Khaleej Times

China to the rescue as US pulls aid plug to Pakistan

- Howard LaFrancHi

American frustratio­ns with Pakistan have run high for decades. So perhaps the newest thing about President Trump’s New Year’s Day blast against the South Asian problem partner was how it was delivered — in a tweet. And on Thursday, the US announced it was suspending at least $900 million in security assistance to Pakistan. What is new in the context of this latest crisis in US-Pakistan relations is the large and expanding role that China is playing in a country that for decades kept almost all of its eggs in the American basket.

Now with a rising China providing regional support and far more in investment and aid dollars than the United States, Pakistan is no longer feeling so firmly tethered to the US as it deepens relations with Beijing. The result is that Pakistan is quaking a little less at Washington’s latest broadside — and may be less inclined to scramble to make amends with Trump, some regional experts say.

“This is not the Pakistan of the past,” says Marvin Weinbaum, a former Pakistan and Afghanista­n analyst at the State Department who is now director for Pakistan studies at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

“China has provided something like $57 billion in investment in Pakistan’s infrastruc­ture, in energy and agricultur­e and industry, the links between the two are stronger all the time,” Dr Weinbaum says. “Now when Washington threatens, (the Pakistanis) don’t feel the pressure and isolated the way they used to.”

Indeed, as if to underscore the self-assurance the country is feeling as a result in part of having a new and swaggering best friend, Pakistani officials were quick to counter Trump’s threats with their own bravado – and to spotlight advancing ties with Beijing.

“We have already told the US that we will not do more, so Trump’s ‘no more’ does not hold any importance,” Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif said in an interview. He added that the president’s disappoint­ment “at the US defeat in Afghanista­n … is the only reason he is flinging accusation­s at Pakistan.”

Defence Minister Khurram Dastagir told the BBC Urdu service that the US can no longer “dictate terms” to Pakistan through the threat of withholdin­g aid. Pakistan’s central bank also chose the moment to announce that the country would now accept China’s yuan as a currency for bilateral trade — a role the US dollar has largely played until now. The move is seen as further easing the path forward for China’s “One Belt, One Road” global trade infrastruc­ture initiative announced in 2015.

And China was quick to come to Pakistan’s defense in the wake of Trump’s tweet. “Pakistan has made great efforts and sacrifices for combating terrorism and made prominent contributi­ons to the cause of internatio­nal terrorism, and the internatio­nal community should fully recognise this,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman said last week.

As if to underscore China’s defense of a friend under attack, the spokesman added: “China stands ready to further deepen cooperatio­n with Pakistan in various fields to bring greater benefits to the two peoples.”

The friendly and supportive tone was everything Trump’s tweet was not — a contrast China was happy to emphasise, analysts say.

Still, aside from the public nature of Trump’s expression of frustratio­n with Pakistan, there was little new about the point-counterpoi­nt between Washington and Islamabad, experts in the relationsh­ip say.

“The reason for the administra­tion’s debate over Pakistan is that the same old conundrum still exists,” says Laurel Miller, who was the State Department’s acting special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan until June. “On the one hand the US is frustrated by Pakistan’s continued harbouring of the leadership of the Taleban and the Haqqani Network,” two insurgent groups that cross over to fight in Afghanista­n. “On the other hand, there simply are no solutions to the problems in Afghanista­n without Pakistan’s cooperatio­n.”

The Middle East Institute’s Weinbaum, who visited Pakistan last year, says he noticed a new sense of independen­ce from Washington that stretches from ministry offices to average citizens.

“They don’t feel their relationsh­ip with the US is critical to them any more, and that goes right down to the guy in the street,” he says. “The attitude

Pakistan’s central bank chose the moment to announce that the country would accept China’s yuan as a currency for bilateral trade — a role the US dollar largely played

is that if we can’t get weapons from the US, we can somewhere else, maybe Russia. And there’s this expanding confidence — I think probably over-confidence — about what the Chinese can do for them.”

Weinbaum notes, for example, that China’s assistance to Pakistan has largely been in the form of loans. “They’re going to be deeply indebted to China,” he says. “Deepening relations with China are giving the Pakistanis some confidence they are not going to be too isolated in the internatio­nal community — they’ll take China as a financial backer and as a permanent member of the [United Nations] Security Council,” RAND’s Miller says.

In the long run, what seems most likely to drive Pakistan deeper into China’s arms is the US’s strengthen­ing strategic relationsh­ip with India, particular­ly under Trump, Miller says.

Miller worries that in the short term the US will take more punitive action that could prompt Pakistan to respond with acts of its own — closing US military supply lines into Afghanista­n, for example, as it did during a previous crisis in 2011 – prompting a further “downward spiral” in relations.

“What we’re seeing is an emerging US-and-India vs Pakistan-and-China dynamic in the region that won’t be good for anyone,” Miller says, “but which on the contrary will be detrimenta­l to the interests of all four countries.” — The Christian Science Monitor

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