By the afternoon of May 21, an unseasonable fog had descended on McCormick Place Chicago so far as Pakistan’s credentials were concerned. The media of the host country latched on to the word ‘snub’ administered reportedly because overland Nato supplies had, rather inexplicably, not resumed, with the Pakistanis still harping on an apology for the deaths at Salala — in the case of Pakistan’s ambassador to the US, somewhat unfashionably — and because haggling in the proverbial oriental bazaar over transit fees was assuming unrealistic dimensions. Bemused, many Pakistani analysts concluded tentatively that there was no real crisis but an orchestration in mutual complicity by which Pakistan would be portrayed as standing firm in defence of its sovereignty, honour and, of course fair compensation for the degradation of its infrastructure. As to a full restoration of amour propre in the form of an apology, wait for Act II.
This would have made sense but for the projection of events in the host country. Bruce Riedel, who is credited to have been the first expert to warn President Barack Obama against the perfidious Pakistanis, demurred: it was, he said, “bad form” not to hold a full-fledged meeting with Zardari in Chicago; the ‘snub’ was going to “come home to haunt us”. The Heritage Foundation’s Lisa Curtis, a permanent fixture on Indian TV channels’ talk shows concerning Pakistan, did not think it was a “personal snub” to President Zardari. President Obama said he “did not want to paper over the cracks” and mentioned recent tensions between Isaf and Pakistan. Given the interest in the US administration and Congress in Dr Shakil Afridi, an uproar against the 33-year sentence handed down to him by a tribal court under Pakistan’s draconian Frontier Crimes Regulations has already begun. (Cue: enter Rahman Malik.)
Just when lesser mortals in Pakistan were piecing together the disparate images from Chicago, this newspaper reported an exclusive conversation of its US-based correspondent with Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar in which she described Pakistan’s participation as “very, very successful”. Khar gave the impression that Pakistan was able to carry conviction as “an enabler, facilitator, a responsible country” on the road to Afghan stability. The vote in the US Senate sub-committee on appropriations on foreign aid signalled the opposite as, indeed, did Senator John McCain when he accused Pakistan of extortion. So, perhaps, the Chicago summit did present a conundrum.
Be it as it may, there may be nothing enigmatic about the situation; it may simply be a question of living with inherent contradictions of a badly fractured relationship. Nato supplies may begin soon, the apology issue may be appropriately fudged and the haggling in the Oriental bazaar settled for a lower-end closure. Simultaneously, Pakistan may already have suffered a fresh setback inasmuch as it gets even more marginalised in the Afghan endgame.
Consider the future. The Nato-led combat mission ends in 2014; a new post-2014 non-combat mission props up the ANSF and a fragile political structure; security and counter-insurgency operations are transferred to an ill-conceived, ethnically unbalanced Afghan army with no credible peace process in place. Without an inclusive settlement, the worst case scenario is a civil war. Such a conflict will be a nightmare for Pakistan. This grim prospect is emerging when the Pakistani government and the army are in danger of losing the plot altogether. It is time to get back to the drawing board and think things through. There is not much time to lose.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 28th, 2012.
COMMENTS (20)
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@Singh: Great question. In addition there are many reasons why US got into this region- oil/gas in Black see area and pipelines to Arabian sea and foothold in region to check China, so why would US leave so easily? now add one more objective- unfolding Khilafat movement by Pakistani Talibans with fingers on nuclear triggers- hundreds of them !! Pakistan is playing with explosives, in my opinion.
@Ali Tanoli: Tell me one country since WW2 which US left after establishing its foot print?
Look forward to you telling us, Sir, the road to "thinking things through".
Pakistan's Role in the Afghan End Game: Snatching defeat from the Jaws of Victory +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Ms Khar with her slogan of " very very successful" Chicago Meet reminds me of Ms Paris Hilton. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Post Chicago, the avalanche of snow that had fallen on Siachen had also enveloped the Pakistani Foreign Policy. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ The policy is now in deep freeze.
Pakistan is looking to borrow $5 billion from the IMF. There are no loan agreements exist since the last one was cancelled in 2008. Let us play some game theory here and let us assume IMF loan does not come without the West supporting it and most of them are NATO countries.
Not that the land route really matters when troops are being drawn down but for just argument sake, let us say open the land route we may consider giving a loan and we will pay $500 million installments. What do you think Pakistan will do?
People, you are not in control and you have zero control over your country’s affairs, it is house built with match sticks, it is either going to collapse or catch fire.
Forget about snub to Zardari and Pakistan, Americans will remember this 'price-gouging' for a long time. And they will be reminded if they forget. Pakistan may get $ 1000 or $ 2000 or whatever for a few weeks and months, but they may have kissed goodbye billions of $$$ in the coming years. Plus who knows what other horrors will come to visit you (floods, earthquakes, avalanches etc) and you will look to America/Nato for help. Foolish. Very foolish.
Author is correct Pakistan has to act now to stop the Afghan slide to chaos and it was golden historical opportunity for Pakistan to fix instability on its western border utilizing the ISAF presence in Afghanistan instead it is trying to hamper the ISAF effort.
@Ali Tanoli
Ever hear of airplanes? The "small, cost effective and lethal military footprint" that Cautious referred to will not be dependant on ocean shipping.
@Ali Tanoli:
"Afghanistan dont have Arabian sea so its hard to stay in for U.S too long."
That is a very ill-informed or wishful conclusion. Afghanistan will have a route to the sea through Iran. India has already constructed the Chabahar port in Iran and the new road to Afghansitan.
@Ali Tanoli: Gold medal for gibberish.
@Ali Tanoli.
I would observe that even with 130,000+ men depending on supplies the USA seems to be doing fine without using Pakistan's land route - when that footprint is shrunk to special forces, drones, and fighter bombers it's unlikely that Pakistan's leverage increases. Overestimating leverage combined with anti American blather is what put Pakistan in this unfortunate position.
@Ali Tanoli: Cash rewards, along with Spy Satellites and Drones and midnight Special Forces raids on Taliban/ Haqqani hideouts are enough to keep the AfPak pot boiling for next 20 years. This strategy doesnot need huge military transit facilities, nor thousands and thousands of soldiers on the ground.
So you are suggesting a 'fudging' of the situation so as to extricate Pakistan from a precarious situation it has put itself in ? What about honor, self respect, sovereignty ?
Civil war in Afghanistan means erosion of support for US presence. It is certainly not a bad thing to have the fight be in Afghanistan with the foreigners desperately trying to patch up a viable "endgame", something which is not in there capability. Trying to do something which couldn't be done with a larger footprint is the height of hubris. The only thing Pakistan needs to do is to ensure as much as possible that the civil war perpetuates in Afghanistan with not too much consequences (refugees).
@Cautious. Afghanistan dont have Arabian sea so its hard to stay in for U.S too long.
The Afghan end game has already been decided - the USA will change focus from civilian to military and leave a small, cost effective and lethal military footprint which will allow America to achieve it's strategic goal without depending on Pakistan. It's likely that Afghanistan will descend into civil war which may not bode well for Pakistan - but that's not an issue that is considered paramount to America or the rest of the World. You had your chance to help and you outsmarted yourselves right out of the game -- now it's time to sleep in the bed you made.