Investment, climate cooperation with US key to reducing Pakistan’s growing reliance on China — study

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (L) meets with Pakistani Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari at the State Department in Washington, DC, September 26, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 05 October 2022
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Investment, climate cooperation with US key to reducing Pakistan’s growing reliance on China — study

  • Study group released its findings during a visit to Washington by the head of Pakistan’s powerful military
  • Says US must move beyond leveraging aid to change Pakistan’s policies, a tactic that has been a proven failure

WASHINGTON: The United States needs to keep engaging Pakistan despite lingering distrust over Afghanistan, with investment and climate cooperation key to reducing the South Asian nation’s growing reliance on China, a study group recommended Tuesday.

The group released its findings during a visit to Washington by the head of Pakistan’s powerful military, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, a week after a trip by the civilian foreign minister, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari.

The study group, which did not involve the US government, included scholars and former US ambassadors to Pakistan Ryan Crocker, Cameron Munter and Robin Raphel, along with Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s former ambassador in Washington.

Pakistan and the United States were partners in the Cold War and, officially, in the Afghanistan war. But American officials lost patience with Islamabad which they suspected of quietly maintaining support for the Taliban, who triumphed as US troops withdrew last year.

“Instead of allowing existing differences to define the partnership, it may be time to recognize that both sides need to understand the other’s interests so that they can then find a way to work on areas of mutual concern,” the study group said.

The United States must move beyond leveraging aid to change Pakistan’s policies, a tactic that has been a proven failure.

Islamabad, in turn, needs to accept “that all of Pakistan’s problems, especially terrorism and militancy, cannot be laid at the door of the US.”

Pakistan has forged increasingly close relations with China, triggering warnings from the United States that Beijing — seen as Washington’s key global competitor — will saddle the economically troubled nation with debt.

The study group said that after previously linking the Pakistan relationship to Afghanistan or its historic rival India, the United States should avoid now seeing ties through the lens of China.

Instead, the United States can “help build Pakistan’s capacity for transparency and compliance” on Chinese loans and can reduce reliance on China by encouraging investment by US companies and others, it said.

The United States can also focus on building climate resilience — a key challenge for Pakistan, which was recently devastated by floods.

While the United States wants to step back from Afghanistan, the study group said the need for counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan “has if anything increased” due to the loss of US intelligence assets on the ground.

“While Pakistan and the US often fail to see eye-to-eye when it comes to Afghanistan, China, or India, they do share mutual interests in seeking stability in the region, combatting the problem of extremism and averting armed conflict in nuclear South Asia,” it said.


At least 14 killed as truck carrying passengers falls into canal in Pakistan

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At least 14 killed as truck carrying passengers falls into canal in Pakistan

  • The incident occurred near Punjab’s Sargodha at a time of reduced visibility on roads due to smog
  • On Friday, five people were killed in a crash involving a vehicle used to transport smuggled Iranian oil

ISLAMABAD: At least 14 people were killed after a truck carrying passengers plunged into a canal in Pakistan’s Punjab province, Pakistani state media reported on Saturday.

The incident occurred near Sargodha at a time of reduced visibility on roads due to dense smog, according to Rescue 1122 officials. The truck carrying passengers veered off the road and plunged into the Ghalapur Bangla canal which was dry.

“At least fourteen people have died in the fog-related traffic accident,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

The deceased included six children and five women, according to local media reports. The passengers were on their way to attend a funeral.

Dense fog is a recurring hazard on Pakistan’s highways during the winter months, particularly across Punjab and parts of Sindh, where poor visibility often leads to serious road accidents.

But fog is not the only reason behind these crashes as some of the incidents have also resulted from speeding and reckless driving, poor awareness of traffic rules, overloading and weak enforcement of laws.

On Friday, at least five people were killed in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province after a vehicle transporting smuggled Iranian oil hit another vehicle coming from the opposite direction, a police official said. The collision occurred in the Washuk district that borders Iran.

“Five people were burnt to death on the spot while both Zamyad vehicles were completely destroyed,” Superintendent of Police (SP) Shafique Shahwani told Arab News. “One of the vehicles was transporting Iranian oil which caused a fire-ball after the crash.”

Blue-colored, right-hand-driven Zamyad vehicles are frequently used for smuggling Iranian goods and oil into Pakistan through the 909-kilometer-long porous border between the countries.

The vehicles have often caused fatal accidents in the province due to reckless driving, while the presence of smuggled oil on these vehicles instantly triggers fire and causes major damages.

Nine Afghan nationals were killed and 10 others injured in Balochistan’s Chaghi district after a pickup truck collided with another oil carrying vehicle in Dec., officials said.