Professional Documents
Culture Documents
18.02.2018
By Aamir Latif
KARACHI, Pakistan
Pakistan’s decision to send its troops to Saudi Arabia for “advisory and training”
purposes has sparked controversy, with some fearing that the troops might be used in
the Saudi-led war against pro-Iran Houthi rebels in Yemen.
Although the army insists that the unspecified number of troops being sent to Saudi
Arabia under a longstanding bilateral agreement will be stationed within the kingdom,
and will not be part of any armed conflict, several parliamentarians questioned the
move, claiming it violates a parliamentary resolution that Islamabad will not be part of
any conflict in the Middle East, particularly Yemen.
The upper and lower houses -- Senate and National Assembly -- have asked the
defense minister to appear before the parliament on Monday to explain the move, which
follows a recent meeting in Riyadh between the country’s powerful army chief Gen.
Qamar Javed Bajwa and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman bin Abdel Aziz.
The development also coincides with the culmination of a weeklong joint exercise
between Pakistan’s Navy and the Saudi Royal Navy on Saturday in the Arabian Sea.
Though the army has not given the specific number of troops being sent to Saudi
Arabia, opposition Senator Farhatullah Babar claimed in his speech during the Senate
debate that a full division was being sent.
However, a senior military official, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on
speaking to the media, told Anadolu Agency that slightly more than 1,000 troops were
being sent to Saudi Arabia to join the already stationed more than 1,100 troops in the
kingdom in line with a 1982 security protocol between the two sides.
Despite repeated attempts by Anadolu Agency, army spokesman Maj. Gen Asif Ghafoor
was not available for comment.
'Unilateral decision'
“Who has taken this unilateral decision? Has anyone given serious thought to its grave
consequences?” Senate Chairman Mian Raza Rabbani said during a debate on Friday.
Shireen Mazari, a legislator from former cricket hero Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-e-
Insaf, voiced similar views.
“Why has such an important decision been taken without consulting the parliament,
especially when there is already a resolution that bars the government from taking such
steps, which could harm our relations with other countries?” Mazari, a former professor
of international relations at Islamabad’s Quaid-I-Azam University, told Anadolu Agency,
in a thinly veiled reference to Iran.
Pakistan army, in a previous statement, insisted that neither the fresh contingent nor the
already stationed troops would be deployed outside Saudi Arabia.
Security cooperation
“I do not give any weight to the apprehensions from some parliamentarians. Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia have had longstanding security cooperation, which includes the
deployment of Pakistani troops on Saudi soil only for internal security and training
purposes,” Ikram Sehgal, a Karachi-based defense analyst, told Anadolu Agency.
Pakistani troops stationed in Saudi Arabia, he insisted, have never been deployed
outside the kingdom’s territory.
Sehgal, editor of the country’s respected Pakistan Defense Journal, observed that
security cooperation between the two allies is beefing up.
“Saudi Arabia is facing problems over its internal security,” Sehgal said, referring to
reported differences within the ruling Al-Saud family, and a recent crackdown on
corruption which led to the arrest of several ruling family members.
“Pakistani soldiers will have nothing to do with the Yemen war or any other conflict.
Their only role will be to train and help Saudi forces maintain internal security,” he said,
citing the appointment of former army chief Gen Raheel Sharif as commander of a 42-
nation anti-terrorism alliance in support of his argument regarding growing security
cooperation between the two sides.
Sehgal dismissed fears that sending additional troops to Saudi Arabia would irk its
longtime rival Iran.
“The army chief already made it clear to the Iranian leadership during his recent visit to
Tehran that Pakistan’s army will not be part of any conflict involving Tehran and Riyadh.
I don’t think Iran will take this move to be against it,” he maintained.
“Deploying additional troops in Saudi Arabia has nothing to do with the Yemen conflict.
It is linked to the kingdom’s internal security, which seems to be in trouble,” Shah, who
himself was part of a Pakistan army contingent stationed in Saudi Arabia in 1984-87,
told Anadolu Agency.
“There was no need for additional troops for training and advisory purposes when over
1,100 soldiers are already there for the same. Similarly, they will not be used in Yemen
as Pakistan has already made it clear that it will not be part of any conflict involving pro-
and anti-Saudi elements,” said Shah.
“It seems as if Saudi Arabia needs additional strength to deal with its internal security
related issues,” he added.