Skip to main content

NATO gets its supply route from Russia

The summit between Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitri Medvedev at the Kremlin on Monday has produced an agreement that will let the NATO-US forces fly their troops and weapons across Russian territory. The agreement allows 4,500 US military flights annually over Russia “at no extra charge”. A White House announcement stated: “This agreement will enable the United States to further diversify the crucial transportation routes used to move troops and critical equipment to re-supply international forces in Afghanistan”.

The joint statement issued after the summit had the following comment bearing on the situation in Afghanistan: “The two countries will work together to help stabilise Afghanistan, including increasing assistance to the Afghan army and police, and training counter-narcotics personnel. They will work together with the international community for the upcoming Afghan elections and they will help Afghanistan and Pakistan work together against the common threats of terrorism, extremism and drug trafficking.” President Obama’s own comment after the summit made it clear that the two countries had resolved “to reset US-Russian relations so that we can cooperate more effectively in areas of common interest”.

The highlight of the summit, of course, was the supply route for NATO which Russia had opposed in the recent past. The next highlight of the summit, not spelled out but certainly a subject of mutual understanding, was NATO policy towards Russia, especially its US-led move to include under its umbrella those states that Russia considers within the orbit of its own influence. The Americans may therefore have agreed to soft-pedal on the Ukraine front, and policy rollback in Georgia, also a former member republic of the USSR, which Russia had attacked last August to target the military installations the Georgians had built according to NATO standards.

The transit route issue has clearly forced the Obama administration to step back from the Russia policy of the Bush administration, signalled by the Monday summit’s new agreements on nuclear arms cuts and replacement of a key disarmament treaty, including figures for reduction in nuclear warheads to between 1,500 and 1,675 within seven years. This came under the unspoken rubric of undoing the Bush administration’s decision to renege on disarmament with Russia.

Before the summit Kyrgyzstan had already indicated that it would “renegotiate” the American bases on its soil and will not insist on their immediate removal. Russia had been mollified and this mollification must have embraced Russia’s complaints in relation to the expansion of NATO in particular and the general feeling in Russia that America was spreading its tentacles eastward after destroying a Slav state in the Balkans in 1999. The consequent thaw will have direct bearing on the situation in Afghanistan; and it will include a nod from China which fears the terrorists more than the expansion of American influence in the region.

Will this mean a reduction of Pakistan’s leverage in any way? Islamabad remains important because of the land route it provides for NATO supplies. If there is any reduction it will be bought by the US only at a big financial cost. But far more than that is the developing consensus in the neighbourhood of Pakistan behind the NATO presence in Afghanistan and the success of its mission against terrorism. This development will affect Pakistan’s policy of assistance to this mission conditional to rolling back the Indian encroachment in Afghanistan and resultant interference inside Pakistan. No one at the international level seems to worry about Governor NWFP Owais Ghani’s warning about “dangerous” American activities across the Durand Line.

The summit will disabuse a lot of Pakistani analysts who have been hoping that Russia would defeat America, now that it is stuck in Afghanistan, the same way America had defeated Russia when it was stuck in Afghanistan in the 1980s. The other jolt the development will deliver is to the strategists who think nothing of the regional consensus gelling against Pakistan’s lingering policy of “strategic depth” and its permanent posture of deterring and challenging India. The general feeling in Pakistan is that if the NATO-US forces leave Afghanistan, the power vacuum thus created would be filled by Pakistan. That may be an erroneous conclusion. *

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

CSS 2009 Written Result

FEDERAL PUBLIC SERIVCE COMMISSION Aga Khan Road , F-5/1 Islamabad , the 26th October, 2009 SUBJECT: COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION, 2009 (CSS) FOR RECRUITMENT TO THE POSTS UNDER FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IN BS-17 It is notified that following candidates have qualified in the written part of the Competitive Examination, 2009 ROLL NO. NAME 28 Amer Ali 42 Athar Farooq 55 Bilal Sabir 65 Farasat Ali Shah 72 Farwa Saadia Batool 103 Jamal Shah Mashood 106 Junaid Ali Khan 113 Khizer Abbas 123 Maham Asif Malik 161 Muhammad Naveed Akbar 203 Rabia Abbasi 229 Syed Mansoor Shah Bukhari 230 Syed Muhammad Afsar Shah 265 Tamur Aman 271 Wajeeha Bashir 282 Zaheer Ahmad 286 Zofishan Manzoor 292 Abdullah Nayyar Sheikh 300 Arshad Ali 301 Arshad Ali 311 Azmat Ullah 333 Hina Sayeed 335 Humaira Mehmood 366 Muhammad Akbar Jan Gandapur 386 Muhammad Tamur Ali Khan Ganda 422 Saif Ullah 447 Abdul Slam 448 Abdul Wahhab Arshed 451 Adeel Khawar 466 Ali Noman 476 Asma Mubarik ...

Foreign Service of Pakistan (FSP)

Well, I have opted for Foreign Service of Pakistan (FSP) as my first preference, and believe Foreign Service of Pakistan (FSP) is not merely a profession but life. It has several facades which make it distinguished from rest of the cadres. I take this opportunity to highlight few of them. In today’s highly transformational world, FSP provides opportunities to its diplomats to compete with best of the best of the world. Challenge and change are inherent in a Foreign Service Officer's professional life of service to his/her country. A diplomat can make a difference in the world. Soon after you join Pakistan Embassy/Mission as 3rd Secretary, your challenges-oriented life embarks upon. FSP is a life time learning cadre undoubtedly. Learning and exploring discerning cultures, languages, civilizations etc. are few of the pile novel experiences which a diplomat undergoes during his career. In order to rise to the occasion, FSP officers build their capacities inline with the vibrant and dy...

CSS 2010 Allocations

GOVERNMENT OF PAKISTAN CABINET SECRETARIAT ESTABLISHMENT DIVISION ***** PRESS NOTE Consequent upon qualifying the Competitive Examination, 2010 conducted by the Federal Public Service Commission, 199 candidates have been selected for appointment against BS-17 posts of the Occupational Groups/Services. 2. All the candidates are advised to send acceptance of their respective Groups/ Services on Fax No.051-9201526 or through Urgent Mail Service to Section Officer (T-V), Establishment Division, Cabinet Block, Islamabad, within fifteen days of the issuance of this Press Note, failing which, the offer shall stand cancelled and no representation will be entertained. Details of the groups/services allocated to the candidates are as under:- MERIT VACANCIES=17 PAKISTAN AUDIT AND ACCOUNTS SERVICE= 01 VACANCY S.NO MERIT NO ROLL NO NAME OF THE CANDIDATE 1 76 10232 Zain Ul Abidin PAKISTAN CUSTOMS SERVICE= 01 VACANCY S.NO MERIT NO ROLL NO NAME OF THE CANDIDATE 1 19 9691 Naseeb Ullah Khan DISTRICT MAN...