What's new

should pakistan be alarmed as bff china gets pally with india?

INDIAPOSITIVE

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Sep 20, 2014
Messages
9,318
Reaction score
-28
Country
India
Location
India
c8239d22-447b-11e8-ab09-36e8e67fb996_1280x720_201528.JPG

Narendra Modi and Xi Jinping. Photo: Reuters
Days before the informal summit between President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, China’s top diplomat Wang Yi met Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Khawaja Mohammed Asif on the sidelines of a meeting of defence and foreign ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation in Beijing. Wang emerged from the meeting to tell reporters China was “ready to work together with our Pakistani brothers to undertake the historical mission of national rejuvenation and achieve the great dream of national prosperity and development”.

“In this way, our iron friendship with Pakistan will never rust and be tempered into steel,” said the Chinese state councillor and foreign minister. Asif responded in matching rhetoric, describing China as “our iron brother”.

Will Xi-Modi summit lead to deals on Belt and Road, investments, and border?
Since Pakistan and China signed a 1963 treaty to resolve their differences over the status of their shared border in Gilgit-Baltistan, a region of Kashmir also claimed by India, their hyperbole of bilateral friendship has mostly been matched with actions.

After Xi unveiled the US$46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) – which has since risen in potential value to US$60 billion – as the showcase project of his pet Belt and Road Initiative in 2015, the Chinese leader characterised it as a thank you for Pakistan’s key role in helping communist China establish diplomatic ties with the US and end its international isolation in 1971. And although, for geopolitical reasons, Pakistan cannot say as much, it has China to thank for enabling it to keep pace with India’s strategic programme, through the transfer of nuclear weapons and ballistic missile technology between 1989 and 1992.

e59cb4cc-49d2-11e8-85b3-af25d27017e0_1320x770_201528.JPG
The first phase of Gwadar Port's Free Zone in southwestern Pakistan was inaugurated by Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, who said the free zone would help facilitate trade under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. Photo: Xinhua

The two have drawn ever closer as China’s Belt and Road-driven expansion across Asia has brought it into direct competition with the US, India and Japan, while Pakistan’s relations with the US, its other major international partner, have deteriorated markedly.

But lately, China and Pakistan have not always been on the same page when it comes to India. At the Financial Action Task Force, an intergovernmental anti-money-laundering watchdog, China in February made what, to Pakistan, was a shock decision. It withdrew its opposition to a US-led move to place Pakistan back on a terror financing watch list for failing to crack down on militant groups fighting Indian security forces in Kashmir and Nato in Afghanistan.

China and India: are war clouds gathering over Doklam again?
Since initiating the CPEC in 2015, China had been quietly warning Pakistan that it cannot indefinitely block multilateral moves to punish it. But Pakistan’s national security and diplomatic narrative has remained deeply invested in countering the threat of an Indian attack across the ceasefire line in Kashmir, and geared towards supporting anti-government forces in India-administered Kashmir.

Wang is understood to have reassured Asif that any progress arising from the Xi-Modi summit would not compromise China’s relations with Pakistan. But the very day after Wang’s rust-and-steel bombast, the deputy chief of mission at the Chinese embassy in Islamabad, Lijian Zhao, tweeted a section of an editorial in the Daily Times, a liberal Pakistani newspaper, saying “Beijing has been asking Islamabad to engage with New Delhi and keep tensions to a minimum.”

India’s killer ‘godmen’ and their sacrificial children
Pakistan’s military, which dominates defence and foreign policy, has consistently blocked attempts by the elected government to promote trade relations with India, making them conditional upon Indian engagement in talks on Kashmir, which Modi has flatly refused.

1d59b8fc-49d2-11e8-85b3-af25d27017e0_1320x770_201528.jpg
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shakes hands with Tong Daochi, the vice-governor of Hubei province, after arriving in Wuhan in China's central Hubei province. Photo: AFP

“I’m sure there’s a bit of unease among the Pakistani military brass about this summit and the apparent detente. Still, the military won’t be overly concerned, as it will conclude – rightly so, in my view – that China very much remains in Pakistan’s orbit, regardless of this new India-China warming period that could well prove short-lived,” said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia programme at The Wilson Centre, a Washington think tank.

Road to Doklam: When will China and India start talking about the 1962 war honestly?
Arif Rafiq, a non-resident fellow at the Middle East Institute, another Washington think tank, said that since the Pakistani military was the “Communist Party of China’s principal strategic partner in the region”, he didn’t think Beijing was willing to damage relations for tactical benefits vis-à-vis India. “But, at the same time, I think there is recognition in Pakistan that dependence on a single strategic partner puts them in a position of weakness,” he told This Week in Asia.

Hence Pakistan is closely watching the Xi-Modi summit for clues on its own relations to China, especially the iron brother’s approach to its Kashmir dispute. But most analysts believe it is too early after the Doklam stand-off last year for China and India to talk Kashmir.

What a stronger Modi means for China
“China and India may be in a period of detente, but this doesn’t mean China will want to undercut the deep trust in the China-Pakistan partnership, especially with the critical role Islamabad plays in [the Belt and Road Initiative],” Kugelman said.

05380278-49d3-11e8-85b3-af25d27017e0_1320x770_201528.JPG
An Indian soldier at Bumla Pass on the India-China border in Arunachal Pradesh. Photo: AFP

“The summit will focus more on some narrowly defined issues of importance to India-China relations. Kashmir is unlikely to come up. And I certainly don’t think China will pressure Pakistan about toning down whatever role it may play in stoking unrest.”

The concerns rise from Indian press reports that Beijing and New Delhi have been quietly discussing an unlikely compromise resolution of India’s opposition to Belt and Road projects located in the Pakistan-administered half of Kashmir, through which flows its only overland link to China.

C. Raja Mohan, the director of the Carnegie India Delhi-based think tank, said a deal, if any, could involve the removal of Kashmir-based projects from the official CPEC listing and their execution under a separate bilateral arrangement.

India’s China policy off target, says Modi’s Mandarin-speaking ‘guided missile’
“Delhi has said it is open to consultations with China on the development of regional transborder infrastructure. Beijing, in turn, has apparently floated a number of new proposals for Delhi’s consideration,” Mohan wrote in The Indian Express. “These include the extension of the CPEC to India, promoting connectivity across the Himalayas in Jammu and Kashmir, Nepal, Sikkim and other places. If it has the will, China should not find it too hard to address India’s concerns on sovereignty on Kashmir,” he said.

But China might struggle to gain Pakistan’s backing for such an extension of CPEC into India-administered Kashmir.



“I can’t imagine Pakistan agreeing to de-link projects in Gilgit-Baltistan from the CPEC portfolio. Such a move, even if accompanied by a plan to expand the project into India-administered Kashmir, would be perceived by Pakistanis as a direct capitulation to an Indian demand tied to sovereignty. And that’s something the Pakistanis can’t accept,” said Kugelman.




Instead, China is likely to float measures regarding CPEC and the Belt and Road that may “soften New Delhi’s opposition to these initiatives, but they are unlikely to be realised in a way that will satisfy New Delhi,” said Rafiq. ■


http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/geopo...akistan-be-alarmed-bff-china-gets-pally-india
 
.
Yes .

If China become pro India ,Or turns Blind eye on Indian Aggression.

Pakistan will be left with no options ,But to kneel in front of West ,
Who also are biggest supporters of India ,

Not to be taken lightly ,Like u did with being Americas ally.
 
.
Or what if there is some kinda peace process between Pakistan and India? Should BFF China be alarmed?

Pakistan and China are already friends and are gonna remain so. Our friendship and good relations are neither dependent on nor against any other country.
 
Last edited:
. .
Modi is in giving mood and Xi is in taking mood, he finally submitted to China
why should Pakistan be worried when Modi has nothing to offer to China for giving up Pakistan.
 
.
Yes, always, if you do not have an alternative plan.
 
. .
I don't know if "Frandship" is the right word after getting defeated in Doklam (Bhutan), Nepal, Maldives, Bangladesh. Compliance is the right word that is why they didn't talk about Doklam. According to Indian opposition Modi compiled.
 
. .
Lol .... What worries? After thumping 56 inches breasts and blowing hot air for couple of years Hindustan is back to it's place.
 
.
It is a mutual understanding between Pakistan and China that they will promote this chai wala so he could win upcoming election.He is a gift and blessing from God for PAK and China.He has totally destroyed social fabric of India.He has already paralyzed the Indian economy. Pak and China don't want to lose this gem. Single handedly he has done so much damage to India which Pak & China could not imagine in last 70 years. Imagine if Indian public God forbid instead of Modi elect some body who is sane,qualified and educated then it will be very hard to deal with the new guy.China is doing the right thing by giving some importance to Modi. Ordinary Indians will get impressed and they will again vote for Modi. After wining next election he will expedite his job of Indian destruction in a more profound way.
 
Last edited:
.
Try to gauge some, not from this article, but from the ground zero, that is Wuhan.
Modi's goal was to save his 2019 election among all. He requested the peaceful borders, never spoke of Pakistan. He was very tense these 2 days, ever since an unknown assistant minister and his driver came to pick him up.

What he got towards any tangibles? Nothing.

China has not taken the Doklam issue kindly. Their feathers are still ruffled. As a result, Indian billionaire fugitive was not arrested in Hong Kong despite Indian request for his extradition.

No promise to sign any border dispute agreement.

Pakistan should be least bothered.

temedcedr45.png
 
. . .
No peace is a good thing.
As far as Indian is concern, we know how to fight and we can fight alone
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom