WASHINGTON - The lifting of economic sanctions on Iran will open “massive trade” opportunities for Pakistan and could effectively transform the energy markets of South Asia by paving the way for a long-awaited gas pipeline across the Iran-Pakistan border, a senior Pakistani diplomat said, emphasising that the nuclear deal will advance the cause of regional peace and economic growth.
“We are convinced that it is the right thing,” the special assistant to the prime minister on foreign affairs, Tariq Fatemi, told a group of journalists in Washington Friday, according to reports in US media.
“We are also convinced that an end to sanctions will open up new opportunities for Pakistan to enhance its commercial and economic ties to Iran.”
The agreement, between Iran and six big powers, calls for a lifting of economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for limits placed on development of Iran’s nuclear capability.
Fatemi said Pakistan is being “mindful” not to take action until UN sanctions are officially lifted, but he asserted that Islamabad is already in constant communication with Iranian authorities about the prospects for the stalled pipeline, as well as other avenues for growing commercial ties between the two nations who share a 560-mile border.
The special assistant said that after a decade of internal turmoil, Pakistan is on a path toward stability and democratic transformation — and increased trade is essential to the goal of weaning the nation’s economy off of handouts from the US and other international powers.
“An end to sanctions will open up new opportunities for Pakistan to enhance its commercial and economic ties with Iran,” Fatemi said. “We have a long border and we could have massive trade with that country should this issue of sanctions no longer be hovering over us.”
The “Iran-Pakistan Gas Pipeline Project,” he said, could ease crippling power shortages that plague Pakistan, where blackouts combined with an intense heatwave killed more than 1,000 people during recent months.
But Fatemi said the prospective pipeline would “not only benefit Pakistan in terms of providing us with a valuable source of energy, we also believe that such a pipeline could encourage cooperation amongst the countries of the region that would really strengthen peace and stability.”
“Iran’s coming out into the mainstream of international politics will [also] be a positive development,” Fatemi said.
He spoke after a week of meetings with senior Obama administration officials, State Department diplomats and several high-level members of Congress from both sides of the aisle.
Fatemi said that during every meeting — even with key Republicans like Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain of Arizona — American officials gave him confidence that the US-Pakistan relationship today is as strong, if not stronger, than it has been at anytime during recent history.
With the prospect looming of a full US troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, Fatemi said US officials expressed support for the Pakistani government’s 13-month-old military campaign against Taliban and so-called Haqqani Network militants along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
He expressed high confidence in Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, asserting that political, intelligence and military officials in Islamabad have had more direct and positive interaction with the Ghani government during the past six months than Pakistani leaders ever had over the past six years with former president Hamid Karzai.
A central focus, he said, has been boosting peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban, the militant group with fighters in both countries.
“It is only through promoting reconciliation talks that peace can be assured in Afghanistan,” said Fatemi, highlighting the importance of a July 7 meeting in Pakistan between “prominent Taliban leaders along with prominent representatives of President Ashraf Ghani’s cabinet.”
“More importantly, senior representatives of Pakistan, the United States and China were present in those talks as well,” he said, adding that “we wish to make this a process rather than to keep it as an event.”
He stressed that any militant faction unwilling to come to the negotiating table will be targeted by Pakistani and Afghan security forces. “The two countries are cooperating closely in intelligence-sharing, as well as in real-time sharing of information that could lead to operations,” Fatemi said.
The Associated Press, an American news agency, reported Friday that a second round of meetings aimed at ending the 14-year-old war in Afghanistan is slated to be held in China on July 30.
Fatemi also expressed rising confidence that long-standing friction between Pakistan and India is beginning to ease. The prime ministers of the nuclear-armed rivals made headlines early this month by engaging in a face-to-face meeting on the sidelines of major economic and security summits in the Russian city of Ufa.
Following the meeting, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said the two had agreed to cooperate on eliminating terrorism in South Asia. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi also accepted an invitation by Sharif to attend a South Asian regional summit to be held in Islamabad next year.
But Fatemi said Friday that the ball is now in India’s court to continue a thaw in relations, which have been particularly strained since the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
The special assistant said Islamabad is “ready to enter into a meaningful, comprehensive, sustained dialogue process” with India. “We have made this offer on so many occasions,” he said. “It is now for India to respond.”
“Hopefully there will be a response. Why? Because the two prime ministers agreed in Ufa, among other things, that the national security advisers of the two countries should meet. And since terrorism in the most urgent issue, they can discuss terrorism.”