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Home » Pakistan Army cannot afford China’s expensive security demands. What is it? | Foreign Affairs Defense Security News
Pakistan

Pakistan Army cannot afford China’s expensive security demands. What is it? | Foreign Affairs Defense Security News

i2wtcBy i2wtcJune 3, 2024No Comments6 Mins Read
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Even as Pakistani law enforcement agencies have completed their investigation into the Dasoo terror attack, Beijing is not satisfied with Islamabad’s efforts to protect Chinese nationals working in Pakistan and ensure security for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project.

The attack was carried out by the Pakistan Taliban (TTP) in March and left five Chinese nationals dead.

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Not satisfied with Pakistan’s response so far, China wants Pakistan to launch a major counter-terrorism operation against militants who have been targeting Chinese people in the country, similar to Operation Zarb-e-Azb, which the Pakistani military launched in June 2014 and lasted for two years, according to an article by security analyst Muhammad Amir Rana published in Pakistani newspaper Dawn on Sunday.

Reports of China’s demands come just two days before Pakistani Prime Minister Sharif begins a five-day visit to China on June 4. During the visit, Pakistan and China are likely to explore strengthening cooperation under the multi-billion dollar CPEC project.

Such a demand seems difficult for Pakistan, which is facing a serious economic crisis, given the human and economic costs of Operation Zarb-e-Azb.

The massive operation will cost Pakistan billions of dollars

On the second anniversary of Operation Zarb-e-Azb in June 2016, the Pakistani military announced that 490 Pakistani soldiers and 3,500 militants had been killed during the two-year operation.

Operation Zarb-e-Azb was launched by the Pakistani military on June 15, 2014 to flush al-Qaeda-linked militants from Pakistan’s North Waziristan region.

In January 2017, Maria Saifuddin Effendi, a security analyst at the National Defense University, Islamabad, revealed that Operation Zarb-e-Azb had cost the Pakistani military $1.9 billion in losses.

Meanwhile, in June 2016, a Pakistani military spokesman claimed that Pakistan had suffered economic losses of $107 billion due to militant activity in the region since the 9/11 attacks on the United States.

Pakistan, which has been suffering from a severe economic crisis for more than two years, is cash-strapped and cannot afford to launch another large-scale counter-terrorism operation like Operation Zarb-e-Azb.

Pakistan’s finance ministry and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced on April 29 that lenders had approved the “immediate disbursement” of a $1.1 billion tranche that will complete the loan of a total of $3 billion agreed under the agreement in 2023.

Pakistan secured an IMF bailout in June last year, helping it avoid defaulting on its sovereign debt.

As of the end of April, Pakistan’s external debt exceeded $130 billion.

However, Pakistan has a history of launching security operations at China’s request.

A report in Sunday’s Dawn newspaper noted that the 2007 Lal Masjid operation in Islamabad was launched after then Chinese president Hu Jintao called Pakistan’s then president Pervez Musharraf. China requested the operation after a female student from the Jamia Hafsa Madrasa had reportedly kidnapped a Chinese medical worker.

According to the report, the Pakistani military launched Operation Zarb-e-Azb in 2014, partly due to international pressure, including from China.

However, Dawn reported that China’s latest demand for a large-scale counter-terrorism operation may not be feasible as the TTP and its affiliates are active in Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s cross-border operations could spark a large-scale conflict in the region, the report warned, adding that the insurgency in Balochistan, which is also targeting CPEC projects, needs to be handled carefully. An “unfortunate event” could impose “significant political and security costs” on Pakistan, the report said.

Why is China angry at Pakistan?

China’s reported demand for a major counterterrorism operation reflects concerns about growing threats to Chinese nationals working on CPEC-related projects in Pakistan and to its investments in the country.

Ayesha Siddiqa, a senior research fellow at the School of War Studies at King’s College London, wrote in Nikkei Asia in April that Beijing has asked Islamabad for permission to send Chinese personnel to provide security for 1,200 Chinese workers in Pakistan.

Pakistan had not agreed to the demands as of late April, according to Siddiqa, who previously served as director of naval studies for the Pakistan Navy.

Clearly, Beijing is not happy with the performance of Pakistan’s 12,000-strong army and navy force, established in 2016 to protect CPEC projects.

The CPEC project is the Pakistani half of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a $50 billion project. The 3,000-kilometer Chinese infrastructure network project being built in Pakistan aims to link the Pakistani ports of Gwadar and Karachi by land to China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

CPEC has faced numerous setbacks over the years, including security threats. Already this year, there have been at least three high-profile attacks targeting CPEC-related workers, projects or locations.

On March 26, the TTP attacked a Chinese convoy travelling from Islamabad to the Das Hydroelectric Project site in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, killing five Chinese.

China condemned the attack on engineers working on CPEC projects and demanded a “thorough investigation.”

Pakistan immediately formed a joint investigation team of police and intelligence officials to address Chinese concerns about Pakistani agencies’ ability to investigate high-profile terror attacks.

The Pakistani government also announced it would pay $2.5 million in compensation to the families of the five Chinese nationals killed in the attack.

A Pakistani military spokesman said on May 7 that the March 26 attack was planned in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and led from there, adding that cross-border terrorism from Afghanistan continues despite Pakistan’s “vital” role for peace in the neighbouring country.

In late May, Pakistani authorities arrested 11 TTP militants involved in the March attacks.

The Das incident comes in the wake of an increase in attacks on CPEC-related targets.

On March 26, one paramilitary soldier attached to Pakistan’s Balochistan Border Force was killed along with four militants of the Majeed Brigade of the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) in an attack on Pakistan Naval Base PNS Siddique in Turbat, Balochistan.

Located in Turbat city, Balochistan, PNS Siddique is Pakistan’s second largest naval air base and one of its primary functions is to provide support to CPEC projects.

Prior to the attack on PNS Siddique, militants had attacked the Gwadar Port Authority complex in March. The BLA claimed that its Majeed Brigade carried out the attack, killing two Pakistani soldiers and eight militants.

Heavy gunfire and explosions occurred during the March 20 attack on the Gwadar Port Authority complex, a key part of the CPEC project.

What is at stake for Pakistan?

Pakistan urgently seeks investments from friendly countries, which in turn want a completely secure environment for their investments.

Besides China, Saudi Arabia also has similar security concerns regarding its investments in Pakistan, according to Dawn.



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