Gwadar Port to have implications for US, Gulf too:ex-Pak envoy

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

Pakistan's strategic Gwadar Port, being developed by under a USD 46 billion economic corridor initiative, will have implications not only for but also for the US, and region, a former Pakistani envoy to the US has said.

"If is going to take care of this or have its military and naval presence in Gwadar, its implications won't be just about It will also put them at the mouth of the It will have implications for Iran, it will have implications for the Gulf, other countries. It will have implications for the US and its supply of and other trade with the countries," former Pakistani Ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani has said.



Haqqani said that Gwadar was always being conceived by as a strategic military base.

The China-Economic Corridor is a planned network of roads, and energy projects linking southern Pakistan, and the Gwadar Port, to China's restive Uyghur autonomous region.

As it passes through the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), has raised objection to the project.

"doesn't have the resources to have a large Navy base. But then Pakistan's entire strategic outlook is related to India," Haqqani said, adding that that is the reason why opposes UN Security Council reform.

"It's not because it really objects to adding new members to the permanent members to the Security Council. It doesn't want to become the permanent Security Council member," he said.

Samir Saran, Vice President of New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation (ORF) at a round table organised by The Hudson Institute, a top American think-tank said CPEC is a project where politics determines economic considerations.

Reiterating India's stand, Saran told the audience that part of the CPEC passes through PoK, which is a violation of India's sovereignty.

At the same time, he warned that the economic aspects of the project would virtually make subservient to

As a result of this, he noted, China's rise will no longer be in the Asia Pacific region.

"It could also be in the Indian Ocean, in the Arctic, in the Atlantic Ocean, and in the Mediterranean Sea. Therefore any partnerships anyone in the world wants to stitch together to now balance and measure this rise will necessarily have to move to the mouth of the and have to move through the Indian ocean and the rest of the Indian ocean," Saran said.

Saran also said that given its economic strength, is unlikely to pay back the financial assistance it is receiving from In fact it would have a tough time in paying USD 3 billion in annual repayment to

And every time would be unable to repay it, there would be fresh set of negotiation and the Chinese equity would keep on increasing in Pakistan, he said.

"CPEC is more political than it is economic in its very structure, in its very conception," he said.

The CPEC which crosses through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and ends up in the Gwadar port in Balochistan and for which Beijing has promised to pump in more than USD 46 billion is basically "colonising" and "rebranding" it as an economic package, argued Prof C Christine Fair from Georgetown University, before a Washington audience last week.

Fair, alleged that is headed towards becoming a colony of through CPEC.

"CPEC is colonising and rebranding it as an economic package," she said during the round table discussion on 'The Economic Corridor: Regional Ramifications', organised by The Hudson Institute.

The discussion on CPEC ahead of the China-sponsored upcoming summit in Beijing issued a warning bell to the major global players and the three experts asserted that this is one project which if completed would tend to pose a major threat to American strategic interest in this part of the world as does in the disputed South Sea.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Gwadar Port to have implications for US, Gulf too:ex-Pak envoy

Pakistan's strategic Gwadar Port, being developed by China under a USD 46 billion economic corridor initiative, will have implications not only for India but also for the US, Iran and Gulf region, a former Pakistani envoy to the US has said. "If China is going to take care of this or have its military and naval presence in Gwadar, its implications won't be just about India. It will also put them at the mouth of the Gulf. It will have implications for Iran, it will have implications for the Gulf, other countries. It will have implications for the US and its supply of oil and other trade with the Gulf countries," former Pakistani Ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani has said. Haqqani said that Gwadar was always being conceived by Islamabad as a strategic military base. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is a planned network of roads, railways and energy projects linking southern Pakistan, and the Gwadar Port, to China's restive Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region. As it passes ... Pakistan's strategic Gwadar Port, being developed by under a USD 46 billion economic corridor initiative, will have implications not only for but also for the US, and region, a former Pakistani envoy to the US has said.

"If is going to take care of this or have its military and naval presence in Gwadar, its implications won't be just about It will also put them at the mouth of the It will have implications for Iran, it will have implications for the Gulf, other countries. It will have implications for the US and its supply of and other trade with the countries," former Pakistani Ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani has said.

Haqqani said that Gwadar was always being conceived by as a strategic military base.

The China-Economic Corridor is a planned network of roads, and energy projects linking southern Pakistan, and the Gwadar Port, to China's restive Uyghur autonomous region.

As it passes through the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), has raised objection to the project.

"doesn't have the resources to have a large Navy base. But then Pakistan's entire strategic outlook is related to India," Haqqani said, adding that that is the reason why opposes UN Security Council reform.

"It's not because it really objects to adding new members to the permanent members to the Security Council. It doesn't want to become the permanent Security Council member," he said.

Samir Saran, Vice President of New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation (ORF) at a round table organised by The Hudson Institute, a top American think-tank said CPEC is a project where politics determines economic considerations.

Reiterating India's stand, Saran told the audience that part of the CPEC passes through PoK, which is a violation of India's sovereignty.

At the same time, he warned that the economic aspects of the project would virtually make subservient to

As a result of this, he noted, China's rise will no longer be in the Asia Pacific region.

"It could also be in the Indian Ocean, in the Arctic, in the Atlantic Ocean, and in the Mediterranean Sea. Therefore any partnerships anyone in the world wants to stitch together to now balance and measure this rise will necessarily have to move to the mouth of the and have to move through the Indian ocean and the rest of the Indian ocean," Saran said.

Saran also said that given its economic strength, is unlikely to pay back the financial assistance it is receiving from In fact it would have a tough time in paying USD 3 billion in annual repayment to

And every time would be unable to repay it, there would be fresh set of negotiation and the Chinese equity would keep on increasing in Pakistan, he said.

"CPEC is more political than it is economic in its very structure, in its very conception," he said.

The CPEC which crosses through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and ends up in the Gwadar port in Balochistan and for which Beijing has promised to pump in more than USD 46 billion is basically "colonising" and "rebranding" it as an economic package, argued Prof C Christine Fair from Georgetown University, before a Washington audience last week.

Fair, alleged that is headed towards becoming a colony of through CPEC.

"CPEC is colonising and rebranding it as an economic package," she said during the round table discussion on 'The Economic Corridor: Regional Ramifications', organised by The Hudson Institute.

The discussion on CPEC ahead of the China-sponsored upcoming summit in Beijing issued a warning bell to the major global players and the three experts asserted that this is one project which if completed would tend to pose a major threat to American strategic interest in this part of the world as does in the disputed South Sea.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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