araz
PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2006
- Messages
- 9,291
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- 81
as long as it can be shown that there is an alignment of national interests that can be served best by such support.On to the main issue then: Pakistan can always get whatever it wants, including F16s, or anything else, Just as everyone is equal, but some are more equal than others, as you said, serving national interests is the best way to achieve something, as always is true in international geopolitics.
Shah jee.
This remains the bug bear and the crux of all international relationships. Pakistan has lacked tbe vision and foresight to see this and get major benefits from it while being a US partner. Our major policy failure has been to utilize-the opportunities provided into a successful mutually beneficial relationship. Part of the problem has been that US arms provide the biggest bang for the buck.
65 was a perfect picture of our failure to understand the dynamics of what this relationship involved. Our elite relied instead on getting shortsighted short term benefits for themselves out of it. Whether it was the latter factor whichmired the whole equation needs to be understood and possibly acknowledged.
Time and again we have seen how shortlived this relationship has been as rightly pointed out it has been a transactional one. However, how did we plead our case? What could we have gotten out of this relationship without ruffling any feathers that we did not.
The US has done what it does best ---look after its interests. BUT WHAT HAVE WE DONE? Any further discourse will require an answer to this question.