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RED ZONE FILES: Trouble with the West

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There is a long list of countries that are angry with us and we are doing far less than we should to make them un-angry. There could be trouble ahead.

Prime Minister Imran Khan ventured to Moscow despite various urgings from powerful capitals not to do so. Senior Biden administration officials, for instance, telephoned their counterparts in Islamabad on the eve of the PM’s Russia visit and said in plain words that the trip at this time would be inadvisable. Various other officials also weighed in with similar advice. The PM decided to undertake the travel in any case. It was a difficult choice but on balance, the right one.

Read more: Should the PM have gone to Moscow?

The story though does not end here. Inside the Red Zone, there is growing concern that while the PTI leadership may have taken the right call to carry on with the visit, it is doing woefully little to mitigate the negatives of the visit through proactive and effective diplomacy. The Foreign Office did so well to stitch up the important visit — regardless of the awkward timing — but for some strange reason is now mishandling the expected fallout of the visit by indulging in terribly weak diplomacy. At a crucial moment that could pivot back and haunt us, the Foreign Office and its leadership is in danger of dropping the ball. So what’s going on?
Plenty, as it turns out. Earlier this week envoys of nearly two dozen countries put their signatures on a document demanding that Pakistan condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It is rare for so many ambassadors to undertake such an initiative. Insiders in the diplomatic corps in Islamabad say they have been under tremendous pressure from their governments to inform the government of Pakistan about how strongly they feel regarding Pakistan’s position on the Ukraine issue. Not that Islamabad does not know. The PM Office and the Foreign Office have a pretty good idea of the anger that is aimed at them. In return, however, Islamabad appears to be shying away from the kind of deep engagement with the West that is so urgently needed now.

The issue is no more the visit to Moscow. That is done and over with. The issue is how Pakistan wants to position itself now in the given situation. Diplomacy isn’t really all black and white even when countries insist their stance is. The Russia-Ukraine binary is being presented by the West to the world in stark tones – either you are with us or with Russia – but within the larger spectrum of interstate relations, there is plenty of space to find a more nuanced position for countries like Pakistan. And especially Pakistan. The fact is that PM Khan’s visit to Moscow at a time when President Vladimir Putin was ordering his forces to invade neighbouring Ukraine has put the PM and Pakistan both under a Western spotlight. Islamabad therefore does not have the luxury of receding into a conveniently vague position and being non-committal about the conflict. It is too late for that.

While it may have a valid explanation for why the Moscow visit was allowed to proceed as scheduled, it does not have one for why the leadership of the Foreign Office refused to meet important Western envoys in Islamabad for more than a couple of days. This is just unpardonable knowing that at this time such incompetence – or flawed decision-making — can cost Pakistan dearly. To make matters worse, the foreign minister has gone off for his party’s long march in Sindh when he should have been leading his ministry from the front and speaking to his counterparts in key Western capitals on a daily basis. In fact, he should have been visiting these capitals instead of jetting off to Ghotki, and presenting Pakistan’s case in person.

But what case? Saying we are neutral is just lazy positioning. Is the leadership of the Foreign Office asleep on the wheel? Does it not sense the mood across the globe and convey its recommendation to the political bosses? Do the Grade 22 and 21 officers in the Foreign Office not realise that in this day and age there is no equivalence between a country that is the invader and the one that is invaded. Have these senior officers at the Foreign Office forgotten international conventions? And if they have not, and they in fact do know that dodging and ducking from Western governments at this moment in time is the worst thing to do, and if they also recognise and acknowledge that this “neutrality” option will not wash — if they are aware of all of this, which one sincerely hopes they are, then why are they criminally silent?

Unless of course, there is more to this diplomatic inertia than meets the eye. Some Red Zone insiders insinuate that thumbing the nose at the West is a political knee-jerk reaction emanating from what is obviously a superficial worldview that Pakistan will now draw strength from China and Russia. There is no shortage of such naïve and emotional advice sprinkled regularly in cabinet meetings by the usual suspects. It should ideally be dismissed with the contempt that it deserves. But apparently it is not.

Is it too late? Should we brace for what comes next because we have dropped the diplomatic ball? A key meeting between senior officials of Pakistan and a Western country was cancelled at the last minute this week. The reason: Pakistan’s refusal to condemn Russia’s invasion. Diplomatic experts say Pakistan should realise it is blundering on this front and issue a statement that Russia’s act of invading another country is against all international laws. Can it say this and still maintain the ties it wants with Russia? “Of course we can,” says a retired diplomat. Naïve neutrality needs to be replaced with smart balance.

Smarts though appear in short supply in Islamabad nowadays. With each passing day the task of salvaging our position is getting harder and harder. The alarm bells are ringing while the Foreign Office remains in snooze mode.

Where are the adults when you actually need them?

Published in Dawn, March 3rd, 2022

 
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Same lot that put Pakistan on FATF for years have new demands? Well, tough!
 
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This FAHD Hussain is one stupid editor of DAWN. Biased to the core against PTI. Why you want Pakistan to side with west when almost entire global south including India is neutral. Yeah yeah we heard that must of our exports goes to europe, usa but so is the case with India, China etc

I'm sure his article would have been other way around if Pakistan supported west.
 
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This FAHD Hussain is one stupid editor of DAWN. Biased to the core against PTI. Why you want Pakistan to side with west when almost entire global south including India is neutral. Yeah yeah we heard that must of our exports goes to europe, usa but so is the case with India, China etc

I'm sure his article would have been other way around if Pakistan supported west.
You are misinterpreting his article, his main point is the Foreign Ministry being MIA, where is the fallout control? Where are the officials, where is Pakistan's statements and also where are we countering the misinformation? Continuing in this vague fashion doesn't help anybody.
 
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Pakistan should tell the West "to do more" as in:

#1 Pay Pakistan the $100+ billion it lost helping the West on it's War in Afghanistan
#2 Pay Pakistan for the 70,000 lives it lost helping the West on it's War in Afghanistan
#3 Solve the 70 year old Kashmir issue
#4 Do an investigation of the mass graves in Kashmir and hold the scum accountable

What? If Russia can make outrageous claims then why can't Pakistan?
 
.
There is a long list of countries that are angry with us and we are doing far less than we should to make them un-angry. There could be trouble ahead.

Prime Minister Imran Khan ventured to Moscow despite various urgings from powerful capitals not to do so. Senior Biden administration officials, for instance, telephoned their counterparts in Islamabad on the eve of the PM’s Russia visit and said in plain words that the trip at this time would be inadvisable. Various other officials also weighed in with similar advice. The PM decided to undertake the travel in any case. It was a difficult choice but on balance, the right one.

Read more: Should the PM have gone to Moscow?

The story though does not end here. Inside the Red Zone, there is growing concern that while the PTI leadership may have taken the right call to carry on with the visit, it is doing woefully little to mitigate the negatives of the visit through proactive and effective diplomacy. The Foreign Office did so well to stitch up the important visit — regardless of the awkward timing — but for some strange reason is now mishandling the expected fallout of the visit by indulging in terribly weak diplomacy. At a crucial moment that could pivot back and haunt us, the Foreign Office and its leadership is in danger of dropping the ball. So what’s going on?
Plenty, as it turns out. Earlier this week envoys of nearly two dozen countries put their signatures on a document demanding that Pakistan condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It is rare for so many ambassadors to undertake such an initiative. Insiders in the diplomatic corps in Islamabad say they have been under tremendous pressure from their governments to inform the government of Pakistan about how strongly they feel regarding Pakistan’s position on the Ukraine issue. Not that Islamabad does not know. The PM Office and the Foreign Office have a pretty good idea of the anger that is aimed at them. In return, however, Islamabad appears to be shying away from the kind of deep engagement with the West that is so urgently needed now.

The issue is no more the visit to Moscow. That is done and over with. The issue is how Pakistan wants to position itself now in the given situation. Diplomacy isn’t really all black and white even when countries insist their stance is. The Russia-Ukraine binary is being presented by the West to the world in stark tones – either you are with us or with Russia – but within the larger spectrum of interstate relations, there is plenty of space to find a more nuanced position for countries like Pakistan. And especially Pakistan. The fact is that PM Khan’s visit to Moscow at a time when President Vladimir Putin was ordering his forces to invade neighbouring Ukraine has put the PM and Pakistan both under a Western spotlight. Islamabad therefore does not have the luxury of receding into a conveniently vague position and being non-committal about the conflict. It is too late for that.

While it may have a valid explanation for why the Moscow visit was allowed to proceed as scheduled, it does not have one for why the leadership of the Foreign Office refused to meet important Western envoys in Islamabad for more than a couple of days. This is just unpardonable knowing that at this time such incompetence – or flawed decision-making — can cost Pakistan dearly. To make matters worse, the foreign minister has gone off for his party’s long march in Sindh when he should have been leading his ministry from the front and speaking to his counterparts in key Western capitals on a daily basis. In fact, he should have been visiting these capitals instead of jetting off to Ghotki, and presenting Pakistan’s case in person.

But what case? Saying we are neutral is just lazy positioning. Is the leadership of the Foreign Office asleep on the wheel? Does it not sense the mood across the globe and convey its recommendation to the political bosses? Do the Grade 22 and 21 officers in the Foreign Office not realise that in this day and age there is no equivalence between a country that is the invader and the one that is invaded. Have these senior officers at the Foreign Office forgotten international conventions? And if they have not, and they in fact do know that dodging and ducking from Western governments at this moment in time is the worst thing to do, and if they also recognise and acknowledge that this “neutrality” option will not wash — if they are aware of all of this, which one sincerely hopes they are, then why are they criminally silent?

Unless of course, there is more to this diplomatic inertia than meets the eye. Some Red Zone insiders insinuate that thumbing the nose at the West is a political knee-jerk reaction emanating from what is obviously a superficial worldview that Pakistan will now draw strength from China and Russia. There is no shortage of such naïve and emotional advice sprinkled regularly in cabinet meetings by the usual suspects. It should ideally be dismissed with the contempt that it deserves. But apparently it is not.

Is it too late? Should we brace for what comes next because we have dropped the diplomatic ball? A key meeting between senior officials of Pakistan and a Western country was cancelled at the last minute this week. The reason: Pakistan’s refusal to condemn Russia’s invasion. Diplomatic experts say Pakistan should realise it is blundering on this front and issue a statement that Russia’s act of invading another country is against all international laws. Can it say this and still maintain the ties it wants with Russia? “Of course we can,” says a retired diplomat. Naïve neutrality needs to be replaced with smart balance.

Smarts though appear in short supply in Islamabad nowadays. With each passing day the task of salvaging our position is getting harder and harder. The alarm bells are ringing while the Foreign Office remains in snooze mode.

Where are the adults when you actually need them?

Published in Dawn, March 3rd, 2022


If it has not become evident to everyone yet, then I suggest that people open their eyes. In particular, Pakistanis and not those who pretend to care about Pakistan and yet live in the West. I'm talking about real Pakistanis, who are invested in Pakistan, mind body and soul.

Pakistanis will be committing the most embarrassing and ill-thought out mistake, if they took Ukraine on face value. If you truly want to understand Ukraine, then go back to the history books and read about the 18th Century Russian Empire and the 19th Century Soviet Union. It is there you will find the origins of what is today known as Ukraine.

America and it's stooges, are on their last legs. The dominance of the Western world is now at an end and it is the Russian Federation which is hammering away the final blows that will timber the West from its position of dominance in this world.

Pakistan is no stranger to Western economic sanctions, unless of course, Pakistanis have suddenly developed amnesia. It's a unifying reason for Pakistan to dismiss Western sqwauks and continue on the path of exercising your sovereign and independent foreign policy.

Today stands as a pivotal moment in history and it is time for Pakistan to establish independent and sovereign foreign policy. Pakistan should recognize that Russia is not the aggressor in Ukraine, for it were the aggressor and Pakistan does sever it's ties with Russia on these grounds. Then Pakistan will need to do the same with America and sever it's ties. Remember the Bay of P!g$? Ahan!! So you see where I am going with this?

Pakistan, stand fast to your independence as a nation and establish relationships with those countries who do not lie in the UNSC about WMDs, about Gulf of Tonkin, about Libya and who are duplicitous when they allow a genocidal Israel to massacre Palestinians.

Truth shall always triumph over falsehood.
 
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This FAHD Hussain is one stupid editor of DAWN. Biased to the core against PTI. Why you want Pakistan to side with west when almost entire global south including India is neutral. Yeah yeah we heard that must of our exports goes to europe, usa but so is the case with India, China etc

I'm sure his article would have been other way around if Pakistan supported west.

His pay check is on the line from the US, what you thing will be the other reason?
These Western paid outfits in the media is hell bent on to put us under the spot light and telling us to take sides. Why are the same countries ambassadors didn't put out the statement in the other countries who abstained in the UNGA and they were around 35 or so and 5 voted against the resolution. The list of absentees is below and its in the common domain.

AlgeriaBurundiEl SalvadorKazakhstanMongoliaSenegalTajikistan
AngolaCentral African RepublicEquatorial GuineaKyrgyzstanMozambiqueSouth AfricaUganda
ArmeniaChinaIndiaLaosNamibiaSouth Sudan Tanzania
BangladeshCongoIranMadagascarNicaraguaSri LankaVietnam
BoliviaCubaIraqMaliPakistanSudanZimbabwe

What does it indicates more then 2/3 of the world population is not buying the Western propaganda and don't want to be part of their game.
Why these sold out people are working over time to keep and stay focus on the Pakistan and keeps us showing the dark days ahead of us. I do need to remind these shameless souls Pakistan is the permanent member of the FATF regime who are hell bent on damaging our economy and starve out our kids.
We all know our FO performance is below par but hey ho that's how most of the Pakistan institutions work. Why our FM should be visiting European capitals to get more cornered ? War is not even ours and why did not US/UK/France FM's showed up in the Islamabad up when article 370 in Kashmir was imposed by the fascist Modi? France even doesn't lets Kashmir issue to be discussed in the UNSC and every year raised issue written on the paper is thrown into the bin. When India bombed us the same countries were telling us to shut up and stay quiet, then no UN resolution was violated, was it ?
They need to find the meaning of the word neutral and Pakistan is staying neutral and no where in the English dictionary says neutral means pro Russian.

Pakistan should tell the West "to do more" as in:

#1 Pay Pakistan the $100+ billion it lost helping the West on it's War in Afghanistan
#2 Pay Pakistan for the 70,000 lives it lost helping the West on it's War in Afghanistan
#3 Solve the 70 year old Kashmir issue
#4 Do an investigation of the mass graves in Kashmir and hold the scum accountable

What? If Russia can make outrageous claims then why can't Pakistan?
These are not outrages claims these are genuine claims. We are short changed by the West/US due to our sold out, incompetent politicians and generals who failed to fight our corner due to their own reasons.
 
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But what case? Saying we are neutral is just lazy positioning. Is the leadership of the Foreign Office asleep on the wheel? Does it not sense the mood across the globe and convey its recommendation to the political bosses? Do the Grade 22 and 21 officers in the Foreign Office not realise that in this day and age there is no equivalence between a country that is the invader and the one that is invaded. Have these senior officers at the Foreign Office forgotten international conventions? And if they have not, and they in fact do know that dodging and ducking from Western governments at this moment in time is the worst thing to do, and if they also recognise and acknowledge that this “neutrality” option will not wash — if they are aware of all of this, which one sincerely hopes they are, then why are they criminally silent?

WTAF.

Last time when Pakistan tried telling an invading country to resolve the issue thru talks ............ they were told "You are with us or against us". And most probably one of the relatives of this same journalist at that time may have written an article saying "if Pakistan doesn't let the invading country use its bases and let their drones bomb Pakistanis, then Pakistan is doomed" and guess what happened after that.

What does Pakistan have to do with Ukraine and Russia? When USSR invaded our neighboring country we did what we had to do, Ukraine is not our neighbor, this conflict doesn't affect us directly so why should we be siding with anyone?

If it helps we remained neutral in Yemen crisis even though we could have benefitted by becoming a direct party. No one said anything at that time, most probably because it is a conflict that maimed and killed Yemenis.

The application of these international conventions is so selective.
 
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These analysts do seem to pick a certain side most of the times. Wonder why is that..
 
.
There is a long list of countries that are angry with us and we are doing far less than we should to make them un-angry. There could be trouble ahead.

Prime Minister Imran Khan ventured to Moscow despite various urgings from powerful capitals not to do so. Senior Biden administration officials, for instance, telephoned their counterparts in Islamabad on the eve of the PM’s Russia visit and said in plain words that the trip at this time would be inadvisable. Various other officials also weighed in with similar advice. The PM decided to undertake the travel in any case. It was a difficult choice but on balance, the right one.

Read more: Should the PM have gone to Moscow?

The story though does not end here. Inside the Red Zone, there is growing concern that while the PTI leadership may have taken the right call to carry on with the visit, it is doing woefully little to mitigate the negatives of the visit through proactive and effective diplomacy. The Foreign Office did so well to stitch up the important visit — regardless of the awkward timing — but for some strange reason is now mishandling the expected fallout of the visit by indulging in terribly weak diplomacy. At a crucial moment that could pivot back and haunt us, the Foreign Office and its leadership is in danger of dropping the ball. So what’s going on?
Plenty, as it turns out. Earlier this week envoys of nearly two dozen countries put their signatures on a document demanding that Pakistan condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It is rare for so many ambassadors to undertake such an initiative. Insiders in the diplomatic corps in Islamabad say they have been under tremendous pressure from their governments to inform the government of Pakistan about how strongly they feel regarding Pakistan’s position on the Ukraine issue. Not that Islamabad does not know. The PM Office and the Foreign Office have a pretty good idea of the anger that is aimed at them. In return, however, Islamabad appears to be shying away from the kind of deep engagement with the West that is so urgently needed now.

The issue is no more the visit to Moscow. That is done and over with. The issue is how Pakistan wants to position itself now in the given situation. Diplomacy isn’t really all black and white even when countries insist their stance is. The Russia-Ukraine binary is being presented by the West to the world in stark tones – either you are with us or with Russia – but within the larger spectrum of interstate relations, there is plenty of space to find a more nuanced position for countries like Pakistan. And especially Pakistan. The fact is that PM Khan’s visit to Moscow at a time when President Vladimir Putin was ordering his forces to invade neighbouring Ukraine has put the PM and Pakistan both under a Western spotlight. Islamabad therefore does not have the luxury of receding into a conveniently vague position and being non-committal about the conflict. It is too late for that.

While it may have a valid explanation for why the Moscow visit was allowed to proceed as scheduled, it does not have one for why the leadership of the Foreign Office refused to meet important Western envoys in Islamabad for more than a couple of days. This is just unpardonable knowing that at this time such incompetence – or flawed decision-making — can cost Pakistan dearly. To make matters worse, the foreign minister has gone off for his party’s long march in Sindh when he should have been leading his ministry from the front and speaking to his counterparts in key Western capitals on a daily basis. In fact, he should have been visiting these capitals instead of jetting off to Ghotki, and presenting Pakistan’s case in person.

But what case? Saying we are neutral is just lazy positioning. Is the leadership of the Foreign Office asleep on the wheel? Does it not sense the mood across the globe and convey its recommendation to the political bosses? Do the Grade 22 and 21 officers in the Foreign Office not realise that in this day and age there is no equivalence between a country that is the invader and the one that is invaded. Have these senior officers at the Foreign Office forgotten international conventions? And if they have not, and they in fact do know that dodging and ducking from Western governments at this moment in time is the worst thing to do, and if they also recognise and acknowledge that this “neutrality” option will not wash — if they are aware of all of this, which one sincerely hopes they are, then why are they criminally silent?

Unless of course, there is more to this diplomatic inertia than meets the eye. Some Red Zone insiders insinuate that thumbing the nose at the West is a political knee-jerk reaction emanating from what is obviously a superficial worldview that Pakistan will now draw strength from China and Russia. There is no shortage of such naïve and emotional advice sprinkled regularly in cabinet meetings by the usual suspects. It should ideally be dismissed with the contempt that it deserves. But apparently it is not.

Is it too late? Should we brace for what comes next because we have dropped the diplomatic ball? A key meeting between senior officials of Pakistan and a Western country was cancelled at the last minute this week. The reason: Pakistan’s refusal to condemn Russia’s invasion. Diplomatic experts say Pakistan should realise it is blundering on this front and issue a statement that Russia’s act of invading another country is against all international laws. Can it say this and still maintain the ties it wants with Russia? “Of course we can,” says a retired diplomat. Naïve neutrality needs to be replaced with smart balance.

Smarts though appear in short supply in Islamabad nowadays. With each passing day the task of salvaging our position is getting harder and harder. The alarm bells are ringing while the Foreign Office remains in snooze mode.

Where are the adults when you actually need them?

Published in Dawn, March 3rd, 2022

Lanat on DAWN NEWS the agent of Jews and US
Allah has clearly said

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

“And certainly, We shall test you with something of fear, hunger, loss of wealth, lives and fruits, but give glad tidings to As-Sabirun (the patient).Who, when afflicted with calamity, say: “Truly! To Allah we belong and truly, to Him we shall return.”

They are those on whom are the Salawat (i.e. who are blessed and will be forgiven) from their Lord, and (they are those who) receive His Mercy, and it is they who are the guided ones.”

(Quran, Surah al-Baqarah, 2:155-157)
 
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