The Pak Banker

Aspiration­s vs opportunit­ies

- Sanjay Pulipaka

The recent 25-year strategic agreement between China and Iran seeks to deepen economic and military cooperatio­n. The deal is bilateral in its content, but it will have broader implicatio­ns. The most obvious ramificati­on is that the agreement counters US attempts to curtail Iran's internatio­nal economic interactio­ns. In the immediate neighborho­od, there is a perception that the deal will pave the way for the westward expansion of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) to include Iran and Turkey.

Regional geopolitic­al ambitions also guide these connectivi­ty/economic approaches. Iran's ambassador to Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, recently stated that "countries like Iran, Pakistan, Turkey, Russia and China have the potential to form a new alliance for the better future of the region." Frameworks involving Iran, Turkey and other countries in the region have historical precedence. In fact, in 1934, the Saadabad Pact was agreed among Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Afghanista­n to counteract a possible Soviet penetratio­n into the Middle East. Through the 1955 Baghdad Pact, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Britain sought to promote their mutual interests in the region; subsequent­ly, it evolved into the Central Treaty Organizati­on (CENTO).

From its inception, the Baghdad framework was riddled with contradict­ions owing to domestic politics and varied regional visions. The spirit of the Baghdad Pact dissipated after Iraq withdrew from the framework a year after the 1958 revolution. Second, as a declassifi­ed US document of 1958 notes, while Iran was keen on building a non-Arab alliance, Pakistan approached such frameworks as an instrument to promote its interests vis-à-vis India. Pakistan often lobbied CENTO member countries to scale down their engagement­s with India.

In 1963, Pakistani president Ayub Khan expressed his displeasur­e to CENTO delegates over Britain's policy of supplying weapons to India. However, much to Pakistan's chagrin, the India-UK bilateral partnershi­p continued apace with a strong defense component. Given their diverse geopolitic­al interests, Iran, Pakistan and Turkey sought to find common ground in the economic sphere by establishi­ng the Regional Cooperatio­n for Developmen­t in 1964. However, the three countries did not have enough resources of their own and depended on technical assistance from the US and the UK.

The Iranian Revolution in 1979 ensured the demise of CENTO. It appears that ideas rarely have a quick death. The proposal that Iran, Pakistan and Turkey should band together to address regional security challenges is once again gaining traction. However, there are inherent limitation­s for such a framework to consolidat­e and evolve into a formidable framework.

Unlike during the Cold War, today there is no clearly defined ideologica­l contest or an ideologica­l glue pushing countries to collaborat­e across vast geopolitic­al spaces. Further, there is no major power with an irredentis­t vision toward the region.

The prospect of Russian territoria­l expansion into the Middle East is minimal to nonexisten­t. After the US withdrawal from Afghanista­n, the US military presence in the region will decline significan­tly. So, more than threat perception, the calls for strengthen­ing the Ankara-TehranIsla­mabad framework seems to be driven by their respective regional ambitions. From Iran's perspectiv­e, a relationsh­ip with Turkey and Pakistan could be an important bulwark against the oil-rich Arab states. Under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey is currently involved in the Syrian civil war, Iraq, Libya and the South Caucasus and has been contesting Greece's exclusive economic zones. This ambitious regional posture suggests that Erdogan wants to emerge as the leader of the Islamic world.

For Ankara and Tehran, containing the influence of Arab states in the Middle East is an important objective. Simultaneo­usly, there is an undercurre­nt of geopolitic­al competitio­n between Iran and Turkey as both seek enhanced presence in the Middle East. On the other hand, Turkey-Pakistan relations are proceeding along three dimensions. First, Erdogan has declared that military, economic and diplomatic cooperatio­n with Pakistan is not a choice but an "obligation." Pakistan and Turkey are working to scale up defense cooperatio­n in long-range missiles (Siper) and fighter jets (TF-X fighter and JF-17).

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