Wednesday, September 28, 2011

US-Pakistan Tensions -- China's Cautious Stance by B Raman

sep 27th, 2011 CE

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: sanjeev nayyar


The Chinese support the Pakis in every way, the U.S. knows that. So does China gain anything by going public in its support of a Terror Group.
 
 

US-Pakistan Tensions: China’s Cautious Stance

By B. Raman 27/9/2011

The Chinese media have started informing the Chinese people of the tensions in Pakistan’s ties with the US without any editorial comment so far.  There have been no comments from the spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry either till now.

2. On September 27, 2011, the “People’s Liberation Army Daily” carried a report of the State-owned Xinhua news agency datelined Islamabad stating that Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, Director-General of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), had gone to Saudi Arabia for talks with his Saudi counterparts.

3. The Xinhua despatch said that the decision to send Lt. Gen. Pasha to Saudi Arabia was taken on the recommendation of the Corps Commanders of the Pakistan Army, who met at Islamabad on September 25, “to brief Saudi leaders on the Pakistan-U.S. tension.”  However, the Pakistani military spokesman Maj Gen Ather Abbas denied that Lt. Gen. Pasha had gone to Saudi Arabia and insisted that Lt. Gen Pasha was in Islamabad.

4. The Xinhua report added: “Pakistan is likely to send envoys to other friendly countries in view of the tension with the U.S., sources said.”

5. The party-owned “Global Times” carried two reports of the AFP/Reuters news agencies relating, inter alia, to the unconnected visits of General James Mattis, the US CENTCOM Commander, and Mr. Meng Jianzhu, the Chinese Minister For Public Security, to Islamabad and the cancellation of the visit of Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, Pakistan’s Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), to London.


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2 comments:

Pagan said...

Kapil Sibal's $35 computer resurfaces

"It would be packed with internet browsers, PDF reader, video conferencing facilities, open office, sci-lab, media player, remote device management capability, multimedia input-output interface option, and multiple content viewer."

Pagan said...

Battle of the Knowledge Superpowers
We in India are blessed to have a JNU, an Indira Gandhi University and a Rajeev Gandhi University. What more can we ask for? Oh, and a highly capable HRD minister in Kapil Sibal.