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A Deal's Collapse Clouds Pakistan's China Alliance

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A Deal's Collapse Clouds Pakistan's China Alliance


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A Chinese mining company pulled out of what was to be Pakistan's largest foreign-investment deal because of security concerns, complicating Islamabad's effort to position its giant neighbor as an alternative to the U.S. as its main ally.

An official at China Kingho Group, one of China's largest private coal miners, said on Thursday it had backed out in August from a $19 billion deal in southern Sindh province due to concerns for its personnel after recent bombings in Pakistan's major cities.

Zubair Motiwala, chairman of the Sindh Board of Investment, acknowledged the cancellation of plans to build a coal mine, power and chemical plants over 20 years. But he said he was hopeful that Kingho would reconsider.

Pakistan has been playing up its friendship with China ever since the U.S. killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in May sent relations between Islamabad and Washington into a tailspin.

But China's response has been lukewarm so far, suggesting that Islamabad may remain dependent on billions of dollars in military and civilian aid from Washington for some time to come.



Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani used a visit this week from Meng Jianzhu, China's minister of public security, to promote the friendship, which Mr. Gilani said was "higher than mountains, deeper than oceans, stronger than steel and sweeter than honey."

Army chief Gen. Ashfaq Kayani thanked Mr. Meng, who pledged $1.2 million in aid for Pakistan's law-enforcement agencies, for his country's "unwavering support."

The gushing compliments contrasted recent U.S.-Pakistani rhetoric, after outgoing U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen called an insurgent group that targets Americans a wing of Pakistani intelligence, and U.S. lawmakers threatened to withhold Pakistani aid.

Islamabad responded with a warning that the U.S. risks losing an ally with such accusations.

China has backed Pakistan, its largest export market for armaments, for many years as a strategic counterweight to India in the Indian Ocean region. The countries have developed military hardware together, such as the JF-17 fighter jet, and China is helping Pakistan build civilian nuclear reactors.

Beijing constructed and financed Pakistan's Gwadar port, opened in 2007, as part of plans to develop a road and rail transport corridor from China's northwest to the Arabian Sea.

In many cases, though, China's support has stopped short of what Pakistan had hoped, while Islamabad, in Beijing's eyes, has failed to live up to its promises, including to ensure security for investments.

Pakistan's army has been lobbying for a formal defense pact with China in the wake of the U.S. raid that killed bin Laden, angering many in Pakistan and straining relations with Washington, a Pakistani government official said.

Such a pact would draw China into any conflict involving their ally and likely anger the U.S. and India, Pakistan's regional rival.

China hasn't commented on the matter. A spokesman for Pakistan's military declined to comment.


"The Chinese wouldn't go in for that. It's too much to put on their plate when they can't ensure how much they can control their own ally," says Aisha Siddiqa, a Pakistani military analyst.


Beijing is keen to balance its support for Islamabad with a renewed push to improve relations with India, a growing trade partner. China also is anxious to avoid fresh tensions with the U.S. that could disrupt a first official visit to Washington early next year by Vice President Xi Jinping, who is expected to take over as Communist Party chief in 2012 and president in 2013, diplomats and analysts say.

The U.S., meanwhile, wants China to engage in a dialogue on Pakistan as Washington looks for ways to bring pressure to bear on Islamabad over its ties with Islamist militants. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made the request directly to China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi in New York on Monday, according to a senior State Department official.

Han Hua, an expert on South Asia at Peking University, said China viewed Pakistan as an increasingly important strategic partner given the imminent withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan.

"That doesn't mean China wants to replace the U.S. in the role it played. It's not a zero sum game," she said.


Some deals are going ahead. Pakistan last week signed a preliminary agreement with another smaller Chinese company, Global Mining Co., to invest $3 billion in a mine and power project close to the one that Kingho canceled, Mr. Motiwala said.


Pakistan's navy recently agreed to buy two Chinese-made Azmat-class attack boats and, in August, China launched a Pakistani telecommunications satellite.

Other Pakistani requests for China to increase its funding of infrastructure projects haven't progressed.

In May, Pakistan's Defense Minister said that China had agreed to take over operation of Gwadar, which is doing little business as a commercial port, and that Islamabad has asked China to build a base there for Pakistan's navy.

China has remained silent on the issue. Pakistani officials involved in Gwadar's operations say there is no sign China will take over. The officials say they have been frustrated by China's failure to finance and build a road network to connect the port to the rest of the country.


A number of Chinese workers have been killed in Pakistan in the past decade, some of them in troubled Baluchistan province, where armed separatist insurgents have opposed Chinese investments.

Some Chinese experts say Gwadar's cut-off location in Baluchistan detracts from its attractiveness as a military base and as a transit point for China's oil imports, given the high cost and security risk of piping them across some of Pakistan's least stable regions.


A Deal's Collapse Clouds Pakistan's China Alliance - WSJ.com
 
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its pure business nothing else. be it pakistan or Afghanistan, if my money ain't safe then i won't trade. friendship and brotherhood ain't good for business relations.
 
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Valid points. At the end of the day its all about interests being served. If they are not, I would not make that investment either.

True, This is not the end. If they are not interested.
Good, no damage done.
 
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you cant blame the Chinese , it does not make good business sense.
 
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Excellent thread - too bad Pakistani forum members have been unable to understand the connection between islamist terror, the lack of investment and the unwillingness of the govt to counter these groups and the ideology behind such groups
 
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It was a clear message from the chinese that we are not with you in haqqani matter. The decision also states that Chinese are not prepared yet to face America, when they will ready then they will useus like a condom.
Moral of the story is dont make china another America because it will hurt us in the future when America will be replaced by China.
You never make same mistake twice beacuse the second time you make it, its not the mistake, its a choice.
 
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Please give me a break, the article is from the wall street journal.
Is this on Dawn or Xinhua?
 
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Please give me a break, the article is from the wall street journal.
Is this on Dawn or Xinhua?

If this is true then dont you think it will publish in dawn now looking at the current scenario.
 
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Excellent thread - too bad Pakistani forum members have been unable to understand the connection between islamist terror, the lack of investment and the unwillingness of the govt to counter these groups and the ideology behind such groups

Islamist terror is not solely owned by Pakistan you know, there's more than a few fingers dipped in that pie, muse.
 
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Islamist terror is not solely owned by Pakistan you know, there's more than a few fingers dipped in that pie, muse.

WHAT precisely is that supposed to mean? Ought we not counter it because there are other fingers in the pie? I don't care who's fingers are in the pie, what I am suggesting is an awareness of this a existential problem and the creation of a national will to confront and defeat it -
 
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collapsing deals between U.S and its closest allies all the time but it doenst change the fact that they are still close allies``


The Pakistan China Alliance is too wide and too important to both China and Pakistan to let minor hiccups derail this mutually beneficial Alliance. I am sure as the security situation improves Chinese companies will be back to make money from this project. Nineteen Billion US Dollars is nothing to sneeze at. So the message to Indians is to stop dancing with joy, China will be back.
 
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good thing they backed out...i happy.

we need local investment. no more foreign investment please..and no aid also.
 
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