Analysis: Why is Russia warming up to Pakistan?

in #steemit7 years ago

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As Pakistan navigates its troubled relationship with the United States and scrambles to avoid being blacklisted for "not taking action on some of the entities and individuals designated as terrorists by the UN", regional alliances are shifting - and analysts ponder whether a cozier relationship with countries like Russia will complicate efforts to move toward peace in neighboring Afghanistan.
Russia, analysts say, is motivated by fears of a growing presence of Islamic State militants in neighboring Afghanistan and has warmed up to Pakistan as well as to Taliban insurgents batting the upstarts Islamic State group affiliate known as Khorasan Province, the ancient name of an area that once included parts of Afghanistan, Iran and Central Asia.
In the latest move to strengthen ties, Russia last week named an honorary consul to Khyber Pukhtunkhwa, which borders Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanistan, where IS has established its headquarters. The IS is also present in northern Afghanistan's border regions with Central Asia, causing further consternation in Moscow.
Russia's honorary consul, Mohammad Arsallah Khan, who belongs to a powerful business family in Pakistan's northwest, said economic development is the best weapon against extremism. To that end, he said, he will promote increased commerce with Pakistan's neighbors, including Russia, which currently accounts for barely $500 million in trade.
"I think this whole region is a bit of a mess, which I realize is one of the great understatements.
Extremists have been taken lightly before and we are where we are because of that," said Khan in an interview in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. reflecting on his business-based strategy, Khan said, "where you can give people a way from terrorism, away from extremism."
A turnaround in Pak-Russia relationship
The appointment reflects a stark turnaround in Pakistan's historical relationship with Russia.
In the 1980s, Pakistan and the US were united against Russia as the Soviet Union sent 150,000 soldiers into Afghanistan to prop up its communist ally in the Afghan capital, Kabul. At the time, Pakistan, with US backing, used Peshawar as a staging arena to arm and deploy Islamic insurgents, referred to as mujahedeen - or as President Ronald Reagan often called them, "freedom fighters" - to wage war on Russia. After 10 years, Russia failed to win the war and on February 15, 1989, left Afghanistan in a negotiated exit.
For some, Russia's cozying up to Pakistan is a bit of a "poke in the eye" to the US, still embroiled in the Afghan conflict that is now in its 17th year more than $122 billion, according to its own special Inspector General on Afghanistan Reconstruction.
Still, Petr Topychkanov, a senior researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, said Russia worries about the US presence in Afghanistan.
"Russia is concerned about the long-term presence of the US and its allies in Afghanistan, and therefore it's in Russia's long-term interests to have an inside view of the situation in Afghanistan," he said, saying that Pakistan provides the viewing platform.
Daniel Markey, senior research professor in international relations at John's Hopkins University, said Russian relations with aim to solve two problems for Moscow. First, to blunt the threat of IS from Afghanistan. Second, to determine US influence, he said.
"The point is that Russia and Pakistan probably have more in common with respect to the war in Afghanistan than the United States has with either - and this is a real turnaround from prior history."
For further detail:
https://www.dawn.com/news/1392060/analysis-why-is-russia-warming-up-to-pakistan

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