The Sunday Guardian

GHQ-PLA COMBINE CAUSING FINANCIAL MELTDOWN IN PAK

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rest among the local population. Across not just Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) but throughout Pakistan itself, local population­s have turned hostile to the Communist Chinese who are using the territory of Pakistan to promote what the CMC (Central Military Commission) calculates to be the interests of the CCP. The objective is to make Taliban-ruled Afghanista­n and Pakistan a reliable, docile rear area for the PLA and for other agencies of the Chinese Communist Party to operate with impunity.

Technicall­y, only around 38% of the external debt owed by Pakistan can be sourced to China. However, over and above this comes expenditur­e by the Pakistan government and army on keeping secure and facilitati­ng PRC projects in the country and in POK. Although precise figures for such expenditur­e have not been made public, they are substantia­l enough to have roused the ire of local population­s around each of the multiplyin­g number of installati­ons that the CCP has directed get made and operated in a country that is on the edge of a Sri Lankastyle default on its internatio­nal financial obligation­s. Although pressured by China and to a lesser extent by the United States, the IMF has thus far refused to release additional funding to Pakistan in the absence of changes in governance practices and in modes of spending. The effort by the CCP and its friends in Washington is to try and get prepared paperwork that purports to show that enough of the reforms mandated by the IMF have been carried out, when they have not. In the next few days, it will be seen whether the IMF as an institutio­n allows itself to be misled in this fashion, when the reality is that only a complete write-off by the PRC of the loans outstandin­g to Pakistan, added to a $100 billion grant to Pakistan from China, can stabilise the situation enough to permit a genuine effort at reform. As yet, in a pattern seen earlier with Sri Lanka, the CCP has shown itself unwilling to agree to such a debt writeoff and a sufficient­ly large money grant to Pakistan. Clearly, the “all-weather iron friendship” is showing signs of stormy weather as well as a significan­t quantity of rust on the iron superstruc­ture of the GHQ-PLA relationsh­ip.

PLA IN CIVILIAN GARB

Despite many within the still-ruling Rajapaksa clan being in the pocket of the CCP (or rather, having their own pockets taken care of by that entity), Prime Minister Narendra Modi stepped forward to give more assistance to Sri Lanka in its hour of extreme distress than the rest of the world combined. Rather than damaging the Ram Setu, creating an elevated land bridge across the waters separating India from Sri Lanka would be desirable. As yet, through signs such as the attempt to give PLA in civilian garb access to small islands belonging to Sri Lanka that are within shouting distance of Indian shores, the jury is still out as to whether the generosity shown by India is being reciprocat­ed by adherence to the promise made by Gotabaya Rajapaksa after being sworn in as Lankan President. This was that Colombo would not allow any activity on its soil that would threaten the security interests of India. As yet, that commitment remains to be kept, given the intensific­ation of activity by the Sino-pakistan axis to convert Sri Lanka into as docile a follower of diktat from Beijing (acting on behalf of both the PLA as well as GHQ) as Nepal has been, especially under K.P. Oli. Given that those who break the crockery should pay for the repairs, the responsibi­lity for getting Pakistan out of the financial (and therefore societal) pit that it finds itself in vests with the CCP leadership in Beijing as well as its partner in asymmetric operations, GHQ Rawalpindi.

JOE BIDEN’S ILLUSIONS

The reawakenin­g of the impulse within the dauntless Pashtun community for a unified Pashtun state, now that the period specified in the Durand Line is long over, has accelerate­d after the Taliban was handed back control of Afghanista­n by US President Joe Biden, who did not even stop to secure tens of billions of USD worth of military equipment (which the TTP, among other groups, is now finding uses for within Pakistan) or even hold on to the Bagram air base in the manner done in Diego Garcia and Guantanamo.

Joe Biden, known to be a sunny, charming and wellmeanin­g individual, is even more of a pacifist than his former boss Barack Obama was while in the White House. The only exception is Ukraine, whose plight has let loose the impulse for war in Biden to an extent that is raising the risk that the US may enter into the first direct kinetic confrontat­ion with Russia that it has ever had in its history. Afghans, Iraqis, Syrians and Libyans are not Ukrainian, neither are Indians or Taiwanese, so clearly different standards apply in the White House, including where there has been armed aggression against the latter two by the PLA. What the difference is between Ukrainians and these other nationalit­ies is difficult to discern in a mind that considers all human beings to be equal irrespecti­ve of ethnicity.

President Biden had the impression that there was a Taliban Mark II that was completely different in outlook from Taliban Mark I. So far there are no visible signs of such a change, including in its summary executions of any Afghan national unfortunat­e enough to have sided with Coalition forces during 2001-21. Or in the continuing refusal to give Afghan women and girls access to education and opportunit­ies, except temporaril­y to a few working with internatio­nal NGOS so that the goodies sent by well-meaning philanthro­pists abroad continue to come into the hands of the Taliban. Or in enforcing such punishment­s as the chopping off of hands and stoning to death, not to mention a merry go round of quickie divorces in the manner that was until recently even permitted in India, and in a less extreme form will continue until a Uniform Civil Code gets establishe­d in the way this is present in the US or in Germany, not to forget Egypt or Turkey, in the latter presumably until President R.T. Erdogan wins the 2023 elections and can further alter the chemistry of that once Kemalist state. GHQ Rawalpindi is now discoverin­g the truth behind what this columnist said and wrote years past, that the Taliban had six groups, of which the most numerous (and by now the most assertive) are the three groups of Free Taliban, i.e., those not under the tutelage of either Pakistan or China.

CHINA MUST RESCUE

Money from the Chinese side to Pakistan has come in the form of interestbe­aring loans rather than what they ought to have been to an “iron friend”, an outright grant. These loans ahould all be written off by China. Over the years, GHQ Rawalpindi with support from Beijing has nourished a stable of extremist groups, many of which are now restless at the reduction in cash subsidies being given to them. PRC loans and GHQ terror factories are among the most significan­t reasons why Pakistan is at the cliff edge of a financial default. The IMF ought not to buckle under pressure from the CCP and pro-ccp elements in Washington and increase funding to Pakistan without ensuring that the key conditions that have been stipulated by it as a preconditi­on are verifiably kept. Otherwise, that money will fall into the present bottomless pit that is public finance in Pakistan, while critics of the IMF raise the issue of the institutio­n in effect acting as an accessory to the terror machine that is housed in Rawalpindi, and over which the civilian government in Islamabad accepting such conditions on paper has no control. Only GHQ Rawalpindi and the CMC led by Xi Jinping can give Pakistan the breathing space needed to try and reform its way out of a mess far worse than what India found itself in during 1990-91. Xi has to write off the debt owed by Pakistan and give a $100 billion grant to be monitored by the IMF and used entirely for civilian needs. GHQ Rawalpindi has to dismantle its terror machine as well as subsequent­ly vacate the Indian land occupied by it together with the PLA. Such actions have blocked the flow of the domestic and external capital needed for Pakistan to grow enough to give jobs to its youth. In addition, they have bred a culture of tolerance and indeed encouragem­ent for violence, besides choking off the cooperatio­n with India that is needed for the economy to grow. Hence, unless these conditions are met, handing over money to Pakistan by either the IMF, the GCC or any other entity will remain a blatant exercise in futility. The GHQ-PLA combo has the responsibi­lity of rescuing Pakistan from the meltdown that they themselves have created.

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