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Pakistan:
Strategic Delusion
By Mahboob A. Khawaja
Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, April 20, 2010
President George W. Bush declared in his 2006
State of the Union message that "our own generation is in a long war
against a determined enemy…….without public debate and without
congressional hearings, a segment of the Pentagon and fellow travelers
have embraced a doctrine known as the Long War, which projects an "arc of
instability" caused by insurgent groups from Europe to South Asia that
will last between 50 and 80 years. According to one of its architects,
Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan are just "small wars in the midst of a big
one."
(Tom Hayden “Our Government Is Planning to Stay at War for the Next
80 Years- Anyone Got a Problem with That? LA Times, April 1, 2010)
The cruelty of the American led bogus war on terrorism has transformed
Pakistan into a beggar nation, solely looking to military and economic aid
for all its operations. The military Generals and their by-products – the
ruling PPP Zardari and in waiting Muslim League Nawaz Sharif, have
infected the body politics of Pakistan with corruption and tyranny, draining
out all of the positive thinking and creative energies of the nation for a
promising future. They must be held accountable for these crimes against the
people of Pakistan.
_____________________________________________________________________
Pakistan’s much optimized strategic relations with the US at best appears to
be “an odd marriage of convenience.” After decade old war against the
“Islamic terrorism”, the Bush presidency failed to achieve any known aims -
if there were any aims of the unwanted war except to occupy the natural
resources and to dominate and secularize the Muslim world with guns and
bullets. Bush had no sense of the eventualities of the “war on terrorism.”
It was an outcome of sheer madness and hopelessness of the US – a superpower
at the time to deal with the crisis of 9/11 terrorist attacks. The US
military is entrenched in Iraq and Afghanistan and all the strategic
indicators point out to only one possible conclusion that the US and its
European and other paid allies will negotiate with the Taliban in
Afghanistan to ensure safe exit from the faith-based unconquerable
mountainous people of southwest Asia. Pakistan is much needed for
any closure process to take its shape. Its corrupt and weak government will
do all to appease the master. India and Iran are viewed as irrelevant
neighbors for any rational strategic approach to conflict management. The US
and its allies are defeated parties in the unwanted conflict in Afghanistan.
It showed poor sense of strategic analysis how a superpower at the time,
jumps into big thinking but does not know where it stands in global moral
and political standing of principles. America lives with a history of failed
wars across the globe. Sean Underwood (“US-Pakistan Relations Fleeting”
March 29, 2010), the Swiss ISN Zurich Security Watch points out that
“the current close relationship between the US and Pakistan is likely to be
short-lived, as Washington treats Islamabad as a fair-weather friend and no
real strategy exists to seal a concrete deal.” President Bush
envisioned a century long crusade against the Muslim world but ended up
bankrupting America leading to the collapse of its financial institutions
which supported the madness of warmongering and as a superpower transformed
into being a broken superpower for all purposes. Even the European allies do
not take the US seriously in global consultancy and advisory for their
strategic future. Perhaps, the European had their own lesson learnt from the
dictates of history after killing millions and millions in support of the
nationalism for the two WW and leaving history to judge them as naïve and
egoistic people only suitable for killing each other for racial supremacy.
The global world of politics is full of the tyranny and corruption of wars.
Tyranny and corruption of wars knows no bound. America’s survival depends on
continued conflicts and its military engagements throughout the world. Chris
Floyd (“Darkness Renewed: Terror as Tool of the Empire: ICH, 04/2009)
explains the reality of the US corruption: …”and let's say this
plainly, clearly and soberly, so that no one can mistake the intention of
Rumsfeld's plan – the United States government is planning to use "cover and
deception" and secret military operations to provoke murderous terrorist
attacks on innocent people. Let's say it again: Donald Rumsfeld, Dick
Cheney, George W. Bush and the other members of the unelected regime in
Washington plan to deliberately foment the murder of innocent people – your
family, your friends, your lovers, you – in order to further their
geopolitical ambitions.” Wars are marked on the global chessboard.
The Obama presidency is continuing the Bush policy of war engagements
against the Muslims across the globe. The scenario and acts are derived from
the preconceived notion of strategic engagement to attack the splinter
groups of Talaban in Afghanistan and Pakistan and provoke a challenge to be
responded with full fledge military response as justification for the US led
war efforts in southwest Asia. Chris Floyd looks beyond the obvious:
“In [a Los Angeles Times] article by military analyst William Arkin...
[comes] the revelation of Rumsfeld's plan to create "a super-Intelligence
Support Activity" that will "bring together CIA and military covert action,
information warfare, intelligence, and cover and deception." According to a
classified document prepared for [Donald] Rumsfeld by his Defense Science
Board, the new organization – the "Proactive, Preemptive Operations Group
(P2OG)" – will carry out secret missions designed to "stimulate reactions"
among terrorist groups, provoking them into committing violent acts which
would then expose them to "counterattack" by U.S. forces.”
Pakistanis find themselves in living hell that Saeed Qureshi, a reputable
international journalist describes it “Kiamat- Doomsday of Pakistan (April
11, 2010). The national interest of Pakistan is not the focal point for any
strategic dialogue with the US but to further the interest of the most
corrupt ruling elite enjoying high standards of living in a nation deprived
of basic human needs and aspirations for its survival. Military aid will
strengthen the military, not the humanitarian sustainability of the common
folks. Foreign aids do not help to develop a nation’s capacity for change
and growth. The aid phenomenon simply creates a culture of long term
systematic beggary assistance to the recipient nations. Economically and
militarily interdependent Pakistan is preoccupied with its domestic
instability, lack of political institutions and corrupt leadership holding
the political powerhouse with the help of foreign masters and military
establishments. The so called political leadership is transitory and its
survival even in short terms is questionable. The Generals enjoy little
credibility in collaborating with the PPP Zardari government known as thugs
and indicted criminals by Pakistani NAB courts and Swiss legal justice for
money laundering cases. They do need some kind of umbrella protection to
carry on the business of killing their own civilian population under the
guise of “terrorism” as the US alleges and wanted them to put up the act.
The strategic alliance has dual meaning and purposes. By providing military
hardware to Pakistanis, they will continue the proxy war against the
suspected militants and the Talaban groups in particular, in tribal belt
areas of south and north Waziristan. You will recall, during the decade old
war, the US could not grab any known figures of Al-Qada or Talabans to
gain strategic credibility of a worthwhile cause in that part of the world.
The US never wanted to capture any of those figures either. It was a bogus
war aimed at killing and destruction of the habitats of Muslim people in the
Middle East and southwest Asia. The US does not want to be seen as a
defeated party in Afghanistan and Iraq- a fact becoming clear to all the
military observers. The US desperately needs Pakistani ISI to shield its
military failure and the final defeat. Sean Sherwood (“US-Pakistan Relations
Fleeting”, March 29, 2010) offers detailed observation: “Improving
security in Pakistan, the rationale for Pakistani cooperation with the US,
their historically troubled relationship as well as conflicting national
interests of the two states all indicate that this close collaboration is
unlikely to become permanent. In recent months, US military operations
and counterterrorism efforts in South Asia have experienced a noticeable
shift in the level of cooperation from the ISI. In Pakistan, increased
cooperation between the two intelligence communities has created a
successful two-month period in which authorities captured or killed 20
senior
Taliban officials and members of al-Qaida in Pakistan, one of the
largest setbacks experienced by the Taliban since October 2001. Among those
captured in Pakistan was Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Afghan Talibans’
second in command. Also captured was
Mullah Abdul Kabir, member of the influential
Quetta Shura council.” To reinforce its strategic
importance and role in Afghanistan, according to Ehsan Azari (“US-Pakistan
What Strategic Dialogue”: openDemocracy.net, April 8, 2010), the Obama
administration has “recognized Pakistan as a central player in Afghanistan,
a role it played with horrible consequences during the 1990s; precipitating
the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan which provided a launching board for
al-Qaida. Pakistan has a history of undertaking some tactical combat
operations, including even mock operations, against limited groups within
the Taliban insurgency in order to attract US policy makers and increase the
cash flow. It has now become clear that the recent arrest of Taliban leaders
in Pakistan was designed in part to punish those Taliban who enter into
negotiation in Kabul bypassing Pakistan. Kai Edie, the former UN special
representative to Afghanistan, accused Pakistan of sabotaging clandestine
discussions with senior Taliban leaders. Pakistan rarely chooses to harm
those Taliban who are Pakistani military strategic partners, since it relies
on their support. At the very moment that Pakistani civilian leaders pledge
to cut off the Taliban bases in Pakistan, shadowy ISI agents are secretly
giving assurance to the Taliban that Pakistan is supporting the Taliban in
the ‘anti-American Jihad’.” Historically, Europeans and others
had countless strategic pacts and understandings to pursue their own vested
interest and articulate hostiles befitting to their strategic needs and
priorities. None of the military pacts were ever a factor for peace and
harmony amongst the contending European powers. All were violated in spirit
and purpose to fuel the two World Wars in Europe. Pakistan had several of
those including CENTO, SEATO and secret military arrangements with Britain
and the US but none were activated or implied to help Pakistan when India
moved aggressively to dismember Pakistan in 1971 on East Pakistan, now
Bangladesh. To balanced the imbalanced strategic equation in southwest Asia
and particularly to counteract India, Pakistan buys weapons from the West,
it lacks manufacturing capability or large industrial complex as India
enjoins much with its own strategic planning and cooperation of the former
Soviet Union to be self-sufficient. Pakistan faces multiple challenges both
on the domestic front and on its borders with India and Afghanistan. What
good is this strategic alliance or relation if there is such a thing?
The corrupt leadership would lean to any foreign governments to acquire
strategic partnership or affiliation to ensure its own short-long terms
survivability. It is a deceptive position of extreme strategic weakness that
Pakistan is made to fight on different fronts- war that has been camouflaged
to be a Pakistani conflict. In reality, it is an American sponsored terror
to cripple Pakistan and punish the Muslim nation for its original alliance
with the Talaban. General Musharaf was bribed to work as an agent of
influence to change Pakistan into a people of Islamic “terrorism.” President
Bush claimed to have paid $10. Billions to the Pakistani Generals to wage
war against al-Qaida and Talabans. The trail of tyranny and corruption
continued under the PPP Zardari regime to engage in a strategic dialogue
with the US for their own good and future governance. Imagine, if Pakistan
had stable political institutions and genuinely proactive and responsible
leadership, it was conceivable that the US Obama administration would have
attached real world strategic value to its relations with Pakistan as an
ally, not as a bribed entity to fight for the master. Would this strategic
dialogue contribute to Pakistan’s domestic stability and position on the
border with Afghanistan? Sean Sherwood (“US-Pakistan Relations
Fleeting”) explains the sensitivities involved: “Theoretically,
Pakistan will remain a close ally of the US; however, this cooperation will
not be backed by any meaningful exchange of information. Convincing senior
Pakistani officials that cooperation with the US is in their best interests
will be a difficult task for American statesmen, especially as Pakistan
begins to experience more security within its borders than in past years
because of the ongoing offensive. Once additional security has been
established by Pakistan, the level of ISI’s cooperation with the US
intelligence community is likely to reduce in the area of combating the
Taliban and al-Qaida. While a stable Afghanistan is in Pakistan's interest,
a strong Afghanistan is not.” Would this conflict ever end? Or is it
a strategy to gain pause and then to go for new and innovative long war
against the people of Afghanistan and Pakistan? Tom Hayden (“Our
Government Is Planning to Stay at War for the Next 80 Years- Anyone Got a
Problem with That? LA Times, April 1, 2010) asks the Obama administration:
It's time the Long War strategy was put under a microscope and made the
focus of congressional hearings and media scrutiny. The American people
deserve a voice in the strategizing that will affect their future and that
of their grandchildren. There are at least three important questions to
address in public forums:
* What is the role of the Long War idea in
United States' policy now? Can the Pentagon or president impose such
war-making decisions without debate and congressional ratification?
*
Who exactly is the enemy in a Long War? Is Al Qaeda (or "Islamic
fundamentalism") considered to be a unitary enemy like the "international
communist conspiracy" was supposed to be? Can a Long War be waged with only
a blanket authorization against every decentralized group lodged in
countries from Europe to South Asia?
* Above all, what will a Long
War cost in terms of American tax dollars, American lives and American
respect in the world? Is it sustainable? If not, what are the alternatives?
The strategic alliance with the US is not a new phenomenon for Pakistan
but a failed act of history. Its role and importance accrue no value to the
well being of the masses of Pakistan. The nation’s health is
dangerously sickening, not being able to THINK rationally of its present and
the future. The common citizens of Pakistan are experiencing social and
economic chaos and political hardships with increasing daily bloodbaths and
killings of the innocent civilians. Those responsible - the foreign masters
and the Pakistani political accomplices must be tried in court of law and
punished for crimes against the humanity. American drone attacks alone are
reported to have killed more than two thousand civilians in the
Pakhtoonistan province of the NWF. How would a strategic delusion bridge the
gaps for the ordinary beleaguered citizens of Pakistan? Would this on-going
bogus war on terrorism help to strengthen the resolve for change and
development in Pakistan? Would it pave the way to organize public concerns
and growing discontentment to oust the PPP Zardari gang from power? The
military will continue to be a rollercoaster in any future political shaping
of the country with the US holding the string for either democracy or
dictatorship. History shall judge the nations and leaders by their
actions, not by their claims. Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja
specializes in global security, peace and conflict resolution, and
comparative cultures and civilizations, and author of many publications
including Muslims and the West; How America Lost the War on Islamic
Fundamentalism; To America and Canada with Reason; “Pakistan: Enigma of
Change”, “Pakistan: Leaders who could not lead”, “Pakistan: how to make
sense out of nonsense”, “Pakistan at Crossroads”, “ How the US
and Britain Lost the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan?”, “To President Obama
-War is War, Not Peace.” Comments are welcome at:
kmahboob@yahoo.com .
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