeping those labor corridors open is economic survival, not diplomacy. The <a href=\"https:\/\/global.oup.com\/academic\/product\/fighting-to-the-end-9780199892709\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">military\u2019s institutional interests<\/a> \u2014 promotions, equipment, prestige, external validation \u2014 require the training exchanges, equipment pipelines, and advisory relationships that come from being a valued security partner to wealthy states.<\/p>\n<p>Geography completes the picture. Pakistan sits at the intersection of South Asia, the Persian Gulf, Central Asia, and western China \u2014 a position that has made it useful to every external power that has ever had ambitions in the region. For the United States during the Cold War, it was the southern anchor of containment. For China, it is the endpoint of the <a href=\"https:\/\/carnegieendowment.org\/russia-eurasia\/research\/2016\/04\/pakistan-at-the-crossroads\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">China-Pakistan Economic Corridor<\/a> and the land bridge to the Arabian Sea. For Saudi Arabia, it is the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.routledge.com\/Pakistan-at-Seventy-A-handbook-on-developments-in-economics-politics-and-society\/Burki-IftekharAhmedChowdhury-Butt\/p\/book\/9781032092102\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">source of military manpower<\/a> and, increasingly, the custodian of Sunni military credibility that the Kingdom needs as it navigates an environment increasingly shaped by Iranian power. No external power with ambitions in the region has ever been able to ignore Pakistan \u2014 and none has.<\/p>\n<p>The Nuclear Dimension They Don\u2019t Discuss<\/p>\n<p>Signed in Riyadh on Sept. 17, 2025, <a href=\"https:\/\/thebulletin.org\/2025\/10\/the-saudi-pakistani-strategic-mutual-defense-pact-that-no-one-saw-coming\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">the Saudi-Pakistani mutual defense pact stipulates<\/a> that \u201cany aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both.\u201d <a href=\"https:\/\/mei.edu\/publication\/dont-believe-hype-modest-reality-saudi-pakistani-defense-pact\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Most analysis<\/a> has treated it through the lens of conventional military cooperation, Pakistani troops in Saudi Arabia, joint exercises, training programs, equipment transfers. That misses what lies beneath. For decades, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.armscontrol.org\/act\/2025-10\/news-briefs\/pakistan-extends-nuclear-deterrence-saudi-arabia\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">analysts in Washington<\/a>, Riyadh, and Islamabad have returned to a question that no official in any of those capitals <a href=\"https:\/\/www.brookings.edu\/articles\/the-signal-and-substance-of-the-new-saudi-pakistan-defense-pact\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">will answer directly<\/a>: Does Pakistan\u2019s nuclear arsenal extend any form of deterrent guarantee to Saudi Arabia?<\/p>\n<p>The answer came closer to the surface than usual within days of the signing. Pakistan\u2019s Defense Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif publicly suggested the pact included <a href=\"https:\/\/thebulletin.org\/2025\/10\/the-saudi-pakistani-strategic-mutual-defense-pact-that-no-one-saw-coming\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">a nuclear umbrella<\/a>, then retracted the comment within hours. The retraction was more revealing than the statement. When a senior official volunteers the nuclear dimension and then walks it back, he has confirmed what strategic ambiguity is designed to communicate: The possibility, hovering just below the threshold of official commitment, is the point.<\/p>\n<p>This ambiguity has deep roots. Saudi Arabia provided <a href=\"https:\/\/www.sup.org\/books\/politics\/eating-grass\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">substantial financial support<\/a> to Pakistan\u2019s nuclear program in its earliest stages \u2014 the investment that gave rise to the notion of an \u201cIslamic bomb\u201d with obligations running in both directions. Extended deterrence has historically been the exclusive instrument of superpowers: The United States extending its nuclear umbrella over NATO allies, Japan, and South Korea through formal treaty commitments and forward deployments or the Soviet Union offering analogous guarantees to the Warsaw Pact. What the Saudi-Pakistani relationship suggests is something categorically different \u2014 extended deterrence offered not by a superpower through a formal alliance, but by a nuclear middle power through deliberate ambiguity and outside any treaty framework, across a relationship built on religious solidarity and transactional military services. If that reading is correct, the nonproliferation architecture built around superpower guarantees requires fundamental rethinking.<\/p>\n<p>The significance of this arrangement cannot be separated from the moment that produced it. Israel\u2019s strikes in Qatar targeting Hamas political leaders on Sept. 9, 2025 <a href=\"https:\/\/thebulletin.org\/2025\/10\/the-saudi-pakistani-strategic-mutual-defense-pact-that-no-one-saw-coming\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">rattled Gulf monarchies<\/a> that had long considered themselves shielded from regional turbulence. Iran\u2019s retaliatory strike on the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bbc.com\/news\/articles\/cddq7j48p35o\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Al Udeid Air Base<\/a>, a major American installation, demonstrated that Tehran would not hesitate to drag neighboring states into the conflict. <a href=\"https:\/\/thebulletin.org\/2025\/10\/the-saudi-pakistani-strategic-mutual-defense-pact-that-no-one-saw-coming\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Two Houthi ballistic missiles<\/a> aimed at Israel broke apart mid-flight over Saudi territory. The message to Riyadh was unmistakable: The Kingdom\u2019s airspace was no longer inviolable, and Washington\u2019s protective umbrella was fraying at precisely the moment the region needed it most. Against that backdrop, Pakistan offers something no other partner can \u2014 nuclear capability held by a Muslim state with decades of demonstrated reliability as a security partner. The 2025 security pact is not the beginning of this relationship, but its latest formal expression, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/50a48a5a-a022-411d-803e-bbd804f99563?syn-25a6b1a6=1\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">signed, notably, without Washington<\/a>. Washington was only informed after the fact.<\/p>\n<p>The Comfort of Capacity<\/p>\n<p>India\u2019s foreign policy underperformance relative to its capabilities is, at its root, a product of the same logic that explains Pakistan\u2019s overperformance. India is secure enough not to need patrons, wealthy enough not to need remittance corridors, and large enough to set the terms of most bilateral relationships rather than adapting to the terms of others. These are, in the ordinary sense of the word, advantages. In the specific sense of generating diplomatic entrepreneurialism, they are constraints.<\/p>\n<p>The ideological framework that governs Indian foreign policy, strategic autonomy, or in its current variant, <a href=\"https:\/\/ddnews.gov.in\/en\/foreign-policy-in-2024-positioned-india-as-vishwabandhu-says-jaishankar\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">vishwabandhu<\/a>, a phrase that roughly translates as \u201cIndia is a friend to all,\u201d is not without internal coherence. It reflects a genuine reading of India\u2019s interest in preserving optionality in a world dividing between American and Chinese orbits. But optionality is not strategy. A state that refuses to impose costs on Russia over Ukraine, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/features\/2024\/6\/26\/india-exports-rockets-explosives-to-israel-amid-gaza-war-documents-reveal\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">maintains arms exports to Israel<\/a> while abstaining on Gaza, and declines to take a position on any contested question of regional order is not exercising strategic autonomy. It is performing it, and performance without commitment generates no alliance relationships, no dependent states, no clients who owe their security to Indian support.<\/p>\n<p>The civil-military dimension deepens the same pattern. Indian foreign policy is produced through complex coordination among competing institutions \u2014 thoroughness at the cost of speed. Pakistan\u2019s foreign policy is made, for better and for worse, by the army. This produces pathologies that are <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Directorate-C-I-Americas-Afghanistan-Pakistan\/dp\/0143132504\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">well-documented<\/a>, the tolerance for militant networks, the double game that has frustrated every American administration since 2001. It also produces speed and coherence at precisely the moments that matter, which is why it was Pakistani Chief of Army Staff <a href=\"https:\/\/www.scmp.com\/news\/china\/diplomacy\/article\/3349427\/iran-deal-pakistans-strongman-munir-cements-his-role-global-diplomacy\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Asim Munir<\/a>, not any Indian counterpart, on the phone with Trump and Tehran in the same week.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/warontherocks.com\/membership\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-29623\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/Untitled-design.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"900\"  \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>What Washington Gets Wrong<\/p>\n<p>American strategic discourse has, since the <a href=\"https:\/\/carnegieendowment.org\/research\/2023\/11\/completing-the-us-india-civil-nuclear-agreement-fulfilling-the-promises-of-a-summer-long-past\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">2005 civil nuclear deal<\/a>, operated on a template for the region. India as the natural democratic partner, reliable and rising. Pakistan as the duplicitous spoiler, useful but untrustworthy. That template has never accurately described either state. In the spring of 2026, it was exposed as insufficient.<\/p>\n<p>As American and Iranian forces exchanged strikes across the Middle East, it was Pakistan \u2014 not India, not any European ally, not any state in the Gulf \u2014 that Washington turned to as its back-channel to Tehran. Islamabad relayed a fifteen-point American peace plan to Iranian officials. Iran allowed Pakistan-flagged tankers to transit the Strait of Hormuz \u2014 a gesture Trump publicly described as evidence of Tehran\u2019s commitment to talks. A ceasefire followed. Two powers that cannot talk directly need a state both will trust as a conduit. Pakistan is, again, that state, and this time, it helped secure a ceasefire.<\/p>\n<p>Pakistan\u2019s indispensability coexists with genuine liabilities. This is the state that spent two decades as the Taliban\u2019s chief patron and ran the A.Q. Khan proliferation network. It did not change, the configuration of necessity changed around it. The Saudi defense pact illustrates the tension precisely. \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/5f946eff-3e9c-4feb-ab6b-60e15cc3e183?syn-25a6b1a6=1\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">It was supposed to be cash for deterrence<\/a>,\u201d one person familiar with Pakistan\u2019s senior military thinking told the Financial Times \u2014 a rare acknowledgment, even anonymously, that the arrangement has not delivered. \u201cBut we\u2019ve not gotten any new Saudi investments and deterrence failed.\u201d Pakistan is now caught between its Saudi commitment, its Iranian back-channel, its warming relationship with Washington, and a domestic population that includes forty million Shia Muslims whose sympathies run toward Tehran. The indispensable broker is also a state that could be consumed by the very contradictions its indispensability creates.<\/p>\n<p>There is a more transactional dimension to the current alignment. Pakistan\u2019s courtship of the Trump administration included a Jan. 2026 agreement with World Liberty Financial \u2014 the Trump family\u2019s crypto venture \u2014 signed in Islamabad with Munir personally present alongside the prime ministers. Bloomberg has raised questions about whether Pakistan\u2019s mediation role was facilitated in part by its willingness to provide commercial benefits to entities connected to the president. These concerns are legitimate and unresolved. Nonetheless, Pakistan has always identified what its patrons need beyond the purely diplomatic \u2014 Gulf states needed military manpower, Washington needed Afghan logistics, Riyadh needed Islamic legitimacy. That the currency exchange in 2026 includes crypto agreements rather than troop deployments is new in form, but it is not new in logic.<\/p>\n<p>The more useful question for American strategists is not how to make Pakistan more reliable or India more assertive, but how to build policy on what these states actually are rather than what Washington wishes they were. India will continue to hedge, abstain, and call it principle. Pakistan will continue to be in the room. Policy that starts from that fact is more durable than policy that starts from hope.<\/p>\n<p>The Necessity Question<\/p>\n<p>The most common objection to Pakistan\u2019s structural indispensability is that Pakistan\u2019s current centrality is a product of personal chemistry between Munir and Trump and will evaporate when either man leaves the stage. The historical record does not support this. The broker role has outlasted every army chief and every American president who has engaged in it. It will outlast these two as well.<\/p>\n<p>Washington\u2019s challenge is not to change that pattern but to stop being surprised by it. A state that can call Trump, Witkoff, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in the same week and be taken seriously by all three is not a problem to be managed. It is a resource to be understood. The only variable is whether Washington will have developed, by then, a strategic framework capable of working with that reality rather than against it.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Farah N. Jan is a senior lecturer in the International Relations Program at the University of Pennsylvania, where she specializes in nuclear security, alliance politics, and threshold wars in the Middle East and South Asia. She is completing a book on the Saudi-Pakistani alliance.<\/p>\n<p>Image: The White House via <a href=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:P20250925DT-0821_President_Donald_Trump_meets_with_Prime_Minister_Shehbaz_Sharif_and_Field_Marshal_Asim_Munir_of_Pakistan.jpg\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Wikimedia Commons<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"In Sept. 2025, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a mutual defense pact, formalizing what decades of quiet cooperation&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":74281,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[753,34,1638,1157],"class_list":{"0":"post-74280","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-iran","8":"tag-alliances","9":"tag-iran","10":"tag-south-asia","11":"tag-strategy"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/pubeurope.com\/@iran\/116436350228639035","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/74280","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=74280"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/74280\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/74281"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=74280"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=74280"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/iran\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=74280"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}