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At a meeting with the non-resident Indian community in Washington, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar blasted the United States for its move to provide Pakistan with the “F-16 case for sustainment and related equipment” worth $450 million.
Rebuking the picture of a blossoming US-Pakistan relationship, the MEA questioned its merits and said:
Jaishankar, refuting the claim that the package will assist Pakistan’s counter-terrorism efforts, said that everybody knows where and against whom the F-16 fighter jets will be used and added, “You're not fooling anybody by saying these things.”
The MEA’s comments were the first time that India publicly expressed its frustration at the Joe Biden administration’s move. Amid the arguments, here’s why the “Pakistan – F-16 Case for Sustainment” is causing a stir between India, Pakistan, and the United States.
In a Defense Security Co-operation Agency press release, dated 7 September, the $450 million package, whose contractor is Lockheed Martin, was said to be a “technical and logistical service for follow-on support of Pakistan’s F-16 fleet.”
Effectively, with the package, Pakistan’s existing fleet of F-16s gets a lifetime upgrade.
After the US agreed to provide the F-16 fleet sustainment air package to the Pakistan Air Force, India registered a strong protest with the US against the deal, over both the substance and timing of the US decision, on 11 September.
India said that it was upset that the US did not forewarn India about a policy design that could have serious implications for India’s security.
MEA officials also said that they communicated India’s objections to the US officials who were in New Delhi for the '2+2 Inter-sessional and Maritime Security Dialogue', and for a senior Quad officials meeting during the announcement on 7 September.
However, before Jaishankar’s comments, during his interaction with non-resident Indians in Washington, where he launched an attack against both the US and Pakistan, the ministry had remained relatively quiet over the sustenance package.
When asked about Jaishankar’s remark, White House spokesperson Ned Price said:
Price said that the US looks at both India and Pakistan as partners, who have shared values and shared interests. He added that the US’ relationship with both countries stands independent to each other.
Responding to another question, Price said that it is "not in Pakistan's interest to see instability and violence in Afghanistan."
The White House spokesperson said that Pakistan is implicated in several commitments with the US, in Afghanistan.
India’s concern around the F-16s and Pakistan is not a new occurrence. Rather, India has been concerned about this since the first time the US gave Pakistan F-16s, a reward for their assistance in the First Afghan War, where the US supplied Pakistan with money and weapons, in a successful attempt to fight the Soviet Army with jihadis.
However, the end of the war and the Soviet Union’s departure from Afghanistan led to the US reworking its relationship with Pakistan.
Aimed against Pakistan’s nuclear ambitions, 'The Pressler Amendment' froze it out of military assurance. In layman’s terms, no more F-16s.
During India and Pakistan’s last aerial skirmish in 2019, Pakistan brought down a MiG-21 flown by the Indian Air Force’s Abhinandan Varthaman. The move acted as a show of strength for the F-16, cementing Pakistan’s intentions to use the aircraft in all future operations.
However, from another point of view, the package could also be a signal from the States to both Islamabad and New Delhi to break the long impasse in their relations.
According to the press release, the proposed sale does not include any new capabilities, weapons, or munitions.
The proposed sale will “support the foreign policy and national security objectives of the United States by allowing Pakistan to retain interoperability with the US and partner forces in ongoing counter-terrorism efforts and in preparation for future contingency operations,” the release added.
“The proposed sale of this equipment and support will not alter the basic military balance in the region.”
The Indian Express reported that among the speculated reasons for the Biden Administration’s reversal of former President Donald Trump’s hardline policy on Pakistan, was the killing of Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second emir of the al-Qaeda, in Kabul.
Many questions swirled, both in Pakistan and in Afghanistan, asking who provided the intelligence which led to the drone strike that killed al-Zawahiri.
In 2021, former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan had explicitly denied American implications that it was negotiating air space rights for security or counter-terrorism related operations in Afghanistan.
Former PM Imran Khan’s allegations of a US hand in his ouster from office did not prove to be much of a hindrance to the Shehbaz Sharif government’s efforts to repair ties with the Biden Administration.
Both Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa, who reportedly asked for help to secure an International Monetary Fund package for Islamabad, and Inter-Services Intelligence Head Lt General Nadeem Anjum, who visited the States in May, have been in contact with their US interlocutors.
In an interview to a Pakistani TV channel, according to The Indian Express, Khan had revealed that he is not actually anti-US, and added that he has been in touch with several US officials, showing that the turning point in Islamabad and Washington’s relations was already close.
In the meanwhile, the Biden Administration has not been silent and has expressed its concern regarding the Modi government’s “lukewarm” attitude towards Russian sanctions and its “neutrality” to the war in Ukraine.
However, US Assistant Secretary of Defense Ely Ratner has disputed such claims and said:
Geo-political observers, quoted by The Indian Express, believe that the package to Pakistan is a one-up move by the US to break China’s hold on Pakistan.
Currently, the Pakistan Air Force has more Chinese JF-17 Thunder fighter jets than F-16s, but continues to rely on the somewhat-dated American fighter, as seen in the 2019 skirmish between India and Pakistan.
However, in a significant demonstration, on Pakistan’s National Day on 23 March, PAF chief Zaheer Ahmad Babar Sidhu led the flypast in an F-16.
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