Bilal Khan (Quwa)
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Absolutely, and it's imperative that we (i.e., our decision-makers) understand that this puts China in a precarious situation. Unfortunately, we're unable to leverage the geo-political reality to our favour (i.e., by exacting real concessions from China in return for derailing India and keeping America out of their backyard). Why? Because our leaders and elites are tied to the West; the former need Green Cards, the latter need trade.I agree to many of your points and that how our approach should be and all. That's going certainly to geopolitics area. So I will make a new thread in some days whenever got the time as otherwise this thread will get majorly off-topic. But just to summarize, I know nobody is your 'brother' in geopolitics, in the end its business & politics. Sometimes common objectives makes us allies. The way we see, United States and india have become allies & partners for foreseeable future. India is not just United State's hired gun but their economic, strategic goals are well defined. I see the US will not chose or give any favor to Pakistan in anyway at expense of India. Indian policy makers are sharp, they want the best out of US -indo relations and they will ensure that Pakistan is kept at distance.
China hasn't done anything to swing the latter (business elites) to their side (if anything, CPEC distanced them further), hence the lack of energy in aligning Pakistan with China. If China could've gotten Pakistani business elites on its side, then perhaps they'd throw out pro-Western military and political leaders by leveraging the media, economy, and other levers to throw the old hacks out.