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Pakistan needs a balanced, not Independent Foreign Policy

blain2

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A great article that addresses this issue of anti-Americanism, espoused by many, head-on despite all the talk by very many of our governments including PTI to have an "independent" FP. When we dig in, which most in the public don't bother with as sloganeering is enough to keep them busy, we realize that Pakistan's options are extremely limited. This is the realpolitik facing Pakistan.


Pakistan needs a balanced, not independent, foreign policy​

A balanced foreign policy would mean a policy of cooperation and co-habitation with all major powers



Syed Abdul Ahad WasimApril 19, 2022


The writer is a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy (MALD) candidate at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, focusing on International Security and International Development

In his last few weeks in office prior to the dissolution of National Assembly, Prime Minister Imran Khan continuously emphasised that under his leadership Pakistan pursued an “independent” foreign policy. In fact, he blamed the pursuit of such an independent foreign policy for his ouster from power as a result of a foreign conspiracy. In his March 31st address to the nation, Imran Khan defined an independent foreign policy in his own words “as one which is meant for Pakistanis” i.e. one that takes into account the aspirations or the will of the people of Pakistan.
If prime minister’s own definition of an independent foreign policy is taken as the guiding light, it would be difficult to make a case that he did actually pursue such an independent foreign policy. For instance, most Pakistanis would want Pakistan to at least condemn Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and other Muslim states for normalising diplomatic ties with Israel. Many would want an end to Saudi Arabia’s massacre of fellow Muslims in Yemen. A considerable number would also perhaps want Pakistan to voice concern regarding the treatment of Muslim Uighurs in China. Yet, it is hard to imagine that any government in Pakistan, let alone Imran Khan’s, would stand up to Saudi Arabia or the UAE or China regardless of what the aspirations of the people are.
Is it not then that an “independent foreign policy” is merely another name for defying the West — and the West only?
If so, such an independent foreign policy would only be partially independent because a true independent foreign policy would mean that Pakistan would freely choose its course of action in the best of its interests irrespective of whether such a policy defies not just the West but even the East, including China.
Even a cursory moment of reflection would make it clear that Pakistan cannot pursue such a “truly” independent foreign policy, even if it wishes to.
Under Imran Khan’s watch, Pakistan refused to participate in the Kuala Lumpur Summit under pressure from Saudi Arabia; did not join the global outrage against China’s actions in Hong Kong; did not condemn the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi; did not share the worldwide condemnation of the treatment of Uighurs in China; could not expel the French ambassador after French President’s statement calling Islam as problematic despite Imran Khan being a vocal critic of Islamophobia and despite there being country-wide protests; and could not say a word of condemnation on normalisation of ties between Arab states and Israel and had to resign for a cautious reaction, “This is a development with far-reaching implications.”
The point here is not whether Pakistan should have or should not have done all this. The point here is that in international relations, middle or weak powers cannot always do what they wish to do because they are economically, militarily and diplomatically dependent on other powerful states. In other words, they cannot be truly “free” and thus “independent” in conducting their foreign policies. Any politician suggesting otherwise is only doing politics.
Nations are dictated by raison d’état or reason — at least supposedly. For middle powers like Pakistan, reason necessitates the pursuit of balanced, not a fictitious “independent”, foreign policy. Most ordinary Pakistanis miss this simple yet important point, or perhaps they never get told about it because it may be politically unattractive.
A balanced foreign policy would mean a policy of cooperation and co-habitation with all major powers. It would mean that Pakistani policymakers and Pakistanis understand that it is in their interests to have friendly and deep-rooted ties with not only China but with the West too. And for that to happen, we must stop viewing foreign policy from the lens of friend-enemy dichotomy.
West is not necessarily an enemy of Pakistan. And, China is our “permanent” friend only until we serve China’s interests. Beyond “West is enemy” rhetoric, Pakistanis must understand that West is one power pole. Anyone presuming that West’s interests are fundamentally and permanently antithetical to our interests does not understand how power operates in international relations. Because those who do understand the workings of power also understand the simple proposition that the West has its own interests that sometimes align with our interests and sometimes do not. Clichédly put, only thing that is permanent is interests, not enemies or friends. Over the course of our relations with the United States, Pakistan and America have — at more than one instance — deeply, strategically collaborated with each other to pursue mutually beneficial interests. In fact, during the Cold War, the United States was thought of as being closer to Pakistan as India was deemed to be closer to the USSR.
Nor is West necessarily anti-Islam, notwithstanding the legitimate concerns regarding rising Islamophobia. If West was against Islam per se, logic dictates that it should have had the worst of relations with the Muslim-majority countries. But the reality is quite the contrary. America and Europe, for example, have deep-rooted economic, security and diplomatic ties with many Muslim states — especially with the Arabic-speaking Muslim Gulf.
The West — with an over 50 per cent share in global GDP — is as an economic hegemon, and, like other Muslim states, Pakistan too should maintain friendly relations with the West.
In his speeches, Prime Minister Imran Khan also cites India as an example of a country with an independent foreign policy. This too is only rhetorical because in reality Pakistan cannot pursue an independent foreign policy while India can simply because Pakistan is not India. Whereas India is an emerging economic giant with over a billion people, Pakistan is living off bailouts from the West-led international financial institutions. All countries — be they Pakistan’s “enemies” or “friends”, including China — wish to have stronger ties with India because they see it to be mutually beneficial. That gives India the leverage to exercise greater autonomy over its foreign policy. Any comparison between India’s independent conduct of its foreign policy with that of Pakistan’s constrained conduct is only either foolish or politically expedient. Before Pakistan can emulate India’s independent foreign policy, it should work towards emulating India’s economic strength.
Pakistan needs a balanced, not independent, foreign policy at least at this point in its history. It should actively work towards maintaining friendly ties with all those countries that can maximise its own benefits. Therefore, opposing West in the name of fictitious “independent” foreign policy, and thus unnecessarily intoxicating ties and forgoing important benefits, will be highly imprudent.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 19th, 2022.
 
How has being a hired gun served Pakistan in the past?
If you were a hired gun, whose fault is it? Why did you become a hired gun? Let's ponder over these issues too.
Some people just have a servant mentality
I am assuming you are talking about the entire Pakistani nation as they have had no qualms serving the British and taking aid from countless others (US, Gulf, China etc. etc. all the while not paying own taxes, so clearly the servile mentality exists far more broadly then you are willing to admit from your high horse.)
 
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As the world becomes increasingly polarised, balancing on the fence might not be an option.

There will be a mentality of ' you're either with us or against us'.
Yet a neighbor right next door gets away with exactly that, i.e. sitting on the fence, balancing. Look further East, a former wing of ours too does the same and gets away just fine. Some introspection is needed to make hay while the sun shines. This is what the rest of the world does.
 
Yet a neighbor right next door gets away with exactly that, i.e. sitting on the fence, balancing.
Bigger rocks are harder to push.

The other facter giving India a free pass is their opposition to China. China is a greater threat than Russia to the US.
 
some people have a poojari mentality for amrika.
Talk is cheap. All the nary-baazi is for nought when your basic economic survival is tied to the major powers that be.

If your economic survival is tied to the major powers, then what option do you have except to try to run a FP that is influenced by the major powers? What alternates do you have?

A balanced foreign policy is what Imran Khan wanted.
That is the reason we are where we are.
It's the Americans that don't want Pakistan to have a balanced foreign policy.
Please re-read the article. It talks about IK's FP as well. It wasn't very balanced either. I agree he tried but the reality of the world is that like others in the past, what he too did was not very successful.
 
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If you were a hired gun, whose fault is it? Why did you become a hired gun? Let's ponder over these issues too.

I am assuming you are talking about the entire Pakistani nation as they have had no qualms serving the British and taking aid from countless others (US, Gulf, China etc. etc. all the while not paying own taxes, so clearly the servile mentality exists far more broadly then you are willing to admit from your high horse.)

That’s like telling a drug addict to keep using drugs since he’s already a drug addict. People and nations can change with the right convictions and leadership.
 
That’s like telling a drug addict to keep using drugs since he’s already a drug addict. People and nations can change with the right convictions and leadership.
Quite admirable but our countrymen need to learn to burn the midnight oil for convictions to deliver. I am not a cynic but when you cannot even raise this nation to do their basic civic duty, i.e. pay their share of taxes, forget about the "right conviction" and leadership.
 
Quite admirable but our countrymen need to learn to burn the midnight oil for convictions to deliver. I am not a cynic but when you cannot even raise this nation to do their basic civic duty, i.e. pay their share of taxes, forget about the "right conviction" and leadership.

I understand your frustrations, but social change takes time. Pakistan has all the ingredients of a great nation but needs a genuine leader to translate that potential to reality. Current challenges are the growing pains most nations go through.
 
I understand your frustrations, but social change takes time. Pakistan has all the ingredients of a great nation but needs a genuine leader to translate that potential to reality. Current challenges are the growing pains most nations go through.
My friend, I am not even frustrated to be very honest. I just see a sea of emotions currently and this is why I posted this article to drive home the point that we need to think with cold, calculated logic. People went off on the "poojari mentality" nonsense not realizing that talk is always cheap. We have to do the hard work to make change happen. That means we have to eat what the major powers shovel at us. Our masla is that our cheetay want Pakistan to rise up without realizing that we need to have more powerful leverage. And for as long as we don't have this leverage, which we don't currently, we have to deal with the powers that be and we have to learn to have a balanced FP which means befriending the US among others.
 

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