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Why China could lose its 'all weather friend' Pakistan

Laozi

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Why China could lose its 'all weather friend' Pakistan

China is facing trouble on multiple fronts these days but the most significant one seems to be emerging in Pakistan – its "all weather" friend. Despite the support of Pakistani elites for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), part of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), there is a bottom-up push in Pakistan to revise the terms of engagement on this project.

Pressure on Pakistan government

The government of Imran Khan is under pressure to push back against the terms of the rail project linking Karachi to Peshawar as concerns have grown about Pakistan falling deeper into debt, exacerbating an already precarious economic situation. As Khusro Bakhtyar, minister in Pakistan’s planning ministry, made clear recently, “We are seeing how to develop a model so the government of Pakistan wouldn’t have all the risk.”

Despite Pakistan’s global isolation, worsening economic condition and the need for an IMF bail-out, the terms of CPEC related projects are apparently so unfavourable to Pakistan that Islamabad is being forced to review all the BRI contracts, though Beijing is in no mood to relent and has decided that only those projects which are not yet operational would be reviewed.

imran2_100218100702.jpg

(Photo: Reuters)

To help balance China’s inroads, Pakistan is now looking at Saudi Arabia and has asked Riyadh to join CPEC as the third "strategic partner." This week, a high-level delegation from Saudi Arabia is in Pakistan for talks during which five MoUs including the one on selling petroleum products on deferred payments are expected to be signed.

If the situation is so serious for China in Pakistan with which its relationship has been described as “sweeter than honey”, and “higher than the Himalayas,” then clearly Beijing should be worried.

In the wider Indo-Pacific, it is now becoming a pattern that wherever a new administration is taking charge, the first thing on the agenda is a review of China-funded projects. From Malaysia and the Maldives to Sri Lanka and Myanmar, there is a re-evaluation underway of China’s involvement in local economies.

The government of Mahathir Mohamad has cancelled Chinese infrastructure investments worth around $40 billion even as Mahathir has made his intention of strengthening ties with the West clear so as to counterbalance China. During his visit to China in August, Mahathir made his unease clear by suggesting that China is “pouring in too much money, which we cannot afford, cannot repay.”

Debt-trap diplomacy

Myanmar and China are also negotiating a framework agreement on the development of Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Rakhine State. These negotiations between China state investment vehicle CITIC Group and the Myanmar government are aimed at reducing the Chinese consortium’s stake in the port from 85 per cent to 70 per cent. It was Sri Lanka’s fate pertaining to Hambantota port which prompted this reappraisal in Myanmar.

Sri Lanka has become the singular case study of China’s debt trap diplomacy. It borrowed around $1 billion from China to build Hambantota port and when it could not repay the loan, it had to lease the operational rights to China for 99 years. In the Maldives, the leader of the new winning coalition, Mohamed Solih, has said he is alarmed by the growing dependence of the Maldives on Chinese debt and wants to curb China’s influence.

This regional pushback is happening at a time when China has come under pressure from the Trump Administration. Trump has long accused China of unfair trade practices such as subsidies, currency manipulation and in particular of stealing American intellectual property in the form of cutting-edge technology. While one can view these developments as a function of President Trump’s worldview, there is a wider shift happening in the US in so far as China is concerned. There is a fundamental re-evaluation of America’s China policy going on at the moment with questions being raised about the nation’s past posture.

xi-copy_100218100731.jpg

(Photo: Reuters)

US-China relations

As a 2017 report from the US Trade Representative to the US Congress underscores: “It seems clear that the United States erred in supporting China’s entry into the WTO on terms that have proven to be ineffective in securing China's embrace of an open, market-oriented trade regime.” These concerns about China’s economic behaviour are not America’s alone.

A number of other leading trade powers, including the European Union (EU), share these concerns. While China has responded with a tit-for-tat approach in retaliating against the US imposition of tariffs, the future will be difficult for Beijing because China imports much less from the US than it exports there. There have been reports about growing criticism of Xi Jinping in China as the future economic prospects of the country look tough.

As the pushback against Chinese economic model gains momentum, it was New Delhi which first pointed out the drawbacks of the Chinese model and it is to its credit that it remained consistent in its opposition despite fears of India getting isolated. Now as the world is converging with Indian views, it is time for India to work in concert with other partners and offer credible alternatives to the Chinese model.

(Courtesy of Mail Today)

https://www.dailyo.in/politics/china-pakistan-debt-trap-diplomacy-xi-jinping/story/1/27009.html
 
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Just Indian wishful thinking. It ain't going to happen , no way.
I also think the same.
China will make sure that their investments in Pakistan remain safe and econmically viable.

China will share its expertise in controling terrorism in Xinjiang and will definitely make Pakistan a terror free and prosperous nation

I do hope that CPEC succeeds as it will be in the interest of peace for both India and Pakistan.
 
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Despite Pakistan’s global isolation
Pakistan is now looking at Saudi Arabia and has asked Riyadh to join CPEC as the third "strategic partner." This week, a high-level delegation from Saudi Arabia is in Pakistan for talks during which five MoUs including the one on selling petroleum products on deferred payments are expected to be signed.
B.C Chutiya writer should have avoided self conflicting statements in his own piece of junk.
But again fable tales and lies have no ground to stand when introduced with truth.
 
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Indian source of the report means nothing, CPEC is a big thorn in India's side, besides all the development India hates to see in Pakistan, what keeps India up at night is the fact that China now put huge invested interest in Kashmir region which India covets but now any future Indian adventure into that region has to seriously consider the China factor,that means India will forever say goodbye to that part of Kashmir.
 
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Rapists have dreams, but dreams is all they are.

Indian source of the report means nothing, CPEC is a big thorn in India's side, besides all the development India hates to see in Pakistan, what keeps India up at night is the fact that China now put huge invested interest in Kashmir region which India covets but now any future Indian adventure into that region has to seriously consider the China factor,that means India will forever say goodbye to that part of Kashmir.

CPEC will only grow. The Americans and Indians are desperate to create a rift, but a rift cannot be created between China and Pakistan. The US and India are two little bitch nations that only know how to cry foul and meddle in the affair of other sovereign nations. We show them a big middle finger. LOL at the desperate Americans trying to reset the relationship with Pakistan. Stupid fvcks.

Pakistan China friendship is not based on treachery and hypocrisy. This relationship has a solid foundation. China doesn't bribe Pakistan to do its bidding.

Let me tell you this much. CPEC will grow massively under Imran Khan. Just because the terms of a handful of projects are being renegotiated doesn't mean that Pakistan is abandoning CPEC all together. On the contrary, the renegotiation means that China Pak ventures are resilient. After the renegotiation CPEC will expand. In fact it already has considering how KSA is also joining the project. There is only bad news for India and the US.
 
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