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A gold-plated gun and $20 billion: How Pakistan could get sucked into the Saudi-Iran rivalry

More and more it seems to me that this entire episode was conducted to stifle any chance for Pakistani economy to resurge and while it has backfired spectacularly, I believe something more sinister would follow.

The early skirmishes at Rann of Kutch were also started in the month of February and peaked in March, April. This time the target is Pakistan's possible economic recovery under this new government.
 
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I was watching Fawad Ch interview with Russian Channel..

And the anchor asked why India and Iran are accusing Pakistan at same time, you must be doing something, I heard this question many times all over foreign Channels.
 
No ... I meant you !
And I meant A holes like these
433111_5349731_Major-General-Mohammad-Ali-Jafari_akhbar.jpg

Pathetic...
 
The only groups we host serve our and only our interests, no one else's. Lol, superpowers couldnt make us back down from this policy and we will continue it. We are fighting mushriks like Rasool Allah did and u iranians are busy fighting other muslims, see the difference. One more thing....no amount of bitching from Iran will change even an inch of our policy. U need to do more to get in the good books of Pakistan. You need to stop hosting hindu terrorists in Iran that strike Balochistan and Karachi. Do more and stop bitching, we have been patient with u uptill now, keep this up and we will shame u just as we shamed India infront of the entire world fairly recently. Playing some PUBG in destroyed and defenceless countries like Syria and Iraq has made u Iranians dellusional. We knw very well how to bring people back to earth.

OK, so hosting terrorists serves your interests. Let's see how that works out for you. Don't expect Iran to take kindly to it.
 
just looks like the intl media is pissed off about money coming into Pakistan.

The Americans are pissed off at everything nowadays. Let them burn.

OK, so hosting terrorists serves your interests. Let's see how that works out for you. Don't expect Iran to take kindly to it.

We know what Iran is doing. You are allowing Indian terrorists to harm Pakistan. Don’t get into this debate about hosting terrorists.

I was watching Fawad Ch interview with Russian Channel..

And the anchor asked why India and Iran are accusing Pakistan at same time, you must be doing something, I heard this question many times all over foreign Channels.

We all know that India and Iran have the same interest. Pakistan is competition and that is how Iran views Pakistan. From Gwadar to Arab investment. Of course the Iranians aren’t going to approve of this, but we don’t care. We look at our own interest. We don’t care about Indian/Iranian accusations.

We don’t cry rivers when India invests in Chabahar. We expect Iran to behave similarly. When KSA is investing in Pakistan the Iranians need to calm down.

A gold-plated submachine gun and $20 billion: How Pakistan could get sucked into the Saudi-Iran rivalry
  • Saudi Arabia announced $20 billion in infrastructure and energy investments for the cash-strapped country of 200 million, which is currently on the brink of financial crisis.
  • Many of the projects are located in Pakistan's impoverished and restive Balochistan region, which lies along the 565-mile border with Saudi arch-rival Iran.
Natasha Turak | @NatashaTurak
Published 7 Hours Ago Updated 1 Hour Ago CNBC.com

AAMIR QURESHI | AFP | Getty Images
Pakistani soldiers (R) patrol on a street next to welcoming posters of Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Islamabad on February 17, 2019.
Pakistan risks becoming the latest arena for Saudi Arabia and Iran's rivalry as it accepts billions of dollars in aid and investment from Riyadh.

Perhaps one of the most visually memorable moments of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's red carpet tour of Asia last month was the gifting to him, by Pakistani senators, of a gold-plated submachine gun. Pakistan, the crown prince's first stop on his tour that also included India and China, announced a national holiday in honor of his visit, calling Saudi Arabia "a friend in need."


Handout | Senate of Pakistan
Pakistani senators gifted the gold-plated gun, a German-made Heckler & Koch MP5, to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during his visit to Pakistan.
And indeed, Islamabad is happy: Saudi Arabia announced $20 billion in infrastructure and energy investments for the cash-strapped country of 200 million, which is currently on the brink of financial crisis and trying to avoid its thirteenth International Monetary Fund bailout.


The location of the investments is significant. Many of the projects focus on oil refining infrastructure in Pakistan's impoverished and restive Balochistan region, which lies along the 565-mile border with Saudi arch-rival Iran.

"I don't think the Pakistanis want to declare Iran an enemy and have a full-on confrontation... but they have to do something for that Saudi money." -Gregory Gause, International Affairs Department head, Texas A&M University
"Mohammed bin Salman has this strategic view that you've got to pressure Iran. And with Pakistan, he'd love to be able to pressure Iran from two sides," Gregory Gause, head of the International Affairs Department at Texas A&M University, told CNBC.

That presents a hard choice for the Pakistanis, who currently neither see Iran as a major ally nor a major threat, though they are wary of Iran's increasing cooperation with their own arch-rival, India.

"I don't think the Pakistanis want to declare Iran an enemy and have a full-on confrontation," Gause said, "but they have to do something for that Saudi money."

baluchistan_map_03-pakistan%20saudi%20iran.1551881336732.png


And the Iranians aren't taking it lightly — Tehran has long accused Saudi Arabia of fomenting unrest in its border area with Pakistan, which is home to Iranian Sunni anti-regime militants who have launched numerous attacks on Iranian military personnel. The Saudis deny the accusations.

In February, Sunni militants from the extremist group Jaish al-Adl killed 27 Iranian Revolutionary Guards along the border, triggering the accusation from Tehran that Pakistan is housing militants and allowing them to attack Iran.

Helping Pakistan: What's in it for the Saudis?
For Riyadh, the Pakistan deals are more strategic than economic, says Gause.

"There's just no economic benefit to Saudi in Pakistan," he said. "Let's face it — Pakistan is kind of a basket case. But for the Saudis, Pakistan is first and foremost a security partner, a reliable Muslim ally in intra-Muslim disputes."

Indeed, the two have a long history of helping each other out. When Pakistan was hit with international sanctions for its nuclear tests in the 1990s, Riyadh came to its rescue with oil supplies and funds. And there are some 70,000 Pakistani nationals serving across Saudi Arabia's armed forces, experts estimate, with more deployed in recent years to provide training and assistance to the Saudi military.


PRIME MINISTRY OF PAKISTAN | HANDOUT | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images
Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan (R) meets Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman (L) in Islamabad, Pakistan on February 17, 2019.
Pakistan's military is ranked as the world's 17th strongest, according to military analysis website GlobalFirepower.com, in between Israel and North Korea. Saudi Arabia's is ranked 25th.

There are also rumors that Pakistan, a nuclear power, could share its weapons technology with the Saudis, who have expressed their desire for a nuclear program with no restrictions on the uranium enrichment capabilities necessary for making a bomb.

While experts agree this sort of help is unlikely, "I think that the Saudis nurture hopes that if they need it either conventionally or in a nuclear sense, the Pakistanis will give them assistance," Gause said.

… but it could backfire
There are plenty of ways this could backfire on the Pakistanis. For one, Iran, which is Shia, could foment sectarian unrest within Pakistan's 20 percent Shia population, the second-largest of any country in the world. Thousands of Pakistanis have been killed in sectarian violence in the last decade.

Iran could also serve as a gateway for Indian spies to infiltrate Pakistan, something some in Pakistan have already accused it of doing.



Saudi overseas investments give some guarantees, expert says 3:45 AM ET Mon, 18 Feb 2019 | 04:23

"Iran is likely to be on Pakistan's mind, as there is a growing partnership between India and Iran," said Kamal Madishetty, a research analyst at the Economist Unit, pointing to India's multi-billion dollar Chabahar Port project in Iran's border region with Pakistan. "This has unsettled the leadership in Pakistan, so the relationship with Saudi is kind of a counterbalance to all of that."

A new proxy battleground?
Pakistan "to some extent already has" become a proxy theater for Iran and Saudi Arabia, Gause said, but he added that this was at a relatively low level — nothing like what we've seen in Syria, Yemen or Iraq, for instance. That's because Pakistan is a relatively stronger state that hasn't been crippled by war. Furthermore, it doesn't always do what the Saudis want: In 2015, the government in Islamabad passed a resolution ruling out sending troops to join the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, despite pressure from Riyadh.

But there are indications that Pakistan will indirectly provide more support for the Saudi campaign in Yemen, despite the war's deep unpopularity among the Pakistani public.

Last year, when Pakistan sent an additional 1,000 troops to Saudi Arabia, the defense minister made public assurances that they wouldn't be participating in the Yemen War.

"But it's interesting," Madishetty observed, "the Pakistani army has developed significant expertise in mountain warfare and counterinsurgency, and they will be transferring these skills to Saudi forces."

The only mountainous region within Saudi Arabia that's currently a conflict zone? Its border with Yemen.



Natasha Turak

Americans being Americans. They got humiliated in Afghanistan and are now poking their ugly nose in our matters. These cowboys just cannot refrain from meddling. It doesn’t matter. We will return the favor like we always have.

Pakistan has clearly chosen its side already.

Yeah and that is Pakistan’s side.
 
Oh I meant TTP.
Still dont get ur poujt, when i said fighting mushriks i meant India and by the way TTP had nothing to do with Islam. They wete trained and supported by TAW and Ci
OK, so hosting terrorists serves your interests. Let's see how that works out for you. Don't expect Iran to take kindly to it.
And does hosting RAW agents like Kalboshan in Iran serve ur interests? Dont think Pakistan will take kindly to it.
 
In my humble opinion, Iran will get nuclear weapon when USA shrink sphere of influence. Actually USA is shrinking sphere of influence already.

If I am Iran leader, I will focus on economy development and science. Wait patiently, when USA decline, grab the window of opportunity and arm with nuclear weapon.

Pakistan is surrounded by Iran, Afghanistan and India. A mature and healthy relationship between Pakistan and Iran benefit both countries' interest.

Arabs have money for now, but how long they can last? New energy and electric cars made oil and gas less and less important.

We are not in the business of warmongering. PM Imran Khan has already made it abundantly clear to all sides that Pakistan won’t be gun for hire anymore. The Saudis are welcome to invest. Anyone is welcome to invest.

We don’t give a fvck about what the irrelevant American media has to say. Our interests are supreme.

When Iran receives investment from India we don’t cry foul. This is business plain and simple.
 
If we count your decades of activities against our interests ... Why not !

Your terrorist ISI killed our diplomats in Afghanistan ... You will definitely pay for that .
Ok make u pay, we are waiting lol.....
 

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