Critics consider him unfit for office. Some call him “Taliban Khan” because of his repeated calls for talks with violent insurgent groups. He has also been criticised for pandering to Islamist hardliners over blasphemy. Others openly accuse him of having links to the army. But Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan is a step closer to becoming the country’s prime minister, as his party leads in 114 seats, as per unofficial trends. Because of Khan’s extremist views and problematic statements, many are concerned about what will happen to Pakistan’s foreign policy if the former cricketer-turned-politician becomes prime minister. This is especially important because Pakistan’s foreign relations are not in great shape today. Both the United States and Afghanistan have accused Pakistan of allowing Taliban militants to operate out of its region. Pakistan’s stronger ties with China have threatened to push the country into a debt crisis, according to Foreign Policy
. And in the last week of June 2018, Pakistan was placed back on a terror financing watchlist by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). [caption id=“attachment_4789761” align=“alignleft” width=“380”] File image of PTI chief Imran Khan. AP[/caption] At a time when India-Pakistan relations are especially strained over issues like Kashmir and state-sponsored terrorism, Khan has accused India of trying to “weaken” the Pakistan Army and “conspiring” with former prime minister Nawaz Sharif. What is more worrying for India is that Khan seems to have the support of the powerful Pakistan Army. As this article in The Indian Express
states, even though India was not mentioned a lot during the election campaign, the PTI manifesto did propose a solution to the Kashmir issue as per UNSC resolution. The fact that India or Kashmir did not have a prominent place in Khan’s poll campaign shows that the former cricketer-turned-politician, like most of his predecessors, may also agree that foreign policy with respect to India should remain in the hands of the military, as this Financial Express
article states. Former Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan TCA Raghavan, however, believes that Khan becoming Pakistan’s prime minister will not have any dramatic effects on the country’s ties with India. “There are chances of a coalition and there is no doubt that he will be engrossed in domestic issues,” News18
quoted him as saying. Raghavan also said that Khan’s anti-India statements “are very common in Pakistan politics. We have to separate political rhetoric from what he actually does when he is in power.” As far as Pakistan-US ties are concerned, Khan
had said
that US president Donald Trump’s policy on Afghanistan was “deeply flawed”. He said US attacks against militants in Pakistan will not end the protracted war in Afghanistan, now in its 17th year and the longest US military engagement. Trump “neither understands the history of Pakistan nor the character of the Afghan people”, Khan had said. He had criticised the US drone strikes in Pakistan, saying they killed innocent people and have failed to bring success. “Drone attacks lead to collateral damage. If (they) were such a successful strategy, they would be winning the war,” Khan had said.