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The book is divided into ten chapters that discuss and evaluate the anticipated economic and geopolitical effects on the region. In addition, it investigates the role of CPEC in the future regional cooperation and integration of subnational regions such as Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (including the Federally Administered Tribal Areas), and Gilgit-Baltistan.
Chaudhuri, Rudra. "The Making of an ‘All Weather Friendship' Pakistan, China and the History of a Border Agreement: 1949–1963." International history review 40, no. 1 (2018), 41–64. Choudhury, G.W. India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the major powers: politics of a divided subcontinent (1975), by a Pakistani scholar.
The third meeting of Pakistan-China JCM was held on 21 June 2024 in Islamabad. [6] [7] The meeting was co-chaired by Senator Ishaq Dar, the Foreign Minister, and Liu Jianchao, the head of the International Department of the Chinese Communist Party. Delegates from all the prominent political parties in Pakistan were present at the meeting. [2]
The China–Pakistan Axis: Asia's New Geopolitics is a book written in 2015 by the British author Andrew Small that explores the cultural and political relationship between China and Pakistan, with China being described as Pakistan's greatest economic hope and trusted military partner.
The agreement was part of an overall tightening of association with China for Pakistan, which resulted in Pakistan's distancing from the United States. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] After defining borders, the two countries also entered into agreements with respect to trade and air-travel, the latter of which was the first such international agreement ...
The same year Pakistan signed the Indus Waters Treaty with India in an attempt to normalise relations. [95] Relations with China strengthened after the Sino-Indian War, with a boundary agreement being signed in 1963; this shifted the balance of the Cold War by bringing Pakistan and China closer together while loosening ties between Pakistan and ...
These principles are also part of the discourse in China-Pakistan relations. [21] In a speech to Pakistani parliament in 1999, Chairman of the Standing Committee of China's National People's Congress Li Peng stated, "China has all along pursued an independent foreign policy of peace and established and developed relations with other countries ...
China and Pakistan already conduct trade via the Karakoram Highway. The CPEC projects involve reconstruction and upgrades to National Highway 35 (N-35), which forms the Pakistani section of the Karakoram Highway (KKH). The KKH spans the 887 kilometers between the China-Pakistan border and the town of Burhan, near Hasan Abdal.