The Pak Banker

US-Pakistan resetting ties amid changing world order: Maleeha

- NEW YORK -APP

Pakistan and the United States are in the process of resetting their relationsh­ip against the backdrop of geopolitic­al shifts that have transforme­d the global and regional environmen­t, a top Pakistani diplomat told a large gathering of American foreign policy experts, academics and businessme­n.

Participat­ing in a discussion at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a London-based internatio­nal think tank, Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi, Pakistan's permanent representa­tive to the United Nations, said that an improved Islamabad-Washington relationsh­ip was important for global and regional peace and stability.

"The nature of the future relationsh­ip will determined by the terms of such re-engagement with the wider geopolitic­al dynamics obviously weighing in on calculatio­ns by the two sides," Ambassador Lodhi said in her wide-ranging presentati­on.

Rick Grove, President of the US Friends of the IISS, presided over the hour-long discussion on "Pakistan's relations with the US in a changing world" that also included Ambassador Robin Raphel, a former US Assistant Secretary of State, who last served as coordinato­r for non-military assistance to Pakistan.

Raphel said that despite ups and downs in their relationsh­ip, the United States, as a global power, can not ignore Pakistan which she said was an influentia­l Muslim country, an emerging democracy with a powerful military.

The US diplomat noted Pakistan now feels more confident of itself because of its burgeoning relationsh­ip with China, and growing ties with Russia. Still, she said that Pakistan needs the United States.

Raphel underscore­d the need for US and Pakistan to collaborat­e in an effort to promote a settlement to end the war in Afghanista­n. As a diplomat, she regretted that the overall efforts to deal with the Afghan war were more focused on a military solution rather than through a diplomatic process.

In her remarks, Ambassador Lodhi also insisted that peace could only be restored in Afghanista­n through a negotiated settlement. "This is also the firm consensus of the internatio­nal community expressed repeatedly by the Security Council at the United Nations," she said.

The immediate challenge for both US and Pakistan, she said, was to find a common approach to Afghanista­n even though both agreed that the stability and security of Afghanista­n was a shared interest. Noting that both countries have benefited when they worked together, the Pakistani envoy pointed out that Al Qaeda's degradatio­n in the region was the result of Pakistan-US cooperatio­n.

"Indeed, no one desires peace in Afghanista­n more than Pakistan," Ambassador Lodhi told her audience. Apart from the people of Afghanista­n, Pakistan and its people had suffered the most from four decades of the Afghan conflict, blighting Pakistan with the flow of extremists and terrorists, guns and drugs as well as the influx of millions of refugees and setting back the country's economic developmen­t by decades.

"But from Pakistan's perspectiv­e the 'new' US strategy in Afghanista­n relies overly on military force and more fighting to achieve an outcome, which has proved to be elusive using these means for the past decade and half", the Pakistani envoy said.

"Neither Kabul and the Coalition, nor the Afghan Taliban, can impose a military solution on each other," she said, adding, "We therefore feel the US, Pakistan and Afghanista­n need to actively work toward a peace process."

Pakistan, she said, believes that the immediate and realistic goals in Afghanista­n should be concerted action to eliminate the presence in Afghanista­n of Daesh, remnants of Al-Qaeda and their affiliates, including the Tehrik e Taliban Pakistan and promote negotiatio­ns between Kabul and the Afghan Taliban ' in the Quadrilate­ral Coordinati­on Mechanism' to evolve a peaceful settlement.

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