Posts Tagged ‘america and pakistan’
July 27, 2010
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Pakistan implicated in todays Wikileaks Reports
Pakistan is in desperate need of a plumber to fix the leak on the front page of the New York Times this morning. The article has one of strongest suggestions yet that the Inter Services Intelligence Agency aids the enemy in Afghanistan and is rooted in reports made available by the whistler blower organization, Wikileaks. The reports entitled the “Afghan War Diaries” purport that the Pakistani ISI provides haven, if not supports Al Qaeda comes from “unverified” sources most likely “aligned with Afghan” intelligence and “paid informants”. The New York Times piece provides examples of how a suggestion of Pakistani aiding insurgents could be accurate, and leaves only a brief disclaimer that nothing is yet certain. Rather, the story more strongly asserts:
Senior lawmakers say they have no doubt that Pakistan is aiding insurgent groups. “The burden of proof is on the government of Pakistan and the ISI to show they don’t have ongoing contacts,” said Senator Jack Reed
“No doubt” is an alarming allegation against a critical ally in this war and a bit sensational in the absence of a closer reading of Pakistan’s realities and motivations.
What seems more likely than “no doubt”, is something I’ve stated previously. Both Ideology and what Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesperson said are “ground realities” run directly counter to the suggestion that the ISI rampantly supports insurgent groups against American interests.
Quite simply, insurgent groups including Al Qaeda are deeply comprised of remnants from the Soviet Afghan war, meaning former fighters we engaged the ISI to train, maintained links to “freedom fighters” who ultimately became extremist groups we combatted post 9/11. That engagement created a decade long window in which there was little instruction or immediate opportunity and to some extent, interest for Pakistan to eradicate insurgents in its neighboring country. Couple this with the fact that Pakistan shares a nebulous border with Afghanistan as it became haven to one of the worlds largest refugee problems with Afghans fleeing Soviet atrocities, and you’ve got a battle hardened, impoverished, and an armed influx of an outside population who call major cities like Karachi, home.
So when we hear about the “Af-Pak Quagmire”, one should really be thinking in terms of the pickle Pakistan got into when millions of refugees made Pakistan’s underdeveloped, politically volatile and vastly feudal state home as the Cold War ended.
This climate allows us to put the Wikileaks reports into perspective. Firstly, reports linking ISI aid to insurgents could likely be referring to former Pakistan intelligence officials who maintained ties to insurgents as Afghans became part of the fabric of Pakistani society. Secondly, although these groups made Pakistan their home, the arms and influx of drugs via Afghanistan, never ceased. An infamous Klashinkov culture pervades Karachi amongst other places, including the now well-known FATA areas. So with such imbedded presence in Pakistan, obliterating Afghani insurgents becomes a highly sensitive task.
I rarely point to ideology as a driver of action when it comes to government behavior, but as Afghan’s made their home in Pakistan, they came sharing religion and some aspects of culture which intensifies the complexity of hunting down terrorists because it leaves Pakistan open to the possibility of a civilian uprising. Certainly Afghans would have preferred we “negotiate” rather than wage full scale war post 9/11 to settle differences. And I will not argue whether or not that would have been wise, however, the point is that the
ISI may be dealing with insurgents in vastly different ways, wheeling and dealing as opposed to obliterating them with the force we might use because of a profound risk involved in alienating an enormous, and internal Afghan presence within Pakistan’s border.
Since 9/11 Pakistan has descended into civlian chaos at certain intervals with extremists growing polarized, gravitating toward insurgents as we intensified our offensive in Afghanistan and Pakistan. So our expecations must take these realities into account and the Wikileaks reports understood within that context.
Ultimately, a lesson we might learn from the Wikileaks story is that negotiating with extremist groups for Pakistan is inevitable. General McChrystal’s Counterinsurgency strategy was moving in that direction as it called for U.S. engagement for the long haul requiring additional years in time, toil, troops, and treasure; which is an increasingly unpopular idea. So will the Wikileaks reports be the “game changer” or this wars equivalent to the “Pentagon Papers” for it’s suggestions that our engagement of Pakistan in providing billions in aid has been not only counter productive but comes in addition to our own mishandlings of the war thus far?
Perhaps. But either way, Pakistan is in desperate need of one skilled plumber to fix this leak.
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Posted in Current Affairs, Foreign Policy, International Relations, Pakistan, U.S. Politics, US Foreign Polciy, US Pakistan relations | Tagged af-pak, Afghan refugees, Afghanistan Pakistan, Afghanistan refugees, afghanistan relations, Al Qaeda Pakistan, al qaeda war on terror, america and pakistan, american foreign policy, american pakistan relations, counterinsurgency, extremist groups pakistan, influx refugees pakistan, insurgent pakistan, insurgents, insurgents pakistan, International Relations, karachi, karachi violence, klashinkov culture, klashinkov pakistan, negotiating pakistan, Pakistan, pakistan negotiations, pakistan refugee, Pakistan refugees, pakistan wikileaks, pakistani politics, refugees pakistan, soviet afghan war, soviet afghanistan, soviet invasion of afghanistan, terrorism, terrorist, u.s. foreign policy, US Pakistan relations, war in afghanistan, war on terror pakistan, war pakistan, wars, wikileaks report, zainab, zainab jeewanjee, zainab jeewanjee foreign policy, zainab jeewanjee Pakistan, Zainab jeewanjee politics, zainyjee | 4 Comments »
May 20, 2010
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Facbeook Banned in Pakistan - May 2010
There’s a notion of two distinct America’s; one that is conservative, mostly Republican Red and the other a more liberal Democratic Blue, and in a similar way I’ve seen two Pakistan’s.
Case in point : the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority severed access to the worlds largest social networking site this week when a Lawyers Association won a court injunction officially banning Facebook because of a page entitled “Post Drawings of Prophet Mohammad Day”. As of now, the Pakistan government has added YouTube, and certain pages on Flickr and Wikipedia to the ban list which is either fueling vehement support of the ban (a conservative, we’ll say Red thing to do) and protests against Facebook or a eliciting a total opposite response “God save this country, lunatics are running it” (a more liberal, response we’ll label Blue).
The polarized views are reminiscent of our own democratic deliberations; strong demonstrations for (Red) and against (Blue) the legality of the Iraq invasion beginning in 2004, or protests against the passage of Proposition 8 (Blue) in California which outlawed same sex marriage in 2008 (Red).
So do such polar views necessarily indicate a distinctly Blue and Red America? I’ve never thought so, because overallAmerican’s tend to be far more centrist than our elected officials make us out to be in a two party system. Generally, Americans from California to New York and everywhere in between share basic social and cultural values; we watch the same shows, dress similarly, and ultimately ascribe to the values outlined in our Constitution (albeit interpretations differ).
But Pakistan is very different. There is far less social homogeneousness and more indications of a vastly distinct populace, a Red and Blue Pakistan if you will. Citizens from the remote, more rural northern areas bordering Afghanistan, or Red places will likely dress, consume, and believe differently than people in the more cosmopolitan hustle and bustle of large cities like Karachi, or Blue Pakistan.
Pakistani’s are educated on vastly different scales. While one child might be raised in a feudal system from a village in Sindh with no education, another might be educated per the Cambridge system in a large city, while another might have only had formal training in religious studies at a Madrassah! In terms of dress; it’s not uncommon to find females covered in burqa’s from head to toe, no face, hands or even eyes showing (Red), while you’ll find other’s in the skimpiest of attire partying until daybreak (Blue), at which point some Pakistani’s may rise to pray at a local Mosque while others are just getting home from a night of drinking and dancing. It’s Red and Blue if i’ve ever seen it, if not as stark as the contrast of Black on White.
So there’s an enormous diversity in belief systems that is more immediately recognized in the Pakistani landscape than in ours. I recall living there while in High School and being shocked at the level of ignorance toward America by some and whole hearted embrace of western culture by others. But polar lifestyles and belief systems amongst Pakistani’s doesn’t indicate there isn’t a grey area of people who fall in between two extremes, nor does it mean the group perceived as more “western” is necessarily against the ban on Facebook. In fact, notorious party animal and international rock star Ali Azmat didn’t denounce the censorship:
“Musician Ali Azmat said the issue should be dealt with sternly so that no such thing takes place in the future. “Every Muslim condemns this act, but it should be handled responsibly because we have to maintain our image. I have registered my condemnation of the relevant Facebook page.”
And that’s when I start to worry. If so called “liberal” personalities in Pakistan can be overworked over the Facebook page and fail to renounce such short sighted legislation, I shudder to think of how widespread acceptance of unnecessary censorship still is in Pakistan.
I’ll be the first to say the Facebook page is in poor taste, it’s a sorry excuse for a cause and the fact that it does not have even a 20k following yet is testimony to how silly it is. Thus the futility of the inane effort makes the Pakistani ban a disproportionate, counter productive response.
The page does not incite hate or violence and I would go so far as to say it posed an opportunity for the Pakistani government to lead its citizens to moderation in this instance. After violent protests against the Danish cartoons which forever mar the image of Muslims today, Pakistan missed a chance to demonstrate Islamic sensibility.
By banning Facebook over a trivial issue the government makes a mockery of it’s people, Red and Blue alike. Officially designated as The Islamic Republic of Pakistan, the government carries a profound responsibility to simultaneously uphold freedom and religious consciousness. Not an easy task, but the last thing Pakistan needs right now are further riled extremists and increased Anti-Americanism.
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Posted in Pakistan, Religion & Society | Tagged america and pakistan, anti americanism, anti americanism in pakistan, censorship in pakistan, conservative and liberal pakistan, conservative in pakistan, conservatives in pakistan, facebook pakistan, freedom of press pakistan, freedom of speech pakistan, government ban pakistan, liberal pakistan, liberal press pakistan, liberals in pakistan, media in pakistan, pakistan and facebook, pakistan and politics, pakistan and social media, pakistan censorship, pakistan extremism, pakistan free media, pakistan government ban, pakistan media ban, pakistan media issues, pakistan news, pakistan politics, pakistan protest facebook, pakistan protests, pakistan zainab, pakistani current affairs, pakistani media, pakistani politics, politics of pakistan, press in pakistan, red and blue pakistan, social media pakistan, social networking pakistan, zainab jeewanjee, zainyjee | 4 Comments »
December 14, 2009
Friday morning a CNN headline informed us that the stock market is inching forward, but America is “still in the red”, simply reminding us that we’re spending more than we’re making.
Ouch. With an expanding war and expanding government (Af-Pak war and healthcare reform respectively), expenses seem excessive. But, thinking about the Af-Pak quagmire within this perspective made me realize the costly necessity of our engagement. Because even though it may seem cost effective and immediately convenient to bring troops home , our absence in the Af-Pak region entails risks that are perhaps higher than the costs of Obama’s troop surge, even in our downward economy.
Let’s run a counterfactual to demonstrate. If we begin troop withdrawal, ultimately winding down NATO forces as well, in the absence of a U.S. presence, Af-Pak becomes fully accessible to regional powers, including China, Russia, and India to step in. Security and development will be led by other foreign powers who emerge with powerful influence in this strategic area. Because in addition to our foremost interest in obliterating Al Qaeda, Afghanistan is strategically poised to access Central Asian energy interests as is Pakistan. Pakistan is not landlocked so the Karachi port becomes key to transporting Central Asian energy to international markets. In our absence, Russia or China emerges as forerunners in supporting Af-Pak in their route to development meaning major energy projects that we stand to benefit from, such as the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan pipeline might take a backseat to projects led by Russia. Similarly, energy projects like the Iran-Pakistan-India Pipeline which the Heritage Organization has already called “unacceptable” for U.S. interests make further headway in our absence with the support China. So withdrawing troops runs the risk of our losing access to potential energy resources and could further threaten Europe by allowing the former USSR to gain a “stranglehold over European energy security”.
Similarly, there are critical security risks that come along with our withdrawal. In our absence, regional powers that are historically not geopolitically neutral in the can create a climate of further conflict.
– Current Afghanistan-India alliance (rapidly increasing)
– Historic Pakistan – Afghanistan alliance (rapidly decreasing)
– Russia-Pakistan enmity (as per India Russia alliance)
– Russia-Afghanistan enmity (Soviet Afghan War)
– India-Russia alliance (An expanding, long term alliance began during the Cold War)
– India-China enmity (Sino Indian War)
– Pakistan-China alliance (Long term alliance began during the Sino Indian War)
– India-Pakistan enmity (Deep mistrust dating back to Partition in 1947 with 3 wars fought since)
This complex mix of regional relations in tandem with competing interests for Afghanistan and Pakistan creates weighty risks that are too big to take. For instance, there’s a widespread notion that Pakistan sought to wield control over Afghanistan to use it as a buffer against India and currently, the Pakistani government says the same is true for India as relations warm between Delhi and Kabul. By removing the United States from the picture, the risk of leaving two nuclear armed, historic adversaries vying for geopolitically strategic and energy rich Afghanistan becomes a weighty concern.
So two weeks ago when Fareed Zakaria questioned Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on whether or not India believes Pakistan is doing it all it can to uproot terrorism, and Mr. Singh gently responded that America has given him all the assurance he needs, one realizes the magnanimity of our mitigating tensions in the region. Leaving the Af-Pak region now runs great potential for further insecurity and could run directly counter to our energy interests. Let’s hope our policies in uprooting terror are accompanied by development strategies for long term stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan so that our presence is not perpetually required.
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Posted in Current Affairs, Foreign Policy, India Pakistan, International Affairs, International Relations, Pakistan, U.S. Politics, US Foreign Polciy, US Pakistan relations | Tagged af-pak, af-pak region, af-pak strategy, af-pak taliban, af-pak terrorism, af-pak war, af-pak war foreign policy, af-pak war policy, afghan pak region, afghanistan india, afghanistan india pakistan buffer, afghanistan india pakistan politics, afghanistan indian relations, afghanistan pakistan border, afghanistan pakistan region, afghanistan pakistan terrorism, afghanistan pakistan terrorists, afghanistan pakistan united states, afghanistan pakistan us, afghanistan pakistan war, afghanistan pakistan war on terror, Afghanistan war, america and pakistan, america and pakistan war on terror, america winning hearts and minds, american pakistan relations, american pakistani relations, Anti americanism Pakistan, anti americanism soviet afghan war, buffer india afghanistan, buffer pakistan afghanistan, buffer pakistan india, cnn zakaria jaswant singh, development in pakistan, fareed cnn jaswant singh, fareed zakaria jaswant singh, foreign policy association pakistan, india pakistan afghanistan, International Affairs, international affairs in pakistan, International Affairs Pakistan, international politics pakistan, International Relations, international relations pakistan, jaswant singh cnn, jaswant singh interview cnn, jaswant singh interview fareed zakaria, Obama Pakistan, Pakistan, pakistan civil war, pakistan foreign policy, pakistan foreign policy association united states, Pakistan international affairs, pakistan international politics, pakistan needs economic development, pakistan political affairs, pakistan politics, pakistan terrorism, Pakistan terrorists, pakistan united states afghanistan, Pakistan US cooperation, Pakistan war on terror, pakistani affairs, pakistani policies, pakistani politics, pakistani us relations, politics in pakistan, politics of pakistan, president obama pakistan strategy, prime minister jaswant singh, terrorism afghanistan pakistan, terrorism of pakistan, united states assistance pakistan, United states foreign policy pakistan, united states pakistan cooperation, united states pakistan policies, united states pakistan relations, US foreign policy, US foreign policy to pakistan, us led war on terror, us led war on terror pakistan, US Pakistan relations, us winning hearts and minds, war on terror in pakistan, war on terror united states pakistan, winning hearts and minds afghanistan, winning hearts and minds pakistan, winning hearts and minds war on terror, zainab jeewanjee, zainab jeewanjee international affairs, zainab jeewanjee international relations, zainab politics | 11 Comments »
December 9, 2009
NYTIMES does a good job of publishing weekly articles on the Af-Pak situation. And a recent piece had a very enticing title: “The Demons that Haunt Pakistan” . It conjured deep curiosity and I delved into it anticipating the “demons” referred to how terrorists have paralyzed the country since 9/11.
Instead, the writer interviews one oddball Psychiatrist who says the “Gucci suit” wearing Americans are the real terrorists and Blackwater is luring his hired help to engage in a grand U.S. conspiracy to destroy Pakistan. Based on this sole, very erratic viewpoint, she presumes that like a “teenager” Pakistan is “self-conscious, emotional, quick to blame others for its troubles” and is where conspiracy theories are “pervasive”. But the presumption that Anti-Americanism supersedes resentment of actual terrorists who have is not well founded. In fact, only at the end of the article does she acknowledge the moderate Pakistani viewpoint:
“Islam treats foreigners according to their wishes,” It’s not what these people (terrorists) say — killing them or asking others to terrorize them,” he said contemptuously of the militants. “We must treat everybody equally. Christians, Jews, Muslims”
The author refers to this as the “unlikely exception”, but on the contrary, this perspective is more likely to be found in Pakistan. The gentleman expressing this view is working class and the masses are working class. They’re not doctors or professionals whom the author erroneously cites as the norm. Further, it’s the working classes who struggle most with terrorism, not the sliver of Pakistan’s elite population who maintain comforts despite political upheaval. So the implication that demon-esque Anti Americanism is rooted in spectacular conspiracy theories is unlikely:
The majority masses are far more skeptical of Pakistani policymakers and domestic corruption than of Blackwater and the American, or Indian government for that matter.
More accurately on India, the author cites counter productive policies in Pakistan that maintained, rather than obliterated the feudal system and attributes the profound struggles of Partition to subsequent skepticism that has been harbored by both countries for one another since. Plus, having fought three wars in just 62 years, she explains it’s “natural that Pakistan’s security concerns focus more on its eastern border with India” and “not irrational” for Pakistan to resent American calls for change in this strategy.
The piece goes on to explain resentment of American policymaking viewed as “U.S. single-mindedly pursues it’s own interests as it did in the 80’s when it was confronting the Soviets”. And therein lies skepticism for the United States in Pakistan: it’s rooted in abandoning ship post the Soviet-Afghan war. Leaving Pakistan with one of the worlds largest refugee problems well ISI/CIA trained extremist Islamist militants in a developing country hasn’t boded well 20 years later. As a partial result, Pakistan hasn’t developed, it’s deteriorated. Cooperation in our Afghan operation in the 80’s isn’t perceived as productive. Thus,
Current skepticism of U.S. expansion in the Af-Pak war is not a matter of irrational, conspiracy theories or bitterness for all things American, it comes after prolonged, and now daily struggle against extremist Islam, and terrorists who massacre Pakistanis almost daily since 9/11.
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Posted in Current Affairs, Economics, Foreign Policy, India Pakistan, International Affairs, International Relations, Pakistan, South Asia, U.S. Politics, US Foreign Polciy, US Pakistan relations | Tagged af-pak, af-pak region, af-pak strategy, af-pak taliban, af-pak terrorism, af-pak war, af-pak war foreign policy, af-pak war policy, afghan pak region, afghanistan pakistan border, afghanistan pakistan region, afghanistan pakistan terrorism, afghanistan pakistan terrorists, afghanistan pakistan united states, afghanistan pakistan us, afghanistan pakistan war, afghanistan pakistan war on terror, Afghanistan war, aid to pakistan, america and pakistan, america and pakistan war on terror, america winning hearts and minds, american pakistan relations, american pakistani relations, Anti americanism Pakistan, anti americanism soviet afghan war, anti americanism war on terror, counterterrorism pakistan, development in pakistan, economic aid pakistan, economic assistance pakistan, economic development pakistan, foreign policy association pakistan, International Affairs, international affairs in pakistan, International Affairs Pakistan, international politics pakistan, International Relations, international relations pakistan, islamabad bombings islamabad attacks, islamist pakistan soviet afghan war, kerry lugar bill, kerry lugar bill pakistan, military offensive pakistan, Obama Pakistan, Pakistan, pakistan 9 11, pakistan 9/11, pakistan after 9 11, pakistan after 911, pakistan after september 11, pakistan aid, pakistan civil war, pakistan economic development, Pakistan economy, pakistan foreign policy, pakistan foreign policy association united states, Pakistan international affairs, pakistan international politics, pakistan needs economic development, pakistan political affairs, pakistan politics, pakistan resentment, pakistan september 11, pakistan terrorism, Pakistan terrorists, pakistan united states afghanistan, pakistan us assistance, Pakistan US cooperation, Pakistan war on terror, pakistan waziristan, pakistan waziristan war, pakistani affairs, pakistani military, pakistani policies, pakistani politics, pakistani us relations, politics in pakistan, politics of pakistan, president obama pakistan strategy, september 11 karachi, september 11 musharraf, september 11 pakistan, september 11 pakistani, soviet afghan war islamist, soviet afghan war pakistan, soviet afghanistan war pakistan, terrorism afghanistan pakistan, terrorism of pakistan, terrorism pakistani, united states assistance pakistan, United states foreign policy pakistan, united states pakistan cooperation, united states pakistan policies, united states pakistan relations, us assistance to pakistan, US foreign policy, US foreign policy to pakistan, us led war on terror, us led war on terror pakistan, US Pakistan relations, us winning hearts and minds, war on terror in pakistan, war on terror pakistan anti americanism, war on terror united states pakistan, winning hearts and minds afghanistan, winning hearts and minds pakistan, winning hearts and minds war on terror, zainab jeewanjee, zainab jeewanjee international affairs, Zainab jeewanjee politics, zainab politics | 3 Comments »