The recent exchanges between the two sides have increasingly become a dialogue of the deaf, with each side talking at rather than to each other. Pakistan’s response has been clear and categorical: immediate suspension of all Nato supplies passing through Pakistani territory, closing of the Shamsi airbase, reportedly used for drone attacks, and boycott of the Bonn conference on Afghanistan. Pakistan also demanded an apology for the loss of life inflicted on Pakistani forces in Salala. The US and Nato/Isaf have ordered an enquiry into the incident and are likely to respond on the basis of the result of the enquiry.
Pakistan’s decision to suspend its ‘business-as-usual’ interaction with the United States is a laudable assertion of its independence and sovereignty and the nation has taken a united position in reaction to the crisis. The question, however, is: how will we deal with a rupture of our relationship with the US? If the enquiry fails to place the blame of the attack on Nato/Isaf forces, Pakistan would have to maintain its hard position with the US in keeping with its honour and dignity. That would hurt Pakistan badly, as it would affect both the civilian and the military assistance we receive from the US, which we can ill afford at this time of great economic difficulty. We must be mindful of the fact that it is not only direct American assistance that could stop but the US could also influence multilateral financial institutions, as well as other donor countries, to review and possibly suspend their dealings with Pakistan.
These dire implications necessitate a Plan B, in case the rupture with the US is not repaired soon. In our thinking, the governing presumption is that the US needs us badly for its successful extrication from Afghanistan. However, what if the US manages to exit from Afghanistan without Pakistan’s help and cooperation? In fact, having opted for a hardball game, we should be prepared for even rougher treatment than we have received so far. The US Congress can slap sanctions on Pakistan that can be debilitating and injurious. There is vague talk in Washington of declaring Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism, which would place us in the category of Iran, North Korea and Cuba. On the other hand, if we buckle down after having staked out our principled position so firmly, we would be forced to accept even more unpalatable terms. For our own sake, we have to take Murphy’s Law seriously and prepare ourselves for the worse.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 14th, 2011.
COMMENTS (12)
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we need to adopt a proactive approach towards America on diplomatic and military cooperation front: transit and logistics subjects should be addressed through fair and square mechanism; "rules of engagement" alongside durand line calls for effective planning(if there is not as Salala carnage happened with in 24 hours of Isaf Chief's, John Allen, visit), efficacious communication and real time implementation;we must mediate on the opportunity cost for "war against terror" that is a global war-a third world war.Murphy's law is an epitome but necessity is the mother of invention and time is ripe for paradigm shift in diplomacy because it is the only exception that proves the rule.
US and Pakistan should visit a marriage counsellor at the earliest.
Sir,
I am not sure whether we have a "principled" stand. Sounds more like an emotional reflex.
A country which has done nothing to wean itself off external assistance (in the military and civil side) cannot afford to stand on principles.
Unless we are prepared to change course, this is all as we call it "nura kushti" and vacuous bombast and the American's know it.
There are 4 countries presently in the list of countries 'repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism'. They are: cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria.
The sanctions which the US imposes on countries on the list are: 1. A ban on arms-related exports and sales. 2. Controls over exports of dual-use items, requiring 30-day Congressional notification for goods or services that could significantly enhance the terrorist-list country's military capability or ability to support terrorism. 3. Prohibitions on economic assistance. 4. Imposition of miscellaneous financial and other restrictions, including: Requiring the United States to oppose loans by the World Bank and other international financial institutions. If the NATO-US enquiry puts the blame on Pak army, then surely we won't accept it and there will be more arm twisting from US and the US-Pak relations will nosedive further. If enquiry does find some blame their side, then Pak will up the ante and there will be protests from Immy brigade and the relations will go further downhill. (This is the problem when you have friendship with a rich guy. Whether you committed a mistake or he did, the fallout will be serious for the poor guy, not the rich one.)
By aggressively opting for a lose-lose situation, Pak seems to be hurtling towards a precipice. Coming year is the Presidential election year in US, and you will hear more Pak dirt washed in US town halls. If a Republican comes to power, then you can expect sanctions to be slapped on Pakistan immediately resulting in international isolation and economic bankruptcy.
The sensible thing for us to do after seeing the writing on the wall: find a good immigration lawyer or get a good hawala operator.
Keeping the upcoming election in mind, I think this government has no choice but to maintain its 'principled position'. It may be possible that some backdoor diplomacy is being carried out with the US where the current government is trying to convince the US as to why the principled position to protect Pakistan's sovereignty is crucial to get re-elected in the next election & this government is the only partner that can get things done for the US.
"On the other hand, if we buckle down after having staked out our principled position so firmly, we would be forced to accept even more unpalatable terms."
The problem is thinking Pakistan's position is "principled" while drowning out all the voices that demonstrate it is not.
There is Pakistan's Law: If we can manage to send our strategic assets and shoot ourselves in the face, we will! And having done that we will blame Murphy!
Kind of hard to whine about "Pakistani Sovereignty" when how many tens of thousands of non-Pakistani militants are roaming around the country! I wonder who ever gave them "permission" to reside in Pakistan!
@You Said It: So you say that "We could have handled the May 2 raid (killing of OBL) more firmly and used that to extract the right concessions." Wow, just what "concessions" are due Pakistan for hiding Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad for THE PAST FIVE + YEARS after HE was responsible for killing around 3000 Americans (not 24) on 9/11, and setting this terrorist fight in motion that has also claimed more than 30,000 Pakistani lives so far?
The examples you cite are of Pakistan wearing its ghairat on its sleeve. There was absolutely no reason why the Raymond Davis affair was made into this drawn-out saga (we can thank SMQ the lota for that). I don't see how memogate is the US's fault. We could have handled the May 2 raid more firmly and used that to extract the right concessions.
Pakistan must first stop conducting foreign policy via Urdu TV. We need to tell our ex-generals, ex-Ambassadors, and ex-Mullahs to shut up or give them a boot in the backside. Also, not every serving politician and general has to give a comment to the media about every issue -- regardless of whether they have that portfolio or not.
It is possible to have your cake and eat it too. You just have to eat small bites at a measured pace. And chew with your mouth closed.
In the end it will all be about the economy.
Without US Dollars filling the gap in our deficit it likely our economy will go from extremely bad to terribly worse. Expect inflation to go up, food, petrol and electricity prices to take a steep hike. Poverty will unfortunately dramatically increase even further and as a consequence so will crime and social disorder.
Kayani said ‘honour before prosperity’, but, unlike the affluent, the desperately poor, who may face near starvation in the future, will pay a big price. It is a case of "plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose" (the more it changes, the more it's the same thing), in other words Pakistan (ie. our GHQ and the ghairatmund lobby) has once again told the US: "If you don't behave yourself, for the sake of my honour I'll shoot myself".
The problem is that the elite lot will be okay, the rest of Pakistan is sure to head towards becoming an economic wasteland for the next few years. Unfortunately the poor cannot eat nuclear bombs.
Dear Sir Naqvi, i think time has come we should declare ourself true free country in the world and start acting like a mature and respected country not a bagger and chy Nuc power.