A senior official told AFP that up to $2 billion of equipment and funding was at stake. However, with US aid declining significantly in recent years, the economy improving and Beijing just a phone call away, sources told AFP the negative effects would be "marginal" in the short to medium term. "International aid is not big in comparison with the (size of the) country's economy," one Islamabad-based diplomat said. "Means of pressure are limited."
Former finance minister Hafeez Pasha says after the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, aid increased substantially, approaching $3-4 billion annually at its peak in 2010. "From there onwards, it's been declining very sharply. Last year, it was around $750 million," he said, a figure that when compared with the economy "is not a lot".
But officials in Washington have also hinted to AFP that they have other cards to play - such as calling in vital IMF loans. Pakistan's economy is currently stable and growing, says senior World Bank economist Muhammad Waheed. But it is also financed through the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Asian Development Bank - all institutions to which Washington is a major creditor.
"There are structural issues like low tax revenues and growing trade deficit, which government needs to tackle," Waheed added, warning of a looming balance of payments crisis. Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves are sharply down, forcing the country to borrow if it wants to continue to grow, analysts have said. In December, Islamabad raised $2.5 billion in international bonds, a transaction described as "successful" by Waheed. But Washington's power gives it an indirect weapon to wield over Pakistan, warned security analyst Rahimullah Yousafzai. "It can use its influence in the UN Security Council, the IMF, World Bank, Asian Development Bank," he said.
The Washington-based IMF has bailed out Pakistan before, with an $11.3 billion loan package in 2008 to stave off a balance of payments crisis in a deal Islamabad abandoned in 2011. The country received a second $6.7 billion IMF bailout package in 2013.
"Pakistan needs the support of the United States... because the US is a major shareholder of those organisations," agreed Ashfaque Hasan, an economist on Pakistan's economic advisory council. He recalled that in 1998 the IMF imposed a $20 million fine on Pakistan, hit by a credit freeze after its nuclear tests. But weeks after the September 11 attacks on the US, the IMF released $135 million for Pakistan as it aligned itself as a major ally of Washington ahead of the US invasion of Afghanistan. Now, however, Pakistani officials appear to believe they also have their long and growing friendship with China to play. "If the US starts to bully, blame, threaten, we have other options," says Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed, referring to China, which rushed to defend Pakistan's track record on militancy after the US announcement.
Questions remain over how much Beijing, which is already investing some $60 billion in Pakistani infrastructure projects and which has a horror of Islamist militancy on its borders, would be willing to prop up its "all-weather" friend. But Sayed was bullish. Suspending aid, he said, is "a failed formula".