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As you rightly pointed out, BRI is China’s strategic game plan in the next 100 years, of which CPEC is the flagship project. China has committed large amount of resource in capital, human and technology into the project to enable the process. What has happened along LAC will has shown the China’s willingness to participate and defend the project in military dimension.I think that this gives Pakistan some breathing space to re-orient because much of our progress has been impeded with the great threat next door. Over the last two decades we've had had multiple firms and it's been a battle for survival. Now that the Western front is relatively secure, we can focus our attention on clearing further issues internally and focus towards our own economic development. If one were an optimist I'd hope that bureaucratic change may come but knowing how poisonously powerful that sector is, I'd be guarded about it. As CPEC is the flagship of the Belt initiative it's the best time that we use whatever time we have to gear ourselves to gain maximum advantages from it and focus towards being a more stable nation economically so we can counter our threats in a safer and stronger manner.
As you rightly pointed out, BRI is China’s strategic game plan in the next 100 years, of which CPEC is the flagship project. China has committed large amount of resource in capital, human and technology into the project to accelerate the process. What has happened along LAC will has shown the China’s willingness to participate and defend the project in military dimension.
Over a longer term, the success of CPEC will heavily dependent on the security environment that China and Pakistan can create in the region, not only within Pakistan but also the entire South Asia region. Investors need to be confident about security and social stability that the host country can provide. China is obviously making the message clear that it will go to great lengths to defend it, particularly at China’s doorstep.
US’ withdrawal from Afghanistan is certainly a welcoming step towards the direction. However India is still highly susceptible about the BRI and hostile to CPEC due to a mix of reasons. I think Indian leadership does understand very well that BRI can benefit India tremendously which aligns with their goal of economic development. I’d be shocked if they don’t. However they are uncomfortable with a growing Chinese influence and footprint in the region and a powerful and prosperous Pakistan and this view has clearly overpowered their thought process. It is certainly regrettable that they couldn’t see the full picture and the recent approximation with Australia reaffirms this stance.
Pakistan and China would most simply take a pragmatic and agile approach and focus on building infrastructure and economy. Direct involvement by China military could allow Pakistan to divert some of their energy into economical front and accelerate the progress.
Very quickly, without prejudice: Focusing solely on STEM fields is EXTREMELY dangerous; it breeds fanboys. I put most of the reasons for India suddenly over the last ten or fifteen years having developed a beefy segment of totally toxic minds to this phenomenon: the growth of capitation fee colleges for engineering and for medical education that built a generation that was trained but not educated. So this flood of internal migrants from the villages and small towns brought all their prejudices and all their unrelieved majoritarian impulses to the city, sacrificed enormously to get trained, and got the money and surplus time to range freely over the more sinister parts of the Internet. The result is what you see on social media, on the comments section of Dawn, in sneers and foul-mouthed superficially patriotic comments on YouTube, in gangs roaming Quora - the lot.
It is imperative that the concentration should be on academics; if there is STEM (there must be, there has to be), it has to be through courses that actively seek to build balanced personalities, people who are aware of the past, who are not brain-washed into religion-driven fascist mind-sets, who are open to questioning their fundamental beliefs and systems, who are open to tolerance of those who deviate from their own beliefs.
I could not emphasise more what has just been so tersely articulated above - a more holistic approach towards development rather than a mere specialist one.
This should be inscribed in letters of gold and EVERY teacher should be summoned into a mass assembly once a week and asked to reflect on this fundamental goal of education, of education and not of training.
Agree totally with both your points.
Its very simple, India does not trust the Chinese.Agreed, I think that the current weaning will of the Western powers, The US and NATO, to be involved directly demands that the Pak-China alliance keep the check on the situation. This isn't ideological but purely the realpolitik of the era: much of the ME and CARs can be utilized to create unrest especially Afghanistan, which is yet to stablize. There's simply no other option left.
Secondly, I'm also surprised that the pragmatic centre of Indian political junta has not appreciated the opportunity that BRI offers them as well. They would have a massive market to expand to with little investment. However, I think this is from the inept bureaucratic system of the nation which perhaps thinks that they would be able to retain their own power with maintaining the status-quo. I have read that the progress of India is despite its executive branch rather than because of it and here it shows that.
Thirdly, the great imbalance that India shows also exposes that there is a need for massive re-orientation of the nation: for instance, China was able to drastically reduce poverty levels with its growth but India has not been able to implement the same level of progress at the home front. That once again shows a 'confused' policy making process. Thus, it seems that they are being held by regressive mentality in their political process.
Moreover, it's also surprising that India is not offering any other alternative to the BRI and its wide arching aims before challenging China and expecting a realistic manner of being able to prevent it from being realized and losing potential allies. I think Afghanistan would be a future example of it. In the end, each nation looks for its own advantage.
Lastly, I think this exposes a huge strategic mistake and frankly hypocrisy on the Indian defence dimension: it has always justified the size of its forces by addressing Pakistan and China as potential threats. However, their focus on ground has heavily been towards Pakistan exclusively. Therefore, when China enters the field, I think, it's quite clear that the Indian military was not prepared to answer the threat in any appreciable manner. I think this justifies what Pakistan has always been stressing that it must maintain a balance of power against its neighbour because it has malintent towards it. Once focused upon, I think, this shows a lack of foresight on their part and a clear cut message to the region.
I submit that personalities are already built during primary education, and further refined during secondary education. Social sciences create the other extreme: leftists. We have many a bad experience with those in our own country. If you want the country to progress economically, focus on fields of national power in tertiary education: STEM, economics, medicine, politics, international relations/geo-politics. All of them play roles in national power.
If you want a population that adheres to sound values of morality and humanity, you need to concentrate on primary education and then secondary education. After that, what children experience at home will still show in their character to some extent.
I don't find anything wrong with leftists, by the way, so long as they don't preach the overthrow of the state and class war.
Its very simple, India does not trust the Chinese.
Pakistan we understand, its trying to be notindia since inception
but Chinese are opposing India in arenas which make little sense , whether strategically or economically.
Example is their support to UN designated terrorists in the security council or keeping us out of the nuclear suppliers club.
Agreed, I was comparing it to the levels that China was able to achieve in order to have a better outlook towards expansion. Not dismissing any progress made.Its a obviously planned strategy to keep India down as a competitor & does not align with your win win theory.
Poverty has reduced in India and i was watching the migrant labour trekking home recently. They for a change looked well dressed and not malnourished. India has changed in a manner we don't appreciate sitting in the metros.
We could do much better but for that just stop all imports , except for the essentials and generate employment. We have the skills and the money only we want short term profits.
The bureacracy is a deadweight but our politicians like mamta, who kicked a half built TAta plant out of Bengal for a few votes , are the real negatives.
Mind set changes only occur if the people are made desperate from various domestic issues. If we look at both India and China then we can clearly say the mindset has changed a lot over the years and it seems that China has taken the mindset of 60 year back India and on the other hand India has become more like 100 year back Germany. Both these countries have taken almost similar years in getting to what they have become.Maybe consider the other side of the coin as well. Someone could come along and say "I don't find anything wrong with rightists/extremists/whomever, by the way, so long as they don't preach the overthrow of the state and class war."
The experience with leftists here in Pakistan is that they want to submit totally and completely to not just a foreign ideology, but foreign actors. If left to their devices, they will make the country a proxy of some other country.
All to do with trust .Let's take this on face value, then what's the strategy?
This is a politically motivated answer rather than one stemming from realism, sir, I do not know why this would be incorporated in your response so I'm not sure how to respond.
Your opening sentence makes little sense here I'm not sure what you're tying into. Is it not clear that India and China are rivals and have similar designs in the region therefore are competing?
Why would a rival help?
I'm not suggesting a win-win situation, I'm speaking that realistically it would make sense to try to orient oneself with such a wide arching plan such as BRI or offer an alternative especially given the expansion of the Indian business community internationally at the start of the century. That lobby seems to be missing, I was speculating why is that so?
Agreed, I was comparing it to the levels that China was able to achieve in order to have a better outlook towards expansion. Not dismissing any progress made.
I think the part that I highlighted is the main issue here and perhaps it stems from an inept bureaucratic inertia or a strong lobby?
As you rightly pointed out, BRI is China’s strategic game plan in the next 100 years, of which CPEC is the flagship project. China has committed large amount of resource in capital, human and technology into the project to accelerate the process. What has happened along LAC will has shown the China’s willingness to participate and defend the project in military dimension.
Over a longer term, the success of CPEC will heavily dependent on the security environment that China and Pakistan can create in the region, not only within Pakistan but also the entire South Asia region. Investors need to be confident about security and social stability that the host country can provide. China is obviously making the message clear that it will go to great lengths to defend it, particularly at China’s doorstep.
All to do with trust .
Suppose India takes a leap of faith with the bri , what makes you think that all our investments wont come to a standstill next time Pakistan's PM wants to show solidarity with the Kashmiris ? Reason given for nawaz shariffs ouster is that he was too friendly with India.
The Chinese have made it clear that they want a adversarial relationship with their actions and we havent even used the Chinese tool kit of using trade against them.
Fine words on forums wont change the ground situation between the countries.
Mind set changes only occur if the people are made desperate from various domestic issues. If we look at both India and China then we can clearly say the mindset has changed a lot over the years and it seems that China has taken the mindset of 60 year back India and on the other hand India has become more like 100 year back Germany. Both these countries have taken almost similar years in getting to what they have become.
This saying sums up perfectly
“The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.”
― Karl Marx
Maybe consider the other side of the coin as well. Someone could come along and say "I don't find anything wrong with rightists/extremists/whomever, by the way, so long as they don't preach the overthrow of the state and class war."
The experience with leftists here in Pakistan is that they want to submit totally and completely to not just a foreign ideology, but foreign actors. If left to their devices, they will make the country a proxy of some other country.
BRI is short to intermediate term plan to dump surplus Chinese manufacturing capacity & labor, package surplus chinese capital on some good & a lot of unviable infrastructure projects. In the process dump the debt & financial risk on third world countries. All the transit projects are at the mercy of Iran or Russia - neither of which are the most responsible stakeholders