What's new

‘Bangladesh should prioritise its national interests above all’

Black_cats

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,031
Reaction score
-5
Published on 09:00 AM, September 14, 2023

‘Bangladesh should prioritise its national interests above all’​


anm_muniruzzaman_interview_0.jpg

Naimul Alam Alvi
Major General (retd) ANM Muniruzzaman, president of the Bangladesh Institute of Peace and Security Studies (BIPSS), discusses the ongoing diplomatic activities of the country in an exclusive interview with Naimul Alam Alvi of The Daily Star.

How would you assess the recent diplomatic activities in Bangladesh, starting with the visit of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, then the G20 Summit, and finally the visit of French President Emmanuel Macron?

The visit of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to Bangladesh, the first by a Russian foreign minister in many years, was a difficult one, as Russia has been isolated by many countries following its invasion of Ukraine.

Lavrov made a number of controversial statements during his visit, but Bangladesh managed to navigate these challenges relatively well.

Then Bangladesh attended the G20 Summit in New Delhi as an invited guest. It was an opportunity for us to participate in a high-profile global agenda, and to have direct bilateral meetings with a number of heads of states. However, in the meetings that were held, besides hoping for increased cooperation for regional stability, nothing important regarding Bangladesh was discussed – that we know of. So, I would consider that the bilateral engagements at the G20 Summit were fairly routine.

A selfie, some visits, and a show of diplomacy

Besides that, Bangladesh was invited and joined the new Global Biofuel Alliance. However, no details on how this alliance will work and how Bangladesh can benefit from it have so far been available. The G20 Summit covered a wide range of issues and agenda, such as climate change, multilateralism, infrastructure development, and macroeconomic risks and measures. It also covered quite a lot on digital infrastructure. These are important to us because many points in the G20 declaration are issues that Bangladesh has interest in.

There was a lot of euphoria in Bangladesh about the photographs that emerged, showing US President Joe Biden taking a selfie with our prime minister. I consider this to be a regular gesture of diplomatic nicety. It does show that it was a happy occasion. But I would not give it any political mileage.

However, there was a big deviation from the 2022 G20 Bali Summit, where Russia's invasion of Ukraine was directly mentioned and condemned. This aspect was completely omitted in this year's declaration. The other major factor in the 2023 G20 New Delhi Summit is that the African Union has been declared as the new permanent member of G20. This inclusion brought in a wide number of countries' interests into the G20 process. So, we can hope that Africa will be adequately represented in the next G20 Summit in Brazil.

The international system is in a flux, and we need to take note of the rapid changes that are taking place around us. Although limited in scope, Bangladesh has declared its Indo-Pacific Outlook. We should further deepen our understanding of the Indo-Pacific and incorporate it in our strategy.
On the sidelines of the G20 Summit, there was a declaration of an economic corridor named India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC). What would be the implications of such a corridor, particularly for Bangladesh?

This is a fairly extensive multimodal connectivity initiative to link railways, ports, energy lines, digital linkages, and green connectivity. It's estimated that if this is implemented, trade distance between India and Europe will be reduced by 40 percent. However, the concept paper they released isn't very detailed. This seems to be a multi-trillion-dollar project, but we don't yet know how it will be financed or implemented. So this is still a fairly aspirational concept. However, they declared that there was a working committee and within two months they would reveal a working paper with detailed information. We should not assume how it will affect Bangladesh at this point.

Although it's not stated, we can assume that the IMEC is being developed as an alternative to China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). We know that all South Asian countries except India are signatory to the BRI. So, India has enthusiastically joined the IMEC initiative. If IMEC is completely implemented, it can emerge as a big challenge to the BRI. It can potentially bring significant geostrategic and geo-economic shifts in the region and the global order.

Read more

Global unity of urgent importance

How important do you think the French president's visit was to Bangladesh?

Macron's visit was fairly significant. First of all, this is the first Bangladesh visit by a French president in 33 years. This seems to be in response to the invitation from our prime minister when she visited France in 2021.

However, France also has significant strategic, economic and trade interests in Bangladesh.
If we analyse the joint statement by Bangladesh and France, there are a number of strategic indications. France has been showing increased interest in this region since they declared their Indo-Pacific strategy in 2020. France is advocating to consider them as not just a foreign player in the Indo-Pacific region, but as a resident power as they have four sovereign territories in the Indian Ocean. With two major global powers competing for influence in South Asia and the Asia-Pacific region, France is indicating that they want to emerge as a third power to create an alternative space in the region. This visit is a part of their Indo-Pacific push.

France has direct trade interests in Bangladesh as well. Our first-ever satellite, Bangabandhu-1, was manufactured by a French company. Now they want to manufacture our second satellite.

Bangladesh has agreed to buy 10 Airbus planes from France, which is a big purchase. France also wants to sell Rafale fighter aircraft to Bangladesh. Perhaps this was also considered during the visit. Overall, trade between Bangladesh and France was an important agenda for the French president's visit.

Read more

Bangladesh-France ties on the right track

What do you think is the reason behind Bangladesh's growing geopolitical importance?

Bangladesh is a key maritime nation. We are a Bay of Bengal country and an Indian Ocean country. Our geostrategic location is significant in today's geopolitics. Bangladesh has been growing its ties with two emerging global powers – India and China. China has already proven themselves as a major power in the world. And our neighbour India has become a major power in Asia. So, through our colocation with these two major powers, our geopolitical importance has increased.

Besides, we have been on a path of great economic development over the last decade. So, we are also attractive as an emerging big market. However, currently our economy is greatly faltering. We have gone to the IMF for a loan. I'm afraid our economic leverage has diminished.

Read more

Bangladesh’s geopolitical position provides for unique opportunities

What should be Bangladesh's stance in this situation?

Bangladesh should prioritise its national interests above all, and try to maintain geostrategic neutrality as much as possible. It is important for us to navigate a complex geopolitical landscape. The international system is in a flux, and we need to take note of the rapid changes that are taking place around us.

Although limited in scope, Bangladesh has declared its Indo-Pacific Outlook. We should further deepen our understanding of the Indo-Pacific and incorporate it in our strategy.


Follow The Daily Star Opinion on Facebook for the latest opinions, commentaries and analyses by experts and professionals. To contribute your article or letter to The Daily Star Opinion, see our guidelines for submission.

 
The strategic outlook of Bangladesh and India are not the same. India considers China a strategic competitor while Bangladesh considers China a strategic ally. In a greater strategic game plan we cannot and should not take a neutral stance. We have to maintain a deep strategic relation with China even if it means alienating India.
 
There was a lot of euphoria in Bangladesh about the photographs that emerged, showing US President Joe Biden taking a selfie with our prime minister. I consider this to be a regular gesture of diplomatic nicety. It does show that it was a happy occasion. But I would not give it any political mileage.

Besides, we have been on a path of great economic development over the last decade. So, we are also attractive as an emerging big market. However, currently our economy is greatly faltering. We have gone to the IMF for a loan. I'm afraid our economic leverage has diminished.

Very sensible assessment overall.

The general spit out facts. The two statements above will trigger BAL supporters, but they are absolutly true.

Uncle Biden taking selfie does not mean Hasina gets a free pass to stage a rigged election and continue with human rights violation. US still has those sanctions in place.

As for the economy - completely agree. Our economic leverage has indeed diminished. This is what happens when you have unchecked corruption and zero governance. Development can never be sustainable if there is no governance. Bangladesh was indeed on a good trajectory, credit does go to Hasina for opting for some business friendly policies and strategy but implementation and governance is where she failed. In her effort to maintain power through absolute control, she kept her thieving loyal dogs happy by allowing them to steal people's money with zero repercussions. Not to forget the daylight robbery her own family members have been committing. She has now turned Bangladesh into a complete kleptocracy.

Even though Hasina and her cronies will divert the attention towards the global economic recession to hide their failure, the real reason for Bangladesh's impending economic failure is unchecked corruption. Global economic recession and high interest rates are just going to accelerate the process.

There are alarm bells everywhere, and Bangladesh is heading towards the same fate as Pakistan and Sri Lanka. It's just a matter of time unless there is a dramatic change, which can only happen through a regime change and significant reduction in corruption. That does not seem likely at all, at least not in the short run.

On a lighter note - only good coming out of this impending mess is that it would finally put a stop to non-stop bragging online by deluded Bangladeshis high on GDP juice.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom