Iran has now gone public with its reservations about the issuance of a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) to General (retd) Raheel Sharif, and this despite assurances given by Islamabad to Tehran that the appointment would in no way affect the tenor of the bilateral relations between the two countries. Those assurances had been made clear by the current Chief of the Army Staff, General Qamar Javed Bajwa. They do not as yet appear to be sufficient to allay Iranian concerns and it is not difficult to see why.
It is vital for Pakistan that relations with Iran remain on an even keel, not least because of Iranian input into the energy mix that Pakistan purchases internationally. Saudi Arabia is another market where energy is bought, and there is a long-standing strategic alliance with Saudi Arabia that needs protecting as much as does the relationship with Iran. Between the energy needs sit the wars in Yemen and Syria, with Iran and Saudi Arabia supporting opposing sides in both. Pakistan has wisely opted not to commit troops to the Yemen conflict and must continue to maintain a studied distance from it. The question in many minds, a lot of them Iranian, is whether the appointment of Raheel Sharif is going to in any way disrupt the internal kinetics of a multilateral relationship that has the potential to come unglued if not handled with the utmost diplomatic dexterity. Emollient assurances must be backed by ground realities, and Islamabad has to walk the walk not just talk the talk if Tehran is to be truly reassured.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 5th, 2017.
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