Shiny, shapeless Romney comforts those who still remember 2008, when the last presidential challenger promised more drone attacks and raiding the country if there were a chance to kill Osama. He did both and looked the other way during more, with contractors murdering our citizens and Nato strikes killing our soldiers. With Pakistan reeling after four years of Obama, a president tagged with being weak in almost every facet of foreign policy except ours, we miss the older, happier days of Republicans in the White Houses.
For instance, in 1973, Richard Nixon declared that “the integrity of Pakistan is the cornerstone of American foreign policy”. Such a statement today might only be made for Canada or Israel (and England if Tony Blair were still in office, ever-ready to sacrifice his people for Dick Cheney). Also who doesn’t remember Republican Ronald Reagan and the endless money and Stinger missiles that he gave to us and which we passed on to our favourite mujahideen in Afghanistan during the 1980s.
We often forget that for both Nixon and Reagan, bigger prizes — aligning with the Chinese, defeating the Soviets — were perhaps more important than any love from the Pakistanis. But it’s still easy to contrast their support with, say, Democrat Jimmy Carter, who scaled back ties with Pakistan when the American Embassy was burned down in Islamabad in 1979. Or with Bill Clinton, whose six-hour visit to the capital in 2000 included a lecture on Kashmir and refusing to be photographed shaking hands with Pervez Musharraf. Humiliating as that was, it’s six hours more than whatever time another Democrat, the current US president, has spent on our soil.
But this conclusion, that the reds have been better for our interests than the blues, has been made redundant by two broader trends. The first is the Bush administration’s savage and stupid response to 9/11. Steered by men that were almost fanatically neoconservative, Bush’s foreign policy became coloured by the virulent unilateralism, by binary terms of good and evil. And as the war in Afghanistan progressed, the theatre of war nightmarishly shifted to our own northwest. The American policymaker’s perspective of Pakistan is more negative today than it ever has been, regardless of party affiliation.
The second is that America itself has changed, and not just following 9/11. It has been changing for a long time. Over the past half-century, Republican vote-getting strategies in the US’s heartland have been cynical exercises in fear, race, and resentment. The resulting rise of an aspirational middle class in America, increasingly white, intolerant, and inward-looking, has made electoral candidates drift even further right. This is best explained by the Tea Party, an assortment of out-of-control libertarians and social conservatives against everything except guns, and a source of unending pain for the saner Republican establishment.
A combination of these two factors explains how the Grand Old Party has let itself become the God & Oil Party, its leaders drab and consciously myopic. Romney finds Pakistanis ‘comfortable’ with drone strikes. Newt Gingrich warns of the ‘extremists’ within reach of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal. Rick Perry talks incoherently of making friends with India in relation to ‘the Pakistani country’. These are not, with the possible exception of Perry (who is no longer in the race), stupid men. They cater to an audience that views Pakistan as a bag of warheads that undefined radicals might snatch up at any second, and little else.
The way out, then, lies not with parties changing in the White House but with us, removing our biases that are intellectually lazy and viewing our relation to other countries’ interests afresh. And not just with the GOP in America, but with our neighbours, friends, and rivals. Maybe our own policymakers should also be inspired towards acting pragmatically towards the changing world around them, rather than taking each day as it comes. A Democratic president has been a tragedy for Pakistan. A Republican America would be worse.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 8th, 2012.
COMMENTS (25)
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Very concise and elegant editorial. The nuances between Pakistan and USA are rarely understood by journalists around the world. It is great to see someone is looking at the future of geopolitical relationships instead of always focusing on the past. Hope to see more from Mr Khan in the future.
@K B Kale: I fully agree with you. Obama (& Democrats) will win White House for a second term!
Tremendous piece. The world needs better hopefuls
Well one can only hope there will be a Republican POTUS after November.
Excellent piece of writing ! keep it up..We are proud of You (ISC-Lahore)
commendable grasp of history. also i dont understand the confusion. indians and pakistanis in the comments are pretty much agreed.
very fresh article. gr @M Saeed i'm sure the reality isnt as stark as that. we should work together more.
Most Pakistani commentators have praised the piece while the Indians as usual ridiculed Pakistan and anyone who supported Pakistan. It is this intolerant attitude which led the Muslims to demand a separate country in the sub-continent.
"......but with our neighbours, friends, and rivals. Maybe our own policymakers should also be inspired towards acting pragmatically towards the changing world around them,......" Young Asad has hit the nail on the head in the above two lines. Pakistan instead of looking at strategic depth to west of its borders should look at economic depth at its eastern side and also in other and all directions
A very well reshearched article. I really like the style of writing, making a discussed to death topic interesting once again using just the right amount of wry humor and witticism.
Republican Presidents are dumb. Only Reagan could look the other way while Pakistan developed Nuclear weapons. Reagan even lied to US Congress every year regularly. He totally lacked foresight & vision and that is why the present crop of Republicans like Newt are worried about the nukes falling in the hands of Al Qaeda and used against themselves. Of course, we in India, are clear that we will be used for target practice. Reagan & George W Bush (GWB) were the dumbest Presidents of USA. They had no grey cells, depended entirely on th advice of their staff. During GWB's regime, I think Cheney was the real President! It is no wonder that the author goes so ga-ga over Republican administrations. But Obama, probably one of the few well-educated amongst the US Presidents, will have a 2nd term & terminate all aids to Pakistan. He is on the right track!
excellent!
@saquib saeed:
I second that.
A very well written post, but I think it is very sad such an article needs to be written.
The biggest folly Pakistan has been committing from the very day of its birth is not to strive for self sufficiency. Its dependence on USA, from the beginning, compromised its freedom to protect its core interests. It has been behaving as a country that does not value its independence; and for that reason it has seldom enjoyed freedom of action. What is most disheartening is the fact that it has still not seen the wisdom of changing its ways, exemplified by growing dependence on China.
The US is extracting its pound of flesh, and so will China when it wants to. Pakistan will be a great country if, and only if, it soon learns to stand on its own feet.
Asad, i distribute happiness. Your article distributed happiness today. excellent written
@John B: I agree with you 100%. Clinton did visit Pakistan but he did not want to be seen shaking hands with a military dictator in any picture. We may love the dictators but the world calls them what they are. Whether Democrats or Republicans they are patriotic to their country and not to Pakistan. Even the double agent MI has said that he is all for the US not Pakistan. We have to stand on our own two feet some day, after all we have the same age as China and India. Thanks and regards, Mirza
Don't neglect the Pakistan side in all this: they're too blame too, it's a two-way relationship. this is quite the eloquent piece though. dont agree with opinion, but in terms of actual writing, more like this from ET please.
Surprised that two opinion columns on American domestic politics!
It does not matter who wins, the policy towards PAK has shifted during Clinton's term and the present policy will continue as long as PAK is still hanging on to her old school of thoughts in foreign policy.
For US PAK is an annoying adolescent who never grows up, or as the previous Sec. State Albright put it, a migraine.
OBL sealed the deal.
This is truly a great piece of writing. Especially surprising, it's coming from a Final year LSE student.Bravo Asad!! Youth like you gives me a lot of hope in our beleaguered country's future. Please keep writing more. you are far better than many of the senior established columnists. And that is just the beginning.
wahhh!
@Salim: "repubs will not be welcome in pak" yeah they are dying for pakistani visas, after all pakistan is the greatest nation.
Impressed by quality of language of this piece,, also more should agree to this- repubs will not be welcome in pak