Home Editor's Pick China Supplying Chemical Agents To Pakistan For Use Against Baloch Rebels?

China Supplying Chemical Agents To Pakistan For Use Against Baloch Rebels?

Select Preferred on Google News

Is China helping Pakistan source an incapacitating chemical agent to be used in law enforcement in some of the troubled areas of Pakistan such as Balochistan? Confiscation of a controlled chemical by Indian customs in Tamil Nadu’s Kattupalli port on May 8 this year has raised concerns. The China-Pakistan nexus on surreptitious transport of sensitive material is now venturing into uncharted territory as well.

Shanghai To Karachi

The chemical in question, known as ‘ortho-chloro benzylidene malononitrile (CS), was shipped by a Chinese firm, Chengdu Shichen Trading Co. Ltd, to Rohail Enterprises, a Rawalpindi-based company. The consignment was loaded onto a carrier vessel ‘Hyundai Shanghai’ (sailing under the Cyprus flag) on April 18 at Shanghai Port.

According to sources, the vessel reached Kattupalli Port around 11 pm on May 8 on its voyage to Karachi. An intelligence tip-off had alerted the customs authorities, who got the consignment offloaded. Investigations revealed that in addition to being on a controlled list under the Chemical Weapons Convention, the use and transport of the CS chemical is also governed by the Wassenaar Arrangement and is placed in India’s dual-use items list SCOMET.

Incapacitating Chemical Agent

Given the usage of the CS chemical as an incapacitating agent, it is possible that Pakistani law enforcement agencies could use it against rebel groups. Besides raising human rights concerns, the seizure also indicates potential complicity of China in trying to protect its own interests in Balochistan. Those are increasingly coming under strain with frequent attacks on Chinese assets and personnel.

China Helping Itself

China, as is well-known, has invested heavily in various projects under the ambit of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor or CPEC in Balochistan. However, these projects have remained a non-starter due to opposition by Baloch sub-nationalist groups. Covert supply of controlled substances by China to Pakistan suggests that Beijing is doing this deliberately to protect its own interests in Pakistan.

European and American regulators and intelligence agencies have kept a close watch on unchecked trading of dual-use technologies by China and Pakistan. But some European capitals are now asking if these efforts are enough.

Germany Wary

In June 2023, an annual report released by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution for the German state of Baden-Württemberg highlighted: “Iran, Pakistan, North Korea and Syria are still pursuing such efforts. They aim to complete existing arsenals, perfect the range, deployability and effectiveness of their weapons and develop new weapons systems. They are trying to obtain the necessary products and relevant know-how, inter alia, through illegal procurement efforts in Germany.”

‘Bypass Countries’

An analysis of this report suggests ‘bypass countries’ like Turkey and China could help Pakistan and North Korea that are in the business of illegal and unrestricted proliferation to route their proliferation weapons and help the business to grow.

In addition, Ilya Kahn, a citizen of the United States, Israel and Russia, and resident of Brooklyn, New York, and Los Angeles, California, who was arrested by US authorities on January 17 this year for his alleged involvement in a years-long scheme to secure and unlawfully export sensitive technology from the United States for the benefit of a Russian business, used a network of businesses in China and other countries to illegally transfer hundreds of thousands of semiconductors to sanctioned business with ties to Russian military.

Chinese Firms Sanctioned

In April 2024, The US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) sanctioned three Chinese companies. These were Tianjin Creative Source International Trade Co Ltd, Granpect Company Limited, and Xi’an Longde Technology Development Company. It was for supplying key components to Pakistan’s ballistic missile programme.

China Acting As Hub

In May 2024, the Directorate of State Security and Intelligence (DSN) of Austria released ‘Constitutional ProtectionReport-2023’ (Verfassungsschutzbericht 2023). It reviewed the global security situation in 2023 and its implications on Austria’s national security. The report emphasised the role of China, which occupies a special position globally when it comes to proliferation. It mentioned that China acted as a global buyer for sanctioned states in the European market and also in Austria.

It said that Pakistan has traditionally maintained good relations with China. Besides, its procurement processes for dual-use goods from Europe often involve fake companies and dealer networks in the Arabian Peninsula. It mentioned that Pakistani proliferation attempts rose in 2023 through civilian intermediaries in China which are not sanctioned. These intermediaries are usually no longer subject to de facto control by Austrian exporters. This is how China becomes a global hub for sanctioned goods, an assessment by intelligence agencies has concluded.

Previous articleModi, World Leaders And CEOs Condemn Attack On Trump
Next articleStarmer Unveils Ambitious Agenda With 35 New Bills To Drive Economic Growth
Nitin A. Gokhale
Nitin A. Gokhale is a communications specialist, media entrepreneur, strategic affairs analyst and author of more than a dozen books on military history, insurgencies and wars. One of South Asia's leading strategic analysts, Gokhale has moved on from conventional media to become an independent media entrepreneur running three niche digital platforms—BharatShakti, StratNewsGlobal and StratNewsGlobal.tech —besides undertaking consultancy and training workshops in communications for military institutions, corporates and individuals. An avid films and sports buff, Gokhale in fact started his career in journalism in 1983 as a sports reporter. Since then, he has, in the past 42 years, traversed the entire spectrum across print, broadcast and digital space. Now better known for his conflict coverage and strategic analyses, Gokhale has lived and reported from India’s North-east for 23 years between 1983 and 2006, been on the ground at Kargil in the summer of 1999 and also brought us live coverage from Sri Lanka’s Eelam War IV between 2006-2009. An alumnus of the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Hawaii, Gokhale now writes, lectures and analyses security and strategic matters in Indo-Pacific and travels regularly to US, Europe, Australia, South and South-East Asia to take part in various seminars and conferences. Gokhale is also a popular visiting faculty at India’s Defence Services Staff College, the three war colleges, India's National Defence College, College of Defence Management and the IB’s intelligence school.