• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • HOME
  • ABOUT CHINA
    • NEWS
    • TESTIMONIES
    • OP-EDS
    • FEATURED
    • GLOSSARY
    • CHINA PERSECUTION MAP
  • FROM THE WORLD
    • NEWS GLOBAL
    • TESTIMONIES GLOBAL
    • OP-EDS GLOBAL
    • FEATURED GLOBAL
  • INTERVIEWS
  • DOCUMENTS AND TRANSLATIONS
    • DOCUMENTS
    • THE TAI JI MEN CASE
    • TRANSLATIONS
    • EVENTS
  • ABOUT
  • EDITORIAL BOARD
  • TOPICS

Bitter Winter

A magazine on religious liberty and human rights

three friends of winter
Home / From the World / Op-eds Global

Pakileaks: A Secret Document Reveals Pakistan’s Unholy Alliance with China

05/12/2023Massimo Introvigne |

A classified government memo explains that Pakistan can “no longer try to maintain a middle ground between China and the United States.”

by Massimo Introvigne

Minister Hina Rabbani Khar. Credits.
Minister Hina Rabbani Khar. Credits.

We now know that the classified documents in possession of the U.S. Department of Defense published last month through the instant messaging platform Discord are genuine, although we do not know how the Pentagon acquired each of them.

One particular document, whose authenticity has not been contested by the interested parties, is of great interest for those observing Pakistan. It is a memo dated March 2023 signed by Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs (not to be confused with the Foreign Minister, of whom she is substantially the deputy).

In the memo, titled “Pakistan’s Difficult Choices,” the minister claims that her country “can no longer try to maintain a middle ground between China and the United States.” Khar reviews various attempts by Pakistan to appease the United States. She comments that even if these attempts are cosmetic rather than real, the mere “appearance” of humoring the U.S. is enough to upset China. Since the only “strategic partnership” by Pakistan is the one with China, any move giving the impression that her country is taking into account American pressure or suggestions should cease, Khar said.

It has been suggested that Khar’s aim was to prevent Pakistan from attending the second Summit for Democracy, organized by President Biden at the end of March. Pakistan had not attended the first one in 2021, and didn’t attend the second either.

Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Islamabad. Source: Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Islamabad. Source: Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

However, beyond the specific circumstances motivating the memo, the document raises several general questions, which are of interest to readers of “Bitter Winter” as well, as we frequently cover the dire situation of religious liberty in Pakistan.

The United States have given billions of dollars to Pakistan, for noble humanitarian reasons but also in the hope of promoting human rights and democracy there. It is no mystery that the U.S. have often avoided or postponed a heavier censorship of Pakistan on its support or tolerance of terrorist groups and on freedom of religion or belief issues, from the bloody persecution of the Ahmadi minority to the kidnapping and forced conversion to Islam of Hindu and Christian girls who are then married to Muslims, and to laws that punish blasphemy with the death penalty. The U.S. did this for geopolitical reasons, hoping to keep Pakistan in its “middle ground” position between the West and China.

Khar’s memo now tells us that this strategy did not work. Pakistan has chosen its camp, and the name of this camp is China. There is thus no reason, for the United States as well as for Europe, for being shy in denying any kind of help or support to Pakistan until it improves its dismal human rights and religious liberty record, in denouncing the horrors of forced conversion and marriages, the blasphemy laws, and the violent persecution of the Ahmadis, and in issuing Magnitsky-like sanctions against those responsible for the repression.

Tagged With: China, Pakistan

Massimo Introvigne
Massimo Introvigne

Massimo Introvigne (born June 14, 1955 in Rome) is an Italian sociologist of religions. He is the founder and managing director of the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), an international network of scholars who study new religious movements. Introvigne is the author of some 70 books and more than 100 articles in the field of sociology of religion. He was the main author of the Enciclopedia delle religioni in Italia (Encyclopedia of Religions in Italy). He is a member of the editorial board for the Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion and of the executive board of University of California Press’ Nova Religio.  From January 5 to December 31, 2011, he has served as the “Representative on combating racism, xenophobia and discrimination, with a special focus on discrimination against Christians and members of other religions” of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). From 2012 to 2015 he served as chairperson of the Observatory of Religious Liberty, instituted by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in order to monitor problems of religious liberty on a worldwide scale.

www.cesnur.org/

Related articles

  • Pakistan, Young Christian Sentenced to Death for Blasphemy

    Pakistan, Young Christian Sentenced to Death for Blasphemy

  • Pakistan: To Join Bar, Ahmadi Lawyers Are Asked to Deny Their Faith

    Pakistan: To Join Bar, Ahmadi Lawyers Are Asked to Deny Their Faith

  • Thailand and Pakistan: No Friends of Uyghur Refugees

    Thailand and Pakistan: No Friends of Uyghur Refugees

  • Religious Liberty in the World in 2023: Worse Than Ever

    Religious Liberty in the World in 2023: Worse Than Ever

Keep Reading

  • Human Rights Watchdogs Urge EU to Review Its Relations with Pakistan
    Human Rights Watchdogs Urge EU to Review Its Relations with Pakistan

    A conference in Brussels called the attention on the intolerable situation of human rights and freedom of religion or belief in the Asian country.

  • Pakistan, Two Teenagers Falsely Accused of Blasphemy and Detained
    Pakistan, Two Teenagers Falsely Accused of Blasphemy and Detained

    Adil Babar and Simon Nadeem Masih are accused of having called their dog “Muhammad Ali.” Only, they do not have a dog.

  • Pakistan: Why Lynching of “Blasphemers” Continue
    Pakistan: Why Lynching of “Blasphemers” Continue

    Another man has been lynched in the Nankana Sahib District in Punjab. Do the anti-blasphemy laws inspire the criminals, or do the mobs influence the MPs who pass and support such laws?

  • “Ahmadis Are the Worst Kāfir”: Terror in Pakistan via WhatsApp
    “Ahmadis Are the Worst Kāfir”: Terror in Pakistan via WhatsApp

    Anti-Ahmadi attacks continue to be promoted in new and creative ways. The government ignores them and their dangers.

Primary Sidebar

Support Bitter Winter

Learn More

Follow us

Newsletter

Most Read

  • Chinese Muslims Told Mosques Should Preach Communism Too by Ma Wenyan
  • Hebei: Friends Pray in Your Home, the CCP Cuts Off Your Water and Electricity by Lai Mingxia
  • China’s “Query System for Islamic, Catholic, and Christian Clergy,” Another Tool for Repression by He Yuyan
  • Christian Students Asked to Study 20th Congress and Celebrate “Heroes” Who Betrayed the Church by Zhang Chunhua
  • Russia: Two Evangelical Pastors Prosecuted, Falsely Accused of Raising Money for the Ukrainian Army by Massimo Introvigne
  • Filipino Catholic Priest Arrested for Slandering Unrecognized Marian Apparitions by Massimo Introvigne
  • Pakistan, Young Christian Sentenced to Death for Blasphemy by Massimo Introvigne

CHINA PERSECUTION MAP -SEARCH NEWS BY REGION

clickable geographical map of china, with regions

Footer

EDITORIAL BOARD

Editor-in-Chief

MASSIMO INTROVIGNE

Director-in-Charge

MARCO RESPINTI

ADDRESS

CESNUR

Via Confienza 19,

10121 Turin, Italy,

Phone: 39-011-541950

E-MAIL

We welcome submission of unpublished contributions, news, and photographs. Each submission implies the authorization for us to edit and publish texts and photographs. We reserve the right to decide which submissions are suitable for publication. Please, write to INFO@BITTERWINTER.ORG Thank you.

Newsletter

LINKS

orlir-logo hrwf-logo cesnur-logo

Copyright © 2023 · Bitter Winter · PRIVACY POLICY· COOKIE POLICY