http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010%5C06%5C07%5Cstory_7-6-2010_pg11_9

The jingoistic media and a Spaniard

 By Saeed Minhas

ISLAMABAD: How the jingoistic approach of journalists can help someone
make a perception about a country should best be asked from our
European Excellencies or perhaps from our Spanish friend HE Gonzalo
Maria Quintero Saravia, who mistakenly landed amongst some jingoes of
the Pakistani media while waiting to see off Premier Gilani at an air
force base outside Madrid during the past week.

During an official voyage to Spain and then Brussels – the home of
both NATO and European Union headquarters – HE Saravia was not the
only one to get the jitters from the Pakistani media, NATO Secretary
General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, European Commission President José
Manuel Barroso and then the president of the European Council, Herman
Van Rompuy, also got a taste of what Pakistani leaders have to endure.
Perhaps the clinically controlled environment of Spain and Brussels
and the language barriers might have made the jingoes amongst the
Pakistani media a bit circumscribed, but still some belonging to a
jingoistic group managed to spill their beans whenever they could.

The result was that the NATO and EU leadership had to appreciate the
‘vibrant’ media of Pakistan, but since HE Saravia was caught on the
tarmac without any protocols and security net around him and instead
of taking refuge behind the language barrier he spoke English, it
wasn’t long before he realised his wrong landing and took up a
tit-for-tat approach. Saravia could hardly find his logical and
historically authenticated arguments meeting some logical response
rather was being told by the man with a big black bump on his forehead
in a jingoistic tone that “given a chance, I would not spare a minute
to convert the historic Cordoba Cathedral back to a mosque”. When all
his (Saravia’s) historic knowledge and arguments dried, he preferred
to inhale a long shot from the pipe and while throwing the smoke up in
the air, and making a damn care gesture posed: “Am I talking to some
al Qaeda people?” The response was yes from the same jingo, which made
many of his media-tribesmen leave the circle and let the jingo
continue with his overtures.

Media jingoism or jingoes aside, the crux of the voyage was that both
the EU and NATO promised a lot, but delivered nothing more than mere
laurels. Some of the off-the-record conversations with Spaniards and
then with the high ups of the EU and NATO revealed that since both
organisations are passing through their own transitional periods, they
are still not sure how to go about Pakistan, Afghanistan and of course
India and China.

The region, for sure, is a constant headache for both organisations
and with talks of a visible split within the EU and the very existence
of NATO as a military alliance, they both are in a tight corner where
they cannot commit anything but goodwill gestures. Still, NATO,
basically a military alliance, is bidding to prove utility to its 28
members by telling them they can be equally effective on the
non-military side. However, their policy makers, not wished to be
named, were of the view that since any EU country or at least those
who matter in international politics, and the US are marred by a huge
trust deficit, their political goals can best be served by a well-fed,
well-equipped and well-entrenched NATO in the region.

Some at the EU agreed with NATO’s point of view while many others were
left frowning at the very concept of giving political leverage to the
armed men, which they believe is effectively controlled by none other
than the US. Which brought me to the query that how big is the trust
deficit between the US and the EU? The answer was simple, the EU was
established to free this region from the political leverage of the US
and though the UK has been bed-fellows with Washington throughout this
period, yet EU countries don’t want the US to dominate their foreign
policies as much as the country has been doing in the case of the UK.

Concerned diplomats and bureaucrats in Brussels were of the view that
the internal economic crisis has brought us to a situation where the
EU wants to develop its own relations with Pakistan and the entire
region. The reasons, they cited were quite comprehensible. They
believed that a huge consumer market is there, with both India and
China as emerging powers of the region and Pakistan being the ultimate
corridor to not only Chinese but also to Balkans and Central Asian
markets. EU members would resist putting their weight behind giving a
non-political mandate to basically a military alliance; i.e. NATO.

Those focusing primarily on trade links and the region in three
different branches of the European Union—namely the European
Commission, European Council and the European Parliament—were of the
view that something needs to be done to bring both Pakistan and India
together. Otherwise, they believed that none of them would be able to
take advantage of the emerging market realities of the world.

The region, they emphasised, is about to become the focus of the
industrialised nations because they ultimately would like to see
expansion in terms of their economic gains. Some of them argued that
don’t’ you see why the US has come up with over $6 billion to invest
into Pakistan’s civil society organisations, plus dolling out monies
to your political and military leadership. The same is true for the
EU, which has earmarked huge allocations for not only understanding
the region better, but also to see for themselves what the ground
realities in the region are. Previously, they admitted that whatever
we have been banking on was through the prisms of the US and the UK.
Since it has become an intense game of economic survival, the EU would
like to see its feet on ground zero; i.e. Pakistan, instead of
depending on the borrowed, or rather filtered, visions sent via the UK
by the US.

In the next column I would like to dwell more on the same issue and
share other thoughts of the EU and NATO officials and of course some
of the Spaniards, who often prefer silence under the garb of
linguistic barriers, but eventually let their feelings loose about the
EU, UK and even the US.


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