Anti-US Sentiment Fuels Pakistan's Shift Towards China

Anti-US Sentiment Fuels Pakistan's Shift Towards China.webp

London, April 11 – With the US image declining in Pakistan, Chinese infrastructure investment, diplomatic influence, and strategic presence are benefiting from the situation. Recent developments have put Pakistani leadership in a delicate balancing act, seeking to maintain ties with the US without fully endorsing them to avoid domestic backlash.

According to a report in the UK-based newspaper Asian Lite, the longer this balancing act persists and leans towards public sentiment, the more leverage Beijing secures in Pakistan.

It added that pro-Iran demonstrations in Pakistan during the West Asia conflict are not incidental.

"US Consulates were stormed, staff were evacuated, travel advisories were raised, visa services were suspended, and at least 24 people died in a single day of protest – these are not indicators of manageable diplomatic friction between Washington and Islamabad. They are markers of an environment in which the American presence has become a liability and a target in Pakistan. It is a new wave of anti-US sentiments in Pakistan, which will not dissipate anytime soon," the report detailed.

As the US and Israel launched a military campaign against Iran on February 28, killing Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the report said, the repercussions were felt in Pakistan almost instantly.

"Within hours, protests were forming outside American diplomatic buildings. By March 1, those protests had turned widespread and fatal. What unfolded in the days that followed was not simply an expression of grief or solidarity for Iran. It was the most concentrated outbreak of anti-American violence at US diplomatic facilities in Pakistan since 1979, and it exposed how thoroughly the US-Iran war has reshaped the security calculus for American citizens, diplomats, and projects across the country," it mentioned.

"Protests erupted across Pakistan on March 1, primarily among Shia Muslim communities, in response to the killing of Khamenei. Demonstrators condemned the attacks and expressed solidarity with Iran, with chants of ‘Death to America’ and ‘Death to Israel', and protesters also accused the Pakistani government of siding with the US during the conflict," it stated.

The report emphasized that the strategic beneficiary of the situation is neither Pakistan’s government nor its public, but China. As the United States reduces its diplomatic footprint and its institutions in Pakistan face sustained hostility, Beijing's influence expands without any effort.

"As Pakistan seeks to profit from the China-US rivalry, any revival in Islamabad’s relations with Beijing would be evident in the fate of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), long described by Washington as a ‘debt trap', with renewed commitment to CPEC 2.0 signalled at all recent high-level exchanges," it noted.
 
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anti-american sentiment china cpec diplomatic presence foreign relations iran khamenei middle east conflict pakistan pakistan-china economic corridor protests in pakistan shia muslim communities united states us consulates us-pakistan relations
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