RajaBaja
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- #46
The United States has a lot of leverage over Pakistan right now. If the Pakistan Democracy Act passes, the US Congress and gets signed into law, the current regime in Pakistan will collapse. The Trump administration and the regime both know that the US has them by the balls and the hybrid regime serves at Trump's pleasure. So, the US will extract maximum advantage and use Pakistan to do its "dirty work " - to borrow a phrase from Pakistan's defence minister.
You are out of reality again. They've seen India's weak posture and global influence. Pakistan on the other hand, enjoys un-parallel influence on China, Iran, Middle East and Africa. All nations where US and it's allies can use mediation in the future on various conflicts.
The US has a huge economic interest in Pakistan, from oil, gas to Rare Earths! And then exclusive rights to Crypto industry. With Pakistan's estimated growth to top 15 economies over time, it's 5th largest populated nation. They will earn billions in profit overtime. This time, it's about American interests, not so much so Pakistan.
I think the recent conflict showed that India got dominated in very key aspects of the conflict - Airpower. This means that India is not even capable of handling a much smaller adversary, let alone a near super power like China. So then what is the point of propping up its military capabilities when all they can or want to do is get into fights with Pakistan and not achieve any victory (even a draw is a win for Pakistan).
India will still hold good economic power and relations, as it has a massive market and Industry to trade with - but why keep Pakistan weak specifically to appease Indian security interests, when they cannot or do not want to address western security interests vs China and Russia. From transactional point of view, if India cannot even give up cheaper Russian oil when they are invading Ukraine, why cannot west/USA sell weapons to Pakistan for reasonable security interests?
While we praise India's super large population, we must keep some facts understood:
- Indian market is not what India shows to the world. That it has 1.4 billion consumers. Gone are the days when Western businessmen used to hear this magic number above a billion and would go "wow, I can make so much money". Near 400 million live under poverty, that leaves nearly a billion, minus youth and stay home people, that's another 300 million gone and from the 700 million left, there is half the number near or below lower middle class. Eventually, per some studies I've read, you get roughly 250 million (near quarter billion) consumers who can buy and afford some luxury. Near 100 million can afford more purchasing than the rest of the population.
- Pakistan's upcoming market: Pakistan is the 5th largest populated nation and a big market also. Compared to India we have much less population and area but it also means we will need much less money to develop this population and area and give our people a good standard of living. Which means our middle class will have more room to grow and will be stronger than the Indian side. By 2028, like I've been stating for a while, re-balancing of the GDP will show a strong middle class starting to emerge. If we have a 120 million consumer population that will have decent purchasing power in the future, it's a lot more than many European nation's entire population. So our GDP should naturally climb towards 1 trillion. So never underestimate what Pakistan has to offer.
US is seeing exactly this. US think tanks chart out next 25 years when creating strategies. They want to become a key trade partner now when things are starting and enjoy the ride up.
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