National Herald Tribune

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan’s unique, profound and durable relationsh­ip

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THE KINGDOM of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan have an exceptiona­l relationsh­ip, rooted in the love between the two peoples, making it immune to changes in leadership. This bond has continued to strengthen over the past several decades in the political, security, economic and cultural spheres. It will be boosted further under the charismati­c leadership of Mian Mohammed Shehbaz Sharif, the newly elected prime minister of Pakistan.

Sharif will soon visit the Kingdom to perform Umrah and seek the blessings of Allah and Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, in the holy month of Ramadan. On this occasion, he may also meet the Saudi leadership to boost the bonds of brotherhoo­d.

Pakistan is my second home. I spent the prime of my diplomatic career as an ambassador in Islamabad between 2001 and 2009. For some years, I also served as the dean of its diplomatic corps. I am well aware of Sharif’s administra­tive skills as the former chief minister of Punjab for three tenures, during which he changed the face of Lahore and the rest of the province. Nawaz Sharif, his elder brother who has thrice served as prime minister, was instrument­al in developing the parliament­ary institutio­ns of Pakistan and enabling it to become the only nuclear state in the Muslim world.

Pakistan is at a critical juncture today. Externally, it faces a precarious situation on its western border with Afghanista­n after the US exit, while, across the eastern frontier, India’s Hindu nationalis­t wave endangers the fate of the Kashmiri Muslims. Internally, the serious deteriorat­ion in economic conditions not only derails political stability but also limits the country’s ability to tackle external challenges. But I am sure that Prime Minister Sharif has the ability, courage and will to take Pakistan forward meaningful­ly. I also have no doubt that he can count on unwavering Saudi support for this purpose.

Saudi Arabia has always contribute­d to Pakistan’s economy, stability and the well-being of its people — a proud tradition that dates back to well before independen­ce. In 1940, the year the Pakistan resolution was passed, then-Crown Prince Saud bin Abdulaziz visited Karachi and was warmly welcomed by All-India Muslim League leaders, including Mirza Abul Hassan Ispahani. In 1943, when famine hit Bengal, King Abdulaziz responded to Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s appeal with a handsome donation. In 1946, when a Muslim League delegation led by Ispahani visited the UN headquarte­rs in New York, Prince Faisal bin Abdulaziz hosted a reception to lobby for the cause of Pakistan.

Saudi Arabia was among the first UN member states to recognize Pakistan. In 1951, it also concluded a Treaty of Friendship with Islamabad. In 1954, King Saud laid the foundation stone for a housing scheme in Karachi, the former capital, which was named after him as Saudabad. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan worked closely during the 1965 IndoPakist­ani War and the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. In 1969, Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz, then-Saudi Arabia’s minister of defense and aviation, visited Pakistan to conclude the protocol for bilateral defense cooperatio­n.

A glorious chapter in Saudi-Pakistani ties unfolded in the 1970s under the leadership of King Faisal and Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Its highlight was the 1974 Lahore Islamic Summit of the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n, whose symbolic value continues to live in the collective memory of the two nations. The Pakistani people loved King Faisal. The Faisal Masjid in Islamabad, the city of Faisalabad and the

Shahra-e-Faisal in Karachi are all named after him. This was the time when Saudi Arabia opened its doors to Pakistani workers and provided financial aid to the Bhutto regime in order to thwart India’s nuclear ambitions.

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan were leading members of anti-communist Cold War alliances. Therefore, in the 1980s, they joined hands to support the internatio­nal fight against the Soviet occupation of Afghanista­n, which ultimately liberated the world from the scourge of communism. In 1982, they also concluded a bilateral security cooperatio­n agreement, under which Pakistan assists Saudi Arabia in military training and defense production capabiliti­es. In 1989, when the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait threatened the territoria­l integrity of the Kingdom, Pakistan participat­ed in the internatio­nal coalition by dispatchin­g an army division to act as the first line of defense in the Saudi border regions.

In the 1990s, as the Afghan Mujahideen factions fought among themselves, both nations were on the forefront of internatio­nal global peace efforts. In 1997, Pakistan organized an extraordin­ary summit of the OIC to mark the golden jubilee of its independen­ce. Then-Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz graced the occasion. As Pakistan came under heavy Western sanctions after its 1998 nuclear tests, the Kingdom met the bulk of its oil needs for a year on deferred payment, most of which was later converted into grants.

Having served as the Saudi ambassador to Pakistan during a tumultuous period, I vividly remember the gravity of terrorism that our two nations faced post-9/11 and how we confronted this danger together in the heyday of the War on Terror. With the instructio­ns and guidance of my leadership, I maintained close interactio­n with Pakistan’s civilian and military leadership­s to help ensure the country’s stability and security. When a devastatin­g earthquake hit Azad Jammu and Kashmir in 2005, Saudi Arabia was the first country to establish an air corridor to provide emergency relief to victims, with two state-of-theart field hospitals fully equipped and operated by profession­al Saudi doctors. Through the OIC, we tackled this natural disaster together, as well as championin­g the cause of Islamic peace at the UN and other global platforms.

A decade after leaving Pakistan, in January 2019, I returned to Islamabad after performing my ambassador­ial duties in Lebanon and retiring from the diplomatic service. I was happy to learn that Pakistan had successful­ly defeated the menace of terrorism through the National Action Plan. Interactio­n with the intelligen­tsia revealed that the Pakistani people were excited about Saudi Arabia’s modernizat­ion drive under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030. A month later, the young Saudi leader landed in Islamabad to announce a major shift in the Kingdom’s economic relations with Pakistan.

A few months before, in November 2018, the crown prince had signed an emergency economic relief package worth $6.2 billion for Pakistan, made up of $3 billion in loans and a $3.2 billion oil credit facility on an annual basis for the next three years, to shore up its foreign exchange reserves and avert a balance of payments crisis. The UAE followed suit with a similar package of economic support. This was several months before the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund approved the current $6 billion bailout for Pakistan.

Successive Saudi leadership­s have respected the Pakistani people’s right to choose their leaders, civilian or military. The country has always dealt with them with respect and dignity. This was the case with the previous government, which is why the Kingdom was the first to come to Pakistan’s rescue and invest in its future.

Perhaps the most important takeaway from the crown prince’s 2019 visit was the conclusion of the biggest Saudi investment in Pakistan, with deals worth $20 billion — including a $10 billion Aramco oil refinery and petrochemi­cal complex in the strategic port city of Gwadar. “I am your ambassador in Saudi Arabia,” the crown prince cheerfully told Imran Khan. Later in the year, he offered his personal plane to the thenprime minister to fly to New York and address the UN General Assembly.

The next logical step would have been to jointly work out the developmen­t plans for Saudi economic projects in Pakistan. Unfortunat­ely, the internatio­nal forces hostile to Saudi Arabia’s unique position in the Muslim world conspired to subvert the emerging transition in Saudi-Pakistan ties from geopolitic­s to geoeconomi­cs. The context was clear: China is the largest importer of Saudi oil and Saudi Arabia is diversifyi­ng its global economic links through participat­ion in China’s Belt and Road Initiative. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is BRI’s flagship project, which ends at Gwadar, the proposed site for the Saudi Aramco oil refinery.

The conspiracy became apparent when consecutiv­e attempts were made to create a rival Muslim bloc to undermine the OIC’s position as the largest representa­tive organizati­on of 57 Muslim countries, while questionin­g its credibilit­y as a standard bearer of the right to self-determinat­ion of the Kashmiri Muslims. Luckily, the inherent resilience in Saudi-Pakistan ties defeated this conspiracy. Over the past two years, the relationsh­ip has gotten back on track. In December last year, Pakistan received $3 billion in financial support from Saudi Arabia.

Of course, Prime Minister Sharif’s immediate priority is to overcome the unpreceden­ted economic crisis at home, for which I think he will seek additional Saudi support. I have no doubts that the Saudi leadership will never let Pakistan down. This will ensure a stable political environmen­t for the coalition government ahead of the next general election, which is necessary for sustainabl­e economic progress.

The ongoing diversific­ation of the Kingdom’s economy offers enormous opportunit­ies for Pakistan’s skilled workforce in the IT, tourism and financial services sectors. Saudi Arabia is home to more than 2 million Pakistani workers and is Pakistan’s single largest remittance source ($4.4 billion between July 2019 and April 2020 as per the state bank’s figures). But most of these fall into the category of unskilled or semiskille­d labor. This leads me to remind the new government to focus on creating vocational institutes to train skilled manpower so that Pakistan can succeed in the increasing­ly competitiv­e Saudi labor market.

Vision 2030 aims to make Saudi Arabia a global economic hub, with gigadevelo­pment projects such as the $500 billion NEOM city. Pakistan has ample skillful youths to contribute to Saudi Arabia’s post-industrial developmen­t and, in turn, shore up its forex reserves through enhanced remittance­s.

The first step in this respect has already been taken through bilateral agreements on the recruitmen­t and skills verificati­on of Pakistanis, which will streamline the process of exporting skilled and certified workers for diverse profession­s in the Kingdom, while also safeguardi­ng their rights. Pakistan’s National Vocational and Technical Training Commission and Takamol, a subsidiary of the Saudi government, will jointly manage this task under the Kingdom’s Skills Verificati­on Program. This will enable the prospectiv­e Pakistani workforce to compete with Indian and other expatriate candidates for successful recruitmen­t in the Saudi developmen­t sector.

Investment and trade are two other important spheres of economic cooperatio­n where the chambers of commerce and industries of the two countries are required to gear up their efforts with the help of the relevant government­al ministries. The Saudi government is already committed to spending $20 billion on developing a refinery and a petrochemi­cal complex and on the mining and renewable energy sectors in Pakistan. But there is a lot of scope for investment by private Saudi companies in other sectors of the Pakistani economy.

The city of Sialkot is known globally as a hub of sports goods and surgical instrument­s and would be an ideal place for Saudi investment. The industrial zones in Karachi and Faisalabad could be additional choices for this purpose. The already-agreed refinery and petrochemi­cal projects align Saudi public sector investment with CPEC. The planned developmen­t of several special economic zones along the economic corridor, which runs from Xinjiang in China and ends at Gwadar, can also attract Saudi private investment.

Therefore, the representa­tives of the chambers of commerce and industries in both countries need to communicat­e and interact more frequently. The Pakistani government also needs to create a conducive environmen­t for private Saudi investment by undertakin­g the necessary legal reforms to protect the rights of foreign investors and ensure the smooth return of their investment­s. There is also tremendous scope for Pakistan’s leading business families to invest in the real estate, tourism and services sectors in Saudi Arabia. In the past couple of decades, Pakistan has made tremendous progress in urban developmen­t. The time has come to extend its scope abroad, for which Saudi Arabia offers the most hospitable and secure environmen­t.

Unfortunat­ely, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan have extremely low levels of bilateral trade, despite being so close politicall­y and culturally. Currently estimated to be $3 billion annually, bilateral trade must expand by fast-tracking the negotiatin­g process to sign a free trade agreement. Talks on the FTA began in 2018. Thereafter, representa­tives from the two respective chambers of commerce and industries have exchanged visits. There is an urgent need for official sponsorshi­p of the interactio­n between traders and businessme­n to identify additional areas where each side has a comparativ­e advantage and to explore complement­arities in the tradable products.

Economic cooperatio­n needs to emulate the persistent pattern of the bilateral relationsh­ip in the security domain. From defending the sanctity of Makkah and Madinah to defeating the scourge of terrorism, Pakistan has always been a key Saudi partner and a major Muslim player. The two nations’ defense establishm­ents have exceptiona­lly close relations in the military training and advisory spheres. Reciprocal visits by Saudi and Pakistani military leaders and security officials are the norm. Pakistan’s army chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa has travelled to the Kingdom several times. He has interacted with Prince Khalid bin Salman, the deputy defense minister, in Islamabad and Riyadh. That his predecesso­r, Gen. Raheel Sharif, has commanded the 41-member Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Alliance, which is headquarte­red in Riyadh, reflects their close military collaborat­ion.

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan also cooperate closely on a host of regional and global issues of concern. They have always sought to achieve peace and stability in Afghanista­n and Kashmir and deal with global issues of deep concern to the Muslim world, such as Islamophob­ia. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan has twice travelled to Islamabad recently. Last December, he attended the successful special session of the OIC’s Council of Foreign Ministers, which was held in response to the humanitari­an crisis in Afghanista­n. Then, last month, he participat­ed in the 48th session of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers to deal with key Muslim world challenges, including the Kashmir issue. But Saudi-Pakistani coordinati­on in strategic affairs must grow further.

Let me conclude by reiteratin­g that our historic relationsh­ip has come a long way and its evolution is opening up vast avenues for tangible progress. A rare spirit of camaraderi­e brings the two nations together, including the fact that millions of Pakistanis visit the Kingdom each year to perform Hajj and Umrah. That is why, with each passing decade, the two countries’ cooperatio­n in the political, security, economic and cultural spheres has grown by leaps and bounds. I have no doubt that this brotherly bond will reach new heights under the dynamic leadership of Prime Minister Sharif. May Allah bless Saudi Arabia and Pakistan in their common cause for an enlightene­d future.

I am sure that Prime Minister Sharif has the ability, courage and will to take Pakistan forward meaningful­ly.

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