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India-Pakistan
Chinese investments dwarf American package: US media
2015-04-20
[Dawn] Compared to the $46 billion China plans to invest in Pakistain, the $7.5 billion US package for Pakistain was too thinly scattered, according to a former Pentagon official.

David S. Sedney, who headed the Pakistain desk at the Pentagon, said the US package also failed to make a strategic impact on Pakistain.

Some Western diplomats told CBS News that China's increasing economic engagement with Pakistain should be seen in the context of Beijing's "efforts to counter the US efforts to deepen alliances around the Asia-Pacific region".

In an interview to The New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
, Mr Sedney noted that the 2009-2012 US aid package for Pakistain designated $7.5 billion for development projects over five years. He called the package a "dramatic failure" because the resources were "scattered too thinly, and had no practical or strategic impact.

The official noted that the Chinese seemed to have learned from the American programme, "including the notion that the American plan was designed to deliver a strategic result - deterring terrorism -- but failed to do so".

To do better than the United States, the Chinese have come up with "a much larger financial commitment -- and it is focused on a specific area, it has a signature infrastructure focus and it is a decades-long commitment," he said.

Other US media outlets pointed out that China would use this massive inve­stment package to expand Pakistain's network of roads, rails and ports. The purpose of the initiative was to connect China to Europe through Central Asia and Russia, the reports said.

The reports noted that in November, China announced plans to build the Silk Road Economic Belt and Maritime Silk Road, which would connect Pakistain to China and Central Asia.

Pak officials told The New York Times China's $46 billion would be used for the construction of roads, rails and power plants. Chinese engineers will be dispatched over 15 years to work in Pakistain in projects that overshadow past US support.

The newspaper also spoke to senior Pak officials and politicians who pointed out that "the Chinese are stepping in, in a much, much bigger way than the United States ever contemplated.
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