'The trees are coming into leaf… their greenness is a kind of grief'
If synergy develops that reinforces buds of transformation, Pakistani slide into dysfunctionality could be halted.
It is springtime in Washington; a late spring actually, but the trees are in full flower and leafing, the flowers are bursting and nature is alive with possibility. On such a beautiful day, it is a shame to be stuck writing this article. But it is a pleasure also to be writing about the ingrained optimism that comes with spring, and I will not spoil that positive feeling by trying to write about Bangladesh. There is nothing positive to write on that subject.
Nor is it a day to be writing about, or even thinking of, South Asia’s other myriad, seemingly intractable, problems. One tends to lose hope in any simple recounting of the miseries of the region. Save the dark thoughts for the dark days of winter. Let us, instead, imagine the conjunction of this spring’s elections in Afghanistan and India; new leaders emerging in both countries with new ideas and different mindsets offers unique possibilities to transform the political dynamics of the subcontinent. And let us hope that Pakistan’s leaders understand that the ability of these new leaders to transform that dynamic depends critically on how Pakistan reacts to their arrival on the scene.
The necessary condition for such a transformation is that the new leaders be willing and able to move away from entrenched ideas and stereotypes. Pakistani leaders must also be able to eschew old patterns of thought and fallacies and embark in their own right on a long and difficult transformation process. First, they will have to grapple realistically with the problem of growing militancy. From the outside, it is difficult to discern whether there is an evolving consensus between the civil and military leaders on the need to slowly and carefully cleanse the scourge of extremist militancy in the country.
By this, I mean to not only bring North Waziristan under the government’s writ by the force of arms, but also to deal with the growing number of jihadi militants now in the heartland of Punjab. In that respect, I commend the May 7 article by Fahd Humayun from Foreign Policy and reprinted by the Jinnah Institute entitled “Patrolling Pakistan’s South Corridor”, which describes the sizeable flow of militants from Fata to south Punjab. Dealing with these groups ad seriatum will not be easy but will be essential if the country is ever to be reclaimed.
At the same time, a similar consensus must develop to open trade with India and to begin to talk rationally with the Indians about resolving disputes that have divided them for over 65 years. And finally, Pakistan must bring a fresh understanding to its interests in a stable Afghanistan and a new mindset on how to achieve those interests no matter what scenario develops in Afghanistan after 2014, whether a successful peace process or a return to civil war. This is a tall order, but if a synergy ever develops that reinforces the buds of transformation that this spring brings, the long, if gradual, Pakistani slide into dysfunctionality could be halted.
I met and brunched with two Pakistani journalist friends who have been forced to leave the country because their lives are, or were, in danger. A third, Raza Rumi, I saw only 10 days ago at a think tank presentation. My friends spoke with emotion and conviction of the serious dangers that face honest and courageous journalists in Pakistan; yet, what impressed me the most was their refusal to throw in the sponge on Pakistan. They insisted that good outcomes are still possible. Was it only that the spirit of spring was on them? Or will this spring, with its profusion of tipping points, begin a rebirth of effective governance in South Asia?
Spring, of course, is ambiguous. That is because, over time, the leaves die and fall, the flowers disappear, and the days become darker again. But in spring, they are reborn — an ability that has escaped humans. Poet Phillip Larkin wrote the lines that are the title of this piece; the poem ends, “Yet still the unresting castles thresh, in full grown thickness every May, last year is dead, they seem to say, begin afresh, afresh, afresh.” Yes, Pakistan needs to begin afresh. Now is the time.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 15th, 2014.
Nor is it a day to be writing about, or even thinking of, South Asia’s other myriad, seemingly intractable, problems. One tends to lose hope in any simple recounting of the miseries of the region. Save the dark thoughts for the dark days of winter. Let us, instead, imagine the conjunction of this spring’s elections in Afghanistan and India; new leaders emerging in both countries with new ideas and different mindsets offers unique possibilities to transform the political dynamics of the subcontinent. And let us hope that Pakistan’s leaders understand that the ability of these new leaders to transform that dynamic depends critically on how Pakistan reacts to their arrival on the scene.
The necessary condition for such a transformation is that the new leaders be willing and able to move away from entrenched ideas and stereotypes. Pakistani leaders must also be able to eschew old patterns of thought and fallacies and embark in their own right on a long and difficult transformation process. First, they will have to grapple realistically with the problem of growing militancy. From the outside, it is difficult to discern whether there is an evolving consensus between the civil and military leaders on the need to slowly and carefully cleanse the scourge of extremist militancy in the country.
By this, I mean to not only bring North Waziristan under the government’s writ by the force of arms, but also to deal with the growing number of jihadi militants now in the heartland of Punjab. In that respect, I commend the May 7 article by Fahd Humayun from Foreign Policy and reprinted by the Jinnah Institute entitled “Patrolling Pakistan’s South Corridor”, which describes the sizeable flow of militants from Fata to south Punjab. Dealing with these groups ad seriatum will not be easy but will be essential if the country is ever to be reclaimed.
At the same time, a similar consensus must develop to open trade with India and to begin to talk rationally with the Indians about resolving disputes that have divided them for over 65 years. And finally, Pakistan must bring a fresh understanding to its interests in a stable Afghanistan and a new mindset on how to achieve those interests no matter what scenario develops in Afghanistan after 2014, whether a successful peace process or a return to civil war. This is a tall order, but if a synergy ever develops that reinforces the buds of transformation that this spring brings, the long, if gradual, Pakistani slide into dysfunctionality could be halted.
I met and brunched with two Pakistani journalist friends who have been forced to leave the country because their lives are, or were, in danger. A third, Raza Rumi, I saw only 10 days ago at a think tank presentation. My friends spoke with emotion and conviction of the serious dangers that face honest and courageous journalists in Pakistan; yet, what impressed me the most was their refusal to throw in the sponge on Pakistan. They insisted that good outcomes are still possible. Was it only that the spirit of spring was on them? Or will this spring, with its profusion of tipping points, begin a rebirth of effective governance in South Asia?
Spring, of course, is ambiguous. That is because, over time, the leaves die and fall, the flowers disappear, and the days become darker again. But in spring, they are reborn — an ability that has escaped humans. Poet Phillip Larkin wrote the lines that are the title of this piece; the poem ends, “Yet still the unresting castles thresh, in full grown thickness every May, last year is dead, they seem to say, begin afresh, afresh, afresh.” Yes, Pakistan needs to begin afresh. Now is the time.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 15th, 2014.