What's new

Is Pakistan becoming marginalised in international affairs ?

hoshiarpurexpress

First Class Captain
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
Runs
6,161
Has Pakistan lose its capacity to control or shape the regional environment to serve its own strategic goals, and is even less able to impact global geopolitics ?
The reasons can are multi fold, including economic weakness and political instability, internal turmoil and strategic confusion.
For a Country Boasting Strategic location an Depth by it's leaders, today it is no longer serving the purpose.
Discuss?
 
This article from Maleeha Lodhis sums it up :

PAKISTAN is becoming increasingly marginalised in international affairs. It is no longer able to shape the strategic environment in its neighbourhood to advance its interests, much less influence global geopolitics.

The country has faced reversals on a number of fronts, notably Kashmir and Afghanistan. Once an active diplomatic player in the Middle East, today its principal engagement with the region is to seek loans from rich Arab countries. Even the country’s most critical bilateral relationship — with China — is facing challenges. Its international relevance has been progressively declining and its diplomatic options shrinking.

A combination of factors is responsible for this situation. Pakistan’s economic weakness, political instability, unceasing turmoil, poor governance, continuing internal security threats and strategic confusion. The key question raised by this is why the country was strategically ‘relevant’ in the past when some of these characteristics were also present.

The answer is that factors or developments extraneous to Pakistan gave it a significant role and importance in global geopolitics. For over two decades after its independence, it was the Cold War that catapulted Pakistan into the position of a much sought-after ally by the US-led West in its fight against communism. Membership of Western-sponsored military alliances enabled it to benefit from significant economic and military assistance.

In the 1980s, it was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan that propelled Pakistan in a ‘front-line’ role in the international coalition’s campaign to roll back Russian occupation. The defeat and disintegration of the Soviet Union was followed by a period in which Pakistan’s geostrategic importance declined precipitously. 9/11 dramatically changed that. Pakistan once again assumed a front-line role in the so-called War on Terror. This enabled the country to coast along for two decades in a globally prominent role as a result of the US and Nato countries’ need for Pakistan’s cooperation in the war in Afghanistan.

What all three phases underlined was that external dynamics, regional geopolitical storms or big power rivalries enhanced Pakistan’s international importance. Thus, factors extraneous to the country affected transformations in Pakistan’s global status, not its intrinsic importance. But in the changed international environment of the post-Cold War era what increasingly mattered was countries’ own attributes that gave them importance. There Pakistan came up short.

This should have been an urgent call to adjust to new realities. External overreach and internal underreach had characterised Pakistan’s past priorities and actions. That was no longer tenable. But successive governments failed to see the world had changed fundamentally and the days of living off geopolitical rents were over. Ruling elites didn’t understand the only way the country could reverse the erosion in its strategic importance was by strengthening and empowering itself at home and putting its own house in order. But old habits persisted as did outdated paradigms.

There are no short cuts to rebooting Pakistan’s international standing and influence.
Pakistan now has to operate in and adapt to a vastly transformed international environment. The post-Cold War era has given way to a world of growing multipolarity, where power is being redistributed and where there is intense competition among states for global influence. In this transformed landscape, it is increasingly the economic power of countries that gives them international clout and heft. Nations with strong economies and who are technology innovators are the ones that have become consequential in the international arena.


The growing importance and rising clout of ‘middle powers’ in global affairs reflects this. Middle powers are not superpowers but have characteristics that give them the ability to influence and shape geopolitics. Most middle powers have strong economies and possess other positive attributes that provide them leverage in global affairs to pursue their national interests as well as the ability to build multiple relationships through skilful diplomacy.

The structural changes and dispersal of power in the international system — the currency of power having changed — has created an enabling environment for middle power diplomatic activism and for them to wield greater influence and become global players. Middle powers play off the US-China competition to strengthen their bargaining position even while they seek to enhance relations with both global powers. They try to avoid getting into the crosshairs of that confrontation but also reap advantages from it. This urges both the US and China to pay more attention to them to ensure they are not firmly tied to their rival’s camp.

Pakistan doesn’t figure today among middle powers that include many countries of the Global South, such as Turkiye, India, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Singapore among several others. But it has all the potential to become one.

To be internationally relevant, it must first and foremost build a strong and resilient economy that is not reliant on external life support, on bailouts and borrowing — an economy integrated into the global economy, which at present it is far from being. This needs efficient governance, political stability and an end to the political squabbles that keep the country in such an unsettled, distracted and divided state. It also needs an educated citizenry and workforce that has the ability to innovate and contribute to scientific and technological progress. All this will engender national self-confidence that can empower the country with hope and optimism, which acts as a force multiplier.


Along with building domestic strength, incorporating soft power in the country’s diplomatic strategy will also help to improve its global standing and reputation. Understood as a country’s qualities or behaviour that appeals to others, soft power can be an indispensable tool to boost its international influence and image. Pakistan has several soft power resources which if identified and leveraged intelligently can help create positive perceptions about the country and build trust, which in turn, can elevate its position and elicit support from the international community for its foreign policy goals.

To sum up, Pakistan’s international relevance now depends on its domestic repositioning and the choices made at home to strengthen the economy, establish durable political stability, provide competent governance, invest in people and address its human development deficits. It also involves fashioning and implementing a coherent and imaginative foreign policy. What should be clear is that there are no shortcuts to rebooting Pakistan’s global influence.

The writer is a former ambassador to the US, UK and UN.

Published in Dawn, September 16th, 2024
 
Meanwhile, the government often stands like a puppet on a string, with the Establishment and various intelligence agencies pulling the punches while the PM looks as influential as a soggy naan abroad. The shocking lack of a spine in the last few decades, Pakistan's backbone can wilt at the sight of a decent paycheque, whether that's from the Americans, Chinese, Saudis etc... Like how IK bailed out of the meeting in Malaysia. Pakistan's stance on any issue can be bought for the right price.

And let’s not forget the way Pakistan's geopolitical stance can change faster than a teenager swiping through dating apps, from being China's "iron brother" yesterday, closer relations with the West now, to eyeing friendships in Wakanda tomorrow, hoping King T'Challa might throw in some gold coins. In return Islamabad will ensure that the archaic educational syllabus will include Youruba language to forge deeper ties. Before we can tackle marginalization, we need to ensure to stop being a joke first!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It has ok regional clout. India has been to shame in several countries in the region. There has been a Pakistani hand involved for sure

But it has lost ground with traditional allies and is between a rock and a hard place between the China camp and the Americans.
 
It has ok regional clout. India has been to shame in several countries in the region. There has been a Pakistani hand involved for sure

But it has lost ground with traditional allies and is between a rock and a hard place between the China camp and the Americans.
Pakistan and Bangladesh have zero clout. Regional or international. Both are a bag of beans as far as any economic clout is concerned, and are pretty much dictated to in every aspect by China or the US.
India has been shamed only in the wild imagination of some Pakistanis or Bangladeshis. Maldives tried to act tough, only for their president to come crying to Delhi. Sri Lanka got 'helped' and 'aided' by China, only to come crying to India for food , fuel and credit when their government was overthrown. Bangladesh will learn its lessons soon.
 
It has ok regional clout. India has been to shame in several countries in the region. There has been a Pakistani hand involved for sure

But it has lost ground with traditional allies and is between a rock and a hard place between the China camp and the Americans.
Did you even read the above Dawn article written by a Pak journalist ? You can live in a cocoon and thats fine. And thats what the Pak establishment wants the Pak people to believe. Almost living in a parallel world detached from reality.
 
Pakistan and Bangladesh have zero clout. Regional or international. Both are a bag of beans as far as any economic clout is concerned, and are pretty much dictated to in every aspect by China or the US.
India has been shamed only in the wild imagination of some Pakistanis or Bangladeshis. Maldives tried to act tough, only for their president to come crying to Delhi. Sri Lanka got 'helped' and 'aided' by China, only to come crying to India for food , fuel and credit when their government was overthrown. Bangladesh will learn its lessons soon.
lol Pakistan has enough clout to help install a pro Pakistani regime in Bangladesh while you guys are keeping looking after their grandma on the house, despite 40 years of efforts it was ripped up in a day. We have seen countless tears from you ever since.

Your Maldives policy failed dramatically. One minute you were trotting out celebrities to advertise your Islands but that was quietly forgotten about and now you are working on bringing tourism back to the Maldives AFTER they booted your troops out.
It's very obvious who won that little skirmish.
 
Did you even read the above Dawn article written by a Pak journalist ? You can live in a cocoon and thats fine. And thats what the Pak establishment wants the Pak people to believe. Almost living in a parallel world detached from reality.
She made some good points but some are incorrect.

There are similar articles about India's foreign policy media too.

Disagreement with a journalist doesn't mean that you are detached from reality.
 
Has Pakistan lose its capacity to control or shape the regional environment to serve its own strategic goals, and is even less able to impact global geopolitics ?
The reasons can are multi fold, including economic weakness and political instability, internal turmoil and strategic confusion.
For a Country Boasting Strategic location an Depth by it's leaders, today it is no longer serving the purpose.
Discuss?
Pakistan had its strategic importance for about 4 decades starting from soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Now with America and NATO completely out of Afghanistan, their importance to the West has decreased drastically. But for as long as the importance lasted, Pakistani Army generals milked Billions of Dollars from US. Now that source of income has dried up for them. They put all their eggs in Chinese basket hoping to make it big one day. Only time will tell if that is the right decision.
 
Pakistan and Bangladesh have zero clout. Regional or international. Both are a bag of beans as far as any economic clout is concerned, and are pretty much dictated to in every aspect by China or the US.
India has been shamed only in the wild imagination of some Pakistanis or Bangladeshis. Maldives tried to act tough, only for their president to come crying to Delhi. Sri Lanka got 'helped' and 'aided' by China, only to come crying to India for food , fuel and credit when their government was overthrown. Bangladesh will learn its lessons soon.
India out campaign did not work for any of the South Asian countries. As you have said when the dust settles, BD leadership will cozy up to India again.
 
What a pointless article full of fluff; it does nothing to address the root problem of Pakistan - its khakiwallahs.
 
Meanwhile, the government often stands like a puppet on a string, with the Establishment and various intelligence agencies pulling the punches while the PM looks as influential as a soggy naan abroad. The shocking lack of a spine in the last few decades, Pakistan's backbone can wilt at the sight of a decent paycheque, whether that's from the Americans, Chinese, Saudis etc... Like how IK bailed out of the meeting in Malaysia. Pakistan's stance on any issue can be bought for the right price.

And let’s not forget the way Pakistan's geopolitical stance can change faster than a teenager swiping through dating apps, from being China's "iron brother" yesterday, closer relations with the West now, to eyeing friendships in Wakanda tomorrow, hoping King T'Challa might throw in some gold coins. In return Islamabad will ensure that the archaic educational syllabus will include Youruba language to forge deeper ties. Before we can tackle marginalization, we need to ensure to stop being a joke first!
Mods removed the first para, the important bit, no offence. It essentially suggested that retired establishment figures have no place as ambassadors in embassies, they're not equipped for the job. Diplomacy isn't a grazing ground for old men with connections!
 
Pakistan had its strategic importance for about 4 decades starting from soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Now with America and NATO completely out of Afghanistan, their importance to the West has decreased drastically. But for as long as the importance lasted, Pakistani Army generals milked Billions of Dollars from US. Now that source of income has dried up for them. They put all their eggs in Chinese basket hoping to make it big one day. Only time will tell if that is the right decision.
This is mainly true and historically you are right that's exactly what Pakistans value was.

But they still haven't put all their eggs in the Chinese basket.

They have put some in, enough to alarm the Americans but not enough to keep the Chinese totally happy too.

How they navigate this situation will be critical.
 
Mods removed the first para, the important bit, no offence. It essentially suggested that retired establishment figures have no place as ambassadors in embassies, they're not equipped for the job. Diplomacy isn't a grazing ground for old men with connections!
They are a complete embarrassment to the country and they don't realize that their connections mean hee haw outside of Pakistan.
 
Let us not indulge in the unhealthy habit of mocking the neighbours, a practice followed by a lot of our Pakistani friends here unfortunately which will provoke many Bharatiyas to do the same eventually.

We must realise that despite our regional issues, overall as part of the global South, we are all trying to elevate millions out of extreme poverty and to secure a prosperous future for the generations to come. Many of our challenges and problems are common. It is a tragedy that people are delusional enough to find amusement in the disparity of the other.

To protect Hinduism, the integrity of my nation i will go to war with Pakistanis. But i will never be one to make fun of their tragedies because belonging to this region I know how awful it is and how tough the road is for both of us. There is so much work that needs to be done.
 
This is mainly true and historically you are right that's exactly what Pakistans value was.

But they still haven't put all their eggs in the Chinese basket.

They have put some in, enough to alarm the Americans but not enough to keep the Chinese totally happy too.

How they navigate this situation will be critical.
you forgot to add the Saudis. sounds like a polyamorous relationship.

Still not getting any significant help on matters which would help Pak become sovereign again.

Think the high-interest rate loan Pak had to take to IMF deal (not done yet) is tall tale of Pak influence
 
The article is written in Pakistan newspaper by the Pakistan ex consul. Do you have anything to add to that topic at hand?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top