It may be recalled that the April 10, 2015 resolution upset Saudi Arabia and the UAE and evoked some rude remarks about Pakistan from the latter. The sense of the resolution then was that Pakistan should not insert itself into the sectarian conflict in Yemen, given that Pakistan has both, Sunnis and Shias and wishes to strike a balance between its relations with the Gulf states and Iran. To those original misgivings could now be added the disintegration and mutual infighting in the pro-Saudi camp in the Yemen civil war, a development that promises the conflict could get messier. While the military may be pandering to our Gulf neighbours given their financial help to Pakistan in dire moments, the reservations voiced in parliament deserve thought. For one, ignoring parliament blatantly on a matter of such importance and in the face of the resolution referred to above highlights the long road yet to parliament's empowerment as the supreme fount of authority in the state. Admittedly, our politicians have not always acquitted themselves in a manner that could advance this cause. For example, when General Bajwa, in an unprecedented first, addressed the Senate acting as the Committee of the Whole about security issues, the briefing and deliberations being leaked to the media by parliamentarians provoked the "ire" of Chairman Senate Raza Rabbani. Be that as it may, surely there is no impediment to the military and foreign ministry briefing a select committee of parliament in-camera on sensitive issues that do not allow public exposure. Two, the move creates an impression that the government and the military have 'surreptitiously' succumbed to the unremitting pressure from the Saudis for the deployment. Three, and perhaps of greatest concern, despite the reassuring noises that the troops would be restricted to Saudi soil, engage largely in training activities and not be sucked into the regional conflict(s), the increasing spillover of the Saudi-Houthi conflict onto Saudi soil by means of missile attacks suggests the Pakistani military contingent may be inadvertently put in harm's way and be forced to at the very least defend itself. This certainly presents a slippery slope of escalation without anyone being able to predict the end.
It may be recalled that the April 10, 2015 resolution upset Saudi Arabia and the UAE and evoked some rude remarks about Pakistan from the latter. The sense of the resolution then was that Pakistan should not insert itself into the sectarian conflict in Yemen, given that Pakistan has both, Sunnis and Shias and wishes to strike a balance between its relations with the Gulf states and Iran. To those original misgivings could now be added the disintegration and mutual infighting in the pro-Saudi camp in the Yemen civil war, a development that promises the conflict could get messier. While the military may be pandering to our Gulf neighbours given their financial help to Pakistan in dire moments, the reservations voiced in parliament deserve thought. For one, ignoring parliament blatantly on a matter of such importance and in the face of the resolution referred to above highlights the long road yet to parliament's empowerment as the supreme fount of authority in the state. Admittedly, our politicians have not always acquitted themselves in a manner that could advance this cause. For example, when General Bajwa, in an unprecedented first, addressed the Senate acting as the Committee of the Whole about security issues, the briefing and deliberations being leaked to the media by parliamentarians provoked the "ire" of Chairman Senate Raza Rabbani. Be that as it may, surely there is no impediment to the military and foreign ministry briefing a select committee of parliament in-camera on sensitive issues that do not allow public exposure. Two, the move creates an impression that the government and the military have 'surreptitiously' succumbed to the unremitting pressure from the Saudis for the deployment. Three, and perhaps of greatest concern, despite the reassuring noises that the troops would be restricted to Saudi soil, engage largely in training activities and not be sucked into the regional conflict(s), the increasing spillover of the Saudi-Houthi conflict onto Saudi soil by means of missile attacks suggests the Pakistani military contingent may be inadvertently put in harm's way and be forced to at the very least defend itself. This certainly presents a slippery slope of escalation without anyone being able to predict the end.