Pakistan says Saudi asked for warplanes, warships and soldiers

Tuesday, 7 April 2015 00:01 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

ISLAMABAD (Reuters): Saudi Arabia has asked Pakistan for military aircraft, warships and soldiers, Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said on Monday, at the start of a parliamentary debate on whether Pakistan should get involved in a Saudi-led campaign in Yemen. Saudi Arabia, the Gulf’s main Sunni Muslim power, has asked Sunni-majority Pakistan to join a Saudi-led military coalition that began conducting air strikes last month against largely Shi’ite Houthi forces in Yemen. Sharif has in turn hedged his bets. He has said repeatedly he will defend any threat to Saudi Arabia’s ‘territorial integrity’ without defining what action such a threat might provoke. “Saudi Arabia has asked for combat planes, warships and soldiers,” Asif, who also visited Turkey to discuss Yemen, said, without specifying where Saudi wanted them deployed. “Both Pakistan and Turkey are concerned at the overthrow of illegitimate government of Yemen by use of force by non-state actors ... Pakistan and Turkey agreed that the continuing crisis in Yemen could plunge the region into turmoil.” Arif Rafiq, a Washington-based adjunct scholar with the Middle East Institute, said earlier Pakistan was hoping to satisfy Saudi expectations at a ‘minimal’ level. “They’re unlikely to be part of any meaningful action inside Yemen,” he told Reuters. “Maybe they will reinforce the border.” Sharif owes the Saudis. Endemic tax dodging means Pakistan needs regular injections of foreign cash to avoid economic meltdown. Last year, the Saudis gave Pakistan $ 1.5 billion. Saudi Arabia also sheltered Sharif after he was overthrown in a 1999 military coup. But joining the Saudi-led coalition could inflame a sectarian conflict at home where about a fifth of the population is Shi’ite and attacks on Shi’ites are increasing, further destabilising the nuclear-armed nation of 180 million people. Pakistani intervention would probably also anger Shi’ite power Iran, which shares a long and porous border in a region roiling with its own separatist insurgency. Pakistan’s other main borders are with arch enemy India and Afghanistan, where Pakistani troops are conducting anti-militant operations. The Iranian foreign minister will visit Pakistan this week. Pakistan has a long record of contributing troops to UN peacekeeping missions but public opinion is also largely against intervention in any Saudi-led action in Yemen.  

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