Andrew Korybko
The
current century presents a plethora of strategic opportunities for Pakistan,
provided that Islamabad knows how to pluck the low-hanging fruit and take the
initiative. The steady development of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC) is making the country ever more attractive for a wide variety of
international partners, some of which have traditionally been aligned with Pakistan,
and others which are entirely new and unprecedented. No matter which of the two
categories these states fall under, it’s evident that they’re all interested in
taking advantage of this game-changing series of infrastructure projects.
Never before has China had a
reliable overland trade corridor to the Indian Ocean, and this in turn opens up
a wide range of options for the People’s Republic and its economic partners.
Moreover, the eventual completion of CPEC will allow Russia and the landlocked
states of Central Asia to more easily conduct commerce with the broader
Indian Ocean Region, thereby leading to the creation of previously uncharted trade
routes which will invigorate each set of partners and profit the irreplaceable
transit state of Pakistan. In terms of the bigger picture, each crisscrossing
network of economic connections in one way or another is expected to pass
through Pakistan by means of CPEC, thereby empowering Islamabad to leverage its
crucial geostrategic position in pursuit of its national interests.
The convergence of so many
diverse civilizational actors – including Europeans, Russians, Turks, Arabs,
Iranians, Chinese, and Africans – in one state is made possible by Beijing’s
One Belt One Road vision of global connectivity as manifested through CPEC, and
it accordingly allows for Pakistan to mediate over a dialogue of civilizations
in the 21st century.
This is a pivotal role of the utmost importance and highest responsibility, and
it has the very real potential of transforming Pakistan from a regional leader
to a hemispheric Great Power within the next decade. This analysis will thus
explore the way in which this grand strategy can be actualized, sequentially
describing the overall concept, the various civilizational-connectivity
channels, and the challenges that Pakistan can expect to face.
Concept
Abstract:
The
economic attractiveness of CPEC serves as an irresistible magnet for all sorts
of various actors to utilize its infrastructural connectivity in facilitating
their trade objectives, whether it’s enhancing bilateral trade with China such
as the EU, Mideast, and African states may naturally be interested in, or in
acquiring a convenient outlet to the Indian Ocean such as what Russia and the
Central Asian republics desire. The convergence of so many civilizational
forces in Pakistan will propel the South Asian state to worldwide importance by
gifting its leaders with the impressive potential to serve as the common middle
ground between each of them, both literally in terms of CPEC connectivity and
figuratively as it relates to the broader dialogue of civilizations concept.
The
latter objective is wholly dependent on the former, meaning that Pakistan is
unlikely to bring together a wide array of hemispheric interests and actors if
the CPEC project isn’t completed or is severely undermined after the fact.
Conversely, the completion of CPEC will enable Pakistan to do just that, which
thus propels the country’s significance to global heights. The second and
largest part of this research will describe the different connectivity channels
that CPEC opens up between Pakistan and the rest of Afro-Eurasia, but at this
point a lot more needs to be said about the grand strategy behind this exciting
endeavor.
Once
CPEC becomes fully operational, Pakistan will unofficially become China’s most
important gateway to the rest of the world. Although the People’s Republic
currently engages in a staggering amount of trade with each of its countless
partners, the vast majority of this is conducted via maritime routes which
traverse the bottlenecked chokepoint of the Strait of Malacca and the
contentious waters of the South China Sea, both of which are uncomfortably
vulnerable to an American blockade or similar sort of interference in the event
of a conflict between the two Great Powers. It’s mostly for this reason and due
to the foresight of Chinese strategists that Beijing decided to pioneer an
overland trade route to the Indian Ocean through CPEC, relying on its
decades-long and all-weather friendship with Pakistan in order to make this a
reality.
Tangible:
Upon
completion, CPEC will make Pakistan the most reliable, cost-effective, and
fastest route for carrying out trade with China. It’s a much shorter voyage for
ships to travel to Gwadar than it is to Guangzhou, and once goods are unloaded
at the Arabian Sea port, they can quickly be spirited northwards to the Chinese
border and enter the People’s Republic in record time. By cutting days off of
the journey and avoiding the possibility of unwanted American naval
interference, CPEC is a priceless gift to each of China’s partners and is
expected to become one of the most widely utilized overland trade routes in the
world. As CPEC becomes more popular, Pakistan naturally becomes more important,
and this provides the country with the chance to take on expanded leadership
responsibilities in Afro-Eurasia.
Understanding
that international trade facilitation between China and each of its partners
will become the backbone of Pakistan’s future strategic significance to the
rest of the world, the government should take the initiative to host CPEC trade
fairs in Gwadar as a means of showcasing its newfound logistical importance.
These gatherings could be jointly organized by Pakistan and China’s relevant
ministries, and they’d serve the purpose of incentivizing more companies to use
this route as additional infrastructure comes online to make it more
attractive. Hand in hand with promoting CPEC, Pakistan could also work on an
ambitious public relations campaign to rebrand its image by associating itself
more closely with this project. If done properly, then this could dramatically
reverse the soft power losses that Pakistan suffered across the past two
decades when the Western Mainstream Media relentlessly waged information
warfare against the country.
It’s
crucial that Pakistan takes urgent and visible steps to debunk the
foreign-imposed stereotypes that the country is an “exporter of terrorism” and
“horrifyingly unsafe”, since this false narrative is a powerful deterrent to
the development of enhanced trade ties. With this in mind, it’s advisable that
CPEC trade fairs be bolstered by complementary political and socio-cultural
forums, events, and conferences that highlight the recent advances in
Pakistan’s domestic stability and raise awareness about its civilizational
connectivity potential in promoting a multilateral dialogue of peace with each
of its partners. Thought leaders (think tank experts, analysts, etc.),
journalists, government officials, and civil society representatives from all
across Europe, Russia, Central Asia, the Mideast, East Africa, and China should
be invited to attend these gatherings in order to network with one another and
learn how Pakistan is becoming synonymous with CPEC, peace, and prosperity.
The
ideal goal should be for Gwadar to host regular trade fairs and socio-cultural
events which culminate in a big-ticket yearly meeting akin in esteemed
importance to the Shangri-La Dialogue, except focusing on participation from
each of the aforementioned regional actors most likely to partake in CPEC.
Given the overt economic focus of CPEC, this prospective headline-grabbing
meeting could market itself on bringing together distinguished representatives
from relevant institutional actors such as the Economic Cooperation
Organization (ECO), the EU, the Eurasian Union, GCC, SAARC, the East African
Community, and other ‘non-aligned’ forces such as China, Iran, and Ethiopia,
for example. Building off of the common denominator of multilateral trade
facilitation through CPEC, the attendees at the “Gwadar Gathering” could then
expand upon the subject of conversation to more broadly include security,
civilizational, and strategic topics as well, which could thus allow for
non-CPEC-participating countries such as India and the US to also take part in
this meeting.
Symbolic:
What Pakistan is aiming for is
to become one of the centers of the emerging
Multipolar World Order, taking advantage of the limitless benefits
afforded by CPEC to transform itself from a regional leader to an actor of
hemispheric and even global importance. It can only do this by promoting itself
as the neutral and well-trusted point of convergence between a variety of
different economic actors, which correspondingly enables it to broaden its
relevance to the world by highlighting how it could serve as a bridge in
connecting each of their larger multilateral interests. There has yet to be
(and may very well never be) another state capable of bringing together as
diverse of a set of partners as Pakistan can through CPEC, since no other
country is as relevant to the collective long-term economic prospects of
Europe, Russia, Central Asia, the Mideast, East Africa, and China.
Consequently, Islamabad should seize the moment by proactively informing each
of its current and prospective partners about the win-win future that awaits
them through CPEC, as well as explaining how this directly correlates with
their respective grand strategic interests.
Paying special attention to the
leading multipolar Eurasian Great Powers of Russia and China, their
partnerships with Pakistan fulfill an indispensable soft power role for each of
them by serving as a powerful bridgehead to wider engagement with the global
Islamic community. Unrecognized by most casual observers, Pakistan is indeed
the most powerful Muslim country in the world because of the combination of its
nuclear weapons arsenal, enormous conventional military capabilities, provably
effective counter-terrorist forces, large population, and the fastest-growing
Muslim economy, all of which are going to be greatly augmented by Pakistan’s
new global geostrategic position vis-à-vis CPEC. Furthermore, Pakistan is
neutral in the American-provoked sectarian wars in the Mideast, having the
second-largest Shiite population behind neighboring Iran yet also enjoying very
fruitful relations with Saudi Arabia, which thus places it in the enviable and
rare position of being trusted by both “sides”. Because of this, Moscow and
Beijing’s productive relations with Islamabad reverberate all across the wider
“Ummah” and leave a favorable impression in the minds of most Muslims.
It goes
without saying that this intangible ‘civilizational credence’ is crucially
significant nowadays in order to stem off the US’ divide-and-rule scheme for
engineering a ‘clash of civilizations’ to divide the Eastern Hemisphere, ergo
the related need for Pakistan to use CPEC as a springboard for encouraging a
dialogue about the imminent convergence of civilizations across its territory
during a prospective “Gwadar Gathering”. The respected credibility and
long-established trust that Pakistan has earned among the global Muslim community
can go a long way in helping Russia and China deepen their socio-economic
engagements across the Mideast and East Africa. In fact, their relationships
with Pakistan could eventually become the model for other Muslim countries’
ties with these two states and accordingly serve as the gateway for
strategically broadening these Great Powers’ presence in these regions, with
Islamabad cementing the progress that Moscow and Beijing have already made in
this regard and ultimately complementing their grand strategies.
Channels
As it was stipulated earlier in
the research, the convergence of civilizations and all of the aforementioned
concepts are entirely dependent on the multilateral connectivity potential of
CPEC, particularly in terms of how it relates to successfully attracting
European, Russian, Central Asian, Mideast, East African, and Chinese trade
across Pakistani territory. This is the essential prerequisite which must be
met in order for Islamabad to proceed with its 21st-century
plans to become a globally relevant Great Power all across the Eastern
Hemisphere. Because of how intimately the country’s future is tied to CPEC, and
keeping in mind the earlier suggestion that Pakistan rebrand itself to more
closely affiliate its international image with this project, the following list
elaborates on some of the bilateral CPEC relationships that Islamabad should
promote as soon as possible, all of which if actualized would collectively
contribute to the convergence of civilizations and consequent multipolar stability:
CPEC-China:
The initial purpose behind CPEC
was to provide China with a reliable overland access route to the Indian Ocean
by means of its close Pakistani ally, thereby easing the physical, financial,
and strategic costs of trade with its European, Mideast, and East African
partners per the reasons that were discussed at the beginning of this analysis.
CPEC has been developing at a very fast pace, especially the work that’s been
done in Gwadar, and the project is already operational despite not being fully
completed. As it stands, this is the first of China’s many Silk Road projects
to be open for business, even if it’s only partially online at the moment. The
reason why this is so important to draw attention to is because Beijing hopes
to eventually construct two additional mainland trade routes across Eurasia in
order to link the People’s Republic more directly with its European, Russian,
and Mideast partners. These are the Eurasian Land Bridge across Russia and an envisioned
high-speed railroad across
Central Asia to Iran and inevitably to Turkey and further afield to the EU (via
the Balkans).
Neither of these has made as
much progress as the One Belt One Road’s flagship project of CPEC, and there’s
no telling when they’ll ever be fully constructed. The Eurasian Land Bridge is
the most spoken about and seriously considered of the two trans-continental
routes under consideration, but even this landmark effort of the Russian-Chinese
Strategic Partnership is still
far from becoming a reality anytime soon. Moreover, both the Eurasian Land Bridge
and the prospective Rimland Railroad between China and the EU (by means of
Iran, Turkey, and the Balkans) are fraught with significant Hybrid War risks and political sensitivities in the era
of the New Cold War, and a multitude of scenarios could arise whereby these
routes are either ultimately unconstructed, rendered inoperable, and/or
anxiously avoided for one reason or another. With this in mind, there’s no
doubt that CPEC will remain the premier New Silk Road project for the
foreseeable future, and in the absence of large-scale trading across the
Northern Sea Route (which itself is dependent on unpredictable environmental
and political conditions), it might even be the only feasible non-Malacca
maritime trade route to China for its Eastern Hemispheric partners.
Conceptually
speaking, CPEC can be likened to the jugular vein of Afro-Eurasian integration,
and it’s expected to be a vital driving force of the emerging Multipolar World
Order. At the same time, however, the project’s unrivaled geostrategic
significance makes it an irresistible target of subterfuge, which will be
touched upon in the third and final section of this research. This is important
to keep in mind as all of the subsequent CPEC connectivity channels and
resultant convergence of civilizations would disappear if the endeavor itself
was put into serious jeopardy by joint US-Indian covert efforts. Therefore,
whether it’s consciously recognized or not at this time, the long-term viability
of the EU, Mideast, and East Africa’s trade with China is in danger if
Washington and New Delhi ramp up their destabilization efforts against
Pakistan. This is a highly sensitive political point which may not ever be
publicly stated but must nevertheless be discretely conveyed to each of these
stakeholders sooner than later so that they can properly comprehend the risks
that their American and Indian ‘partners’ are irresponsibly creating for them.
The same goes for Russia and Central Asia, which obviously wouldn’t use CPEC to
further their trade with adjacent China, but rather to gain direct access to
the wider Indian Ocean Region marketplace.
CPEC-EU:
The EU
is one of China’s largest trading partners and vice-versa, so it can be
confidently anticipated that CPEC will eventually be used to conduct a large
amount of bilateral trade between them. It was already discussed how this route
reduces the physical, financial, and strategic costs of commerce between these
two, and as Pakistan successfully rebrands its national image and more of
CPEC’s infrastructural projects come online, it’s expected that European and
Chinese companies will come to increasingly rely on this geographically pivotal
vector of their relationship. Although an increasing amount of trans-continental
overland trade will inevitably be conducted across the Eurasian Land Bridge and
Rimland Railroad, neither project is expected to enter into full operation
anytime soon, and even when they do, Hybrid War risks and political
sensitivities might render them inoperable or make certain states avoid them.
Being the prudent long-term
strategists that they are, the Chinese aren’t taking any chances by assuming
that either of these two projects will ever replace the EU’s maritime trade
with the People’s Republic, which explains why Beijing bought the Greek port of
Piraeus (one of the largest in Europe) and is constructing the Balkan
Silk Road high-speed
rail route from the Mediterranean to Central and Eastern Europe. The intention
behind this initiative is to allow China to conveniently trade with these
regions via a newly charted southern access route as opposed to having to
lengthily circumnavigate the European peninsula and offload goods to them from
the Baltic Sea. Beijing wouldn’t be pursuing the Balkan Silk Road if it had
full confidence that the Eurasian Land Bridge would mostly replace the EU’s
maritime trade with China, so the very fact that the given project is in
existence and progressively moving forward should be taken as a sign that China
expects more of its EU trade to transit through CPEC instead.
To
explain a little bit more in case the reader doesn’t follow, all maritime trade
between the EU and China is greatly assisted by CPEC because of the
comparatively lesser physical, financial, and strategic costs that it entails
as compared to the circuitously longer route through the bottlenecked
chokepoint of the Strait of Malacca and the contentious South China Sea. Just
like the Eurasian Land Bridge won’t ever fully replace the EU’s maritime trade
with China, so too will CPEC never fully replace this mode of trade’s historic
reliance on the Strait of Malacca and the South China Sea. Rather, the
Pakistani-traversing project offers an alternative route to China which is less
susceptible to external interference, while ironically remaining just as
dependent on the Suez Canals and Bab El Mandeb. However, the key difference
between these western chokepoints and their eastern counterparts is that
they’re controlled by Egypt and the GCC, respectively, both of which are on
very friendly terms with Pakistan and China, which makes it considerably less
likely that they’ll agree to go along with the US’ geopolitical blackmail
against either.
CPEC-Mideast:
The next
connectivity channel which will be discussed should be divided into Iranian and
non-Iranian halves due to several important geographic and strategic
differences. Turkey and the Levantine countries could conduct their trade with
China just like the Europeans do through the Mediterranean, Suez Canals, and
Bab El Mandeb en route to CPEC. If the geopolitical situation allows them to,
however, they could also transport their goods overland through Iraq and
onwards to the Persian Gulf, from where they could then trade with China just
like most of the Gulf Kingdoms do by crossing the Strait of Hormuz and
accessing CPEC. The UAE, Oman, and Yemen importantly avoid any of these three
chokepoints by having direct maritime connectivity to CPEC, thus giving them
the highest degree of flexibility in trading with China and potentially
positioning them to function as alternative overland ‘detours’ in the event
that the bottlenecks become unpassable.
Iran is in a somewhat interesting
place by theoretically having three potential avenues for conducting trade with
China. All of the country’s ports except for Chabahar are in the Persian Gulf
and thus dependent on the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint. As for the far eastern
port in the province of Sistan and Baluchestan, it’s relatively underdeveloped
despite India’s commitment to modernize it as part of its ambitious efforts to
streamline the so-called North-South
Corridor. Chabahar also remains largely disconnected from the rest of
Iran’s road and rail networks, making it very difficult for the country to rely
on it in times of dire need. Similarly, because of Chabahar’s distance relative
to the rest of the country and its economic heartland, it’s unlikely that Iran
will properly utilize the commercial possibilities of the neighboring CPEC port
of Gwadar anytime soon, though that doesn’t necessarily mean that Tehran’s
participation in the project should be ruled out. Iran recently expressed
interest in CPEC,
and it’s possible that if India follows through on its promises and helps to
develop this corner of the country, that it could inadvertently allow Iran to
strengthen its connectivity with CPEC.
This is very important because
Iran can’t rely on the Rimland Railroad which has yet to even materialize into
a concrete proposal, and even if it ever does, Central Asia will always remain
a Hybrid
War hotspot. Furthermore, although there’s already a roundabout
rail route connecting
Iran with China via the peripheries of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, it’s not
economically dependable at this time and is also much longer than simply
shipping goods from the country’s western economic heartland across the Persian
Gulf to Gwadar and then northwards to China. It’ll take a lot of time before
the Rimland Railway becomes a practical option for Chinese-Iranian bilateral
trade, so in the meantime, Iran might just have to depend on either entirely
maritime routes to China or the shortcut through CPEC. At this point, it’s
pertinent to talk about the CPEC-Iran channel and how it could reasonably
develop in the future.
It was already written how Iran
is unlikely to achieve large-scale direct mainland connection to CPEC due to
its infrastructure shortcomings in Sistan and Baluchestan province, so this
begs the question of what other types of connectivity are available aside from
sailing across the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz to Gwadar. Readers should
be made aware that the bulk of Iranian-Chinese trade is through energy
resources, and that it’s in this sphere where Tehran could potentially be most
useful for CPEC. A $2
billion partially-Chinese-financed Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline is already under construction which will one
day transport gas across Gwadar and to Nawabshah, from where it’ll then enter
Pakistan’s internal gas distribution network and help power the rest of the
country. Interestingly, Russia is also involved in constructing the $2 billion North-South gas pipeline from Karachi to Lahore which will enable
Pakistan to import LNG in the future. Taken together and prognosticating the
best-case scenario, there’s a chance that Russia and Iran could be convinced to
put aside their undeclared energy rivalry and cooperate in helping to bring Gulf gas to
China via Pakistan.
For example, following the
eventual completion of the Iran-Pakistan and North-South gas pipelines, these
successful confidence-building projects could be used as the launching pad for
a grander multilateral connectivity initiative aimed at more closely
integrating Russia, China, Pakistan, and Iran. Russia, with its globally
renowned professional expertise in the gas sector, could modernize and develop
an expanded CPEC-parallel pipeline for shipping Iranian gas to China. There’s a
lot of technical planning that would be involved with this and it probably
wouldn’t see the light of day until midway through the next decade at the
absolute earliest, but it’s a promising idea which should at the very least be
casually entertained by the expert and professional communities in case it
becomes viably attractive in the future. As the 21st century steadily becomes characterized by
Eurasian integration, it’s only a matter of time before this proposal is
seriously looked at as a logical way to expand upon CPEC and deepen
Iranian-Chinese relations, with the collateral benefit being that Russia and
Pakistan could also draw even closer as well.
CPEC-East Africa:
China’s commercial relations
with East Africa are taking on a heightened importance in the early 21st century, representing the most dependable
way for the People’s Republic to deal with its overcapacity and thus sustain
domestic economic growth and social stability. Contrary to what many Western
pundits have alleged, China’s investments in Africa are no longer just
one-sided cash-for-resource agreements, but part of a mutually
beneficial development partnership whereby
Beijing is sincerely committed to seeing its counterparts flourish and prosper.
China needs African markets just like Africa needs Chinese infrastructural
investments, and this win-win arrangement makes for a perfect match between the
two partners. The author extensively explored the nature of Chinese-African
relations in his ongoing
Hybrid War series at
Oriental Review, and the reader is strongly encouraged to reference it for
additional detailed information about the nuances of this under-discussed
partnership.
As the
most generalized summary which can be topically offered in this context, China
is constructing four ultra-strategic infrastructure corridors along the eastern
part of the continent which could directly link up with CPEC after their
cross-oceanic journey to Gwadar. From north to south, these are the
Ethiopia-Djibouti railway; the LAPSSET Corridor between Ethiopia, South Sudan,
and Kenya; the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) across Kenya and Uganda; and the
Central Corridor (CC) from Tanzania to Rwanda and Burundi. Additionally,
there’s also the 1970s legacy project of the TAZARA railway which has recently
been modernized and connects the coastal country to its landlocked and
copper-rich neighbor of Zambia. It should also be said the SGR, CC, and TAZARA
have the very real possibility of laying the foundation for an interoceanic
North and South Trans-African Railway bridging the continent’s Indian and
Atlantic coasts.
Regardless
of how far China’s infrastructure projects go in penetrating the heart of
Africa and beyond, it’s indisputable that trade between the two is always
growing and will figure ever more prominently in Beijing’s strategic calculus.
Due to physical constraints, all bilateral trade must cross the Indian Ocean
for some length of distance or another, so it only makes sense that this will
be expedited via CPEC and its conveniently located northern oceanic port of
Gwadar. In terms of the bigger picture, this means that Pakistan is poised to
become the geographic interface through which Chinese-African trade is
conducted, which could thus make Islamabad a future player in East African
affairs. Being the most powerful Muslim country and the origin of some
British-era colonial descendants, Pakistan can leverage its religious and
ethnic links along the majority-Muslim East African coast in order to prospect
new networking and investment opportunities that simultaneously work out to its
own and China’s strategic benefit through the overlapping complementarities of
Islamabad’s outreach programs and Beijing’s One Belt One Road vision.
CPEC-Russia/Central Asia:
The last CPEC channel to be
discussed is that between Pakistan and its northern partners in Russia and
Central Asia. Moscow and its regional allies obviously don’t need to go through
Pakistan in order to trade with China, but they do need to utilize CPEC if they
are to gain market access to East Africa, South Asia, and ASEAN. Russia doesn’t
currently have many economic interests in Africa, but its government is keen to
develop the country’s commercial ties with India and ASEAN, neither of which
are exclusively dependent on CPEC but could be greatly assisted by it. In
connection with this, Russia could potentially access Pakistan via the narrow border
that it shares with China between Altai and Xinjiang, through which Moscow is
already countenancing the possibility of energy and water pipelines. If Russian decision makers
continue to pay attention to this strategic corridor, then it’s likely that
they’ll eventually realize that it could also be used for connecting
Siberia to the Indian Ocean by means
of CPEC and thus facilitating the country’s trade with India and ASEAN.
However, due to India’s jealous
jingoism, Moscow can’t openly declare its eagerness to utilize CPEC, hence why
it must resort to a curious
diplomatic game of
denying any official interest or investment in the project, but at the same
time remaining silent about the likelihood of private Russian companies using
this apolitical infrastructure network. There’s of course no way that Moscow
could or ever would prohibit its private citizens and business entities from transporting
their goods across CPEC, so India’s obsessive efforts to prevent Russia from
using it will inevitably be in vain. Nevertheless, the Russian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs must still play along with India and officially deny that
Moscow is involved in CPEC, which is technically the truth because the
government itself has no part in it, though the same obviously can’t be said
for its private citizens once the project is fully operational and potentially
linked to Siberia by means of the Altai-Xinjiang Corridor.
As for
the Central Asian republics, they’re not under any such diplomatic pressure to
publicly distance themselves from CPEC, and it’s very likely that they’ll take
advantage of this project in order to achieve access to the wider global
economy and the valuable marketplaces of East Africa, South Asia, and ASEAN.
Additionally, CPEC could also potentially open up another avenue for Central
Asian-EU trade, as well as commercial interactions with the Mideast, so it’s
improbable that the landlocked countries will avoid using it. Even so, India
isn’t giving up and has its own ambitions to connect with Central Asia through
an overland route across Iran which would serve as an outgrowth of the
North-South Corridor, though remembering just how far behind New Delhi is in
tangibly actualizing this, one shouldn’t get their hopes up that it will happen
anytime soon. Given the Central Asian countries’ close relationship with China,
there’s a greater likelihood that they’d defer to using CPEC as opposed to the North-South
Corridor for conducting their extra-regional trade, though the latter could
still be exploited one day to uncontrollably push Indian goods onto their
markets in a desperate bid to displace China’s influence.
Challenges
Absent any external inference,
all of the abovementioned scenarios and connectivity channels would likely
develop as expected, but appreciating just how significant CPEC is to the
emerging Multipolar World Order and the 21st century in general, there’s no way that the
US and India will passively stand by and allow any of this to happen if they
can help it. After all, CPEC is the umbilical cord of China’s sustained
economic integration with most of the Eastern Hemisphere, and snipping it would
deal a death blow to Beijing’s future leadership plans. It’s for this reason
why the US-Indian Strategic Partnership is scoping out CPEC and probing its
most likely vulnerabilities to exploit, though they’re aware that they must
tread carefully and act indirectly since they’d otherwise risk provoking a
wider war which could quickly go nuclear if they decided to conventionally
attack.
Barring
a suicidal “surgical strike” campaign by India or an unthinkable “limited
intervention” aimed at cutting CPEC in half through Gilgit-Baltistan (both of
which might frighteningly seem attractive to the pro-American Hindutva
extremists currently running New Delhi at the moment), the US and India will
resort to operating through proxies in order to achieve their grand strategic
objective of sabotaging this project. It’s unrealistic to think that either of
them could fully stop CPEC at this point, but what they intend to do is raise
the economic and security costs of doing business by spiking fears about the
route’s safety and thereby scaring away potential companies which might
otherwise be eager to utilize this strategic shortcut to China. Pakistan and
China are closely cooperating on ensuring CPEC’s security, but it’s impossible
for every inch of this network to be under surveillance and control at every
single second, and it’s bound that some attacks will be launched against it
with time.
What the American and Indian
intelligence agencies are depending on is that they can succeed in stirring up
enough domestic political disturbances inside of Pakistan that the military is
unable to totally commit to protecting CPEC due to much more urgent and
immediately prioritized problems, such as dealing with a Color Revolution
outbreak in the country’s main cities for example. Concurrent with this, unconventional
warfare operatives could provoke violence in Balochistan and the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) using their in-country proxies and
Afghan-based terrorists. This was briefly discussed in the author’s end-of-the-year
radio commentary and 2017
analytical forecast for
South Asia, and it’s an emerging trend which has been warned about for some
time but which will acquire imminence as CPEC becomes an ever more prominent
vehicle for promoting multipolarity in Afro-Eurasia.
This
isn’t to say that every destabilization scenario will succeed or that they’ll
play out simultaneously, but just that the risk is evidently there and it’s
clear that this warning encapsulates the most likely range of unconventional
instruments which the US-Indian Strategic Partnership could conceivably muster
in trying to disrupt CPEC. Having said that, Pakistan is stronger than ever
before after having finally beaten back the terrorist insurgencies which
plagued the country all throughout the first decade of the millennium, and it’s
thus more than capable of preemptively dealing with any of these eventualities,
to say nothing of properly responding to them after the fact. Despite that,
it’s always useful to keep the most probable threats facing one’s country in
mind in order to remain alert at all times and mentally conditioned for
tackling any trouble the moment that it arises, which is why it’s necessary to
discuss the various dangers facing CPEC so as to never be caught off guard in
case they materialize.
Concluding
Thoughts
CPEC is the cornerstone of
China’s One Belt One Road global vision of infrastructure connectivity and its
conception of 21st-century multipolarity, and it’s not an exaggeration to state
that it’s one of the most important game-changing projects to ever be attempted
in history. Even looking solely at its bilateral Chinese-Pakistani
implications, CPEC is an historic expansion of Beijing’s influence into South
Asia and an unprecedented direct gateway to the broader Indian Ocean Region. It
essentially nullifies the strategic utility of the US’ “Pivot to Asia” by
reducing China’s dependency on the South China Sea and Strait of Malacca, both
of which Washington has feverishly tried to turn into geopolitical traps for
blackmailing Beijing. Proverbially speaking, all of that meticulous planning
and billions of dollars of military-strategic investments could go out the
window with CPEC, which is why Washington is so furious with the project and
decided to team up with New Delhi – which is equally aggravated for its own
hyper-nationalist reasons – to try and undermine this corridor through the
unconventional means of proxy warfare.
All of this is being done
because of the immediate impact that CPEC has on strengthening
Chinese-Pakistani relations and Beijing’s strategic presence in the Indian
Ocean Region, but the US and India also have more far-reaching goals in mind.
It’s clear that CPEC’s full completion will propel Pakistan into becoming the
most important transit state in the world due to its role in facilitating
China’s trade with the EU, Mideast, and East Africa, as well as Russia and the
Central Asian republics’ trade with the “Global South”. As such, a diverse
variety of civilizational representatives and interests will be traversing
across Pakistan, thereby making the country the focal point for the convergence
of civilizations in the 21st century. No other place in the world is
poised to fulfill such a role on the level that Pakistan is, as it’s truly
becoming the zipper not just of pan-Eurasian integration, but of
Afro-Eurasian integration as well due to the functionality that CPEC will have
in enhancing Chinese-African trade.
If properly utilized, the coming
years can become a godsend for Pakistan by assisting in its transformation from
a regional leader to a hemispheric and potentially even globally influential
Great Power, provided of course that Islamabad is keen enough to promote the
convergence of civilizations which is destined to take place on its territory.
No other state except for Russia comes close to matching Pakistan’s
capabilities in managing a dialogue of civilizations, as Moscow lacks the
positive historic relations with the Mideast and East Africa that Islamabad
has, though it admittedly makes up for it with its long-held ties to Europe and
Central Asia. However, while Russia has certainly become a powerful force in
the Mideast over the past couple of years and especially through its recent Tripartite partnership with Turkey and Iran, it’s a
one-way street in the sense that Moscow’s influence is entering the region but
not the other way around (although that’s not necessarily a bad thing), and it
still has yet to revive its Soviet-era ties with Africa (if ever).
On the other hand, although
Pakistan doesn’t immediately seem to have much in common nowadays with the EU,
Russia, and Central Asia, these three regions will naturally be drawn to it by
virtue of Pakistan’s strategic geography through CPEC, thereby bringing their
representatives and interests into contact with those from China, the Mideast,
and East Africa. The brilliance behind Beijing’s project is that it basically
serves as a convenient 21st-century superhighway for
facilitating trade between the rest of the world and China, which translates in
practical terms to Pakistan becoming the geographic bridge economically
connecting these civilizations together. Such a role is inordinately important
in the emerging Multipolar World Order and serves the purpose of sustaining a
peaceful dialogue of civilizations amidst what will expectedly be an era of
American-driven identity conflict (Hybrid Wars) aimed at preventing the
integration of Afro-Eurasia. Pakistan is thereby endowed with unparalleled
responsibility in making sure that these plans don’t succeed, but for this to
happen, its decision makers must fully grasp the global and historic
geostrategic significance of their country in taking the lead to promote the
converge of civilizations.
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