When Saddam invaded Kuwait in August 1990, the US seized the opportunity to test the emerging new order. The UN Security Council (UNSC) was asked to sanction the use of force to evict the Iraqi forces. It readily obliged — with the Soviet Union (in death throes) and China, both of whom might have demurred in the bygone bipolar era, meekly falling in line. Having vacated the occupation and proven who was now the big boss, the US ignored the world body when imposing sanctions or no-fly-zones over Iraq.
Europe, too, remained pathetically dependent on American leadership, even when putting out fires in its backyard. It needed the Big Brother, who indeed did not need the UNSC, to come bomb the Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo. But then, no worldly power is omnipotent. Defiant powers like Cuba and Iran also survived, India and Pakistan got away with their nuclear impertinence and China continued its long march towards one day posing a serious challenge to American hegemony.
Post-9/11, the Security Council was once again needed to permit (an open-ended!) use of force to bring the perpetrators of this monstrosity to book, and was once again ignored thereafter. It did grant ex post facto sanction when the US ordered its Nato underlings to the Afghan front, but when it showed reluctance to rubber-stamp the invasion of Iraq, the US and its poodles went charging regardless. The difference this time around is that this unrelenting approach has cost the wounded superpower dearly.
According to conventional wisdom, an insurgency or a resistance wins merely by not losing. The US has thus lost both in Afghanistan and in Iraq. (Those not impressed by military bywords may consult former CIA and MI5 big guns.) And there is little chance that it can come out, especially from Afghanistan, in good shape. It may not care much for finer things like ‘world opinion’; however, the deficit is fast becoming critical. The two misadventures alone may not have gotten the US in its current financial woes; but they still cost a few trillion dollars. The only consolation it can savour is that there was precious little it could do to avert the great fall.
If the aim was to round up the al Qaeda top leadership, a little more persuasion with the Taliban or use of covert means with the war option held in reserve could have paid more dividends. But the thought never crossed an American mind. A people raging mad at the violation of their safe sanctuary could only find solace in a swift and spectacular response: why else did we create this expensive war machine? The problem is that once created, this infernal machine acquires a life of its own.
Capturing Kabul or securing big cities in Afghanistan was never a big deal for the invading armies (what happens later is another matter). That the Taliban regime could be toppled in short order was therefore no surprise. What must have surprised or dismayed many of us was the extension of war to Iraq. Considering, however, that all empires, when intoxicated by power, overextend and meet the fate of their predecessors, this too had to happen. If it came too soon in the present case, the acceleration of the process may have been a joint venture.
Osama bin Laden’s claim that he would exhaust America by making it run in circles, if true, could not have been accomplished without some inside help from those who benefit from wars. Their greed may be one reason that the US, despite facing default, is sinking billions of dollars to train the Afghan Army for a role that it never has and never can fulfil, or is fortifying military bases that are the main obstacle for a political settlement! The predilection of power to exhaust all options before doing the right thing (it was Churchill who said that) has — inevitably again — led the US to dig deeper in the Afghan hole, and to a state of war (low-intensity, but still a war) with what was once fatuously called its frontline ally — Pakistan.
But then, that too was on the cards with both sides pursuing divergent objectives and different strategies. It doesn’t really matter what America’s initial, subsequent, or evolving interests were, they could not be reconciled with those of Pakistan. Wars in Afghanistan inevitability spill over the Durand Line: for demographic, topographic, perhaps also historic reasons. Pakistan, therefore, pleaded non-use of force, but then succumbed to using some of its own by starting a military operation in South Waziristan, again when better choices were available. It is now desperately resisting any further use and, along with Kabul, is thus the perfect scapegoat for Washington’s inability to finish the job.
And what about al Qaeda that started it all? It is possible that it no longer exists as a coherent entity but it is still useful. The US can rationalise its military presence in the region since its nemesis was still alive and kicking in Pakistan. Any militant group can claim to be its affiliate and strike terror in the hearts of its enemies. Regimes like Qaddafi’s can staple this brand on their adversaries to justify repression. Its remnants can be moved to Yemen or Somalia to send us all chasing shadows. That makes it another superpower, even if of a different kind: nebulous or perceived; but a superpower all the same. That also serves a purpose. On the 10th anniversary of the attacks, the US can declare victory: its rivals could not do another 9/11.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 11th, 2011.
COMMENTS (37)
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@Ali Tanoli.: Whatever Ibn E Sina was, he was not Pakistani. If he would have been Pakistani I would have been proud of him as well because before 1947 Pakistan was part of India. You can not claim Ibn E Sina just because you are Muslim. Americans do not claim achievements of Germans just because both are Christians. Taking pride on someone's achievements just because you share the same religion is absurd.
@Bangash: If you know your history, the land you call Pakistan was a part of ancient India, it was not transplanted from Arabia in subcontinent in 7th century. So whatever is there to be proud about ancient India is Pakistan's heritage too. Or do you assume that you are Arab or Turk. Stop being ashamed of your heritage just because India's name is connected with it.
A nice read ! What I like in Asad Durrani is that hiding many complexities inside him, he is a straight forward man.
One thing I must mention, bygone is the time when people used to get impressed by listening to a language they do not understand (shakespeare's english), now practically speaking, people prefer to listen to someone who wants to speak to make people understand, rather than not to understand and make them get impressed for nothing.
Please use simpler words, to address more and more people rather than impressing few word collectors. Thanks!
Who are interested in learning ancient indian math or vedic math? It it very interesting. This is the link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_mathematics
@Exprss tribune : Error by This writer "No wonder that the Arabs, enamoured by astrology, invented the figure of 10." This statement is totaly incorrect. kindly update the same to writer. Arabs learn numbers, astrology and astronomy from persians who learn from Indians. Indian scholars are even recognised by greeks( Alexander era) in those days.
@Amelndu..i agree with ur latest comment...unless we think we belong to our lands , until then we cant love the country as it should have been loved....
@Ali Tanoli.: No one is saying India invented zero after 1947. The India which invented zero also included Pakistan and in fact no one knows exact geographic location of place where zero was invented but it is established that it was in the sub continent. Taxila being a major educational hub of ancient India might very well have been the place where zero was invented (Than makes present day Pakistan the inventor of zero). So you can take as much pride in the fact that zero was invented in ancient India as any other Indian. That is if you accept the heritage of your land and do not assume that you are actually an Arab planted in sub continent.
@Asad Durrani: General Sahab: Unfortunately "The Strategic depth" has turned out to be a "deep hole" for Pakistan. Even now, instead of trying to get out of the hole, our "strategists" are digging even deeper; hoping to emerge at the other end of the globe. A single minded determination indeed!
@ Dr Who; yeah indian invented aljebra too abi senna was indian too yes india inventing one thing and that is man standing on one leg for twenty years bum ugly.
@Asad Durrani: Sir, I may agree or disagree with your views and we can have a debate but saying that Mr Samad Hayat Khan is putting a passionate defense is absurd. He is not defending anyone or anything. He went on tangential in response to assertion that zero and decimal system was invented in ancient India (Of which Pakistan was a part and thus an average Pakisatni can share this pride). He did not put forward any logical alternative for origin of decimal system. He did not say anything logical about anything you have written in this article or anyone else in comments section. In his 5 comments he has just abused people on the basis of their assumed religion. Net sum of his comments is that everyone who has responded to him is a Hindu and thus loathsome, inferior and vermin. I did not expect that you will promote such behavior in guise of good blog fight. If this is the standard of fight you are looking for then I don't know how low your real fights would have been.
Thank you Saeed Ajmal, Abhi and Maria b- for looking at the contents of the article. Grateful also to those who have pointed about other versions of zero and "seven year decades".
Special thanks to Samad Hayat Khan for his passionate defence. I am sure blog fights too are helpful.
@Samad Hayat Khan:
"When I was a boy of 14, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be 21, I was astonished at how much the old man had learned in seven years." Sameul Clemens AKA Mark Twain (Allegedly) Have hope!
@Faction: Ok. Come on. You show you Open Minded Hindu mentality then. Common!!! You think You can do that when you hide behind fake Identities like almost all of your countrymen? First, Learn to identify yourself before giving false lectures to others. And I usually do not comment on someone 's religion but since referred to mine, I will show you Just one example of your own secular Hindu RSS terrorist Nexus of your terrorists Hindu Army ( Col.Prohit), Or rather Bal Thakray, Or Narendra Modi ( The Architect of Guajrat Massacre) Or Your second Biggest part's head L.K. Advani, the Hindu terrorist, who led the Babri Mosque demolition. And all these Criminals are in Main stream Politics. This is your secular Leadership. Got the taste of your Secularism? That's why they say, Wise is who he doesn't throw stones on others while he himself lives in crystal house. @A Reader: Ok. You go ahead and you start WWIII. Happy now? @Dr. Who!: LOL. Same idiotic behavior as your Buddy Vineet? My assessment about you Indians was 200% true. every other one is More idiot than the previous one. Let me be a 5th grader, I am still 5 grades above you, Dr. Kindergarten. Looks like you suffer, along the majority of your countrymen, some sort of inferiority complex otherwise at least you and many like you, would have some decency to write your real name. Suffering from true identity crisis, Mr. Kindergartner? LOL. Remember, You are no one to reason with me at all. I don't even want to sit with you until you change your Kindergarten mentality, that means "GROW UP". Would ya? I will pray for you but I don't have any hopes.
@ikmundapunjabi: Allergic to facts? Hahaha. Was that a fact? Goodness Sake, don't make me laugh anymore. Go and find a name for you first. You are, like your buddy, suffering from acute Identity crisis. I simply do not understand what you people are so ashamed of your Hindu identity that you even don't write your Hindu names.
@Samad Hayat Khan: What grade are you in? 5th or 4th? Are we trying to reason with pre teen kids!!
@Samad Hayat Khan: dude ,u need to relaxxxx,he's not invading you or forcing his beliefs on you,he's just stating some facts,something you seem to be allergic to.haha
It is easy to argue that Wars in Afghanistan will spill over to Pakistan. But you forget that we vigorously promoted instability in Afghanistan - while you were DG ISI. We built the Taliban - all with the express objective of having a client state and strategic depth. We "spilled" the wars Pre and Post 9/11 into Afghanistan.
This war can come to an end provided we stop supporting it. We can give up our Khaki obsession with Kabul and IOK, yet maintain an interest like civilized nations do. It is only we (the Army that is that you were part of) - who have adopted terror as an instrument of national policy - without any approval by the masses and at enormous cost to us as a people. So why not stop the spin take some responsibility? - that would be conduct becoming of a leader.
@Samad Hayat Khan: You seem to be very tightly wound up. One comment from an 'indian' and you started off with world war 3!!
Well said and produced General Saab
Sir, no one is a great admirer of all things American or their policies which have kept shifting with the sand. What we must all admire is the Government will and determination to ensure the safety of their citizens, something that third world countries like Pakistan and India never had. By sending out the strong message that we will come and get you wherever you are the terrorists whether in Waziristan, Yemen, Somalia or Afghanistan are fearful and on the run. The Americans have ensured that not a single terrorist incident has happened there since 9/11. While we may rave and rant about the inhumanity of their actions the effectiveness of their strategy is bast captured by the old saying - "the proof of the pudding lies in the eating". We should not be confused because the American goal is to make America a safer place, whether the world is safer for all an irrelevant matter to them. Hear their duplicity when they tell India not to retaliate to terror sponsored from Pakistan, but to negotiate. Their own interest is their sole interest.
@Samad Hayat Khan: Khan Sahab calm down: It isn't present day India but ancient India which included Indus Civilization, and is your and my heritage too. Zero may possibly have come from Moen Jo Daro and Harappa civilization, i e present day Pakistan, who knows! If you look at the old hand written manuscripts of the HOLY QURA'AN; you will find that they do not have numeral index, rather, first word of next page would be written at the bottom of the preceding page and was used as index. Abstract concept of the large number existed in Arabic language but numeral representation came much later. Don't throw baby out with the bath water please!
@Samad Hayat Khan: LOL!! You perfectly embody the close minded Pakistani Islamist perspective. What else do you refuse to believe, that the earth is round?
Ezcellent piece General sahib. Now do best effort to make pak an economically independant and educated nation and democratic comprising 180million. Pak will be a heaven on earth and can do wonder. Pak zindabad
@vineet. you are right about the indian origin of zero. the europians gave the credit to the arabs by naming them as aribic numerals. However the arabs always acknowledged the Indian contribution and referred to them as hindsa.
While we all talk about the 9/11 tragedy and condole the deaths in US, I believe we should also condole the innocents who have died after 9/11 because of collateral damage and not only this Pakistan and Afghanistan have suffered the most because of 9/11 (do note none of the hijackers were Pakistanis or Afghanis) as more innocent people have died in Pakistan and Afghanistan because of after effects of 9/11.
@Aziz Akhmad:
Akhmad Sahab Why "unfortunate" that Indians invented Zero! Should it be "Unfortunate" that Wright brothers, not Arabs invented aero plane and Edison invented light bulb not Egyptians?
Shouldn't it be 20/20 when the matter relates to (hind)sight? Or 20/20 after 10 years on, or something like that! Number 7 has deeper impact on human psyche than number 10, such as 7 year itch,7 days in a week etc. Vineet has a point about Zero! You don't need to google it.
@Vineet
And while at it, one may also find our whether it was 'astrology' or 'astronomy' that the Arabs were interested in. But then these things happen when you try to fit the reality to a pre-decided theory instead of the other way around.
@Vineet: We do not believe Google and Not even you. Both proposals are plainly rejected. Mr. Durrani's words stand as truth. And that's we are going to believe. You want to believe something else, you are free to do that. You can not make us believe what you want us to. Now, make us believe your version by force. Can you? See, This is your problem that you bring your "Do Takay Ki superiority" and try to push it through our throats. It will never work that way. Your hatred for Pakistan and Muslims is so much that, no matter what they say or do that's never going to be acceptable to you. Let me tell you that is this Idiotic behavior that Pakistanis and Muslims in general do not like you. You can not force your Idiotic findings on us. Try it if you can force it. But before even you do that, let me remind you the Aftermath of Two Biggest super Powers This world ever Produced: Soviets and USA, who tried to force their philosophy on others by force. Do I need to tell you what was the fortune of the first one and what's the fortune of the second one is going to be? Bottom line is we are not interested in your idiotic thoughts and philosophy. You want to live your lives with them, do it but do not try to impose on others what they should do. This is the problem of most of your Countrymen, who come here to lecture others for what they themselves do not do. We do not need your lectures and it should be very loud and clear to you and your countrymen. If you kept on insisting, I am afraid you will be joining in the same team who tried to Pushed their Agenda on others , waged 10 years of war each and failed. Join them if you wish. Choice is all yours.
i am no fan of ex-generals spreading wisdom once they retire but have found this piece to be an excellent analytical summary of our times-past, present and future. there's no new information but an excellent overview of whats to come in the light of whats happening. well done general saab
A little bit of nitpicking, General Sab, if you don't mind. One, the Biblical mythology of dry and wet "decades" was not of decades but of 7 years. "The seven years of abundance in Egypt came to an end ..." Genesis 41:53. Two, the Arabs did not invent the numeral 10. Unfortunately, it were the Indians, who invented 0, which led to the numeral 10.
"Pakistan, therefore, pleaded non-use of force, but then succumbed to using some of its own by starting a military operation in South Waziristan, again when better choices were available."
What other choice did TTP leave us? They cannot be reasoned with or argued with. I remember that when this serpent of TTP, raised by or at the very least having sympathies of many in the ISI, started rearing its ugly head then first came the denials that such an organization even existed, followed by reluctant and short lived peace treaties. These pacts gave sufficient time to extremists to organize, arm, and entrench themselves increasingly eastward in the tribal areas. Had Pakistan's intelligence agencies shown enough foresight and taken action in a timely manner then perhaps the episodes in North & South Waziristan, Wana, Swat, Parachinar may never have happened. Such is the state of mass-delusion in this country that many still sympathize with these obscurantist barbarians and loudly oppose any military action, no matter how justified. These are not our people. They do not have any genuine grievances. This death cult seeks the destruction of Pakistan, its people and its culture. The sooner we realize that US, India, Israel, or some broad international conspiracy is the not biggest threat facing our country, the better we stand a chance of dealing with this menace.
Factual error alert: "No wonder that the Arabs, enamoured by astrology, invented the figure of 10"
Well they didn't invent 10 (or zero) actually, they borrowed it from ancient India. Try google!
Vineet
Improved home security and a minor bombing campaign against Al-Qaida and Taliban should have been enough. Al-Qaida is not a country, and it cannot force its way into US. But US spend all the time waging counter insurgency against Taliban fighters, who can’t even get a job in Pakistan let alone US. Taliban were never a global threat, they should have been punished a bit for harbouring Al-Qaida and that was enough.
What is true for US militarism is infinitely more so for the Pakistani, Saudi & Chinese variety, Mr. Durrani, or have you forgotten???? So, kindly take those lessons to heart close to home first, lest you sink the ship that you helm. Let others worry about their own ships.