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Why Obama is skipping Pakistan?

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Why Obama is skipping Pakistan?

Mosharraf Zaidi
Most of the Pakistani response to the visit by President Barack Obama to India seems to be of the sour-grapes variety. These sour grapes are the fruit of Pakistan's intoxication with regional parity. Pakistanis are upset, even jilted, that the recently humbled President Obama is visiting India, and not paying Pakistan a visit on the same trip. Surely, we jest.
There's something exceptionally problematic about the misplaced Pakistani pride that expects the United States to treat Pakistan in the same manner that it treats India. Pakistan is a net-consumer of American taxpayer benevolence. India is a net-contributor to the American taxpayers' bottom-line. What part of "more money" is so difficult for the Pakistani nationalist elite to understand? Perhaps some numbers will help populate the imagination.
Pakistan has the injuriously infamous Kerry Lugar Bill of course, which is a $1.5 billion gift from American taxpayers to the Pakistani elite, to help purchase the things that the Pakistani elite should be paying for-bridges, schools and other brick-and-mortar infrastructure that contractors across the country will find much harder to scam than they would like.
At the "strategic dialogue" this past month of course, Pakistan was also able to secure a promise from the ever-weakening Democratic administration, that it would seek an additional $2 billion in military funding for Pakistan, from a House of Representatives that is fresh from a set of victories for the Jamaat-e-Tea faction of the Hizb-e-Republicans.
So this friendship between America and Pakistan (regardless of what it has cost Pakistan), potentially costs the American taxpayer a cool $3.5 billion a year in cash and military hardware.
To get a look at some of the things President's Obama's entourage will be doing in India-other than horrendous (though very cute) attempts to seem like they are down with Bollywood-we turn to the excellent reporting of Paul Beckett (Wall Street Journal) and Alister Bull (Reuters). Their summaries of business deals on Obama's agenda include:
$917 million for Bucyrus International, a Wisconsin-based manufacturer, to sell mining equipment to Sasan Power in Madhya Pradesh for a 3,960 megawatt powerplant.
$2.7 billion for Boeing to supply 30 Boeing 737s to the plethora of Indian airlines that have helped transport tens of millions of creative, innovative and risk-loving Indian entrepreneurs around their country.
$4.5 billion to $5.8 billion for the purchase of 10 C-17 aircraft, as well as hundreds of engines and spare parts for the Indian military.
$50 million for Caterpillar to supply marine engines to the Indian Coast Guard.
$800 million for General Electric to supply fighter jet engines to the Indian Aeronautical Development Agency for a light combat aircraft for India.
$500 million for General Electric to supply super heavyweight gas turbine engines for Reliance Energy.
These deals alone are worth more than $10 billion in total transactions, with the cash heading from India to the shores of the recession-prone American economy that can't seem to create jobs without someone's benevolence. They do not include some of the massive deals for which dollar figures are not public, because they are deals between private sector companies in both countries.
One of the most promising potential deals is the one between the Tata Group and two firms, Eaton and Cummins. Together these companies have developed the already in-operation Hybrid Tata Starbus-which was used at the Commonwealth Games to transport players to and from venues. Potential contracts for this kind of bus will be in the thousands, with New Delhi alone looking to add 6,000 vehicles to its public sector transportation network.
Another potential deal for India's transportation sector that has yet to be finalised is the purchase of 4,000 state-of-the-art diesel engines, worth at least $4 billion by Indian Railways, from either GE or Caterpillar.
The total value of these deals is one thing. The total number of jobs these deals will produce in the United States is another. Obama Administration officials are confident that the deals will deliver at least 50,000 jobs for manufacturers in the US.
So just to recap the numbers here, Pakistan is a country that the United States is paying $3.5 billion in total, because without this money Pakistan threatens to go Talibankrupt. That $3.5 billion is going to come from the American taxpayers' paycheck. Its money they're forced to pay because of the gullibility and guilt of centrist American politicians.
In contrast, India is a country that is going to spend more than $10 billion to buy American goods and services, and in that process, will help create 50,000 jobs, and the paychecks that go with them.
Now ask yourself which country is going to get special treatment? That melody in the distance is the sound American violins playing Vande Mataram.
Of course, none of this means that the US-India romance is righteous. It is what it is. The flowery rhetoric of shared values between the US and India are cute-but America will not and cannot treat Oregon the way India has treated, is treating and will continue to treat Kashmir. The closest thing the US has to a domestic insurgency is Keith Olbermann's moral uprightness, or the Tea Party's commitment to making sure rich people don't have to pay taxes. India has a Naxalite problem that is fully and wholly existential in nature. America is a fully grown organism, as nation-states go. India is still growing into its own clothes, and into its rightful place on the world stage.
Picking at India's soft underbelly is for the bitter and the out of touch. It is hardly constructive or relevant to the Pakistani condition. The only relevant lessons from the Obama visit to India are the ones to be gleaned from the deals being made.
It is unfortunate that Pakistan's deeply polarised national discourse is so obsessed with identity. This political piñata of identity has always been exploited by both ends of the spectrum, sucking out all the air from the discourse and leaving no space for talking about the economy or jobs. Thanks to 9/11, it is now the overwhelmingly dominant lens for foreign policy (India, Afghanistan, America etc.), for social services (education curriculum, population control etc.) and even for technology (Facebook bans, "media Taliban" etc.).
All the while, there are mouths to feed, money to be earned, deals to be made. While we drown in the inanities of this country's infinite and perpetual search for identity, we are deepening our current bankruptcy, and ensuring a future of mostly begging for handouts. Obama next stops are South Korea, Indonesia and Japan. The reason he is not visiting Pakistan is obvious. Pakistan does not belong on that list of countries. And that is not India's fault.

Why Obama is skipping Pakistan
 
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Obama balls aloft

Juggling is one of the essential skills in every presidential toolkit. President Obama has a number of balls in the air as he picks a diplomatic route through his visit to India. India is an emerging vital market for the USA, but its protectionist trading environment makes it difficult for Americans to do business there - a fact picked up by Obama when he linked reciprocity in trading arrangements with his own need to stimulate the American economy where unemployment is running at 10 per cent. Having just had a thrashing in the US midterm elections Obama is more than ever mindful of the need to mend his domestic fences, though the chances of India opening its retail and financial services markets to American investment appear slim today. A couple of other balls have greater local significance – Afghanistan and Pakistan. A nod of approval was given in the direction of India's engagement with development in Afghanistan. Again this links to his domestic agenda as India will be seen as a 'safe pair of hands' in Afghanistan in the post-American world there, whereas we are perceived as a part of the Afghan problem rather than a part of the solution.
Obama was careful to be seen to give equal weight (though equally careful not to give equal status) to India and Pakistan in terms of a satisfactory resolution to the Afghan conundrum, but offered no hostages to fortune leaving both balls safely in the air. Other balls had a more wobbly trajectory; Kashmir and Mumbai to name but two. His suggestion that ourselves and India may like to try our hands at something more open to resolution as a way-paver for talks on Kashmir sounded like a diplomatic way of doing nothing by saying little. On the Mumbai issue and terrorism generally the ball is looking hard to catch. In line with what his own senior officers and other donor nations have been saying, he repeated the 'do more' mantra by saying that we were not moving fast enough to counter terrorism. India, he said, had much to gain by having a stable Pakistan, which may have been an oblique hint to India to stop its own gameplaying. Or so we may think. India is important to America in ways that we never have been and may not be. We have very little that America wants and a lot that it does not want in the form of actual as well as latent instability. The key statement on America's future relationship with India came at the joint press conference held with Indian PM Manmohan Singh. "The relationship between the United States and India will be one of the defining partnerships of the 21st century" said Obama, completing the circle by saying that he now recognised India as a world power. India and America may be drawing the preparatory sketches for a new form of empire, and an Amer-asian hegemony is not beyond the bounds of possibility.

Obama balls aloft
 
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Even though he is not visiting Pakistan still its not hurting Pakistan in anyway. US - Pakistan relations are not dependent of US - India Relations.

PS. I have not read the articles. dont have time. Maybe later.
 
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Even though he is not visiting Pakistan still its not hurting Pakistan in anyway. US - Pakistan relations are not dependent of US - India Relations.

PS. I have not read the articles. dont have time. Maybe later.

UN-fortunately your FO spokesman doesn't think so:

Obama backs India?s drive for UN power Latest news, breaking news, world news, international news and current affairs

BTW, please read the articles before responding. A compulsive responder only ruins the thread.
 
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And anywhere he said that this US - India relation will effect Pak - US relation. We will show our concerns on India getting permanent seat.

Let me help you:

“Pakistan believes that US endorsement of India’s bid for its permanent seat in the Security Council adds to the complexity of the process of reforms of the Council,” the foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said in a statement.

Keywords: Pakistan, US, India, FO spokesman Abdul Basit.

P.S. Read the articles.
 
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Once you told me that you are an aged man!!!! I doubt that!

It's not about me yaar. I just hate it when people comment on threads without reading the OP. It's the perfect recipe for derailing a thread.

BTW, I recommend you to read the articles. They're quite good.
 
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Article says..just what it is...a fact. good read, if you are still not sure why the discrimination between india and Pakistan by the US.
 
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I feel differently on such subjects.

We need to stop comparing & lamenting when such events happen. Both nations are different with diff dynamics , aspirations , capabilities & demonstrated potential.

Will this imply that when Obama visits Pak India should sulk ? I find it childish and unbecoming for nations to feel slighted or elated by such visits.
 
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I feel differently on such subjects.

We need to stop comparing & lamenting when such events happen. Both nations are different with diff dynamics , aspirations , capabilities & demonstrated potential.

Will this imply that when Obama visits Pak India should sulk ? I find it childish and unbecoming for nations to feel slighted or elated by such visits.

Agreed. Which is why I was surprised to see reactions in the Pakistani press that were rather dejected/annoyed at Obama giving Pakistan a miss. Basically, the US needs India for some stuff, India needs the US for some, and we are bound to have a reciprocal relationship. There is no need to compare US-Pak and India-Pak, just take it as-is.
 
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