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What if series : In the war between USA and China who will Pakistan support?

In the war between USA and China who will Pakistan support?


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    3

hoshiarpurexpress

First Class Captain
Joined
Jul 29, 2020
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USA and China are on a war path. It's a conflict between two different political systems, two different ideologies to dominate the world.
Pakistan relies on Americans for IMF and has deep debts from China due to CPEC?
In case of war between these two.. Whom will Pakistan support?
 
USA and China are on a war path. It's a conflict between two different political systems, two different ideologies to dominate the world.
Pakistan relies on Americans for IMF and has deep debts from China due to CPEC?
In case of war between these two.. Whom will Pakistan support?
Pak will take the Ind foreign policy approach here. We explicitly support nobody- we just support a good game of cricket and hope the cricket is entertaining lol !😂
 
In Assamese it's called 'Dui Naut Dui Bhori' (1 leg each in 2 seperate boats).
 
USA.

Those green cards for the top brass haven't come easy.
 
Pakistan will make peace and establish ties between the two countries just as it did in the past.
 
China will not go to a physical war, they have never been war ready country, they can only inflict violence on their people.

Chinese will unleash the economic war though and they are better than USA in that.
 
Pakistan as usual won't take side. The deep state will side with China but apparently they would call for peace.
 
It is not downgrading to put Shehbaz in the back rows, it is where he belongs. A simping cheerleader is his natural disposition. That is why he was selected to be the junta's mouthpiece.
 
It is not downgrading to put Shehbaz in the back rows, it is where he belongs. A simping cheerleader is his natural disposition. That is why he was selected to be the junta's mouthpiece.

Leaders are mirrors of the nations they represent. The respect or lack thereof they receive on the world stage reflects how much value other nations attach to their country.

Pakistani generals have long sold their nation for quick cash, convinced they’ve outsmarted others by giving away little. In reality, Pakistanis always end up with far less than what their military dictators bargain away.

For decades, China has used Pakistan as a pawn both to counterbalance India in the subcontinent and as a testing ground for its substandard weapons. Everyone knows this. Yet, when it came to the SCO summit or the V-Day parade, China didn’t think twice before relegating Pakistani leaders to the back row, while happily staging photo-ops with India, the very nation it pushes Pakistan to confront. The irony should sting.

To be fair, Shehbaz Sharif is a courteous, articulate gentleman. Had he led a truly respected nation, he would’ve been welcomed with full honours and centre-stage attention. In terms of statesmanship and presentation, I’d rate him 10/10. Of course, he doesn’t have the depth, grit, or self-made story of a leader like Modi, he comes from a privileged dynasty but when it comes to political etiquette, he holds his own.

Pakistan, however, should take a hard look at last week. Despite bending over backwards for China, it was still pushed to the sidelines after putting everything on the line against India.
 
Leaders are mirrors of the nations they represent. The respect or lack thereof they receive on the world stage reflects how much value other nations attach to their country.

Pakistani generals have long sold their nation for quick cash, convinced they’ve outsmarted others by giving away little. In reality, Pakistanis always end up with far less than what their military dictators bargain away.

For decades, China has used Pakistan as a pawn both to counterbalance India in the subcontinent and as a testing ground for its substandard weapons. Everyone knows this. Yet, when it came to the SCO summit or the V-Day parade, China didn’t think twice before relegating Pakistani leaders to the back row, while happily staging photo-ops with India, the very nation it pushes Pakistan to confront. The irony should sting.

To be fair, Shehbaz Sharif is a courteous, articulate gentleman. Had he led a truly respected nation, he would’ve been welcomed with full honours and centre-stage attention. In terms of statesmanship and presentation, I’d rate him 10/10. Of course, he doesn’t have the depth, grit, or self-made story of a leader like Modi, he comes from a privileged dynasty but when it comes to political etiquette, he holds his own.

Pakistan, however, should take a hard look at last week. Despite bending over backwards for China, it was still pushed to the sidelines after putting everything on the line against India.


He's not really a leader though so he doesn't represent the nation. He represents a mouthpiece for the military junta as I said. If you want to say the miltary junta represents the nation then that is a different conversation to the one you tagged me in.
 
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