The Sunday Guardian

Pakistan’s diplomatic failures and peace overtures

- ASHOK BHAN

Peace with India will bring economic security to the region, but the onus is on Pakistan to create an environmen­t free of terror and hostility.

Pakistan’s diplomatic clout has eroded over the years because of political instabilit­y and economic insecurity. Its rulers have failed even to build a national narrative on any critical issue. The internal political strife and Pakistan’s economic dependency on other countries have raised questions about its ability to effectivel­y fight any case in internatio­nal forums.

Many factors have contribute­d to Pakistan’s diplomatic debacle in its latest war of words and deeds with India, ranging from incompeten­t diplomacy to its failure to successful­ly feel the pulse of post-cold war the world.

The latest Kashmir rant of Prime Minister Imran Khan that Pakistan would not hold talks with India until New Delhi reverses its decision of scrapping the special status of Jammu and Kashmir. India abrogated the special status of Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 on August 5, 2019 and bifurcated it into two Union territorie­s.

“Unless India retreats from the steps taken on August 5..., the Pakistani government will not talk to India at all,” Khan said.

On the other hand all powerful Pakistan Army chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa said that “it is time to bury the past and move forward” when it comes to his country’s relations with the neighbour and arch-rival India.

It appears that Pakistan is playing a “good cop-bad cop”naive diplomacy

Pakistani policymake­rs failed to understand the perils of the post-cold war environmen­t. During the cold war years, as an ally to the US, Pakistan could reasonably expect a sympatheti­c American response to tensions with pro-soviet India. The end of the Cold War has changed regional and internatio­nal equations. Pakistan should have learned this lesson the hard way when the Kargil conflict escalated.

One of the main pillars of Pakistan’s worldwide antiindia diplomacy has been its efforts to malign India in Islamic countries, especially in the Gulf and across West Asia. It constantly sheds crocodile tears about a so-called ‘India-israel axis’ and an anti-islamic ‘Hindujewis­h’ conspiracy threatenin­g the Islamic world. The 53-member Organisati­on of Islamic Conference (OIC), which is significan­tly influenced by Saudi Arabia, is sought to be used to promote anti-india propaganda, particular­ly on J&K.

It looks that this era is now ending, as India’s relations with the Islamic world, particular­ly with the oil-rich Gulf countries, including Iraq, have significan­tly improved. Like India, most Arab states favour a ‘twostate solution to the Israelpale­stinian issue. Moreover, these countries view Pakistan as an economic basket case, forever pleading for money.

It is, however, the arrogance and naive changing geopolitic­al understand­ing of Imran Khan, that he is obsessed with denigratin­g India, which has ruined Pakistan’s relations with the Arab world. His efforts to make Kashmir an issue for collective action by the ‘Islamic ummah’ inevitably failed. He was rebuffed on more than one occasion by Saudi Arabia on his pleas to convene a meeting of the OIC to act against India. His Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi demanded that Saudi Arabia should immediatel­y convene a meeting of the OIC foreign ministers. He pompously proclaimed: ‘If you cannot convene it, then I’ll be compelled to ask PM Imran Khan to call a meeting of the Islamic countries that are ready to stand with us on the issue of Kashmir, and support the oppressed Kashmiris.’

The inner political contradict­ions on the stand of geo economics verses geo politics are galore on the policy on Kashmir,all the stakeholde­rs are not on the same page.as such it is meaningles­s until there is perceptibl­e change on K policy.

Pakistan has to fight the Frankenste­in of terror it has created as a matter of State’s policy.she has to take stern actions and dismantle all the infrastruc­tures and architectu­res of terrorism in its real sense,conclusion of Mumbai attack trials and punishment to the accused will go a long way. These measures will help in restoring the Pakistan’s blurred diplomatic credibilit­y worldwide.

PAKISTAN’S ECONOMIC WOES

PM Imran.seems to have forgotten that Pakistan’s economy survives on annual doles from Saudi Arabia and the West. The infuriated Saudis responded immediatel­y by freezing a $3.2 billion oil credit facility, and demanded that Pakistan commence repaying a $3 billion loan. Saudi Arabia and the UAE see India as a diplomatic­ally reliable and economical­ly useful partner. Their leading national oil companies have decided to invest $60 billion in a major petrochemi­cal project in India,-maharashtr­a’s Raigad district.

These are important developmen­ts, confirming that India has played its cards dexterousl­y across its western neighbourh­ood. It has calibrated its relations with Islamic countries. Relations with Iran also have been friendly, but marred by Tehran’s unpredicta­ble policy on Jammu and Kashmir. Most importantl­y, India has built a strong partnershi­p with Israel, while supporting Palestinia­n aspiration­s for a viable nation-state. Hence India is seen as reliable, regional power.

Facing a debacle, Pakistan is now aiming to transit from a geo-strategic domain to a geo-economic domain. That means to market Pakistan as geo-economic potential instead of a strategic partner of global and regional powers.

A 35-page research paper released recently by a prominent Pakistani think tank suggested a paradigm shift in Pakistan’s approach, making economic diplomacy at top of the agenda. The five areas identified in the paper included “transiting from geo-political to geo-economic cooperatio­n, bolstering human security: investing in people, partnering for Afghanista­n’s future, countering global terrorism, turning great power competitio­n into great power collaborat­ion, contending with the India-us strategic alignment and enhancing disaster and climate change mitigation through cooperatio­n.”

Instead of using financial incentives as the means to secure strategic ends, it reads the US could instead begin viewing trade, investment, and economic cooperatio­n as the underlying basis for developing a durable bilateral relationsh­ip with Pakistan. It was in the US interest to enable Pakistan to become economical­ly viable.

It reads that Pakistan could leverage its geostrateg­ic position to pursue economic goals, rather than relying on internatio­nal aid instead of furthering the geostrateg­ic agendas of powerful countries, like the US. Even now, it reads as India’s image as the largest ‘democracy’ in the world has begun to tarnish and its political actions have strained its relations with its neighbours, it continues forging economic links with China, with other South Asian and East Asian countries, with Oceania and beyond. “New Delhi is wellpositi­oned to expand its economic linkages due to the sheer size of its market and its economy. Yet, Pakistan too has the untapped potential of diversifyi­ng its economy and becoming more integrated with the global economy— something that the incumbent government plans to explore through its recent initiative­s with regards to economic diplomacy.”

POST-COLD-WAR REALITIES

It also reads that rather than being coerced into choosing either Beijing or Washington, Pakistan needed to set itself up as a mediator to allow the two great powers to pursue their shared interests.

The country has in the past played the part of a bridge state for the two powers during the Nixon era. However, the nature of the strategic competitio­n between the US and China “is now quite different, and Pakistan cannot assume that it would be able to achieve any sort of détente.”

This policy paper coinciding March 18 speech of Pakistan Army chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa may be music to India’s ears. He said that “it is time to bury the past and move forward” when it comes to his country’s relations with the neighbour and arch-rival India.

Speaking at the Islamabad Security Dialogue, he outlined a vision for his country’s foreign and strategic policy that was refreshing­ly forward-looking, building on themes that have been trickling in from Islamabad over the past few months: that Pakistan would reprioriti­ze economics, and situate it at the heart of its foreign policy; that peace with India is a pre-condition for this geoeconomi­c pivot; and that Pakistan recognizes the need for collective action to meet transnatio­nal threats in the POST-COVID-19 era.

“National security in the age of globalizat­ion, informatio­n, and connectivi­ty has now become an all-encompassi­ng notion; wherein, besides various elements of national power, global and regional environmen­t also play a profound role,” Bajwa said. Noting that national security is “multi-layered,” shaped by a mix of external and internal variables, he added, “I also firmly believe that no single nation in isolation, can perceive and further its quest for security, as every single issue and security dilemma faced by today’s world is intimately linked with global and regional dynamics.”

Inaugurati­ng the dialogue on March 17, Prime Minister Imran Khan had also brought up themes reiterated by Bajwa. “National security is also about nontraditi­onal issues like climate change and food security which threaten Pakistan and its overall security,” Khan had said.

Noting that Pakistan’s perennial dispute with India has come in the way of the country realizing its full geoeconomi­c potential in terms of leveraging its geographic­al location at the intersecti­on of South and Central Asia, Bajwa claimed that the “Kashmir dispute is obviously at the head of this problem.” “It is important to understand that without the resolution of Kashmir dispute through peaceful means, the process of subcontine­ntal rapprochem­ent will always remain susceptibl­e to derailment due to politicall­y motivated bellicosit­y.”

In his speech, Bajwa described his country’s geoeconomi­c shift in terms of four “core pillars”: peace (including inside the country); non-interferen­ce in the affairs of other states; trade and connectivi­ty within the region; and “sustainabl­e developmen­t and prosperity through the establishm­ent of investment and economic hubs within the region.”

SUBTLE CHANGE OF PRIORITIES

But noted Pakistani scholar and former diplomat Husain Haqqani believes that the overall tone of General Bajwa’s speech at the first-ever Islamabad Security Dialogue represente­d a subtle change of priorities in Rawalpindi. The army chief made no mention of Pakistan’s ideology, recognised the role of “politicall­y motivated bellicosit­y” in derailing rapprochem­ent between India and Pakistan, and acknowledg­ed the primacy of “demography, economy, and technology.”

“By refusing to identify India as a permanent enemy or an ideologica­l rival, General Bajwa is trying to signal that he is the all-powerful military leader some in New Delhi have been looking for, who could settle matters with India’s elected leadership without fear of backtracki­ng,” he wrote. All the above developmen­ts may be

Pakistani policymake­rs failed to understand the perils of the post-cold war environmen­t. During the cold war years, as an ally to the US, Pakistan could reasonably expect a sympatheti­c American response to tensions with pro-soviet India. The end of the Cold War has changed regional and internatio­nal equations. Pakistan should have learnt this lesson the hard way when the Kargil conflict escalated.

music to our ears, but we must not overlook that Pakistan has not dismantled its jihadi infrastruc­ture and has not punished groups and individual­s responsibl­e for terrorist attacks targeting India.

Pakistan’s words should be weighed in terms of its action on the ground, especially when it comes to Pakistan’s support for cross-border terrorism in Afghanista­n as well as India. It also needs to be kept in mind that in Pakistan sections of the security establishm­ent have worked at cross purposes in the past. It may very well be that despite Bajwa’s commitment­s others may seek to muddy waters when it comes to India based on their incentives.

India is all for peace, all Indians stand for peace, but India cannot compromise on its security and integrity. We understand that peace between India and Pakistan will lead the region into economic security, prosperity and stability. But for that, the onus is on Pakistan to create an environmen­t free of terror and hostility.

 ?? ANI ?? An old man blesses an Army doctor during a medical cum veterinary camp organized by the Indian Army at Kotlari, in Kupwara on Saturday.
ANI An old man blesses an Army doctor during a medical cum veterinary camp organized by the Indian Army at Kotlari, in Kupwara on Saturday.
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