Khyber Impasse

How long can the United States and Pakistan keep pretending that they actually have any interests in common?

BY JAMES TRAUB | APRIL 15, 2011

Over the past week, while all eyes were focused on Libya and the Middle East, America's most frustrating, most turbulent, and least predictable bilateral relationship took a serious turn for the worse. I speak, of course, of Pakistan.

On April 11, the New York Times disclosed that Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, chief of Pakistan's Army, had grown so angry over the growing reach of U.S. counterterrorism efforts that he was seeking to close down the drone flights that have targeted terrorists on the Pakistan side of the border with Afghanistan and to expel a large fraction of the CIA and special operations officers and contractors currently in the country. The same day, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, head of Pakistan's spy service, had made an emergency trip to Washington to deliver at least some of those demands in person. But on Wednesday, the United States launched more drone strikes, prompting Pakistan's Foreign Ministry to lodge a "strong protest" with the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad. It was, in short, a really bad week.

Of course, the relationship has had a lot of bad weeks. These melodramas have, in fact, become so ritualized that the rending of garments was quickly and inevitably followed by bland reassurances that all would be well, as well as by the cynical -- though reassuring -- interpretation that the Pakistani leadership was performing yet another pantomime designed to soothe public anger. Both a senior U.S. and a senior Pakistani official told me that Pasha had not demanded any specific reductions of the U.S. presence on the ground in Pakistan. On the other hand, both agreed that Pasha had asked for restrictions on the drones.

There's something special about a relationship that only gets worse, but never actually falls apart. Pakistan has been selling itself to the United States as a national security bulwark since the earliest days of the Cold War, and Washington has been an eager and often uncritical buyer, subcontracting to Pakistani military and intelligence operatives much of the effort to arm and train the mujahideen who fought the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Only in the 1990s, with the Soviet menace gone, did Washington allow the bonds to fray altogether, over Pakistan's nuclear program. The terrorist attacks of 9/11, however, gave Pakistan a new purchase on its self-appointed role. And the country's unique combination of a nuclear arsenal and a thriving population of Islamic extremists has made it not so much indispensable to Washington as terrifying to it. The United States can't walk away, and Pakistan knows it can't, and the United States knows Pakistan knows. Etc. It's the diplomatic equivalent of Tolstoy's dictum that every unhappy family is unhappy in its own special way.

Weary veterans of the relationship are thus inclined to file the latest hullabaloo under more of the same. The case of Raymond Davis, the CIA contractor who shot and killed two men in the provincial capital of Lahore, enraged not only the broad Pakistani public but elites as well, who realized that American spies were carrying out operations hidden from their country's own security services -- as if Pakistan were an enemy rather than an ally. Clearly there would be some price to pay. But so long as "the grown-ups"-- figures like Kayani and Pasha, rather than their hotheaded subordinates or political leaders -- set that price, the United States should be able to live with the fallout.

But it could be more serious than that. The Pakistani official I spoke with said that the message from both Kayani and Pasha is that the drone strikes "have to be very, very limited" -- for example, in case of an "imminent threat" -- and cannot be conducted nearly as deep in Pakistani territory as they have been in recent years. But the drone strikes have eliminated dozens of leading Taliban figures and disrupted their capacity to train, plan, and communicate; no significant restriction would be acceptable to the United States. A senior U.S. official pointedly noted that CIA director Leon Panetta "has been clear with his Pakistani counterparts that his fundamental responsibility is to protect the American people, and he will not halt operations that support that objective."

It has been convenient for both sides to frame the issue as one of Pakistani sensitivity over national sovereignty. And even a country with a less brittle sense of identity than Pakistan would bridle at serving as a battleground for someone else's war. But in the past Pakistan's national security elite have been willing to ignore public sentiment in order to allow the United States to conduct operations that are also in the Pakistani interest. This is the crux of the new dilemma: The fundamental incompatibility of Pakistani and American national security interests can no longer be avoided. And it can't be cured; it can't even be admitted.

Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

 

James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and author of, most recently, The Freedom Agenda. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly.

MARTY MARTEL

4:36 PM ET

April 15, 2011

U. S. military engineered its own failure in Afghanistan

U. S. military under Gates/Petraeus/Mullen has been mollycoddling Kayani’s Pakistani Army while Kayani has been protecting the terrorist outfits who are killing US/NATO troops in Afghanistan day in and day out since 2001.

Defense Secretary Gates has sought to justify Pakistan’s terrorist connections, alluding to a “deficit of trust” between Washington, DC and Islamabad. Mr Gates also said there was “some justification” for Pakistan's concerns about past American policies. Gen David Patraeus, rushed in with an apologia for his Pakistani friends, by claiming that while Faisal was inspired by militants in Pakistan, he did not necessarily have contacts with the militants. Both Adm Mike Mullen and Gen Patraeus fancy themselves to be “soldier statesmen” a la Gen Dwight Eisenhower. Adm Mullen has visited Pakistan 15 times and Gen Patraeus no less frequently. Both evidently have high opinions of their abilities to persuade Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani to crack down on the Haqqani network in North Waziristan and the Taliban’s Mullah Omar-led Quetta Shura.

Previous US ambassador Anne Patterson to Pakistan, wrote in a secret review in 2009, ‘Pakistan's Army and ISI are covertly sponsoring four militant groups - Haqqani‘s HQN, Mullah Omar‘s QST, Al Qaeda and LeT - and will not abandon them for any amount of US money‘, as diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show.

Ambassador Patterson had NO reason to mislead her own State Department and U. S. government.

Pakistan under General Kayani does NOT want US drones to destroy the terrorist groups that Pakistani Army and Intelligence SPONSOR, namely Haqqani‘s HQN, Mullah Omar‘s QST, Osama bin Laden‘s Al Qaeda and Hafiz Saeed‘s LeT.

Duplicitous Pakistan has U. S. by the throat. US can NOT use its aid leverage to force Pakistan to stop supporting terrorist groups who kill US/NATO troops in Afghanistan day in and day out because US needs Pakistan’s help in ferrying supplies to those very US/NATO troops.

This charade has been going on since 2001 when the Bush administration allowed Musharraf to spirit away by airlift hundreds, if not thousands, of Taliban operatives cornered by the advancing Northern Alliance in Kunduz in November, 2001. Pakistan relocated those Taliban cadres including Mullah Mohammed Omar in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan (but now relocated to Karachi by Pakistani ISI to protect it from possible US drone attacks) and Haqqani network (HQN) in North Waziristan from where Mullah Omar’s QST and Haqqani’s HQN have been planning raids in Afghanistan ever since.

With US military in cahoot with Pakistani Army to prolong this Afghan war, resurgence of Taliban was preordained and U. S. war there was doomed to fail from the very beginning.

 

RIGHT2LIFE

8:32 AM ET

April 16, 2011

Causes & solution to the war of Afghanistan & Pakistan.

Honestly, one can accept and appreciate each and every word of the comments of "Mr. Marty Martel," - with commas and full stops.
But he did not menton the causes of the war and their solutions in Afpak.

What are the main cause of Afghan war? Well, in 1947 Pashtun lands
were annexed with Pakistan without the consent of Pashtuns. Afghanistan
protested about it and defied the "Durrand-line" and opposed the entry
of Pakistan in United Nations in 1947.

On the other hands, Balochs prefered Pakistan instead of Great Britain
as their Protectorate State. Balochistan was freed in 11th August, 1947 but she was occupied in 18th March, 1948. Only Afghanistan protested the illigal action of Pakistani Army, who had sidelined the Politicians.

The mean reason of Pakistani adventure to keep Afghanistan in stone
age was and is the "bone of contention"- the Durand line and the
lands of Pashtuns and Balochs which were illigally occupied by Pakistan.

All Pakistani policies, stratagies and foreign policies are related
to enslave Baloch and Pashtun lands for which Pakistan is killing not only Balochs and Pashtuns in Pakistan but also punishing Afghanistan and other country whom they suspect are potential dangours to free Baloch and Pashtun lands.

NATO/ISAF and Afghan forces made no mistake to handle the Afghan crisis but the policy makers in Washington D.C. knowing well the actual causes of the war but failed to frame right policies for their remedy instead they used ploster on the wounds for their temporary gains.

The remedy to eliminate war of Afghanistan is not to accept the "Durrand-line" or the assurances on high level to Pakistani Military about the integrity of Pakistan or to seek an "exit-way" of NATO forces from Afghanistan.

The real permanent solution to keep peace in Afghanistan, stability in
South Asia including the whole world lies in the bottom lines of reality. The reality to "urge Pakistani Military to leave alone Baloch and Pashtun-lands alone and accept the right of self-determination of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtun-khawa in accordance with the charter of United Nations.

The Western Civilisation can`t afford to be collapsed like Soviet
Union who turned her back from the legitimate question of the freedom
of Balochs and Pashtuns of Pakistan.

 

VODKA

2:16 PM ET

April 16, 2011

US AID

US Aid to Pakistan is a joke........... Pakistan is 63 years old and thus far received $62 Billion aid, less than a billion a year. Copper and Gold in Baluchistan only add up to over $300 Billion. Do Pakistan a favor stop aiding it.

 

OMARALI50

10:44 AM ET

April 16, 2011

SO in the end, James Traub's

SO in the end, James Traub's prescription is "more of the same"?
The heart of the problem is the unwillingness of some in the US (like Pakistan, the US is not a person, there are different people with different agendas, especially in a shadow war like this) to aim for real change. I have no idea if this is just because of the usual combination of arrogance and ignorance, the kind of thing that causes every JCS to crow about the three cups of tea they had with Kiyani last week; or because of more sinister reasons (one can imagine that some people on both sides actually benefit from having the problem go on forever...as William Burroughs noted, he met an American working to stop the Aftosa epidemic in Mexico and asked him how long the epidemic would go on; the inspector dreamily replied "as long as we can keep it going").
Whatever the real reasons aftosa continues to plague the land (the crucial factors may be local and environmental, not the fault of misguided control measures), this article does not indicate that this strange transactional relationship is going to change any time soon. Pakistan's generals have been in this relationship since 1953 and they know more about their patrons than their patrons care to know about them. Obviously, they also have more to lose; who is likely to play their cards better? Do the math.
As a Pakistani, this superior card-playing ability gives me no pleasure. The success of GHQ's "strategy" is a recipe for more conflict within Pakistan and in the region. We would be much better off if we could stop being a "rent-an-army" operation and if we stopped our insane zero-sum game with India (a change to which Indians would also have to contribute, but one must admit that given their recent economic success, they do have other aims in mind now and may be amenable to rising above this 64 years old nonsense). One hopes for the best.

 

KILLA ABDULLAH

11:36 AM ET

April 16, 2011

 

RIGHT2LIFE

12:24 PM ET

April 16, 2011

Sir KILLA ABDULLAH, like a

Sir KILLA ABDULLAH, like a Pakistani General
you are trying to shut-up the on going discussion.
This is a Political intellectual disscussion not a
business which Pakistani Army does in the form of
"beat and snatch money" and business from narcotic
and selling of weapons of Darra, Proliferation of
nuclear technology, abduction of Pakistani citizens
for ransom and etc. etc.

ISI has their own Journalists who kill the politician like Ahmed Shah Masood in Afghanistan and they lecture in the "Panel of International Peace" in Washington D.C. to abuse Balochs.

 

ST1NGR

1:37 PM ET

April 17, 2011

Unanswered Questions

How does Mr. Traub know the intentions behind Raymond Davis's making connections with Lashkar?? How does he know it was lashkar, and since when did you kill people to make connections with them, looks like a covert deal went bad? Also the article could have mentioned how General Kayani criticized US drone strikes after they killed militant leaders AND Tribal elders who were trying to negotiate a resolution to conflict in the area:

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-03/17/c_13784458.htm

It would be really helpful if you reported a more complete version of events, incomplete information tends to be misleading.

 

AVILLA

6:13 PM ET

April 17, 2011

Nonsense

The title of the article on the front page made sense. The actual article? Not so much. The jist of this, like virtually all other articles on Pakistan, is that America can't get the heck out of dodge because Pakistan will be "worse" without American aid. I call BS on that. Pakistan is an absolute mess and gets worse every day, no matter how many supplies, money, or men the Americans send it. If Pakistan is going to go the Afghanistan route, it will do it with or without America's presence there. If it's going to be reformed, it can ONLY do that without America there--the populace is simply too anti-Western to accept a government that operates with American help. There is no point in any Western nation, especially America, spending another iota of time, energy, or money on Pakistan. Abandon ship, I say.

 

DDSNAIK

5:28 PM ET

April 18, 2011

Agree mostly, AVilla

It seems astute to limit aid significantly to humanitarian pursuits (instead of going cold turkey) in the region and allocate the net subsequent large chunk of foreign aid into an endeavor out of which something useful actually has a chance to result. You're absolutely right that Pakistan is a total mess and doesn't have much hope of resembling a modern, functioning country anytime soon. If they don't want that, that's their right, but we should stop funneling our major funds there.

Growing pains are to be expected as a by product of haphazardly creating a country where there was none historically. The Brits/Europeans have a talent for that, but it was wasn't done in a total vacuum of political and ideological zeal from locals. Hard to lean on the inexperienced argument for over 60 years, though - but I digress... sorry.

 

BILL_L

11:58 AM ET

April 19, 2011

Gettin' Out

What is 'sticky' about Pakistan? Is there anything other than the nukes? If there is nothing that can be done to turn the country around and the only reason we are there is to safeguard the nukes, then let's destroy the nukes and get out. As has been said lately, hope is not a strategy.

 

CHARLEY S

12:00 PM ET

April 20, 2011

Getting out

Amen to that, Bill_L.

 

SADASIVA

1:17 PM ET

April 22, 2011

The True Weaklt of India

One one the most important qualities in the Indian resurgence is its cultural gifts - its spiritual / scientific gifts such as Yoga, Ayurveda (its holistic medical system) and even vedic astrology. Not to mention the qualities of ahimsa (non-violence), which includes non factory-farming practices - which destroy the land, etc. These are the true treasures of India that the world is reawakening to.

 

JASONSANDERS

5:02 AM ET

April 25, 2011

Islam and Pakistan

Militant Islam continues killing, yet political figures and journalists even now avert their eyes.

One particular horrendous case in point arises from Pakistan, in which a series of attacks upon Christians, both regional and foreign, has taken place in the last year:

Oct. 28: an assault on St. Dominic's Church in Behawalpur kills sixteen.
March 17: an encounter within the Protestant International Church in Islamabad kills five (which includes a couple of American citizens).
May 22: an attack upon the executive assistant of Karachi Diocese of Church Pakistan, who had been tied up to a chair, forced to renounce kasper suits, and injected with toxin.
Aug. 5: an attack within the Murree Christian School kills six.
Aug. 9: an attack at the Christian medical center in Taxila kills four.
Sept. 25: an attack on the Institute for Peace and Justice, a Christian charity in Karachi, kills seven.

There've been a host of additional non-lethal attacks on places of worship and church services, the latest earlier this Weekend. There's no question concerning the causes of the perpetrators: Militant Islamic associations brazenly speak out their thoughts, proclaiming their goal is "to eliminate Christians" and later on boasting of having "slain the nonbelievers."

Victims understand full well the reason why they're zeroed in on - "just that they are Christians," as one individual put it. An area Christian leader declares "that the terrorist assault was an act by al Qaeda or some pro-Taliban agencies."

 

ASJIBRASDA

2:06 AM ET

May 11, 2011

These events dramatically

These events dramatically illustrate Ahmed Rashid’s central contention in his brilliant and passionate book Descent into Chaos. Throughout the book Rashid emphasizes the degree to which, Amazon Affiliateseven years after September 11, “the US-led war on terrorism has left in its wake a far more unstable world than existed on that momentous day in 2001

 

JIBRAN_PCC

6:31 AM ET

May 12, 2011

The deeply entrenched Islamic

The deeply entrenched Islamic and tribal character of Pashtun rule in the Northwest Frontier Province in Pakistan will not be transformed by invasion or war. jacksonvillerealestateThe task requires probably several generations to start to change the deeply embedded social and psychological character of the area. War induces visceral and atavistic response.