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BARKING OR BITING? Trump’s Tweet About Pakistan as a Terrorist Haven Was Right...

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BARKING OR BITING?
Trump’s Tweet About Pakistan as a Terrorist Haven Was Right. But What Will He Do About It?
Pakistan’s generals, who run the policy supporting terrorism, believe Trump is all bluster. And they may be correct, but there is much Washington can do if it is serious.
BRUCE RIEDEL - 01.03.18 4:06 PM ET


Earlier this week Donald Trump tweeted his two predecessors had spent $33 billion in aid attempting unsuccessfully to persuade Pakistan to change its policies protecting terrorists. “No more!” he vowed.

Trump’s proclamation on Twitter shouldn’t come as a surprise. His administration has accurately described Pakistan’s support for terrorism in general and the Afghan Taliban in particular.

But it has yet to lay out a strategy to deal with the issue.

Pakistan’s generals, who run the policy supporting terrorism, believe Trump is all bark and no bite. And so far they look to be right, but there is much Washington can do if it is serious.

For months the administration has spoken out clearly about the Pakistani army’s longstanding support for organizations like the Haqqani network in the Afghan Taliban and Lashkar e Tayyiba, focused on Kashmir and India.

The army and its intelligence service, the Inter Services Intelligence directorate (ISI), has trained, equipped, advised and directed the Afghan Taliban and LeT for decades. The ISI was deeply involved in Taliban attacks in Kabul and the LeT attack in Mumbai in 2008. It facilitates their fundraising in the Gulf states. It provides safe haven and sanctuary for the leadership of these groups. LeT leader Hafiz Saeed operates openly in Pakistan, routinely denouncing America, India, and Israel.

Trump officials have been explicit and unequivocal about all this, including in the roll out of their Afghanistan policy and the overall presentation of security strategy.

“We will press Pakistan to intensify its counterterrorism efforts, since no partnership can survive a country’s support for militants and terrorists who target a partner’s own service members and officials,” read the National Security Strategy document issued in December. “The United States will also encourage Pakistan to continue demonstrating that it is a responsible steward of its nuclear assets,” which no doubt are a complicating factor.

Vice President Mike Pence put Pakistan “on notice” about terrorism when he visited Afghanistan last month.

But most of the $33 billion in aid that Trump referred to, more than $25 billion, was provided before the SEAL raid that found and killed Osama bin Laden hiding in the army cantonment city of Abbottabad in 2011. Withholding money is not much of a penalty, the $250 million in the pipeline is an insignificant threat.

Meanwhile, the administration has done little to engage the Pakistanis. Trump snubbed the Pakistani leadership when he visited Saudi Arabia on his first foreign travel, even though the Saudis has brought the top political leadership to the Riyadh summit. Pence did not travel to Pakistan. Nor has the administration tried to rally our allies in NATO to press the Pakistanis about Afghanistan, which is their war, too.

The Pakistani establishment believe that Washington and especially the president is not seriously committed to the Afghan mission and will eventually disengage from America’s longest war, leaving Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban the winners. The President has already said his generals convinced him to ignore his own predilection to get out of Afghanistan immediately. If they fail to show significant progress this year, Trump may well go with his own gut.

There is much the administration can do to alter Pakistan’s assessment. Some steps would be mostly symbolic but important. Washington could remove Pakistan from the category of a major non-NATO ally which George W. Bush gave it, a designation that has nothing to do with NATO but does qualify the country for receiving certain military technologies. The administration could also recall our ambassador and not replace him.

A more substantial approach would involve exploiting the president’s strong relationships with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Both host large émigré Pakistani worker populations and have been major aid donors to Pakistan’s economy. The former head of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Mansour, was a frequent traveler to Dubai and Manama, Bahrain, to raise money for the group until he was killed in a drone strike in 2016 in Pakistan’s Baluchistan province.

The Trump team should press Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh and Mohammed bin Zayed in Abu Dhabi, the powerful crown princes of their countries, to not only shut down the Taliban’s fund raising but to prosecute their funders even if they have royal connections. Both states have close ties to the ISI.

The Saudis and their gulf allies say they are committed to fighting terrorism. Washington should put the Afghan Taliban, which kills American soldiers, at the top of the list.


Moreover, the Saudis should use their considerable influence to cut the ISI aid to the Taliban. Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was just in Riyadh looking for Saudi help. He and his brother Shabaz, who also just visited the kingdom, are the two most important civilian politicians in their country. The generals are frequent visitors to Saudi Arabia as well.

The most extreme step the administration can take is to label Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism, like Iran. This would cut off all assistance and engagement with Pakistan. It would cut spare parts for the F16s in the Pakistan Air Force and other equipment provided since 2001. The United States would block multinational bank funding for Pakistan’s economy. It’s a draconian step but the evidence clearly qualifies for Pakistan’s designation.

George H.W. Bush considered the step in 1992 when I was the Pakistan desk officer in the White House. He wrote to then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif threatening designation. But both Bush and Sharif were out of power before the issue came to closure. It’s probably better used as a threat than actually implemented, but it’s in Trump’s tool bag.

An alternative approach is to rely primarily on unilateral actions by our own security services. President Barack Obama made the top priority of his administration’s AfPak policy the disruption, dismantling, and defeat of the al Qaeda core in Pakistan in 2009. The drone war was the means and it was pursued relentlessly despite Pakistan’s vocal objections. It was a success. Al Qaeda in Pakistan is a shell of what it was in 2009. Obama only used the drones sparingly against the Taliban, but they did get the group’s leader, Mullah Mansour, in 2016, in Pakistan.

The Taliban is a harder target than al Qaeda was because it often operates in major Pakistani cities like Quetta and Karachi, but it is vulnerable to disruption.

The virtue of the unilateral approach is it doesn’t rely on Pakistani cooperation, which is an unlikely outcome at best. It can also be used in conjunction with an engagement approach that acknowledges that Pakistan is a major victim of terrorism as well as a patron sponsor.

The administration, which has been debating policy for a year, does have options at its disposal.

A comprehensive approach that utilizes multiple tools – diplomatic, economic and covert – is best. Engagement with the elected leadership of Pakistan and also a reach out directly to the Pakistani people, the greatest victims of the ISI’s blowback, should be incorporated. China and India should be consulted.

The administration has diagnosed the problem, now it is facing the hard part. It won’t be easy. Pakistan is in the midst of a complex political meltdown, engineered by the army and others. New elections will come this year. But the need for urgency is also real, especially for our troops in Afghanistan. Congress should press for more than a tweet.




riedel-bruce-columnist-silo.jpg

BRUCE RIEDEL

Bruce Riedel is the Director of the Intelligence Project at the Brookings Institution. His new book,
Kings and Presidents: Saudi Arabia and the United States Since FDR
, will be published this fall.
 
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An alternative approach is to rely primarily on unilateral actions by our own security services.
This seems like the most threatening option. What options Pakistan have if US restarts its drone war and extends it into urban Areas. As the article suggests the so called "targets" are in Quetta and Karachi. Chief of air staff did order to shoot down intruding aircraft. Do we have sophisticated air defense systems like s-400?
 
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This seems like the most threatening option. What options Pakistan have if US restarts its drone war and extends it into urban Areas. As the article suggests the so called "targets" are in Quetta and Karachi. Chief of air staff did order to shoot down intruding aircraft. Do we have sophisticated air defense systems like s-400?

You don't need S-400 to shoot down a drone. It can be done with Azan missile easily. Secondly USA cannot target Pakistani cities. If they do their bases in Afghanistan can get attacked easily from with in Afghanistan.
 
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@Arabi nice try troll trying to provoke a fight between Pakistan and Iran just to serve arab purpose your post is from
30 Apr, 2017

When Holy prophet (PBUH) said Dajjal is going to come from an Island east of Makkah that Island is Bahrain. Now go away satan and Arabs should try to fight Persians them selves if they have balls.
 
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You don't have to post such a lengthy article my friend we all know Trump is all Bark and no Bite

Lets hope so, there are so many different theories about what actually is happening with US-Pak relations. The most bizarre theory is one I actually found out today. This elaborate theory posits that Pakistan in cahoots with US is projecting to be anti-US in a bid to convince Taliban into negotiations. The grand American strategy is to pit everyone against each other Pakistan against Afghanistan-India, India against Pakistan-China and China against India.

The one I believe is after hearing Ahmed Rashid a popular writer and also Sentor Mushahid Hussain.
Ahmed Rashid: Pakistan will only help America leave Afghanistan, if America helps resolve Kashmir.
Mushahid Hussain: The road to peace in Afghanistan goes through peace in Kashmir.
I believe US wants to leave Afghanistan but Pakistan isn't helping US until it solves Kashmir.
 
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@cocomo USA cannot resolve Kashmir Now Pakistan Knows it. Pakistan don't wants USA to leave Kashmir.Let me tell you Pakistani Plan. It all started with Nuclear reactor in Iran. USA had no soultion for Iran going Nuclear and as expected USA went for a deal to save Israel, Sanctions are now lifted and if USA imposes sanctions again Russia and China don't have to follow them as it is the Nuclear deal that USA cannot impose sanctions on Iran. Now Iran has good supply of oil so Pakistan can now play the afghan game with USA. Pakistan Iran China Russia all shifting to Yuan. They are also integrating Banking system with each other. Iran and Russia are going to act as energy providers China as tech hub and Pakistan as logistics. If sanctions are imposed they 4 countries can support each others economy and be self sufficient. Now we can fight cold war 2.0.
 
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The US is trying to internationalize a local Afghani problem.. now they are looking left and right to find a solution, not to the problem itself, but to the Pakistani alleged support.. it is clearly an ugly game they are playing and trying to put the blame on Pakistan for their own failures in Afghanistan.. They knew since the beginning that there were same tribal areaa on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan borders.. Now they are blatantly asking Pakistan to kill its own citizens, because they belong to some tribes that don't like the US intervention against the rest of them in Afghanistan..
I think the US was a bit too confident in its success in Afghanistan, for two reasons; first they think that they have defeated the USSR by themselves, while it was the Taliban and their Muslim supporters who did it with a very symbolic but efficient support by the US stinger missiles, although sold to them and financed by some Arab countries..Second, the US thought that since there is no more USSR who can turn around and help Taliban, the US was assured of victory.. but at their dismay..they found out that the Taliban were the real Boss of Afghanistan.. and now the US tries to justify its failure by externalizing the issue and putting the blame on Pakistan..worst yet they will try to hit Pakistan with its own closest Arab allies.. something that won't work for them either..

@Arabi nice try troll trying to provoke a fight between Pakistan and Iran just to serve arab purpose your post is from
30 Apr, 2017

When Holy prophet (PBUH) said Dajjal is going to come from an Island east of Makkah that Island is Bahrain. Now go away satan and Arabs should try to fight Persians them selves if they have balls.
That island can be Qatar too.. how can you be sure it is Bahrain.. don't just make things up..
 
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@cocomo Pakistan Iran China Russia all shifting to Yuan. They are also integrating Banking system with each other. Iran and Russia are going to act as energy providers China as tech hub and Pakistan as logistics. If sanctions are imposed they 4 countries can support each others economy and be self sufficient.
This is a very good, but the global economy still plays a much bigger role..and alas it is the US and its allies who run it mainly..

Qatar is land connected. not an Island.
Bahrain
%7BABA3B7DE-8060-430C-9281-6534502E7ACE%7DNorth%20Manama%20Causeway%20Bahrain%202007_3.jpg



qatar-capital-doha.jpg

They can both be considered islands
 
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This is a very good, but the global economy still plays a much bigger role..and alas it is the US and its allies who runs it mainly..
This is a backup plan in case USA and allies go for full sanctions. Winning Syria and Iraq were important part of it. ISIS is defeated and after the ISIS defeat why is USA looking like a disturbed man?
 
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Trump is literally the butt of jokes in the American public and media and across the western world. Very few people take him seriously, those being his core supporters. Pakistan should just be able to sit this out.
 
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This is a backup plan in case USA and allies go for full sanctions. Winning Syria and Iraq were important part of it. ISIS is defeated and after the ISIS defeat why is USA looking like a disturbed man?
Those guys (the US) are never really disturbed.. they just never play on their own ground.. the only disturbed people are in where the US plays its games..
 
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