This Week at War: Heading for a Bad Breakup

What the four-stars are reading -- a weekly column from Small Wars Journal.

BY ROBERT HADDICK | NOVEMBER 20, 2009

What happens when the U.S. and Pakistan split up?

How close is the U.S.-Pakistan security relationship to a break-up? Self-interest, not affection, seems to keep the partnership going. That's fine until a better arrangement for one side comes along or emotion overrides logic. An even larger U.S. military expedition in Afghanistan will be at the mercy of this fragile bond.

The reasons for cooperation are well-known. The United States could not prosecute its war in Afghanistan without access through Pakistan. Washington hopes the Pakistani government will deliver up more al Qaeda terror suspects to join Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. The U.S. engages Pakistan on a variety of levels to keep Pakistan's nuclear weapons stockpile under control. Indeed, notable U.S. analysts such as Stephen Biddle and Steve Coll believe that stabilizing Pakistan is the best justification for continuing the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan.

For its part, Pakistan counts on the United States to moderate its friction with India. More recently Pakistan has exploited its intelligence and military connection to the U.S. to target the Islamists at war with Pakistan's government. But Pakistan's enduring interest in America seems mostly to be about money.

On Nov. 15 the Los Angeles Times reported on the hundreds of millions of dollars the Central Intelligence Agency has paid Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) -- Pakistan's powerful internal intelligence agency -- since 2001. The article reported that in addition to "bankrolling the ISI's budget," the CIA paid the agency $10 million for high-ranking al Qaeda leader Abu Zubaydah and $25 million for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. According to the article, U.S. intelligence officers delivered many more briefcases stuffed with money to ISI officials in exchange for lower-ranking al Qaeda personnel.

These sums are little more than a rounding error for the U.S. intelligence community and most Americans would consider it money well spent. But it makes one wonder what kind of an ally Pakistan really is. Would a CIA officer need to deliver a thick cash-stuffed briefcase to a British, Canadian, Australian, or South Korean intelligence officer in order to gain custody of a terror suspect?

The article also discusses another well-known aspect of the ISI, namely that there are really two such agencies. The first eagerly cooperates with the CIA when the targets are the Pakistani Taliban who are fighting the ISI and the rest of the Pakistani government. Meanwhile the other ISI, off-limits to the CIA, supports the Afghan Taliban in its fight against U.S. troops.

In spite of the mutual dependence, the countries seem one step from a divorce. In her recent visit to Pakistan, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton openly said what most Americans are thinking, that it is "hard to believe that nobody in your government knows where they [al Qaeda's top leaders] are and couldn't get them if they really wanted to." Is Pakistan deliberately keeping the al Qaeda issue unresolved and the Afghan Taliban in the field in order to keep the U.S. aid pipeline open? Whether valid or not, such a perception risks a relationship-ending backlash.

On the other side, the United States is intensely unpopular in Pakistan. President Asif Ali Zardari's popularity has collapsed over concerns about corruption, ineffectiveness, and the view that he cooperates too eagerly with U.S. policies. 

Despite the anger and lack of trust on both sides, the relationship struggles on. Neither side wants to end things. But neither side controls all of the emotions in play. Something to consider as more U.S. soldiers fly over Pakistan into Afghanistan.

 

Alex Wong/Getty Images

 

Robert Haddick is managing editor of Small Wars Journal.

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AHSON HASAN

11:17 PM ET

November 20, 2009

Heading for a Bad Breakup

This relationship is one heck of an historical irony. The Pakistanis are slippery beings, loose cannons that are hardly close to being trustworthy; the US is methodical, organized and wants things flawlessly executed.

Before a relational split happens, the US must safeguard its own 'areas of interest'. Washington sends its diplomats and military personnel to Islamabad on a frequent basis. This exercise must continue.

Broadly speaking, the US areas of interest include, amongst others, ensuring that the Pakistani nuclear program doesn't fall into the wrong hands. There are innumerable Taliban oriented officers within the Pakistani ranks who are not only anti-US but are crazy enough to seek an end to India's and Israel's existence.

All the hard work and billions of US tax dollars spent in Afghanistan mean absolutely nothing until the al-Qaeda big shots are made to come out of their hideouts in Pakistan. It is a well-known fact that Islamabad, for its own vested interests, has been encouraging these extremists, aiding and abetting them for years.

As an extension of the first argument, make Pakistan sign the treaties that regulate nuclear facilities and the use of nuclear technology. At this time, Pakistan is not a signatory to any of these treaties.

Pakistan is a wild and a highly explosive country. Citizens are brainwashed regularly against the US and allies. About 75% of the population lives in small towns and villages. People are easily emotionally blackmailed.

The Pakistani political system is broken and rickety, unreliable and preposterously obnoxious. The system stands in dire need of a thorough cleansing. The US may make an effort to cultivate a leadership that is open-minded enough to accept Western values, facilitate in eliminating extremism, appreciate the US geo-strategic concerns in the area and, in return, establish a socio-economic infrastructure that would ensure prosperity for millions of deprived youth who fall a prey to the fundamentalist brainwashing tactics. This investment done today in this direction could possibly guarantee steady relation for some years to come.

Whereas we can appreciate Pakistan's assistance in the war against terrorism, the country's instability regarding dealing with its neighbors, or, as for that matter, countries across the globe are a massive question mark. Washington must create a fallback arrangement ASAP in case things with Islamabad vis-a-vis cooperation start going south.

 

SMJ

12:14 AM ET

November 21, 2009

Make Or Break Times`

Past Pak-US ties can be debated forever as to who did what and whether it was right. But as of the minute, you are right in concluding the obvious that both the US and Zardari are widely unpopular among Pakistanis. I do not know what sort of relationship the two countries will have in the future because I think both will always need each other as long as Pakistan remains a country of geostrategic location connecting South Asia/India with the Middle East, China and Central Asia and with shared waters with the Gulf countries and as long as the US remains a militarist, interventionist super power.

There will be ups and downs or break ups and patch ups if you like but not a long term abandonment. Certainly not in an era when militancy is on the rise in the entire region and Pakistan's nuclear bomb remains a cause of concern. What the western audience needs to know about the current political scenario in Pakistan is that the country despite being a federation has lost its only federal political leader, Benazir Bhutto. She was the one last politician that drew votes and support across the country. Whether she was inept or could not control her corrupt husband (now President) Asif Zardari is another debate. All the politicians in the country today have at best a regional vote bank, not nation-wide. This in a country deeply divided along ethnic lines (Sindhis, Balochs, Punjabis and Pathans) can play havoc with its very integrity and existence if a political chaos sets in and the army is unable to step in due to US pressures not to intervene.

I am not suggesting that the army is the ideal way to keep the country intact but the history of this volatile state for its entire existence of 60 years reveals that without the army's intervention, it has all the elements of a disintegrating nation or balkanization. The chaos and any subsequent disintegration, if not controlled, can mean a mortal threat for all the country's neighbours and their stability, including India, Iran and China but also for the US and the region as a whole. A rapidly radicalizing population, disoriented and frustrated with loads of weapons including nuclear arms can wreak havoc that is beyond anyone's imagination.

So, whatever happens to the ties of US-Pak in the immediate future, the eye must not be taken off the ball in the long run which is the stability and integrity of the country that faces an 'existential threat' not only for itself but the entire region.

 

LAHORIJERRY

6:04 AM ET

November 21, 2009

there are no permanent allies

there are no permanent allies or friends.only interests are of importance.Pakistan is not slippery as one of the comments point out.they are merely looking out for their own self interest.as long as those interests converge with the interests of the US fine if not so be it.this is true for all countries.Pakistan is in a rough neighborhood.It cant change its geography or history.America is here today but one day it will leave.Pakistan has to be mindful of that.as for the author musing whether CIA would pay other agencies for arrest of terrorists i dont know.however during the cold war im sure they bankrolled various agencies.anyway Pakistan and the US will probably not get a divorce anytime soon.they might though opt for separation for a little while ...90's cant be repeated.its not in the interests of both countries.one of the most detrimental things that happened during the sanctions of the 90's was that a whole generation of Pakistan military officials could not interact or train with their American counterparts.

 
January/February 2010