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Trump’s Warning To Islamabad Has Formalised The China-Pakistan-Russia Axis

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In calling out the "safe havens for terrorists in Pakistan" as part of his Afghanistan policy, US President Donald Trump has given formal shape to a reality that has been brewing in South Asia since Washington fell out with Islamabad post the Osama bin Laden raid.

With both Beijing and Moscow coming out in Islamabad's defence almost immediately, the China-Russia-Pakistan axis has been formally inaugurated, with the US and India allying in Afghanistan—as epitomised by Trump's call for New Delhi to help out Washington in the region.

Washington and New Delhi have been conspicuously toward drawn each other since the 2008 nuclear deal, a similar version of which Islamabad has been demanding as well. However, initial US policy had been to ensure that proximity with India doesn't alienate its traditional ally Pakistan, which heretofore had a pivotal role for Washington in Afghanistan.

What the Trump regime has done to chastise Islamabad over Afghanistan echoes the Indian stance in the region, specifically targeting Pakistan's "jugular vein": Kashmir.
Following the bin Laden raid, the relations between the US and Pakistan became increasingly acrimonious under the Obama regime. Under the Trump presidency, the Republicans in the Congress that had already been clamouring to revisit aid to Pakistan—asking Islamabad to pay for its F-16s last year, for instance—now have a formal outlet to vent their frustration.

What the Trump regime has done to chastise Islamabad over Afghanistan echoes the Indian stance in the region, specifically targeting Pakistan's "jugular vein": Kashmir.

In little over three months, Trump implicitly equated Kashmir's freedom fight with terrorism at an Islamic summit in Riyadh, sanctioned the Kashmir-bound Hizbul Mujahideen and its commander Syed Salahuddin as terrorists, and now officially underscored the problem of Pakistan "harbouring terrorists" while seeking the solution from India.

Meanwhile, China has continued to forestall New Delhi's move to blacklist Kashmir-bound jihadists at the UN, as it continues work on the $62 billion corridor with Pakistan, while further reigniting its own border dispute with India in Doklam.

Moscow drawing closer to Islamabad, at least militarily, naturally overlapped with US angst vis-à-vis Pakistan. It started with Russia lifting its self-imposed arms embargo on Pakistan in November 2014, following by a landmark "military cooperation" agreement that culminated in the first ever joint military drill between the two countries last year.

In the meantime, Pakistan will be importing Mi-35 combat helicopters in addition to the Russian Klimov RD-93 engines for its JF-17 multi-role fighters. Moscow and Islamabad have also signed a deal for the construction of the North-South gas pipeline from Karachi to Lahore, to cater to the ever growing energy needs in Pakistan's most populous province.

The shaping of these axes in South Asia has been further facilitated by Indo-Pak ties reaching their nadir amidst increasing volatility in Kashmir.

This formation of hard alliances is a return to 20th century diplomacy and the rigid rulebook that defined bilateral relations, and which caused wars of all kinds.
With the US involved in direct confrontation in Ukraine and the South China Sea, as on-ground samples of its longstanding rivalries with Russia and China, the formalisation of coalitions means the respective alliances could henceforth be backing territorial disputes and regional crises as single units, drawn against one another and overlapping with the security and economic cooperation between the groups.

Even so, Russia cannot overlook the economic power that India is growing into. It is especially unlikely that Moscow would stop its military exports to New Delhi, despite its two-pronged security antagonism with Islamabad and Beijing.

Another promising ally for the China-Russia-Pakistan axis would've been Iran, considering Tehran's proximity to Moscow and bitterness vis-à-vis the US, which has seen it join Beijing and Moscow in condemning Trump's accusations against Islamabad. But Pakistan's own ties with Iran have deteriorated in recent times, with Tehran echoing the US India in accusing Islamabad of providing safe havens to terror groups, and even threatening military invasion inside Pakistani territory.

Furthermore, Pakistan's unflinching obligations to Saudi Arabia, which is the foundation of its differences with Iran, coupled with New Delhi and Tehran's growing economic cooperation along with Kabul—as exemplified by the Chabahar Port—mean that Iran isn't a natural fit for either of the two groups, especially since Washington is unlikely to diplomatically ease things for Tehran under Trump, who has signed a "$110 billion" arms deal with Saudi Arabia.

This formation of hard alliances is a return to 20th century diplomacy and the rigid rulebook that defined bilateral relations, and which caused wars of all kinds. But there still might be a chance that the China-Pakistan-Russia axis might end up being shaped by the common interests that define it, rather than the ramifications for the states that it alienates.

Even so, with stridently antagonistic voices and policymaking now at the helm in Washington and New Delhi, coupled with Islamabad's rigidly masochistic shielding of jihadist groups, it is likely that confrontation rather than cooperation will remain the order of the day in South Asia—at least in the near future.

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/kunwar...ed-the-china-pakistan-russia-axis_a_23188832/
 
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I bet the one who had written this opinion peace doesn't know a jack about diplomacy and international politics. It's not like enemy's, enemy is a my friend or my friends enemy is by default my enemy. It ain't work that way.

Even when we argue here, it's the business and other ties between U.S.A and China the greatest than anyone else in the world. There are a lot of areas of their mutual interests that either of them won't think of doing anything stupid that may destabilize the balance of the other in the first place. :-)
 
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I bet the one who had written this opinion peace doesn't know a jack about diplomacy and international politics. It's not like enemy's, enemy is a my friend or my friends enemy is by default my enemy. It ain't work that way.

Even when we argue here, it's the business and other ties between U.S.A and China the greatest than anyone else in the world. There are a lot of areas of their mutual interests that either of them won't think of doing anything stupid that may destabilize the balance of the other in the first place. :-)
Well if you are thinking that the Russian bear and China will allow USA to destabilize another country in their neighborhood then you are in bit of a shock. Syria is the prime example of how far Russia is ready to defend the Yankees aggression . They had a rough Awakening after the death of Col. Qadafi in Libya.
And with current developments inside Geo political snerio Russia and China as well as Pakistan all come to conclusions that Taliban are the political reality in Afghanistan. And only solution to Afghan problem is via dialogue and political consensus. So all these regional powers will make sure that status quo remains as it is.
 
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Well if you are thinking that the Russian bear and China will allow USA to destabilize another country in their neighborhood then you are in bit of a shock. Syria is the prime example of how far Russia is ready to defend the Yankees aggression . They had a rough Awakening after the death of Col. Qadafi in Libya.
And with current developments inside Geo political snerio Russia and China as well as Pakistan all come to conclusions that Taliban are the political reality in Afghanistan. And only solution to Afghan problem is via dialogue and political consensus. So all these regional powers will make sure that status quo remains as it is.

Why do some people blame the civil war in Syria on Americans when they are so many countries stoking the fire there, from Saudis to Iranians. While Russia continues to back a murderous thug like Assad.

Of course, American are always the go to villain in any situation.
 
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Good if this true. A Pakistan,Russia, and Chinese axis would do wonders.

sure it would.

but there is also no doubt that china and Russia would prefer to have a quadruple alliance with iran in the fold. the geography of such an alliance will spare all members from facing enemies in no more than one direction: russia's underbelly will be protected by iran and pakistan, iran's back by russia and pakistan, pakistan's northeast by iran and russia, and china's vast west by pakistan and russia.

this quadruple alliance, of course, presumes that pakistan and iran can resolve their longstanding differences with each other. but it should be obvious that whatever geopolitical concessions they make to each other can be amply compensated by the bountiful security gains from this alliance.
 
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I bet the one who had written this opinion peace doesn't know a jack about diplomacy and international politics. It's not like enemy's, enemy is a my friend or my friends enemy is by default my enemy. It ain't work that way.

Even when we argue here, it's the business and other ties between U.S.A and China the greatest than anyone else in the world. There are a lot of areas of their mutual interests that either of them won't think of doing anything stupid that may destabilize the balance of the other in the first place. :-)
And that's why you are writing on PDF only
 
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during wwI and WWII, USA sold weapons to both sides and selfishly participated when both sides were tired,and USA call other country selfish?
 
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Well if you are thinking that the Russian bear and China will allow USA to destabilize another country in their neighborhood then you are in bit of a shock. Syria is the prime example of how far Russia is ready to defend the Yankees aggression . They had a rough Awakening after the death of Col. Qadafi in Libya.
And with current developments inside Geo political snerio Russia and China as well as Pakistan all come to conclusions that Taliban are the political reality in Afghanistan. And only solution to Afghan problem is via dialogue and political consensus. So all these regional powers will make sure that status quo remains as it is.

USA does not care for Syria. USA choose not to topple Assad but let the civil war keep going.
80% of populace is opposed to Assad. he is dead meat anyway.

Taliban is no political reality. the 50-60% non-Pusthun majority do not like the Taliban
 
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USA does not care for Syria. USA choose not to topple Assad but let the civil war keep going.
80% of populace is opposed to Assad. he is dead meat anyway.

Taliban is no political reality. the 50-60% non-Pusthun majority do not like the Taliban

this post can give Ebola to half of PDFians ... :suicide:
 
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USA does not care for Syria. USA choose not to topple Assad but let the civil war keep going.
80% of populace is opposed to Assad. he is dead meat anyway.

Taliban is no political reality. the 50-60% non-Pusthun majority do not like the Taliban

remember how USA lost in KR WAR AND VIET WAR! IF USA put all its warlord money to its domestic development USA shall have moon base and Mars base and hyperloop reality 10years ago,remember jack MA of alibaba said:last 30years USA spent almost 14 trillions in 14 wars what if those money been put into USA self development and citizen benifits?!
 
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remember how USA lost in KF WAR AND VIET WAR! IF USA put all its warlord money to its domestic development USA shall have moon base and Mars base and hyperloop reality 10years ago,remember jack MA of alibaba said:last 30years USA spent almost 1.4trillions in 14 wars what if those money been put into USA self development and citizen benifits?!
what is KF war ?
 
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