The Double Standards of US Trade Policy: A Barrier to Pakistan’s Defense Development
Which caused considerable controversy, over a quarter of a hundred of the individuals and companies have been sanctioned by the US for purported support of weapons and drone programs in Pakistan and Iran, as well as for assistance to Russia’s military operation in Ukraine. Despite US explanations of such activities in matters of national security, these steps point to a direction of geopolitical hypocrisy that might have potentially dangerous consequences for Pakistan’s military power and the cooperation between the two countries.
The biggest problem is that the way US treats trade and defense issues remains different for different countries. For example, countries like Israel and India, which have strong military and defense sectors, are benefactors of many of the services the US offers provided they are approved to access high-tech products. On the contrary, every effort made by Pakistan to strengthen its own self-defense structure is viewed with mistrust and provocation is inflicted. Such selective scrutiny of defense initiatives feeds an inequitable security narrative that erodes confidence and collaboration, let alone in a security complex environment.
When Pakistani entities are blacklisted the consequence of these actions is far reaching. It dramatically limits Pakistan’s technological and industrial progress deeply affecting its potential to improve its defense and sustain a domestically produced military. For Pakistan, aimed at the military programs are not just a desire to increase the degree of the arsenals; it is to safeguard itself from real threats internal and external threats, More so given the region’s instability. Subverting Pakistan’s true defense needs, the U.S. in fact continues to perpetrate Pakistan into a state of reliance on external powers for defense needs thereby violating its sovereignty.
However, this blacking list is a recipe for creating unnecessary tension in still-precarious relationship between US and Pakistan. Originally, Pakistan has been a strategic partner for US in the war against terrorism and the stabilization process of the instability- plagued area. But such actions convey a message more negative than the other – it tells Pakistan that the country and the sacrifices made by it are unwanted and disregarded. It may spur strategies of negativity and low involvement and pulling back from joint solutions to shared security problems. While those penalties demotivate cooperation, they isolate Pakistan and force it to seek other partnerships that may prove to be perilous for the US’ goals in South Asia.
The fact of the matter is that Pakistan is being threatened with real external security threats hence the need for a proper defense strategy. Missile as well as defense technology in the country are intended for deterring the rival countries in the region and protecting the sovereign state. However, regrettably, through ‘Pakistan’s defense posturing’ lens, the United States frequently fails to see this real requirement and instead views it as an assertive act. By not appreciating the various factors constituting security situation in Pakistan, the US may not accurately estimate the significance of South Asia for itself.
Moreover, while blacklisting of Pakistan isolates it, the same policy of the U.S. also opens a space which other countries particularly China are only too willing to occupy. Pakistan is moving to look for other partners to cooperate in the defense sector and especially the ones ready to work on military supplies, technologies and equipment – U.S refereed influence in the region is fading. Indeed, China has waded deep into Pakistan’s defense market, and further exclusion of the US may deepen this relations and might result to a strategic partnership against the US interests.
However, based on all these factors of dynamism, this means that US should reconsider its operations. Instead of using blacklist and sanctions against who, US should use diplomacy and cooperation with whom realizing the special security concerns of Pakistan. In this way, US can balance the relationship and meet mutual goals for both parties and eliminate the existential threats that currently dominate the business relationship.
Thus, the US has an opportunity to demonstrate other member states and international partners how multilateralism in the security of the region should be realized without excluding dialogue and mutual understanding. It presupposes understanding legitimate security concerns of Pakistan and, at the same time, promoting the path of openness and efficiency in the defense sphere. The U.S should engage constructively in diplomacy and security in South Asia so as to obtain a positive outcome of stability in the region and increase its power in the region.
Therefore, the recent action of black listing Pakistani entities fall in the category of more than just trade policy it is a political move, or one may claim that it is another example of double standards in American foreign policy. To Pakistan, these actions present quite a problem when it comes to its defence development and possibly angering a country that has been of much importance to it in the past. To the contrary, the US should maximize diplomatic calibration with the country and acknowledge legitimate security concerns of Pakistan. Only combined action will allow both nations to strive for a further stabilization in the mutual relations for the sake of their common benefit.