Energon
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Hey guys, I had written a long post up last night which did not load, so I'm posting it now. I will add more to this discussion later. Antiobl and dabong: you guys have raised some excellent points.
This however is not the case for Pakistan. Since the Baghdad Pact was signed in 1959, Pakistan has been one of the biggest recipients of US Aid in terms of monetary credits as well as military hardware (after Egypt and Israel). I don't think anybody even knows the amount of unappropriated funds that have been put into Pakistan, but last year the New York Times ran a great article about it. To this day, the USA is providing billions of dollars in assistance. Obviously the nature of this relationship is far different than with China or India.
China and India unlike Pakistan have never been rental states. China was initially allied with the communist bloc and India took the non-alignment route until 1970. As a result, both of them have been shunned by the US since the 1940s. The relationship with China started opening up in the 70s after Nixon's initiatives and progressively grew through the 80s and 90s. With India, the unfreezing process started in the mid-late 90s and the flood gates opened up in 2002. However since neither of then got into deep financial and strategic pacts with the USA as fledgeling countries, they are far more capable of holding off the US influence while still keeping the economy machine in high gear.antiobl said:Look at this folks, US "co-operates" with China to fill the walmart stores while China gets to buy the latest US nuclear plants (each worth $2billions).
US "co-operates" with India to get its accounts in order and in turn India gets $billions.
and similarly Pakistan "co-operates" with US to keep its military power as one of the dominant forces in the regions, and in turn US gets to extend and protect her strategic interests.
This however is not the case for Pakistan. Since the Baghdad Pact was signed in 1959, Pakistan has been one of the biggest recipients of US Aid in terms of monetary credits as well as military hardware (after Egypt and Israel). I don't think anybody even knows the amount of unappropriated funds that have been put into Pakistan, but last year the New York Times ran a great article about it. To this day, the USA is providing billions of dollars in assistance. Obviously the nature of this relationship is far different than with China or India.
I don't know much about the bilateral relationship between Pakistan and the UK, but with the USA I can assure you Pakistan has always been considered as a client state (as are all the other states on that monetary donation list). For some reason it seems to me that the UK has always had more of a bilateral relationship with India. At first India was almost exclusively using British military hardware and in recent times (especially since Gordon Brown has come to power, Britian has seemed to zero in on India for economic purposes (probably so as to not fall behind the USA in trade relationships with India). Nonetheless, the point is that diplomats having relationships isn't nearly as important as the nature of that relationship. Hence one cannot draw comparisions between Pakistan, China and India when it comes to their respective relations with say the USA or the UK.antiobl said:Pakistani politicians have a long history with UK and US. It is pretty logical that they interact with the US officials, but so do Pak government officials.