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Pakistan's eternal quest for 'strategic balance' with India

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Pakistan's eternal quest for 'strategic balance' with India





Earlier this week, Pakistan's Defense Minister Syed Naveed Qamar argued that "discriminatory" nuclear policies followed by the international community would lead to a "strategic imbalance" in the region.

For those who are new to South Asia, "strategic imbalance" is Pakistan's way of seeking parity with its much larger eastern neighbor, India. Mr Qamar is not the first Pakistani official and he will not be the last.

In July 2009, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani stated that any internal instability in Pakistan could prompt an Indian attack on Pakistan. "When seen with the widening force differential between ours and Indian armed forces, it explains to us New Delhi's emboldened posture and its urge to find space for a conventional war." Three months later India launched its first indigenously-built nuclear submarine INS Arihant. Pakistan's reaction was to term the Indian move as "detrimental" to regional peace and need to take "appropriate steps" to maintain a "strategic balance." Within a few days close ally China delivered the first of four state-of-the-art F-22 P frigates to Pakistan ostensibly to help repair the imbalance.

As I have argued in my book Explaining Pakistan's Foreign Policy: Escaping India (Routledge, 2011) a key underlying driver of Pakistan's foreign policy has been a desire for parity with India. The desire for parity dates back to the pre-Partition era when the Indian Muslim League sought parity with the Indian National Congress.

Pakistan and Pakistanis would benefit from a refocus on Pakistan's core strategic interests: a stable polity, a growing economy and civil-military balance

It was reflected after Independence in Pakistan's desire for parity in all arenas with India and has had an impact on Pakistan's external relations, especially its ties with the United States and Afghanistan.

Pakistan's leaders have consistently argued that the only way for Pakistan to resolve the Kashmir dispute would be if Pakistan achieved some form of parity with India. As early as 1954 Pakistani Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra stated: "When there is more equality of military strength, then I am sure that there will be a greater chance of settlement." Most of the India-Pakistan conflicts on Kashmir have taken place at a time when the Pakistani military and often civilian establishment believed that if they did not act at that moment India would surpass Pakistan in military strength.

Pakistan's military establishment has always sought parity with India.
The military's championing of the concept of "strategic depth" and close Afghan-Pakistan ties reflect the fear of a hypothetical two-front war if India and Afghanistan build close ties.

At the core of Pakistan's relationship with the US and the rationale behind the frequent tensions between the two countries lies Pakistan's desire for parity with India. Right from 1947, Pakistan's leaders looked to the US as a superpower who would help build Pakistan's meager resources so that it could stand up to India.

Hence, the oft-repeated refrain from Pakistan's leaders that the US must be fair, must treat both countries equally and should not become too close to India. Pakistan preferred the offshore balancer role that the US played in South Asia during the Cold War to the post-Cold War closeness with India.

Soon after the 1971 war, Pakistan's army chief argued for American aid in order to maintain his army "at pre-war size." When asked by the Americans if this would be possible keeping in mind both the reduction in size of the Pakistani territory and elimination of the need to now maintain a force in East Pakistan Lt Gen Gul Hasan's answer was that "a credible force would still be needed to serve as deterrent against any hostile intentions by India." The civilian bureaucracy and politicians have generally preferred to adopt rather than contest this view.

The support for non-state actors as well as the move towards nuclear weapons especially after 1971 was undertaken because Pakistan's leaders and strategists believed that conventional military parity with India was becoming difficult to achieve.

Pakistani strategists like Aslam Siddiqui, author of Pakistan Seeks Security (Longman & Greens, 1960) had argued from the 1960s onwards that though Pakistan needed external aid to build up its military strength yet Pakistan should be ready for the day the "marriage with the West" dissolves.

The argument ran that Pakistan had an ideology and manpower and that in parts of Pakistan (like Balochistan and the Frontier areas) there was a tradition of irregular warfare which could be harnessed by the state.

Unlike a regular army, irregular forces (read jihadis) were not a burden on the treasury and since they were independent entities the state could disclaim responsibility from any action they undertook.

For Pakistanis, leaders as well as general public, Pakistan's nuclear weapons are seen as the panacea. It was thought that nuclear weapons would make Pakistan India's equal, guarantee territorial integrity even without the support of allies and also give Pakistan respectability in the Muslim world as the first Muslim country with nuclear weapons.

That Pakistan's leaders have sought nuclear parity and not simply nuclear deterrence is evident from the continuous build-up of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal. According to the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists 2011 report Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is now the fourth largest in the world and ahead of countries like the United Kingdom. Pakistan has also consistently refused to sign the Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty (FMCT) because of the notion that signing the treaty would result in Pakistan having a smaller arsenal than India.

Pakistan eternal search for military parity or "strategic balance" with a much larger neighbor has drained most of its resources without providing the security Pakistanis crave. :angel:

Instead of this eternal quest, Pakistan and Pakistanis would benefit from a refocus on Pakistan's core strategic interests: a stable polity, a growing economy and civil-military balance. :agree:


Comment: Pakistan's eternal quest for 'strategic balance' by Aparna Pande
 
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Pakistan is population of 180 millions while India is population of 1400 millions. We are not a match in area, in GDP, in natural, human and financial resources. Agreed. With this in view, Pakistan never tried to match straw with straw and finger with finger but always needded enough strength to defend these 180 millions against 1400 millions.

If you agree, Pakistan has right to gain enough strength and enough potential where 1400 remain within their territory and minds.. and we are there already. Pakistanis have paid a higher cost as compared to Indians but either you strive and stand or you don't and we have chosen to stand. In the last 3 attempts of aggression, we have kept India within its territory. Was that not worth it?
 
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This "eternal quest" has been bequeathed to Pakistanis by Military dictators and the remnants of the "company"...
Unless this realization dawns upon the General Ahabs that they have essentially destroyed their ship in their quest for killing Moby Dick..this ship..and all those within it will sink.. And the General Ahabs will just find some new homes to play golf in.
 
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The quest for military strategic balance has been eternally achieved through acquisition of nuclear weapons. It has happened by default. What is the fuss about.
 
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If it was a question of attaining 'enough to defend' it would have been a different case altogether.

Till just a couple of decades back Pakistani Army believed it could beat India at conventional warfare. This thinking resulted in Pakistan attacking India to take Kashmir. For those who don't know that PA has ever attacked ndia..please don't even bother responding.
Had it just been about 'defense', Pakistan wIould have never attacked in the first Place.

First there was the thinking that PA can beat India militarily. Then they slowly realized that they can't win a war but they are 'equal equal' as they say and if they can force India into certain circumstances, and militarily forced to a certain extent they can win ala Kashmir.

Slowly that mindset is also changing that they just can't win any kind of war, nor force diplomatically or via irregular forces and get Kashmir. Thus now you hear since a decade or more about minimum detterence and what not. But it wasn't always like that earlier.
 
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Pakistan is population of 180 millions while India is population of 1400 millions. We are not a match in area, in GDP, in natural, human and financial resources. Agreed. With this in view, Pakistan never tried to match straw with straw and finger with finger but always needded enough strength to defend these 180 millions against 1400 millions.

If you agree, Pakistan has right to gain enough strength and enough potential where 1400 remain within their territory and minds.. and we are there already. Pakistanis have paid a higher cost as compared to Indians but either you strive and stand or you don't and we have chosen to stand. In the last 3 attempts of aggression, we have kept India within its territory. Was that not worth it?

2 claims you made. all are untrue.
3 attempts of aggression - not true
India being kept within its territory - not true
 
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Pakistan never tried to match straw with straw and finger with finger but always needded enough strength to defend these 180 millions against 1400 millions.
If you agree, Pakistan has right to gain enough strength and enough potential where 1400 remain within their territory and minds.. and we are there already. Pakistanis have paid a higher cost as compared to Indians but either you strive and stand or you don't and we have chosen to stand. In the last 3 attempts of aggression, we have kept India within its territory. Was that not worth it?
First up people are not fighting people, so please don't consider 1400 million as your enemy. Also planners should consider all possible scenarios. Fixating on one may leave you blinded on other fronts.
Second, in the last three attempts of your aggression, we not only managed to keep our territory but also helped liberate Bangladeshi's from your oppression. So your the money you spent was not really worth it.
 
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2 claims you made. all are untrue.
3 attempts of aggression - not true
India being kept within its territory - not true

Sir, if what you say is true,

May I ask why do you people tell the world that you are a status-qou power.

And that you are peaceful and do not have any territorial ambitions against any other country in the region.

An why in Gods name are you amassing so much militray armament.

You are the biggest country in South Asia, having over a billion hungry people. you are a nuclear power.

Who are you afraid of.
 
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Pakistan is population of 180 millions while India is population of 1400 millions. We are not a match in area, in GDP, in natural, human and financial resources. Agreed. With this in view, Pakistan never tried to match straw with straw and finger with finger but always needded enough strength to defend these 180 millions against 1400 millions.

If you agree, Pakistan has right to gain enough strength and enough potential where 1400 remain within their territory and minds.. and we are there already. Pakistanis have paid a higher cost as compared to Indians but either you strive and stand or you don't and we have chosen to stand. In the last 3 attempts of aggression, we have kept India within its territory. Was that not worth it?

Such a nice and balanced post but you had to screw it up by slipping into falsehoods towards the end :disagree:
 
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If Pakistan improves its economy , it won't be eternal anymore.

Pakistan was improving its economy prior to 1970 and look what happened. so we learned that to live among a bully you need to be a bully. India has a strong desire to bully all her neighbors, not Pakistan
 
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Balance has already been achieved. Period. Now time to focus on Economy and being vigilant.
 
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Sir, if what you say is true,

May I ask why do you people tell the world that you are a status-qou power.

It just means that No border rearrangement in Kashmir. And we intent to give up our claim of P O K if Pakistan stop claiming the J&K is a disputed territory. And probably also means that we do not have intentions to change Nation-state system of the world today with it's UN.

And that you are peaceful and do not have any territorial ambitions against any other country in the region.

which is of course the truth.

An why in Gods name are you amassing so much militray armament.

To Keep Pakistan and china from entertaining naughty ideas.:D

You are the biggest country in South Asia, having over a billion hungry people. you are a nuclear power.

Who are you afraid of.

Human wickedness and Greed!?
 
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