This report examines how the 7–10 May 2025 India-Pakistan conflict has reshaped Pakistan’s military thinking, procurement, and higher defense organization. Focusing on the period since the crisis, it traces the relative demotion of nuclear “full-spectrum deterrence” in favor of a conventional “Quid Pro Quo Plus” posture built for limited, stand-off, non-contact warfare. It assesses service-by-service acquisitions across the Air Force, Navy, and Army; the creation of the Army Rocket Force Command and the National Strategic Command; and the consolidation of military, and specifically Army, control over both conventional and nuclear forces under Field Marshal Asim Munir. It closes with Pakistan’s effort to convert its claimed battlefield success into external partnerships and arms exports, largely financed by Saudi Arabia. The analysis draws on Pakistani official statements, doctrinal commentary, and open-source reporting through mid-2026 to map what may become a new South Asian missile race.