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Monday April 29, 2024

Connectivity with regions key to Pak foreign policy: Mushahid Hussain

By Muhammad Anis
March 20, 2021

ISLAMABAD: Senator Mushahid Hussain has said connectivity with countries and regions is key to Pakistan’s foreign policy in the coming decade, with Pakistan having a ‘strategic space’ to promote its vital interests. He made these comments during his keynote speech on the theme “Navigating the New Decade” at the concluding session of the Islamabad Security Dialogue.

Prime Minister Imran Khan, Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi besides defence analysts, diplomats and others addressed different sessions of the dialogue organized by the National Security Division.

Mushahid said Pakistan’s main challenges would be domestic as the ‘strategic space’ would give Pakistan a “geopolitical breather”, and urged the need to redefine the notion of national security, away from military might alone, to human security. He said Pakistan needs a rules-based national order that should bridge the gap between outmoded state governance versus vibrant, young, dynamic society, driven by self-starter citizen activism, particularly among youths and women.

He listed some of the emerging non-traditional security threats like the coronavirus pandemic, climate change and cyber warfare. He cited three major transformations which would impact Pakistan: a shift in the global balance of economic and political power, away from the West to the East in this “Asian Century”, Pakistan’s emerging role as a hub of regional connectivity, courtesy CPEC, linking up South Asia with China, Central Asia, Iran and Afghanistan, and India’s transformation into an exclusive, minority-hating “Republic of Hindutva”, burying Nehruvian ideals of inclusive secularism.

Mushahid said Pakistan’s strategic space is due to the CPEC, proactive role in Afghanistan peace process, close ties with China and cordial relations with the US at the same time, and India being on the defensive regionally due to failure of Modi’s ideological foreign policy, with setbacks during the 2019 Balakot attack on Pakistan and the 2020-2021 border clashes with China, and popular resistance in Occupied Kashmir to Indian illegal annexation.