'The US would be unwise to turn to Pakistan as a strategic partner,' Richard N Hass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote in an op-ed last week.
Amid
an increased India-Pak
tension on Kashmir and an ongoing Afghan peace talks, a top
American foreign policy expert has cautioned the Trump Administration
against any strategic tilt towards Pakistan and moving away from
India.
"The
US would be unwise to turn to Pakistan as a strategic partner,"
Richard N Hass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote
in an op-ed last week.
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Pakistan
sees a friendly government in Kabul as vital to its security and
competition with arch-rival India, he wrote in his op-ed that was
first published by Project Syndicate and thereafter, on the CFR
website.
"There
is little reason to believe that the military and intelligence
services, which continue to run Pakistan, will rein in the Taliban or
rule out terrorism," Hass said.
"Equally,
the US would be unwise to alienate India. Yes, India has a tradition
of protectionist trade policies and often frustrates US policymakers
with its reluctance to cooperate fully on strategic issues," he
wrote.
But
democratic India, which will soon surpass China as the world's most
populous country and will boast the world's fifth-largest economy, is
a good long-term bet, he added.
"It
is a natural partner to help balance China. India has rejected
participation in China's Belt and Road Initiative, whereas Pakistan,
struggling economically, has embraced it," Hass said.
According
to the top American scholar, the US would also be unwise to race for
the exits from Afghanistan.
Peace
talks with the Taliban mostly look like a means to extract US
forces from the country, he claimed, adding that the process is
reminiscent of Vietnam, where a 1973 agreement between the US and
North Vietnam provided a pretext for American withdrawal from the
South but not a basis for peace.
The
notion of a coalition government, with power shared by the current
government and the Taliban, is optimistic at best, fanciful at worst,
Hass observed.
"Instead
of embracing fantasy, the US should continue to keep a modest number
of troops in Afghanistan to ensure the government survives and the
country does not again become a terrorist haven.
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