The Arab reaction

Disregarding what our Arab friends think or how they react to our neutrality, we must pursue this course


Rasul Bakhsh Rais September 01, 2015
The writer is a professor of political science at LUMS

Pakistan’s decision not to join the Saudi-led coalition in its Yemen war has not been received well in Riyadh and the UAE. They expected us to be on their side. They might rightly claim that they have been on our side in many difficult situations that we have faced in the past. Acknowledged. Never was it, however, a one-way generosity or affair. We did our part, for decades, in providing security training, intelligence cooperation, and during the deadly Iran-Iraq war, stationed our troops, advisers and trainers in Saudi Arabia. Pakistan has traditionally offered itself to Arab countries as their second home, and it should continue to do so, even after their reactive swing to India. Reactive posturing in foreign affairs doesn’t work much except for some temporary relief in getting even or having some satisfaction of stressing the other side. Actually, Pakistan shouldn’t be much concerned about how the UAE is going to develop its relations with India. It has big money and India is a big emerging market to invest. Let us wish them the best of luck.



The question is, was the move, coinciding with Narendra Modi’s visit, a search for an infrastructure market to invest or find a new strategic partner against their real or imagined ‘adversary’, Iran? It is quite puzzling that India has been as big a market as it is today for decades, and the UAE failed to see its potential to invest its surplus funds it holds in many safe places in the world. It will be as disappointed to see India refuse to support it in any endeavour against Iran, as it was when it expected Pakistan to support its war in Yemen. Rationally speaking, countries weigh costs and benefits, leave emotions aside and pursue a pragmatic path in foreign affairs. A conventional truth in this respect is that nothing is permanent, except national interests.

Pakistan did the right thing in not choosing any side in the Arab-Iran rivalry, which in recent decades has transformed into a sectarian conflict that has historically been embedded in their clashing national identities. This is not for the first time Pakistan made this choice. We stayed neutral during the Iran-Iraq war and adopted the same posture during Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait and during the first Gulf war to liberate Kuwait. We have been badly hurt by the Arab-Iran rivalry as both sides have been attempting to extend it through their religious proxies to other Muslim lands. The secret sectarian militias in our country have sources of funding, aspirations, advice and counselling in the rival capitals. Taking sides will have been internally divisive. We must stick with our good old policy of neutrality in wars between Muslim states.

There are new kinds of wars emerging in the Middle East and in our immediate neighbourhood i.e., in Afghanistan — civil wars. They have all the combustible elements in them — tribe, ethnicity, sect and religion. All of them feed on the fire of hate and extremism, and they have to some degree, singed us in the face. Disregarding what our Arab friends think or how they react to our neutrality, we must pursue this course. We have served our interests well by staying out of the bloody wars of the Middle East. The internal and external costs of being part of the Arab coalition would have been staggering.

Our Arab friends made some serious miscalculations about Pakistan’s policy, or may be our diplomatic communications were weak or signals were not read well on the other side. We are a big state, very diverse and endowed with natural resources and we should be making independent decisions in our national interest. This is exactly what we have done.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 2nd,  2015.

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COMMENTS (24)

S.R.H. Hashmi | 8 years ago | Reply The writer says “We have been badly hurt by the Arab-Iran rivalry as both sides have been attempting to extend it through their religious proxies to other Muslim lands. The secret sectarian militias in our country have sources of funding, aspirations, advice and counselling in the rival capitals. Taking sides will have been internally divisive. We must stick with our good old policy of neutrality in wars between Muslim states”. Now if the sectarian militias in our country have sources of funding, aspirations, advice and counseling in the rival capitals, then it must be our own fault that we allow all this to happen right under our nose. All states keep strict control over such matters and do not allow a situation to develop where their operation in our country become a determining factor in shaping our foreign policy. And when he says taking sides (in Yemen) will have been internally divisive, he seems to be taking for granted that this unsatisfactory state of affairs will continue indefinitely And by implication, it means that we should frame our foreign policy based on dirty role played by the foreign funded, aided and abetted sectarian outfits. Nowhere does he emphasize the need to eliminate these outfits and to cut their foreign connections. And he is definitely being ungrateful not acknowledging the favours done to us in times of our desperation, like when sanctions were imposed on us for conducting nuclear explosions. And while our assistance to Saudis – and other Middle Eastern states – has strictly been on commercial lines, Saudi help has at times been motivated more by brotherly sentiments. And we did not have to send a substantial proportion of our armed forces to fight in Yemen. All we had to do was to send some forces and give a commitment that more could on the way if needed. We saw that aerial bombardment by some Gulf states’ air forces and ground combat by pro-government forces in Yemen was enough to put Houthis on the run. So, a little extra help by us would have won us the hearts and minds of the Saudis and other Gulf rulers, and dividends in terms of goodwill and material benefits would have been huge in comparison to our effort. We also know that despite being under pressure due to sanctions, Iran managed to help its allies in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen and has also joined the united front formed both by Sunni and Shia states against Daesh which has become a threat to them all. So, there is no reason why despite involvement at borders and inside the country, our armed forces could not take up a limited assignment in Yemen. As a matter of fact, in line with other regional states, we should also play our part against Daesh and try to eliminate it in its home ground instead of waiting for the monsters to gain strength in Afghanistan and Pakistan and then to start fighting them. What I am saying is that our massive, well-trained and well-equipped armed forces should not feel shy of playing limited international roles, and not limit this just to UN peace-keeping missions. We seem to be losing friends fast both in the neighbourhood and in distant lands and in these circumstance, this ‘damn care’ attitude is not advisable. Karachi
Mohd Salam | 8 years ago | Reply @curious2: The first decisions in a BIG STATE's national interest is to decide how to feed its people and provide basic necessities such as Jobs, Health Care and Utilities by utilizing its natural resources. Singapore is not a big state endowed with natural resources but it meets its national interests.
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