Iran: an estranged friend
By Javid Husain
THE statement by President Ahmadinejad of Iran in early March on the eve of his visit to Saudi Arabia expressing concern over the meeting of the foreign ministers of Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, hosted by Pakistan on February 25, came as a shock to those observers in Pakistan who were aware of the importance of Pakistan-Iran friendship for the security and economic well-being of the two countries.
The Iranian president remarked that he had “lots of questions….and apprehensions” about the meeting, which called for “explicit answers”. That the situation had come to such a pass that the head of state of a friendly country, which had stood by Pakistan in its difficult times, complained publicly about its foreign policy initiative spoke volumes about the current state of Pakistan-Iran relations.
The foreign ministers’ meeting in Islamabad was the result of the trips undertaken by President Musharraf to the capitals of a number of Muslim countries in January and February this year. The nation was told by the government that the president’s move was aimed at taking “new and forceful” initiatives on important issues of the Middle East region and strengthening harmony within the Muslim world. The visits covered Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Syria, the UAE, Indonesia, Malaysia, Iran and Turkey.
The meeting was preceded by media reports in the Arab world that President Musharraf was working for the establishment of a Sunni alliance to confront the rising influence of Iran in the region. This accusation was vehemently denied by the spokesperson of our foreign ministry.
Be that as it may, the net result of President Musharraf’s initiative, which was supposed to promote harmony in the Muslim world, was increased misgivings and mistrust among the Muslim countries as reflected by the Iranian president’s expression of concern over the foreign ministers’ meeting held in Islamabad. It should have been clear to even a novice in diplomacy that the establishment of a new group of like-minded countries within the OIC would create divisions within the Muslim world, at least between its members and those excluded from it, instead of promoting unity and harmony.
Misgivings were also bound to arise when one realised that the participants of the Islamabad meeting included only the representatives of pro-West Muslim countries thus giving rise to rumours that Musharraf’s initiative was meant to serve some hidden US agenda.
The argument that only those countries which supported the two-state solution, land for peace formula and withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Golan Heights as Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri would have us believe lacks basis. After all, Syria was a party to the plan adopted by the Arab summit at Beirut in March 2002, which was based precisely on these elements. It certainly would not have opposed the Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights!
As for Iran, despite the rhetoric of its leaders, it has in the past adopted a pragmatic approach at the OIC meetings and routinely gone along with the resolutions on Palestine which were based on the Arab consensus. One should also not forget that Iran successfully hosted the OIC summit in December 1997 and did not allow its national views on Palestine to come in the way of the adoption of resolutions on this issue which enjoyed broad support in the Arab and the Muslim world.
Iran’s omission from the countries which attended the Islamabad meeting, therefore, defied any logic, especially as the Iranian nuclear programme was one of the important items on its agenda. The Iranians must have felt the same way as we would have if a regional country had taken the initiative of organising a meeting on Kashmir from which Pakistan was excluded.
One of the gravest threats facing the Muslim world at this stage is the danger of strife between Sunni and Shia Muslims. Unfortunately, the Islamabad meeting by excluding Iran, the most powerful Shia state in the region, sent the wrong signal on this issue also. One of the main objectives of the foreign ministers’ meeting in Islamabad should have been to provide a healing touch on this issue which is tearing apart Iraq and can lead to deep divisions, instability and strife in the Muslim world. By excluding Iran from the meeting, that opportunity was lost.
In contrast, the Iranian president by undertaking in early March a visit to Riyadh where he met King Abdullah, conveyed Tehran’s readiness to work for calming the situation and strengthening Muslim harmony and unity. According to Saudi sources, “The two leaders affirmed that the greatest danger presently threatening the Islamic nation is the attempt to fuel the fire of strife between Sunni and Shia Muslims, and that efforts must concentrate on countering these attempts and closing ranks”.Fortunately, Islamabad soon realised the damage that had been caused by the exclusion of Iran from the Islamabad meeting. President Musharraf’s telephone call to the Iranian president on March 8 to allay Iranian concerns came none too soon. One would have to wait and see how far our government has succeeded in overcoming Iran’s misgivings about our initiative regarding the Middle East, which besides parroting OIC’s well-known positions on Middle Eastern issues and alienating Iran has achieved precious little so far.
The latest episode in Pakistan-Iran relations also shows that all is not well between the two brotherly countries. An Iranian cleric Hojatoleslam Ahmad Khatami told Friday worshippers in Tehran on March 2, “Though Pakistan is our neighbour, little by little it is losing its neighbourly manners. Pakistan has become a sanctuary of terrorists who kill people in Zahedan.” Those who have served in Iran are fully aware that the statements at the Friday congregations in Tehran carry the sanction from the highest quarters in Iran and therefore must be taken seriously.
Earlier, after two bomb blasts in Zahedan one of which killed 11 Revolutionary Guards, the Pakistan ambassador was summoned by the Iranian foreign ministry for “explanations”. Following discussions, a decision was taken to form a committee of the two countries to reinforce border security.
Separately, the Iranian officials indicated that the bomb blasts and the later unrest in Zahedan bore the marks of the involvement of the American and the British intelligence agencies. These developments were followed by the report that Iran had started constructing a concrete wall from Taftan to Mand along its border with Pakistan to stop illegal crossings.
A number of factors are responsible for the cooling of relations between Pakistan and Iran. During the 1990s, the clash of the Afghanistan policies of the two countries and the sectarian issue caused severe damage to Pakistan-Iran relations. Fortunately, the sectarian issue has subsided now.
The change of our Afghanistan policy after 9/11 provided an opportunity to Pakistan and Iran to coordinate their Afghanistan policies. Unfortunately, that opportunity was not fully grasped by them because of lack of vision on the part of their leaders.It is not without reason that President Ahmadinejad has yet to pay a visit to Pakistan since his election in 2005. Conversely, President Musharraf’s short visit to Iran in February this year took place after a long interval of seven years since June 2000 when he visited Tehran to attend the ECO summit.
Currently, Iran is facing a serious threat to its security from the United States not only because of its nuclear programme but also because Washington sees Iran as an obstacle in the realisation of its strategic objectives in the Middle East, that is, control over the oil and gas resources of the region, security of Israel as a US outpost in the Middle East and reorientation of the political outlook of the region to suit American interests.
Our friendship with the US, which has its own unique importance for us, despite its limitations at present as shown by the recent moves in the US Congress to link aid to Pakistan to certain conditions, should not be at the expense of our friendship with Iran which is a tested friend of Pakistan.
Pakistan and Iran have common strategic interests. Both of them have suffered when they worked at cross purposes on important regional security issues as, for example, in Afghanistan during the 1990s. Both of them would have been better off if they had instead followed the policy of mutual understanding and accommodation in Afghanistan during that period.
The complementarity between the economies of Pakistan and Iran and the Economic Cooperation Organisation hold vast potential for developing mutual economic cooperation between the two countries. Their leaders must take advantage of the attractive opportunities for mutual cooperation, of which the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project is just one example, waiting to be exploited.
On the Iranian nuclear issue, we should categorically tell Washington that
Pakistan is resolutely opposed to the use of force in dealing with this issue because of its destabilising repercussions for the region and Pakistan, and would not be a party to it under any condition and in any form whatsoever. At the same time, we should advise both the US and Iran to show necessary flexibility for resolving the Iranian nuclear issue peacefully in accordance with Iran’s rights and obligations under the NPT.
The writer is a former Pakistan ambassador to Iran.
E-mail: javid_husain@yahoo.com


