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Pakistan agrees to send ships to block arms shipments to Yemen rebels

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Pakistan agrees to send ships to block arms shipments to Yemen rebels


BY TOM HUSSAIN
McClatchy Foreign StaffApril 17, 2015

ISLAMABAD — Yielding to pressure from staunch ally Saudi Arabia, Pakistan has agreed to help an Arab military coalition enforce an arms embargo against Houthi rebels in Yemen and is expected to announce the deployment of navy warships to the busy commercial shipping lanes off Yemen’s coast.

In a statement posted late Thursday, the office of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said a high-powered Pakistani delegation had “affirmed to the Saudi leadership that Pakistan would fully participate and contribute to the implementation” of the arms embargo, which was set in place Wednesday by a United Nations Security Council resolution.

The U.N. Security Council approved the resolution, proposed by Qatar, a member of the Saudi-led coalition, after Russia, an ally of Iran in Middle East politics, abstained.

The Pakistani army chief of staff, Gen. Raheel Sharif, is also expected to travel to Saudi Arabia soon for consultations. He’s not related to the prime minister.

Pakistan still is declining a Saudi request to contribute ground forces and attack aircraft to the Saudi-led coalition of 10 Arab nations and has not drawn up any contingencies to deploy ground troops or warplanes to Saudi Arabia, according to sources in the army’s military operations directorate, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were disclosing classified information.

Pakistan’s Parliament voted unanimously a week ago to remain neutral in the Yemen conflict. But the resolution gave the government leeway by authorizing it to commit forces in the event Saudi Arabia’s territory came under threat.

The resolution shocked Saudi Arabia, which was so confident that Pakistan would join the Arab military coalition that it had displayed Pakistan’s flag at its press briefing center in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.

The Pakistani delegation, which met Wednesday in Riyadh with Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz and the Saudi defense and foreign ministers, was led by the prime minister’s younger brother, Shahbaz Sharif, chief minister of populous Punjab province.

The unusual departure from diplomatic protocol reflected Pakistan’s desire to soothe Saudi anger at Pakistan’s refusal to actively participate in the Yemen conflict.

It also reflected the family’s debt to the Saudi ruling family, which saved Nawaz Sharif from possible execution after he was overthrown by the military in October 1999. Intervention by Riyadh persuaded the junta’s leader, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, to allow the Sharif brothers to live in exile in the kingdom.

Pakistan’s naval contribution to the arms embargo against Houthi rebels in Yemen is an easy option, because two warships already are deployed in Indian Ocean waters near Yemen as part of multinational task forces patrolling the area to interdict al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula militants and pirates based in the Horn of Africa.

But further involvement is opposed by Gen. Sharif, the army chief of staff, who’s reluctant to deploy troops in the kingdom, even for a proposed joint military exercise discussed by the Saudi and Egyptian governments this week. Pakistan has never deployed warplanes in support of overseas operations, said the sources in the army’s military operation directorate.

Egypt, which operates the largest army in the Arab coalition, also has not sent ground forces to Saudi Arabia. Gen. Sharif met with Gen. Sedki Sobhi Sayed, Egypt’s defense minister and armed forces commander in chief, in Islamabad on April 8 to discuss the crisis in Yemen.

On Wednesday, Gen. Sharif highlighted the unavailability of Pakistani ground forces, saying massive counterterrorism operations launched last June against Taliban insurgents in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan could soon be extended to areas of western Baluchistan province bordering Iran.

That extension follows an upsurge in attacks in April on security forces and contractors working there on mostly China-funded infrastructure projects. A cross-border raid by al Qaida-affiliated militants killed eight Iranian border guards, and Pakistan agreed to tighter border security cooperation when Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif visited Islamabad earlier this month. Iran also has a longstanding problem with ethnic Baluch Sunni Muslim rebels in its eastern Sistan-Baluchistan province.

Pakistan’s reluctance to join the Arab coalition is also because, in part, of concerns it would antagonize the sizable number of Shiite officers serving in Pakistan’s military, said editors of newspapers politically aligned with the prime minister’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party.

Pakistani media reports have claimed Saudi Arabia’s request for Pakistani forces in support of the campaign in Yemen was nuanced by a demand that any Shiite Muslim soldiers be excluded.

“The reported Saudi request for sectarian screening of the troops would be upsetting to the armed forces, which have prided themselves on preserving themselves from this divide,” said Mohammed Afzal Niazi, executive editor of The Nation, an English-language daily newspaper politically aligned with the prime minister’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party.

Saudi Arabia’s suspicions toward Shiite Pakistani soldiers have strained relations in the past.

In 1982, Pakistan deployed 12,000 soldiers in the kingdom, which feared Iranian military reprisals for the Arab Persian Gulf monarchies’ support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war. They were withdrawn in 1987 after Islamabad refused to comply with Riyadh’s demand for a list of Shiite Pakistani army officers.



Read more here: ISLAMABAD: Pakistan agrees to send ships to block arms shipments to Yemen rebels | Afghanistan & Pakistan | McClatchy DC
 
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Pakistani media reports have claimed Saudi Arabia’s request for Pakistani forces in support of the campaign in Yemen was nuanced by a demand that any Shiite Muslim soldiers be excluded. “The reported Saudi request for sectarian screening of the troops would be upsetting to the armed forces, which have prided themselves on preserving themselves from this divide,” said Mohammed Afzal Niazi, executive editor of The Nation, an English-language daily newspaper politically aligned with the prime minister’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party. Saudi Arabia’s suspicions toward Shiite Pakistani soldiers have strained relations in the past. In 1982, Pakistan deployed 12,000 soldiers in the kingdom, which feared Iranian military reprisals for the Arab Persian Gulf monarchies’ support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war. They were withdrawn in 1987 after Islamabad refused to comply with Riyadh’s demand for a list of Shiite Pakistani army officers.
Now that's an interesting fact not many people are aware of. Does anyone know more about this demand on the part of Saudis do screen Pakistani troops of Shiite officers and the request of lists of Shiite officer's names??

@Horus @Irfan Baloch @Daneshmand
 
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Pakistan agrees to send ships to block arms shipments to Yemen rebels


BY TOM HUSSAIN
McClatchy Foreign StaffApril 17, 2015

ISLAMABAD — Yielding to pressure from staunch ally Saudi Arabia, Pakistan has agreed to help an Arab military coalition enforce an arms embargo against Houthi rebels in Yemen and is expected to announce the deployment of navy warships to the busy commercial shipping lanes off Yemen’s coast.

In a statement posted late Thursday, the office of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said a high-powered Pakistani delegation had “affirmed to the Saudi leadership that Pakistan would fully participate and contribute to the implementation” of the arms embargo, which was set in place Wednesday by a United Nations Security Council resolution.

The U.N. Security Council approved the resolution, proposed by Qatar, a member of the Saudi-led coalition, after Russia, an ally of Iran in Middle East politics, abstained.

The Pakistani army chief of staff, Gen. Raheel Sharif, is also expected to travel to Saudi Arabia soon for consultations. He’s not related to the prime minister.

Pakistan still is declining a Saudi request to contribute ground forces and attack aircraft to the Saudi-led coalition of 10 Arab nations and has not drawn up any contingencies to deploy ground troops or warplanes to Saudi Arabia, according to sources in the army’s military operations directorate, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were disclosing classified information.

Pakistan’s Parliament voted unanimously a week ago to remain neutral in the Yemen conflict. But the resolution gave the government leeway by authorizing it to commit forces in the event Saudi Arabia’s territory came under threat.

The resolution shocked Saudi Arabia, which was so confident that Pakistan would join the Arab military coalition that it had displayed Pakistan’s flag at its press briefing center in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.

The Pakistani delegation, which met Wednesday in Riyadh with Crown Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz and the Saudi defense and foreign ministers, was led by the prime minister’s younger brother, Shahbaz Sharif, chief minister of populous Punjab province.

The unusual departure from diplomatic protocol reflected Pakistan’s desire to soothe Saudi anger at Pakistan’s refusal to actively participate in the Yemen conflict.

It also reflected the family’s debt to the Saudi ruling family, which saved Nawaz Sharif from possible execution after he was overthrown by the military in October 1999. Intervention by Riyadh persuaded the junta’s leader, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, to allow the Sharif brothers to live in exile in the kingdom.

Pakistan’s naval contribution to the arms embargo against Houthi rebels in Yemen is an easy option, because two warships already are deployed in Indian Ocean waters near Yemen as part of multinational task forces patrolling the area to interdict al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula militants and pirates based in the Horn of Africa.

But further involvement is opposed by Gen. Sharif, the army chief of staff, who’s reluctant to deploy troops in the kingdom, even for a proposed joint military exercise discussed by the Saudi and Egyptian governments this week. Pakistan has never deployed warplanes in support of overseas operations, said the sources in the army’s military operation directorate.

Egypt, which operates the largest army in the Arab coalition, also has not sent ground forces to Saudi Arabia. Gen. Sharif met with Gen. Sedki Sobhi Sayed, Egypt’s defense minister and armed forces commander in chief, in Islamabad on April 8 to discuss the crisis in Yemen.

On Wednesday, Gen. Sharif highlighted the unavailability of Pakistani ground forces, saying massive counterterrorism operations launched last June against Taliban insurgents in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan could soon be extended to areas of western Baluchistan province bordering Iran.

That extension follows an upsurge in attacks in April on security forces and contractors working there on mostly China-funded infrastructure projects. A cross-border raid by al Qaida-affiliated militants killed eight Iranian border guards, and Pakistan agreed to tighter border security cooperation when Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif visited Islamabad earlier this month. Iran also has a longstanding problem with ethnic Baluch Sunni Muslim rebels in its eastern Sistan-Baluchistan province.

Pakistan’s reluctance to join the Arab coalition is also because, in part, of concerns it would antagonize the sizable number of Shiite officers serving in Pakistan’s military, said editors of newspapers politically aligned with the prime minister’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party.

Pakistani media reports have claimed Saudi Arabia’s request for Pakistani forces in support of the campaign in Yemen was nuanced by a demand that any Shiite Muslim soldiers be excluded.

“The reported Saudi request for sectarian screening of the troops would be upsetting to the armed forces, which have prided themselves on preserving themselves from this divide,” said Mohammed Afzal Niazi, executive editor of The Nation, an English-language daily newspaper politically aligned with the prime minister’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party.

Saudi Arabia’s suspicions toward Shiite Pakistani soldiers have strained relations in the past.

In 1982, Pakistan deployed 12,000 soldiers in the kingdom, which feared Iranian military reprisals for the Arab Persian Gulf monarchies’ support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war. They were withdrawn in 1987 after Islamabad refused to comply with Riyadh’s demand for a list of Shiite Pakistani army officers.



Read more here: ISLAMABAD: Pakistan agrees to send ships to block arms shipments to Yemen rebels | Afghanistan & Pakistan | McClatchy DC
Well blockade of weapons is a good idea yes we should send a Ship
 
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The nature of this conflict is such that Pakistan can neither chose a side nor it can afford to lose a side. But, Pakistan must not declare quarantine on its own self. Leaving behind all alone may not be sanity as well. Our government must understand that what is offer for free is dangerous as it usually involves either a trick or a hidden obligation. What has worth is worth paying for. By paying our own way, we stay clear out of gratitude, guilt and deceit. It is often wise to pay the full price. If it is time to pay, better to pay it this time once and for all and get rid of the heavy cost of free lunch.....
just wrote a 5 page long article on this issue ....Smart move if Pakistan is sending the Navy ...!
 
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Well blockade of weapons is a good idea yes we should send a Ship
Yaar this is first step i told you before ships sub plus p3c orions .next step is jets monday big guys is going to saudia again he is reluctant may be on tactical level once they figure it out monday its will be worked out .they need some sort of reason they got it through the UN .
 
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Yaar this is first step i told you before ships sub plus p3c orions .next step is jets monday big guys is going to saudia again he is reluctant may be on tactical level once they figure it out monday its will be worked out .they need some sort of reason they got it through the UN .
On monday Chinese president is coming may be Wednesday
 
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On monday Chinese president is coming may be Wednesday
Could be the issues probably r tactical one like cammand ?troops nature plus pak has first experience with overseas deployment both airforce and army .i think they will figure it out to help our saudi partners dont want let them down either .cheif is not going maybe DGMO and others .
 
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Could be the issues probably r tactical one like cammand ?troops nature plus pak has first experience with overseas deployment both airforce and army .i think they will figure it out to help our saudi partners dont want let them down either .cheif is not going maybe DGMO and others .
DGMO can be the one along with Naval and Air Force Guys
 
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On monday Chinese president is coming may be Wednesday
Could be the issues probably r tactical one like cammand ?troops nature plus pak has first experience with overseas deployment both airforce and army .i think they will figure it out to help our saudi partners dont want let them down either .
DGMO can be the one along with Naval and Air Force Guys
i guess navy tasked and jets taskwill be done in days now one sqd of F16 plus one Jf17 r enough .lets see what they worked out over boots issue .
 
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Under the resolution of UN which is an open ended resolution Pakistan could intervene … already our government has goofed up the whole scenario .. another example of our poor foreign policy .. in wars countries take sides they can’t be neutral coz being neutral mean doubts in both sides in this situation we have lost the trust of sauida as well as Iranians .. so deal with both now …
 
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What will be the end game of this conflict ?
My two cents will be a political one but they have push hothis from Aden i think it is pretty much possible now with help of local tribes and militias mix with SF .Saleh will be main player with hadi forces too but hothis may get something but they use to fight with saleh too so there is no such real allience .

Under the resolution of UN which is an open ended resolution Pakistan could intervene … already our government has goofed up the whole scenario .. another example of our poor foreign policy .. in wars countries take sides they can’t be neutral coz being neutral mean doubts in both sides in this situation we have lost the trust of sauida as well as Iranians .. so deal with both now …
I dont think so yes its poor performance on FP issue but they r actively involve now with kingdom and Gcc navel request of kingdom been met fully now airforce request which i hope will met very soon .issue is with ground operation army is busy in FATA now they moving to SW balochistan lets see how much they met that saudi demand.but invading yemen by regular forces is a bad idea best way is work with hadi forces help them logistics and SF activity .not more than this i beleive that should be more than enough .
 
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Saudis want to pin down the hoties to bring them down to Saudis agenda coz it has nothing to do with sunni shia issue but to secure the straight of addan as a secure oil supply rout so they will secure it by any means with or without Pakistan
 
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I think this is a reasonable contribution given our own situation. Two frigates and perhaps a Submarine to enforce the arms embargo will make a token contribution.
 
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