Pakistan: can U.S. policy save the day?
Malik, Mustafa
Ever since 9/11, America's preoccupation in Pakistan has been
with "terrorism." Anti-American Pakistani militants call it
part of their jihad against the U.S.-NATO "occupation" of
Afghanistan. Today political stability has become the overriding U.S.
concern in Pakistan. President Obama says his administration is
"working to secure stability in Pakistan" because he is
"gravely concerned" that an unstable Pakistan could become a
haven for militants. (1) Pakistan's stability hinges mainly on its
interethnic equations, mode of governance, relations with India and the
American policy toward Pakistan. Obama aides acknowledge that U.S.
policy since the 1950s has continually abetted the disruption of the
nation's democratic governance, fueling its disintegrative trends.
The administration is also worried that political chaos could lend
Taliban or al-Qaeda militants access to Pakistani nuclear weapons. Yet
Washington has pushed Pakistan into an ominous war with the Taliban,
which is spawning the chaos that troubles it. To promote Pakistan's
stability, the administration is recasting U.S. policy objectives in
that country. It is unclear, though, to what extent the U.S. policy
shuffle would help the fraying society pull together.
In this article I explore the threats to Pakistan's political
stability, foremost among them the ethnocentrism that is inherent in the
multiethnic postcolonial state. Punjabi ethnocentrism, in particular,
has played a pivotal role in exacerbating Pakistan's separatist
movements and impeding the democratic process. Furthermore, Washington
has supported Pakistan's dictatorial regimes and used the
country's military forces to promote U.S. foreign-policy goals. I
also discuss the impact on Pakistan's stability of the continuing
"war on terror" (a term the Obama administration has stopped
using). Finally, I look into the steps the United States might take to
help shore up Pakistan's troubled political and economic
institutions.
Pakistan was born in 1947 as an unstable "nation-state."
Like many other postcolonial states, it was created overnight out of
disparate ethnic communities that had never lived together as a
"nation." The previous year, the departing British colonial
rulers of undivided India had held an election, partly to determine
which Indian provinces wanted to join the "Muslim homeland."
Pakistan would be chopped off from the country's Hindu-majority
provinces, which together would become modern India.
The All-India Muslim League spearheaded the Pakistan movement and
called the election a "referendum" on its Pakistan project.
Ironically, in none of the four provinces that make up today's
Pakistan (Baluchistan was carved out as a separate province after the
creation of Pakistan) did the Muslim League win the election. The
legislature of Sindh province had, however, adopted a resolution three
years earlier signaling its support for Pakistan. The ethnic groups in
each of these provinces, which would be known collectively as West
Pakistan, were preoccupied with their ethnic interests. Only the
province of Bengal, a thousand miles to the east, elected a Muslim
League government. Besides, Muslims in the Indian province of Uttar
Pradesh played a key role in the creation of Pakistan.
Years later, the would-be founder of Bangladesh, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman, said to me, "Without the victory of the Bengal Muslim
League [in the 1946 elections] and the Calcutta riots, Pakistan would
have remained a dream." (2) Sheikh Mujib had joined the Pakistan
movement as a Muslim League activist and defended Muslims during the
Hindu-Muslim riots in Calcutta that broke out over the Pakistan question
in August 1946. Part of Bengal, home of the Bengali ethnic community,
would join Pakistan and be called East Pakistan. And yet, irony of
ironies, East Pakistan would break away from Pakistan 24 years later to
become independent Bangladesh, complaining bitterly of the Punjabi
political and economic stranglehold on the country.
British Indian Muslims shared a common religious bond, but their
religious values metamorphosed into their ethnic lifestyles, and their
political behavior was guided essentially by their ethnicity. In
undivided Bengal, Muslims were 52 percent of the population, most of
them exploited and suppressed by upper-caste Hindu landowners and money
lenders. In 1946, they voted overwhelmingly for the Muslim state,
primarily so as to rid themselves of caste Hindu exploitation. Muslims
in what would become the four West Pakistani provinces--Punjab, Sindh,
Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP) and Baluchistan--had not suffered
similar Hindu suppression. In Punjab (which, like Bengal, would be split
between Pakistan and India), Muslims were a third of the population but
had a strong middle class, while in the three other West Pakistani
provinces they made up large majorities.
Most West Pakistani Muslims warmed to the Muslim state after
learning that their provinces would become part of it in any case. The
inception of Pakistan sparked vicious riots between Muslims and Hindus
in Punjab, Bengal and other parts of the subcontinent. These were
followed by three full-blown wars and several minor conflicts between
Pakistan and India. The Hindu-Muslim riots, the India-Pakistan wars and
the Islamic bond fostered Pakistanis' national solidarity. (3) Yet
ethnic values and affinity remain strong among Pakistanis and have been
exacerbated by the Punjabi military and political elites'
domination of other provinces.
Approximately 75 percent of contemporary Pakistan's armed
forces, and roughly an equal percentage of its central government
bureaucracy, come from Punjab. The Punjabis rebuff complaints about
their domination, claiming that since they are Pakistan's majority
ethnic community (about 60 percent of the country's population),
their leading role in national affairs is natural. In the old Pakistan,
though, the Punjabis were a minority, but they stubbornly resisted the
leadership of the East Pakistani Bengalis, the majority community. The
main complaint against them concerns the constant use of their
preponderance in the army and bureaucracy to impose dictatorships and
promote Punjabi interests in other provinces.
REGIME CHANGE
The United States has supported all of Pakistan's half-dozen
dictatorial regimes and been accused of abetting the unconstitutional
overthrow of some of its democratic ones. The first such allegation
followed a 1953 coup. Those who related the story to me included the
late Pakistani Prime Minister Nurul Amin. The Eisenhower administration
had invited Pakistan through its pro-American army chief, General
Mohammad Ayub Khan, to join the proposed Baghdad Pact. This anti-Soviet
treaty, sponsored by America and Britain, would later be renamed the
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO).
Prime Minister Khwaja Nazimuddin, a native of East Pakistan, wanted
the draft treaty reworked to enable Pakistan to count on alliance
support if attacked by a foreign power. The Americans rejected his
request, and the prime minister was having difficulty making up his mind
about the alliance, despite the prodding of the Punjabi governor
general. On the afternoon of April 17, 1953, Governor General Ghulam
Mohammad told an incredulous Nazimuddin that he was being fired as prime
minister. The governor general had no constitutional authority to
dismiss the prime minister who had the support of a parliamentary
majority. Three days later, the deposed prime minister told visiting
Nurul Amin, then chief minister of East Pakistan, that he had been
warned by army sources that any challenge to his dismissal would
"compel the army to step in."
Nurul Amin told me in 1970 that "Ghulam Mohammad and his
coterie were uncomfortable" about having a Bengali prime minister,
and that Nazimuddin believed that they made common cause with the
Americans to get rid of him.4 On February 24, 1955, Pakistan joined the
Baghdad Pact without the alliance's commitment to its defense. The
Nazimuddin episode instilled anti-American feeling in many of the first
generation of East Pakistani leaders. This was reflected in Nurul
Amin's last letters to me before his death in 1974.
Four months after Nazimuddin had been overthrown, the CIA openly
orchestrated a military coup against the democratically elected prime
minister of neighboring Iran, Mohammed Mosaddeq, and replaced him with
American protege Muhammad Reza Pahlavi. Like Nazimuddin, Mosaddeq had
resisted the U.S. demand to join the Baghdad pact; the autocrat Reza
Pahlavi had no such compunctions. Nazimuddin, one of Pakistan's
architects, swallowed his humiliation to avoid a military adventurism that could harm the five-year-old state. Nurul Amin had told him that he
would resign as East Pakistan's chief minister and launch a
movement challenging the "illegal, ultra vires [extra legal] and
undemocratic" act of the Punjabi governor general, "provided
you come with us." The ousted prime minister rejected the idea. He
had evidence that Ghulam Muhammad had "acted in this matter in
consultation with General Ayub Khan," who was present in the
governor general's official residence when the prime minister was
fired. "The army was kept ready to take over." Political
turmoil in Pakistan, Nazimuddin feared, could give "enemies of the
country," meaning India, an excuse for intervention. (5)
Another East Pakistani leader, Sheikh Mujib, refused to accept an
obstruction of the democratic process by a Punjabi military dictator,
and Pakistan paid dearly for it. Sheikh Mujib's political party,
the Awami League, had won a majority of parliamentary seats in the 1970
elections, but the military ruler General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan would
not allow the party to participate in creating Pakistan's future
constitutional framework, prompting it to launch the Bangladeshi
independence movement. And as though to vindicate Nazimuddin, India
invaded East Pakistan, dismembered the old Muslim state and helped
create Bangladesh. The Bangladeshi political elite never forgave the
Nixon administration for staunchly supporting the Punjabi dictator
through this vicissitude.
A third Pakistani leader--a democratically elected prime minister
from Sindh--was toppled and executed by the Punjabi General Muhammad Zia
ul-Haq after the prime minister had a falling out with the United States
over Pakistan's nuclear program. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto told family
and friends that his resistance to pressure from Henry Kissinger (then
U.S. national security adviser) to abandon Pakistan's nuclear
program cost him his prime ministership and "perhaps my life."
Later Benazir Bhutto, his daughter and successor as prime minister,
related his encounter with Kissinger in her autobiography. Zulfikar
Bhutto, she wrote, returned from his meeting with President Richard
Nixon's emissary "flushed with anger." Kissinger had
spoken to him "crudely and arrogantly," warning him that if he
didn't give up Pakistan's nuclear program, he could be
"made into 'a horrible example.'" (6)
Significantly, the day before his July 5, 1977, coup, Zia had met
with the U.S. ambassador to Islamabad alone, telling others that he
wished to greet the envoy on America's Independence Day. Zia had
not visited the embassy on July 4 before, and Zulfikar Bhutto did not
know about the visit until a week after he had been overthrown. Kausar
Niazi, a fellow journalist who had become a member of the Zulfikar
Bhutto Cabinet, told me during a 1989 trip to Islamabad, "Mr.
Bhutto took Kissinger's threat seriously," but never thought
"Zia, of all people, would betray him." Zia had been Zulfikar
Bhutto's favorite general. The prime minister had suspected, Niazi
added, that "the Americans could try to get him some other
way." (7)
Few of America's policy initiatives have had a more
destabilizing effect on Pakistan than its use of the Pakistani armed
forces to fight the "war on terror." Pakistan's Punjabi
army chief of staff, General Pervez Musharraf, had staged his military
coup against a democratically elected prime minister--who happened to be
a Punjabi for a change--and had become a pariah in Pakistan and abroad
until the United States tapped him to run its antiterror campaign.
The campaign against Pakistani militants continues under the Obama
administration. During the Cold War, the United States cultivated
Pakistani generals in order to use the Pakistani army as a bulwark
against the Soviet Union's southward expansion. Most Pakistanis did
not like the one-sided relationship because America had no commitment to
Pakistan's defense. They resented it especially when successive
U.S. administrations supported or condoned the generals' coups
d'etat against democratic governments. In the post-9/11 phase,
Pakistanis see the United States using their army against, not an
external power, but their own children. Many Pakistanis who would
normally have supported the army campaign to rein in the Taliban oppose
it instead for two reasons. One, they know that their army has waged the
anti-Taliban war at the American behest because part of the guerrilla
force is fighting U.S.-NATO troops in Afghanistan. They are anguished by
the sight of Pakistanis in uniform killing young Pakistani civilians.
Secondly, most Pakistanis, including those who denounce the
Taliban's religious extremism, support their struggle against
foreign forces in Afghanistan. And they are alarmed by the progressive
alienation of the army from the public during the anti-Taliban campaign.
The U.S. assignment for General Musharraf was to keep Pakistan's
mostly Pashtun guerrillas from crossing over into Afghanistan, besides
allowing the passage of war materiel through Pakistan. Under the Obama
administration, the focus of the "anti-terror" campaign in
Pakistan has shifted from Afghanistan to Pakistan. The administration
not only continues the air raids on Pakistani Taliban targets begun by
the Bush administration, but has also sponsored and funded the Pakistani
army's war on the militant organization. The whole campaign is
based on the apparent assumption that anti-American militancy in
Pakistan and Afghanistan stems essentially from the militants'
religious and social values. The Americans routinely attribute the
Taliban and al-Qaeda jihad to Islamic scripture and seminaries, poverty,
illiteracy and so forth. Seldom do they ponder whether American policy
has had anything to do with it.
A 6,000-YEAR-OLD PASHTUN
During two trips through Pakistan in the last three years, I was
told by politicians, scholars and activists over and over that
anti-American militancy there had been fueled mostly by the
"reckless military campaign" against militants in Pakistan and
Afghanistan, the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and America's support
for repressive Pakistani dictators. My interviewees said that prior to
the Afghanistan invasion, suicide bombing had been practically unknown
to Pakistanis. Al-Qaeda did not exist there; neither did the Taliban
have much of an organization. By now, the militancy has spread from the
tribal areas and the NWFP to Punjabi and Sindhi cities. The guerrillas
are moving to the Pakistani heartland because, noted a British reporter,
"U.S. air strikes have made life uncomfortable in their traditional
homelands in the northwest frontier regions." (8)
The movement of the mostly Pashtun Taliban is inspired by the
Islamic values that underpin their ethnic community more than any other
in Pakistan. Islam propelled British Indian Muslims into a two-pronged
liberation struggle. They fought to end British colonial subjugation as
well as economic and social suppression of the Hindu caste system. Six
decades later, the Taliban, xenophobic and obscurantist as they mostly
are, have launched a similar struggle. They are fighting to end the
U.S.-NATO occupation of Pashtun territory in Afghanistan and the
political suppression of the Pakistani lower classes. Despite their
Islamic agenda and activism in non-Pashtun areas, the Taliban retain
their ethnic orientation and are focused mostly on the Pashtun-inhabited
NWFP.
The Taliban's February 2009 peace agreement with the
government set off alarm bells in Washington. American officials and
media viewed it as the Pakistani federal government's capitulation to Islamism, which, they contend, could engulf the whole nation.
Actually, the deal was an intra-Pashtun rapprochement, negotiated by the
Pashtun government of the NWFP in support of its Pashtun feudal
constituency. The Taliban had expelled dozens of
landlords-cum-politicians from Swat and distributed their estates among
the poor, creating excitement among the local public and part of the
Pakistani intelligentsia. Columnist Manzur Ejaz of Pakistan's Daily
Times wrote, "The foreign powers obsessed with extremism and jihadi violence in Pakistan have little insight into Pakistan's real
issues."
The foreign powers obsessed with
extremism and jihadi violence in Pakistan
have little insight into Pakistan's
real issues, Pakistani society has long
reached the boiling point because of
continuing oppressive feudalism at
the political and economic levels. To
that has been added the new rich class
of Pakistan, brazenly exhibitionist,
which, too, has no regard for the poor.
The country has thus become a conglomerate
of urban and rural fiefdoms
where the powerful make their own
laws and state institutions extract from
the poor whatever they can. No one
has yet put a stop to such degradation.
Perhaps the Taliban will. (9)
In the 1960s and early 1970s, Pashtun landlords in the Malakand and
Hashtnagar areas of the NWFP were threatened by peasant movements,
usually supported by Maoists. Some of those movements were defused by
the pro-Soviet leftist provincial government of Abdul Wali Khan, the
father of the current leader of the NWFP-based Awami National Party,
Asfandyar Wali Khan. Pakistan's pro-Soviet left was led by
landlords. The Taliban, on the other hand, come mostly from the lower
classes, and they have revived the anti-feudal movement once led by
Maoists. Their socioeconomic agenda resembles that of Catholic
liberation theology in Central and South America.
Meanwhile, Pakistan's stability is threatened, not so much by
Islamism, but by ethnocentrism, especially the hostility between the
Punjabis and minority ethnic groups. Democracy could have helped bridge
the ethnic fissures by giving citizens from minority provinces greater
stakes in the national economy, politics and culture. Continual military
coups--establishing Punjabi military, bureaucratic and economic
domination of minority provinces and ethnic groups--obstructed that
process and sustained most of the ethnic fault lines inherited by
Pakistan.
The Pashtun "nationalist" upsurge was once symbolized by
the pro-Soviet left in the NWFE It seemed to be tapering off during the
past three decades, mainly from the fading of the left and the gradual
Pashtun incorporation into the army and economy. The war on the Taliban,
who are deeply rooted in Pashtun society and culture, threatens to
reverse that trend. If this war on the Islamist movement goes on,
Pashtun nationalism could revive under Islamic garb.
The Pashtun ethnonational movement is as old as Pakistan. The
historical Pashtun homeland was split in 1893 by the British colonial
power between Afghanistan and what would later become Pakistan. The
Afghan government has not recognized the partition to this day, but,
curiously has been complaining about Pashtun militants from Pakistan
crossing into Afghanistan. Few Pashtun, on either side of the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border have ever reconciled with it.
In 1974, the Zulfikar Bhutto government arrested the Pashtun leader
Abdul Wali Khan on the apparently baseless charge that he had accepted a
bribe from then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to carry on
secessionist activity in the NWFP. In court the defendant said he was a
Pashtun and also a Muslim, but that neither his ethnic nor his religious
identity conflicted with his loyalty to Pakistan. Which was his primary
identity--Pashtun, Muslim or Pakistani?--the prosecutor demanded to
know. "I am a 6,000-year-old Pashtun," roared the Pashtun
warhorse, "a thousand-year-old Muslim and a 27-year-old
Pakistani!" Islam had spread among Pashtun tribes during the eighth
century, and in 1974 Pakistan was 27 years old.
Like the Pashtun, the Baluch have a unique ethnolingual tribal
culture. Depressingly poor and uneducated as most of them are, they are
fiercely independent and resent the domination of their community and
exploitation of their minerals by the Punjabi-dominated central
government. Since the creation of Pakistan, the Baluch secessionist
campaign has ignited a half-dozen extremely bloody wars and miniwars
between their guerrillas and the Pakistani army.
The Baluch are, says author Stephen Philip Cohen, "an unlikely
candidate for a successful separatist movement." (10) Though their
province spans 42 percent of Pakistan's territory, they make up
only 5 percent of the Pakistani population. And a massive influx of
Pashtun and Punjabis has turned the Baluch into a minority in
Baluchistan. Still, their independence movement rages on. Two years ago,
I saw graffiti on store walls in Quetta, the provincial capital, and
hillside rock faces in the countryside: "Islam is our religion,
Baluch is our nation, independence is our goal." "Pakistanis
out!" "Stop looting Baluchistan," and so forth. The
secessionist movement has been waged by the Baluchistan Liberation Army,
the Baluchistan Liberation Front, Jundallah, the Bugti militia and other
militant groups.
Many of the Baluch separatists are left-leaning and critical of the
United States. They also resent U.S. support for the predominantly
Punjabi army, which has waged bloody wars against them. Interestingly,
some intellectuals and government officials in Punjab and the NWFP
accuse the Americans of supporting the Baluch rebels. Among them is
Azmat Hayat Khan, head of the Area Study Center at Peshawar University
in the NWFP capital of Peshawar. He told me that the CIA and Indian
intelligence had been funding and arming Baluch rebels out of different
motives. Pointing to a map on his wall, the professor said the United
States wanted a "corridor through Baluchistan" for passage of
its military forces, oil and other resources from Central Asia and
Afghanistan to the Indian Ocean. India was trying to "destabilize Pakistan," he added, to counter Pakistani support for the Kashmiri
insurgency. (11) America may or may not have anything to do with Baluch
separatism, but the complaint echoed a near consensus among the
Pakistani intelligentsia that American "interference" is
destabilizing Pakistan.
FEW EXPERTS
The Sindhis, also resentful of Punjabi dominance, waged their
separatist movement in 1972. Leaders of the Jeay Sindh Qaumi Mahaz, the
umbrella organization of several Sindhi separatist groups, complained
that the Punjabis, along with immigrants from India called Mohajirs,
were scooping up jobs and land in Sindh. And they denounced the
diversion of fiver water to the upper riparian Punjab, hurting Sindhi
agriculture. The movement's leader, the late Ghulam Murtaza
Sayed--better known as G.M. Sayed--was inspired by the independence of
Bangladesh and wanted his province to become an independent "Sindhu
Desh," the country of Sindh. The Jeay Sindh movement had abated by
the mid-1970s but revives continually.
The late Akhter Hameed Khan, one of Pakistan's best-known
intellectuals and social activists, blamed Pakistan's separatist
ferment partly on "Punjabi greed and militarism." During a
series of interviews in 1989, Khan likened the new Punjabi neighborhoods
in Sindh and Baluchistan to "the British [colonial] settlements in
Kenya or Zimbabwe" and said Punjabi land grabs and "brutal
military crackdowns" in trouble spots had aggravated ethnic
conflicts and "threaten[ed] the stability" of Pakistan. (12)
Today, the war against the Taliban, unless ended soon, could pose a
greater threat to Pakistan's stability. It threatens to deepen the
Pashtun Punjabi ethnic divide, while fomenting the class dissension
between the feudal aristocracy and the landless poor in the NWFP.
President Obama believes, an administration source told me in February,
that al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Pakistan could be "defeated by a
combination of military, economic and diplomatic tools" which, in
the president's opinion, would be more palatable to Pakistanis.
This view was reflected in the "comprehensive strategy for
Afghanistan" that the administration has announced. Under it, the
United States has undertaken to dispatch an additional 21,000 troops to
Afghanistan and pour billions of additional dollars in economic and
military aid to Pakistan and Afghanistan. The expectation that military
action and economic assistance would "defeat" the
anti-American militants in Afghanistan or Pakistan betrays a serious
lack of understanding of what the militants are fighting and dying for.
Taliban activists and guerrillas are amused by the American
political and media speculation that they have been inspired by Islamic
scripture, enjoining them to fight Christians and Jews. Several of them
told me that they did not see their anti-American jihad today as any
different from the anti-Soviet one that their elders had fought in
Afghanistan two decades before. They recalled that the CIA had helped
arm and train those Pakistani guerrillas, and that the Americans
"called them mujahedeen," freedom fighters. (13)
Mighty foreign hegemons have occupied Afghanistan and other South
Asian countries before, and some spent money and energy to spread
education and build infrastructure in those countries. But their good
deeds, which the beneficiaries appreciated, did not buy them the
natives' tolerance of their hegemony. "The West doesn't
seem to understand," says British author and activist Tariq Ali,
"that people do not like to be occupied. The British tried and
failed, the Russians tried and failed, and now the U.S. and NATO are
trying, too." (14) Cohen says U.S. policy toward Pakistan has often
been clueless because "the United States has only a few true
Pakistan experts and knows remarkably little about this country."
(15) Obama appears instinctively to realize the need for a fundamental
change in U.S. policy toward Pakistan (and Afghanistan). It requires
fresh ideas based on facts on the ground. The president's reliance
on the advice of retirees from past administrations with little useful
knowledge of the region seems to have become his administration's
Achilles heel in its dealings with Pakistan and Afghanistan.
U.S. OBJECTIVES
At his 2003 Camp David meeting with Musharraf, President George W.
Bush outlined three issues that were of paramount American interest in
Pakistan: terrorism, nuclear proliferation and democratization. The
three issues also underlie the Obama administration's Pakistan
policy. In addition, the administration is pursuing two other
objectives: improving Pakistan's relations with India and shoring
up its rickety economy. Some of these objectives are contradictory.
The Obama administration is wasting its time trying to get Pakistan
to defeat the Taliban militarily. The Pakistani Taliban organized itself
to fight U.S. and NATO forces in the Pashtun land of Afghanistan and,
along the way, launched its campaigns to introduce Islamic law and take
on the feudal aristocracy in areas under their sway. Military force will
not defuse the movement, especially while foreign troops roam
Afghanistan. On the contrary, Pakistani military and paramilitary
crackdowns and, especially, the U.S. drone attacks, are found to have
swollen the ranks of the Taliban: A Pakistani writer narrates the impact
of the drone strikes on his state and society. "The message given
[by the drones] to the people," says Khalid M. Ashraf, "is
that it is not the government of Pakistan that controls these areas, it
is we who control these areas. Your lives are at our mercy. We will
attack anywhere, anytime." While Pakistani government forces flee
at the sight of the drones, "the Taliban are closing in ... on
Islamabad. Pakistan will crumble if these attacks continue." (16)
The U.S. position on Pakistan's nuclear-weapons facilities
also needs to be reassessed. Pakistani government officials and
generals, dependent on American military and economic aid, would not
pick an argument with the Americans on the issue. In private, they
resent the traditional "American hostility" to their arsenal
of nuclear devices. They consider the nukes their only deterrent against
India's overwhelmingly superior nuclear and conventional military
forces. Some fume over American official and media "paranoia"
about the safety of their nuclear facilities. They insist that the
security system at their nuclear plants is "ironclad." Some
Pakistani officials are worried that the Americans, by throwing a fit
about their nuclear arsenal and the country's instability, may be
building a case to take over their nuclear facilities.
It is hard to understand, too, whether Washington is serious about
its professed commitment to democracy and human rights in Pakistan. The
United States has had close ties to all of Pakistan's autocratic
governments. America does not talk about the democratization of the
Saudi, Egyptian, Jordanian, Moroccan and other repressive Muslim
regimes. After 9/11, it introduced the surveillance of hundreds of
law-abiding American Muslim citizens and incarcerated and tortured
hundreds of other Muslims at Guantanamo, Abu Gharib, Bagram and the
"black sites." These actions have flouted international law
and, in some cases, amounted to war crimes. They have undercut
America's credibility as a promoter of democracy and human rights.
Furthermore, if the Pakistani army decides to grab power again,
Washington would still need to work with it on terrorism, proliferation
and other issues.
A well-considered initiative to improve Pakistan's relations
with India would indeed serve the cause of peace and stability as much
as American interests in the subcontinent. The Pakistan-India conflicts
have, as mentioned, strengthened Pakistanis' national solidarity.
But they also have unduly elevated the army's clout, which is among
the country's major destabilizing agents. If the United States is
serious about promoting Pakistan's stability, it should begin by
discontinuing its long-standing direct liaison with Pakistani generals.
Bruce Riedel, the administration's resident expert on South
Asia, wants the United States to begin its quest for peace between
Pakistan and India with the Kashmir issue. The Hindu ruler of that
Muslim-majority principality had refused to join Pakistan or India.
Subsequently, each country occupied part of the state, demarcated by a
"line of control." Riedel suggests "making the line of
control a permanent and normal international border." (17) I doubt
that this would pacify the Kashmiri militants, who have been struggling
for their "national independence." A better way to begin the
search for a resolution of this thorny issue could be to try to persuade
India and Pakistan to make the line of control permeable and grant the
Kashmiris greater autonomy over their territory.
The administration plans to dramatically increase the volume of aid
to Pakistan and focus on the country's economic development. In the
eight years following 9/11, Pakistan received $12 billion in U.S. aid,
nearly 90 percent of which went to the military and was intended mainly
to be used in "war on terror" operations. Yet today the
Talibans' robust network spans most of Pakistan's northeast
and challenges the Pakistani army, while part of it continues to engage
U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.
Obama advisers blame the dramatic rise of the Pakistani Taliban on
the Bush administration's obsession with military crackdowns on the
group. They are trying to win the hearts and minds of Pakistanis in an
attempt to erode the Taliban's public support, simultaneously
arming and pushing the military to fight the militants. The
administration has introduced measures in Congress to triple the amount
of Pakistan aid to $1.5 billion a year for a five-year period,
allocating a substantial portion of it to education, infrastructure and
other programs for public good.
This substantial aid package would help alleviate some of the
hardships afflicting everyday Pakistanis, provided the United States
makes sure a good portion of it is used to benefit the lower classes.
For this, the aid program should include such efforts as job creation,
promotion of small business, and technical and vocational education.
Equally important, an effective monitoring mechanism should be put in
place to insure the use of the aid for the intended purposes. Studies
have shown that in South Asia only about a third of foreign economic
assistance reaches the target groups. The rest is siphoned off by
bureaucrats and used for unintended projects.
Pursuit of these objectives could assuage some of the grievances
the Pakistanis have been nurturing against the United States. It would
not do much, however, to defeat the Pakistani Taliban movement. Many
Pakistanis criticize the Taliban's obscurantism and cruelty to
those who do not conform to their brand of Islam, but most support their
struggle to expel foreign forces from Afghanistan. American aid would
not diminish Pakistani public support for the "Afghan jihad."
Neither can military power vanquish Taliban guerrillas while U.S.-NATO
troops remain entrenched in Afghanistan. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, a steadfast U.S. ally participating in NATO's Afghan
mission, understands this reality. "We are not going to ever defeat
this insurgency," he told CNN and The Wall Street Journal. (18) The
administration should begin exploring a strategy to wind down the
Western military presence in Afghanistan. This would take care of
anti-American militancy in Pakistan as well as in Afghanistan.
(1) Jon Meacham, "A Conversation with Barack Obama: What
He's Like Now," Newsweek, May 25, 2009; Helene Cooper and Jeff
Zeleny, "Obama Voices Concern on Pakistan and Defends Interrogation Memo Release," The New York Times, April 30, 2009.
(2) Author's interview with Sheikh Mujibar Rahman, Dhaka, East
Pakistan, March 14, 1970.
(3) Mustafa Malik, "Pakistan: Terror War Bolsters Islamism,
Nationhood," Middle East Policy, Vol. 15, No. 1, Spring 2008, pp.
111-124.
(4) Author's conversation with Nurul Amin, Dhaka, East
Pakistan, February 28, 1970.
(5) Nurul Amin's forthcoming autobiography, narrated to the
author.
(6) Benazir Bhutto, Daughter of Destiny (Simon and Schuster, 1989),
p. 95.
(7) Author's conversation with Kausar Niazi, Islamabad,
Pakistan, August 26, 1989.
(8) Michael Burleigh, "Will World War III Start Here?"
Daily Mail (London), March 4, 2008, p. 14.
(9) Manzur Ejaz, "Taliban to the Rescue," Daily Times,
Lahore, April 22, 2009.
(10) Stephen Philip Cohen, The Idea of Pakistan (Brookings
Institution, 2004), p. 1.
(11) Author's interview with Azmat Hayat Khan, Peshawar,
Pakistan, October 3, 2007.
(12) Author's interview with Akhter Hameed Khan, Karachi,
November 2, 1989.
(13) Author's interviews with tribal youths and a tribal elder
at the Mohmand Agency town of Yaka Ghund, October 4, 2007.
(14) Lisette B. Poole, "Author Tariq All Warns against U.S.
Actions in Pakistan," Washington Report on Middle East Affairs,
December 2008, pp. 70-71.
(15) Cohen, p. 221.
(16) Khalid Ashraf, "Drone Attacks Will Crumble
Pakistan," Writers Forum, Islamabad, April 9, 2009.
(17) Bruce Riedel, "Pakistan: The Critical Battlefield,"
Current History, November 2008, p. 361.
(18) Robert Marquand, "Clinton Pushes NATO Allies for United
Strategy on Afghanistan," Christian Science Monitor, March 6, 2009,
p. 7.
Mr. Malik has been a reporter, editor and columnist for The
Hartford Courant, The Washington Times and other newspapers. He has
conducted field research in Europe, the Middle East and South Asia as a
fellow of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, the University
of Chicago Middle East Center and the American Friends Service
Committee. He has also carried out diplomatic assignments from the
Pakistani government and served as the speechwriter for the late Prime
Minister Nurul Amin.