Pakistan has sought for many decades to turn the Kashmir conflict into a multilateral dispute by inviting third parties to intervene diplomatically, with a recent opinion piece from a Pakistan-based think tank suggesting that this continues to be its objective. It has opposed India’s entry to the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation since the first summit at Rabat in 1969. Since then it has consistently urged that forum, either directly or through proxies, to pass resolutions against India on Kashmir in the hopes of transforming it from a bilateral issue between itself and India to a multilateral one. It has frequently urged the United Nations to intervene in the Kashmir dispute, most recently in the aftermath of the Pulwama attack of February 2019. In continuation of its efforts to turn the Kashmir dispute into a multilateral kerfuffle, Pakistan has on numerous occasions urged the United States government to intervene in Kashmir, seeking its participation as a mediator in the dispute. Other instances of Pakistan working in concert with China to harm India’s interests at multilateral fora such as the NSG have been well-documented.