The tripartite India-Iran-Afghanistan pact on
Iran’s Chabahar port’s development and its linking with Afghanistan has left
Pakistan feeling ‘encircled’ and ‘isolated’ in the region.
At a three-day workshop organised by an Islamabad think tank, two former
defence secretaries, both retired generals, opined that the pact and the port
that would come up would be “a security risk for Pakistan.”
The feeling appears to have become more acute after Iranian envoy to
Islamabad has revealed that Tehran had offered the project first to Pakistan
and to China. He implied that neither took the offer.
‘Business is business, politics is politics’, Iranian envoy Mehdi
Honerdoost said at the Institute of Strategic Studies in Islamabad (ISSI) on
May 26, in the wake critical comments from Pakistan and sections of its media.
The envoy said that the Iranian offer was “still on the table.” He also
engaged in deft diplomacy saying that Chabahar and Pakistan’s Gwadar port, far
from being rivals, could be “sister ports” that could engage in cooperation in
future.
“The deal is not finished. We are waiting for new members. Pakistan, our brotherly neighbours and China, a great partner of the Iranians and a good friend of Pakistan, are both welcome,” the envoy was reported to have told his Pakistani audience.
“The deal is not finished. We are waiting for new members. Pakistan, our brotherly neighbours and China, a great partner of the Iranians and a good friend of Pakistan, are both welcome,” the envoy was reported to have told his Pakistani audience.
The Chabahar pact signed on May 23 in the presence of Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani, with Iranian
President Hasan Rouhani playing the host snd calling it ‘historic’ and “a
milestone” in regional cooperation, consciously keeps out Pakistan since the
stake-holders are seeking an alternative route to Karachi.
To India’s offer of spending USD 500 million, Japan is chipping in with
funds and technology. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is scheduled to visit Tehran in
August – the first top level visit in 38 years.
Pakistan’s apparent chagrin is evident from the fact that the United
States that has yet to fully lift the sanctions on Iran and had asked India and
Afghanistan not to make haste has, since the pact’s signing, approved it. The
US State Department has noted that there was no military element in the pact
that, presumably, would require the US to oppose it.
The approval comes even as Washington has moved to block payment for
Pakistan’s F-16 combat aircraft purchase and military aid worth USD 300
million, the latter clearly stipulating that Islamabad must move against the
Haqqani network operating from the Pakistani soil. In that wake has come the
killing of Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Mansour.
The US thinks Pakistan has ensured that Sirajuddin Haqqani, a wanted man
with bounty his head, while not given the top job by the Taliban, is retained
as a deputy (naib ameer) of the Afghan Taliban. President Barack Obama, his
tenure barely a few months now, has justified Mansour’s killing in a drone
attack and has called it “a clear message” to all the stake holders in
Afghanistan.
Whoever wins the American presidency in November, it is likely that
Washington would retain its tough posture on Afghanistan-Pakistan region.
Reflecting Pakistan’s concerns vis a vis the US and especially in the context
of Afghanistan’s peace process and linking it to Chabahar pact, Najam Sethi
says in an editorial in The Friday Times that this has not been possible
because “the obsession of the Pakistani military with the increasing sphere of
regional influence of “arch-enemy” India.
“These fears have been exacerbated by the India-Afghan-Iran project to
link the Iranian port of Chahbahar with Afghanistan aimed at diminishing the
prospects of Pak-China’s CPEC corridor into Afghanistan and central Asia.
Iranian ambassador Honerdoost took care to say the pact was not meant to
denigrate or rival the CPEC corridor. It is significant that he marked out
India for praise before an Islamabad audience. He said: “India was a good
friend during the sanctions, the only country to import oil from us during
sanctions”.
That India continued with these imports till the US choked banking
transactions being made through Turkey is well known. Also well known, much to
the annoyance of the US and Iran’s rivals in the region, especially Saudi
Arabia, is that India kept the supply lines open through Dubai to meet the
day-to-day needs the sanctions-hit Iranian people. This policy had been devised
when Pranab Mukherjee, now India’s President, was the External Affairs Minister
under the late PV Narasimha Rao and was continued by subsequent Indian
governments.
Pakistan has called the Chabahar pact “a missed opportunity.” But Dawn
newspaper has said in an editorial that “Pakistan’s foreign policy is built on
rivalry, whereas it would be to the country’s long-term advantage to view its
regional environment through the lens of cooperation instead”.
“It is realistic, and not naïve, to suggest that in the evolving
regional situation, cooperation yields greater benefits, while rivalry and
conflict only serve to bottle the country up further,” the editorial said but
again expressed serious doubts whether Islamabad would do this.
*Mahendra Ved is Columnist and Analyst.
No comments:
Post a Comment