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Defining Strategic Depth

DAWN.COM | Columnists | Defining ?strategic depth?

And how does it help us? We are engaged in the Great Game in Afghanistan, we are told, because ‘strategic depth’ is vital for Pakistan due to the fact that our country is very narrow at its middle and could well be cut into half by an Indian attack in force.

Strategic depth, we are further informed, will give respite to our armed forces which could withdraw into Afghanistan to then regroup and mount counter-attacks on Indian forces in Pakistan. I ask you!

I ask you for several reasons. Let us presume that the Indians are foolish enough to get distracted from educating their people, some of whom go to some of the best centres of learning in the world. Let us assume that they are idiotic enough to opt for war instead of industrialising themselves and meeting their economic growth targets which are among the highest in the world.

Let us imagine that they are cretinous enough to go to war with a nuclear-armed Pakistan and effectively put an immediate and complete end to their multi-million dollar tourism industry. Let us suppose that they lose all sense, all reason, and actually attack Pakistan and cut our country into half.

Will our army pack its bags and escape into Afghanistan? How will it disengage itself from the fighting? What route will it use, through which mountain passes? Will the Peshawar Corps gun its tanks and troop carriers and trucks and towed artillery and head into the Khyber Pass, and on to Jalalabad? Will the Karachi and Quetta Corps do likewise through the Bolan and Khojak passes?

And what happens to the Lahore and Sialkot and Multan and Gujranwala and Bahawalpur and other garrisons? What about the air force? Far more than anything else, what about the by now 180 million people of the country? What ‘strategic depth’ do our Rommels and Guderians talk about, please? What poppycock is this?

More importantly, how can Afghanistan be our ‘strategic depth’ when most Afghans hate our guts, not only the northerners, but even those who call themselves Pakhtuns?

Case in point: the absolute and repeated refusal of even the Taliban government when it was misruling Afghanistan, to accept the Durand Line as the international border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, despite the fact that it was a surrogate of Pakistan — propped into power; paid for; and helped militarily, diplomatically and politically by the Pakistani government and its ‘agencies’.

Indeed, it even refused the Commando’s interior minister, the loudmouth Gen Moinuddin Haider when he went to Kabul to ask for the extradition of Pakistani criminals being sheltered by the Taliban. We must remember that the Commando, as chief executive of the country, was pressing the Foreign Office till just a few days before 9/11 to use every effort to have the Taliban regime’ recognised by more countries!

This poppycock of ‘strategic depth’ can only be explained by our great military thinkers and strategists and geniuses: it is not for mortals like yours truly to make sense of any of it. Particularly because this nonsense can only happen after the Americans depart from Afghanistan. And what, pray, is the guarantee that they will leave when they say they will?

Why this subject at this time, you might well ask. Well I have just been reading David Sanger’s The Inheritance in which he meticulously lays out the reasons why he believes the Pakistani “dual policy” towards the Taliban exists.

On page 247 he states that when Michael McConnell, the then chief of US National Intelligence went to Pakistan in late May 2008 (three months after the elections that trounced Musharraf and his King’s Party, mark) he heard Pakistani officers make the case for the Pakistani need for having a friendly government in Kabul after the Americans departed.

When he got back to Washington McConnell “ordered up a full assessment” of the situation. ‘It did not take long … Musharraf’s record of duplicity was well known. While Kayani was a favourite of the White House, he had also been overheard — presumably on telephone intercepts — referring to one of the most brutal of the Taliban leaders, Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani, as a “strategic asset”. Interesting, for Kayani’s former boss, Musharraf is quoted thus in Der Spiegel:

Spiegel: “Let us talk about the role of the ISI. A short time ago, US newspapers reported that ISI has systematically supported Taliban groups. Is that true?”

Musharraf: “Intelligence always has access to other networks — this is what Americans did with KGB, this is what ISI also does. You should understand that the army is on board to fight the Taliban and Al Qaeda. I have always been against the Taliban. Don’t try to lecture us about how we should handle this tactically. I will give you an example: Siraj Haqqani ...”

Spiegel: “... a powerful Taliban commander who is allegedly secretly allied with the ISI.”

Musharraf: “He is the man who has influence over Baitullah Mehsud, a dangerous terrorist, the fiercest commander in South Waziristan and the murderer of Benazir Bhutto as we know today. Mehsud kidnapped our ambassador in Kabul and our intelligence used Haqqani’s influence to get him released. Now, that does not mean that Haqqani is supported by us. The intelligence service is using certain enemies against other enemies. And it is better to tackle them one by one than making them all enemies.”

Well, there they go again!

But back to ‘strategic depth’. Will the likes of Sirajuddin Haqqani, son of Jalaluddin Haqqani, help Pakistan gain this ‘depth’ in Afghanistan? Are we that gone that we need these backward yahoos to save our army?

PS By the way what about our nuclear weapons? Are they not enough to stop the Indians in their tracks? What poppycock is this ‘strategic depth’?!

While back in the 90s this was often theorized, but nothing was actually put on paper. Strategic depth is just a fantasy tale, you can't trust your armed forces on a foreign soil.

Forget the army, its hardware, you probably can't even station your Air Force or your missiles in Afghanistan. How and when are you going to transport them during the war, what infrastructure exists to keep them secured in Afghanistan?

Today strategic depth only exists as an excuse to pin on Pakistan that it is against any resolution of the Taliban problem. I think Afghanistan can only be seen in such a way that they are pawns between India and Pakistan. If it is not controlled by us, it is controlled by India to promote its own fantasies similar to strategic depth, that they will mount a two sided attack upon Pakistan.
 
DAWN.COM | Columnists | Defining ?strategic depth?



While back in the 90s this was often theorized, but nothing was actually put on paper. Strategic depth is just a fantasy tale, you can't trust your armed forces on a foreign soil.

Forget the army, its hardware, you probably can't even station your Air Force or your missiles in Afghanistan. How and when are you going to transport them during the war, what infrastructure exists to keep them secured in Afghanistan?

Today strategic depth only exists as an excuse to pin on Pakistan that it is against any resolution of the Taliban problem. I think Afghanistan can only be seen in such a way that they are pawns between India and Pakistan. If it is not controlled by us, it is controlled by India to promote its own fantasies similar to strategic depth, that they will mount a two sided attack upon Pakistan.

You are late to the game Asim;)

Threads merged. Do read the discussion on Shafi's article when it was first posted. :)
 
And now, General Kiyani blowing holes in the half baked analysis of pompous ***** like Kamran Shafi and other Western and Indian commentators:

“We want Afghanistan to be our strategic depth, it does not imply controlling Afghanistan,” he said.

The term “strategic depth” is often used to describe Pakistan's historic policy of propping up sympathetic governments in Afghanistan, including the Taliban, to counter the perceived threat from its arch-rival India.

“The way we understand it, if Afghanistan is peaceful, stable and friendly, we will have our strategic depth because our western border is secure... no one has been able to control Afghanistan in that sense in its history.”

He said Pakistan had offered to help the United States and Nato train Afghan security forces, a key plank of the US exit strategy after more than eight years of war against the Islamist insurgents in Afghanistan.

“We can't wish for anything for Afghanistan that we don't wish for ourselves,” he said, adding that Pakistan does not want a “Talibanised” Afghanistan, albeit without elaborating further.
DAWN.COM | Pakistan | Pakistan does not want to control Afghanistan: Kayani

As I said, people ascribing Kamran Shafi's interpretation of 'Strategic Depth in Afghanistan' to Pakistan need to provide some credible source linking that interpretation to military policy makers.

So far there isn't any, and now we have a very clear statement from the Pakistani COAS on how Pakistan views 'Strategic Depth in Afghanistan'.
 
And now, General Kiyani blowing holes in the half baked analysis of pompous ***** like Kamran Shafi and other Western and Indian commentators:



As I said, people ascribing Kamran Shafi's interpretation of 'Strategic Depth in Afghanistan' to Pakistan need to provide some credible source linking that interpretation to military policy makers.

So far there isn't any, and now we have a very clear statement from the Pakistani COAS on how Pakistan views 'Strategic Depth in Afghanistan'.

Thanks AM, Your post made alot of things clear ..!
However People would still like Pakistan to have a lion's Share in the process of Stabilizing and Nation Building of Afghanistan and prevent it going back into the Hands of those Psycho Mullahs who were a hindrance in Afghanistan's Developement and Prosperity . Only then we might consider our western front as truly safe .

:cheers:
 
Ok people, another gem of Deserter's intellect:


It is within us
By Kamran Shafi
Tuesday, 09 Feb, 2010

THERE has been a veritable raft of statements from the chief of army staff in the very recent past on ‘strategic depth’ for Pakistan in Afghanistan.

Variously: “we want a strategic depth in Afghanistan but do not want to control it”; “if Afghanistan is peaceful, stable and friendly, we have our strategic depth because our western border is secure”; and “our strategic paradigm needs to be fully realised”. Inexplicably he also said that ‘it would be a cause of worry for Pakistan if Afghanistan’s projected army developed the potential to take on Pakistan’.

The Afghan army’s ‘projected’ development (woefully inadequate five years after it started, mark) and whether that development can be a danger to Pakistan with its half-a-million strong army and a powerful air force when Afghanistan has no air force at all at the present time, to say nothing of our bomb, we shall come to later. Let us for the moment look at ‘strategic depth’.

Now then, whilst matters as critical as strategic depth, especially in other, foreign countries, are best discussed in their minutiae in closed confabulations of elected political leaders, diplomats and military experts, let us look at the many hurdles in the way of the general’s wishes coming true.

While the Afghans can heave a sigh of relief that Pakistan will not take over their country to gain strategic depth, how can Afghanistan ever become peaceful, and stable, and friendly towards Pakistan when the likes of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and the Haqqani father-son team, well known as friends of our very own security establishment, run around that country spreading havoc from Ghazni to Kunar to Paktia?

How can Afghanistan become friendly towards Pakistan when there is continuing ambivalence in wholeheartedly targeting the Taliban leadership, both Afghan and Pakistani, which as we well know are closely allied? How possibly can Afghanistan call Pakistan a friend when senior Pakistani army officers refer to these people, its enemies, as ‘assets’?

On another tack, how can the ultimate leaders of groups that also attack innocent Pakistanis in Peshawar and Rawalpindi, Lahore and Karachi be the strategic assets of our brass hats?

How can Afghanistan consider Pakistan a friend when the Quetta shura of the Afghan Taliban which has now been outed by no less a personage than the minister of defence, is not even touched let alone degraded to an extent that it will cease being a threat to Afghanistan? When its leaders openly defy government authority and do as they will in Balochistan, extending their murderous tentacles into Iran too?

Unless, of course, it is still the case that our great strategists feel that the Taliban, both the Pakistan and Afghan variety, are the only ones who can ensure a peaceful, stable and friendly Afghanistan. If so, they have very bad memories, for they do not have to look very far back into Afghanistan’s sorry history to see how badly this, for want of a better word, scheme, failed so very miserably the last time around, with the Afghan people facing untold tribulations at the hands of a backward and medieval regime.

How possibly can the Afghans see Pakistan as a friend when they see that their tormentors and the Pakistani security establishment are still friends? No sirs, no, Afghanistan will never consider Pakistan a friend unless those who have made mindless statements about the Taliban being assets retract those statements in totality and without reservation. And far more than that take stringent action against all of the terrorists without exception.

As for the Afghan national security forces, the army and police, developing to the point that they can ‘take on’ Pakistan, those two forces are slated to rise to 171,600 men for the army and 134,000 for the police by the year 2011.

Both the projected numbers fly in the face of the views of independent observers and analysts trained to make such projections who say unreservedly that let alone the non-availability of suitable manpower, the mere costs of maintaining such numbers are way above the capacity of the Afghan government. Empirical evidence also shows that fully 40 per cent of present recruits came out positive when tested for drugs. So much for the Afghan forces ever being able to ‘take on’ Pakistan.

As to our strategic paradigm(s) being realised by other people, I can only say that whingeing will get us nowhere because no one owes us anything at all. We Pakistanis are the only ones who can, and should, realise what those paradigms are, and how we can best achieve them. We have to understand that the best strategic depth is that which comes from within our own country, from within ourselves. That the best strategic depth is that which comes from within our own people.

All of us have to understand that instead of looking beyond our borders, a literate, healthy and happy populace that lives in peace and tranquillity is the best strategic depth any country can possibly have. This, of course, cannot be, given the state of the country as it is today with completely skewed national imperatives, and a state whose writ is eroding by the day.

For, how can Pakistan educate its children in halfway decent schools; or give its people halfway decent healthcare and housing when only three per cent of the budget goes to the social sector? How can the people feel at peace when the mainstream press carries photographs of private, mark, anti-aircraft guns deployed in a cotton field in Sindh?

Instead of looking towards others it is time we sat up and took notice of the dire situation we are in. And jolly well did something about it.


--------------


Oh the Deserter is back with another conspiracy of his :lol:

What a loser.

Anywaz, i think the Deserter missed this very IMPORTANT point in Gen Kiyani's presentation:
......As to the much-maligned Pakistan's 'strategic depth' desire, the general told the correspondents that what Pakistan means by this is not any greed for Afghan territory, but an abiding interest in "a peaceful, stable and friendly Afghanistan". Nothing less, nothing more; Pakistan has strategic interests in a peaceful and stable Afghanistan, irrespective of who rules it.....
Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]


What a thick-head he is!
 
if India can train sirilankans, Bhutanis-participate with France, USA, Russia and so many countries in Naval and maritime exercises- Then why not Pakistan can desire (by virtue of its geo graphic location) to have Afghanistan stabilized in a way Pak-Afghan joint trg and cooperation is possible.

Stability of Pakistan is directly related to stability of Afghanistan. From last three decades, due to Afghan unstability (interest of Russia-CIA, then AlQaida-CIA, now Taliban-CIA-RAW) Pakistan is under heavy economic, political, ethnic, religious and terrorism crisis.

History is evident in any problem to Afghanistan, Afghanis-CIA have taken Pakistan on Board. Therefore:
Pakistan needs a stable and friendly Afghanistan for no future crisis if possible.
 
Daily Times -analysis: A ‘friendly’ Afghanistan? —Shahid Ilyas

The risk of failure and backfiring are much higher in trying to install a friendly government in a foreign country than in attempts to develop friendly relations with an incumbent government. The failure of Pakistan’s Afghan policy is a glaring example in this regard

Pakistan indeed needs
to have a friendly Afghanistan, just as Afghanistan needs a friendly Pakistan. The two countries are dependent on each other for their national security, economic development, peace and social cohesion. Pakistan serves as a trade route for Afghanistan, and Afghanistan is crucial for the fulfilment of Pakistan’s ambitions of becoming an energy corridor for Central Asian oil and gas.

Having said that, the question how the objective of ensuring a friendly relationship between the two countries could be achieved needs analysis and answer. Here we focus on Pakistan’s efforts towards ensuring a friendly Afghanistan.

Since 1976, when Islamic-fundamentalist elements from Afghanistan were given shelter by the Bhutto regime in Pakistan, the strategy of Pakistan’s security and political establishment has been to invest its scarce resources in installing a friendly government in Kabul. Developing friendly relations with an existing government is different from installing a friendly government. The basis of Pakistan’s policy has been to install a friendly government in Kabul at any cost rather than working towards establishing friendly relations with the existing government.

The implementation of each of these two strategies demands different methods. The risk of failure and backfiring are much higher in trying to install a friendly government in a foreign country than in attempts to develop friendly relations with an incumbent government. The failure of Pakistan’s Afghan policy is a glaring example in this regard.

Given its track record and current media and intelligence reports, one can rightly conclude that the Pakistani establishment believes that any group controlling the government in Afghanistan, with the exception of Taliban-style pan-Islamic ideologues, is against its national interests. The groups it perceives as adversaries include the Northern Alliance, the well-to-do and educated segments of Pashtuns as represented by personalities like President Hamid Karzai and Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, intellectuals, the Afghan diaspora and indeed all the Pashtuns who reject the Taliban ideology. Therefore, the Pakistani establishment thinks that all these groups need to be kept out of government in Kabul; hence its support for the Taliban.

We need to be assured about the fact that the Taliban are a marginal force in Afghanistan. Support for them even in the Pashtun south and southeast is microscopic. (Those who want them in power in Kabul would like us to believe that they are the future of Afghanistan. But ground realities present a different picture.) Therefore, it is virtually impossible for the Taliban to have control or to have a considerable share in the government in Afghanistan, because of the absence of public support for them. (The fact that the Taliban once did control Kabul is a completely different story, because the Afghans of that time were fed-up with warlords and hence they supported the newly emerged Taliban. They were tested and rejected.) It seems that the only option available to Pakistan — which can also be conducive for its own stability — is to find ways to work with the existing government in Kabul. The failure of 37 years (1973-2010) of efforts and investment in trying to install a government in a foreign sovereign state should be enough for us to realise that this policy is not working.

Pakistan is now reaping what it has sown in the previous three decades, resulting in substantial miseries for its own population, which is already teetering under grinding poverty. Its policy has further pushed Afghanistan towards India, as a result of which India’s influence and involvement in that country is at a record high. Furthermore, this policy has further alienated the Pakistani political and educated Pashtun classes from the state of Pakistan. The Pakistani Pashtuns consider Pakistan’s interference in Afghanistan as genocide and a challenge to their identity.

Moreover, Pakistan’s support to the Afghan Taliban gave birth to the Taliban here who are hitting the Pakistani state hard. They are now active in every city, town and village of the country, most notably in Lahore and Karachi. They have not yet appointed ‘shadow governors’. If they do, they are likely to be much stronger than the so-called ‘shadow governors’ in Afghanistan — thanks to Pakistan’s flawed Afghan policy characterised by the establishment of thousands of madrassas in every nook and corner of the country, indoctrinating millions of Pakistani youth, who are ever ready to take up arms at the call for jihad by the mullah, a phenomenon Afghanistan does not face.

Most of us look at Pakistan’s Afghan policy in the context of its enmity with India. This phenomenon is being called the policy of ‘strategic depth’, which means that Pakistan needs Afghanistan as a backyard under its thumb where its forces can retreat in case of a war with India. But too much emphasis on ‘strategic depth’ for understanding Pakistan’s policy looks misplaced. More important than strategic depth in Pakistan’s quest for controlling Afghanistan is its apprehensions regarding the Durand Line. The line, drawn in 1893 by the British imperial power in India, which divided Pashtuns into two groups — the ones living in Pakistan today and the ones living in Afghanistan — has never been ratified by any Afghan Loya Jirga or parliament. The Afghans still lay claim to the Pashtun territories between the Khyber Pass and the river Indus. Pakistan believes that it can get this agreement ratified by Taliban-style and pan-Islamist ideologues, who in any case do not believe in national borders. Interestingly, when the Taliban occupied most of Afghanistan with the help of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, they refused to ratify the Durand Line agreement, saying that the matter will be looked into once Afghanistan was peaceful and proper institutions were in place.

War in Afghanistan produces unrest in Pakistan, given the two countries’ proximity to each other and their ethnic composition. Therefore, considering that the Taliban have almost zero chances to rule Afghanistan or to have a substantial share in the government, Pakistan must find ways of achieving its goal of a friendly Afghanistan by keeping in mind the ground realities. The existence of Afghanistan sans the Taliban is a big possibility on the ground. How far, and when, Pakistan realises this truth will largely determine its own future.

The writer is a freelance columnist hailing from Waziristan. He can be reached at ilyasakbarkhan@gmail.com
 
After Strategic Depth: Remembering Eqbal Ahmad Pak Tea House

Eqbal Ahmad’s death anniversary passed away without the pomp and galore that we assign to such events. Perhaps the best way to remember Eqbal Ahmad is through his insightful, almost prophetic writings. This one in particular is a grim reminder of the blunders that we have committed in the past that are now haunting us in our face. Pak Tea House pays tribute to EA by posting this piece and inviting a discussion on the key issues highlighted therein.

What After Strategic Depth? [Dawn, 23 August 1998]

Eqbal Ahmad

In his letter to Zarb-i-Momin, the Taliban publication, Mr. Azam Tariq, leader of Pakistan’s violently sectarian Sipah-i-Sahaba party, is ecstatic over his ideological brothers’ recent victories.

His ecstasy is shared by Pakistan’s national security managers, but for non-ideological reasons. The attainment of ‘strategic depth’ had been a prime object of Pakistan’s Afghanistan policy since the days of General Ziaul Haq.

In recent years, the Taliban replaced Gulbadin Hikmatyar as the instrument of its attainment. Their latest victories, especially their capture of Mazar-i-Sharif, the nerve centre of northern Afghanistan, brings the Pakistani quest close to fulfilment if, that is, in addition to residing in some military minds such a thing as ‘strategic depth’ does exist in the real world.

In does not. In military thought, it is a non-concept unless one is referring to a hard-to-reach place where a defeated army might cocoon. Far from improving it, the Taliban’s victory is likely to augment Pakistan’s political and strategic predicament. The reasons are numerous, and compelling. Consider, for example, the following:

A fundamental requirement of national security is that a country enjoy good relations with its neighbours. If one is unfortunate enough to have a neighbour as an adversary, then its security interest are best served by maintaining excellent relations with the others around it. Pakistan has had the misfortune of being born in an adversarial relationship with India, a populous and resource-filled country. This enmity shows no sign of abating, and is now augmented by the nuclear arms race and proxy warfare. The growth in provincial and ethnic discontents renders Pakistan especially vulnerable now to covert warfare. In this critical period the country needs friends in the region. The regional environment has been favourable to consolidating old friendships and forging new ones. Instead, Islamabad is alienating both actual and potential friends.

Until recently, Pakistan has always had good relations with Iran and China. In this decade new states emerged in Central Asia augmenting the number of Pakistan’s potential trading partners and strategic allies. Cold war’s end also ended its hostility with Russia and held the promise of friendly regional alignment. Afghanistan was long an irritating but innocuous adversary with territorial claims on NWFP, Pakistan’s largely Pashto speaking province.

The Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s support of the anti-Communist Mujahideen ended Islamabad’s hostile relations with Kabul, and rendered its influence dominant over Afghanistan. Pakistan has misused this gain to its detriment. Its Afghanistan policy – the quest of a mirage misnamed ‘strategic depth’ – has deeply alienated trusty old allies while closing the door to new friendships. Its national security managers have in fact squandered historic opportunities and produced a new set of problems for Pakistan’s security.

Teheran is openly hostile to Islamabad’s support of the Taliban. “We had an agreement with Pakistan that the Afghan problem will not be resolved through war,” said the judicious former President Hashemi Rafsanjani in his Friday khutaba last week. “This has happened now and we simply cannot accept it.” Thereafter, hundreds of Iranians protested in front of the Pakistan embassy in Teheran against the “fanatical, mediaeval Taliban” who held eleven Iranian diplomats hostage and mercilessly bombed civilian quarters of Bamiyan, a predominantly Shi’a town. Iran’s Foreign Minister, Kamal Kharazi, called Taliban’s capture of Mazar-i-Sharif a “threat to the region”. A resolution of the United Nations Security Council appeared to concur. Russia issued a warning. Tajikistan and Uzbekistan responded to Taliban advances by shoring up their defences.

Pakistan’s foreign office responded with strongly worded declarations of innocence and neutrality in Afghanistan. Not one diplomat at the UN headquarters in New York regarded these claims as credible. This worldwide loss of credibility is hardly a foreign policy achievement. Also, denials are not a substitute for policy. The fact is that Iran, an important and traditionally friendly neighbour, is deeply alienated by what it regards as Pakistan’s sponsorship of the Taliban. Russia, a major power, protests it. Recently independent states – Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kirghizia – that had once looked up to Islamabad for help and guidance now regard it with apprehension. Pakistan appears today morally and politically isolated, a condition it shares with the Taliban who present to the world a most distorted and uniquely repugnant visage of Islam. It is not possible yet to surmise the consequences of this isolation, but it is certain that it will greatly augment the sense of insecurity that for five decades has haunted Pakistan and contributed much to its misery and militarisation.

The cost of Islamabad’s Afghan policy have been augmenting since 1980 when Mohammed Ziaul Haq proudly declared Pakistan a “front line state” in the cold war. Those costs – already unbearable in proliferation of guns, heroin, and armed fanatics – are likely now to multiply in myriad ways. The Taliban will certainly be assisted by Islamabad to consolidate their precarious conquests. Successful or not, this will be an expensive undertaking, an expense we are ill-prepared to bear. Taliban victories have not put an end to their challengers; they are there and do not lack sponsors. The prospect is for protracted proxy warfare. It may cost some billions to keep the Taliban in saddle, assuming that we avoid being sucked into a larger war with Iran or Russia or both.

Afghanistan’s reconstruction cost is conservatively estimated at some $40 billion. We cannot muster such amounts even for ourselves, so who will keep the Taliban in business? The strategic dreamers of Islamabad dream of dollar laden Saudi princes, Emirate Sheikhs, and American oil tycoons laying transnational pipelines from Turkmenistan to Karachi. They are veterans of false and deadly dreams such as the great Kashmiri uprising in support of Operation Gibraltar in 1965, or the powerful reinforcements which the American Seventh Fleet was bringing to Pakistan’s army in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh.

Pakistan is being trapped again in risky illusions, and again the people not the decision-makers will pay the price. Without the resources of a great power Pakistan has entered the game – both nuclear and non-nuclear – that great powers found difficult to sustain. So help us God!

The domestic costs of Pakistan’s friendly proximity to the Taliban are incalculable and potentially catastrophic. Our embroilment: willy nilly, in the Ben Laden affair is a case in point. More importantly, the Taliban’s is the most retrograde political movement in the history of Islam. The warlords who proscribe music and sports in Afghanistan, inflict harsh punishments upon men for trimming their beards, flog taxi drivers for carrying women passengers, prevent sick women from being treated by male physicians, banish girls from schools and women from the work-place are not returning Afghanistan to its traditional Islamic way of life as the western media reports sanctimoniously.

They are devoid of the ethics, aesthetics, humanism, and Sufi sensibilities of traditional Muslims, including Afghans of yesteryear. To call them “mediaeval” as did the protesters in Therean is to insult the age of Hafiz and Saadi, of Rabi’a Basri and Mansur al-Hallaj, of Amir Khusrau and Hazrat Nizamuddin. The Taliban are the expression of a modern disease, symptoms of a social cancer which shall destroy Muslim societies if its growth is not arrested and the disease is not eliminated. It is prone to spreading, and the Taliban will be the most deadly communicators of this cancer if they remain so organically linked to Pakistan. The Sipah-i-Sahaba leader’s greetings to his Afghan co-believers is but one signal of the menace ahead.

Policy-makers in Islamabad assume that a Taliban dominated government in Kabul will be permanently friendly towards Pakistan. The notion of ‘strategic depth’ is founded on this presumption. This too is an illusion. The chances are that if they remain in power, the Taliban shall turn on Pakistan, linking their brand of ‘Islamism’ with a revived movement for Pakhtunistan. I have met some of them and found ethnic nationalism lurking just below their ‘Islamic’ skin. It is silly to presume their debt to Pakistan as an impediment to their ambitions. Old loyalties rarely stand in the way of new temptations. Also, as the threat of local rivals recedes, their resentments against Pakistan’s government shall rapidly augment, as Islamabad will not be in a position to meet their expectations of aid. The convergence of ethnic nationalism and religion can mobilise people decisively. However inadvertently, Islamabad is setting the stage for the emergence in the next decade of a powerful Pakhtunistan movement.

There may still be time to help avert the disasters that are likely to accrue from the Taliban’s domination of Afghanistan. Our interest lies in the establishment of a common peace there, one as welcome to Afghanistan’s other neighbours as to us. Our future is best served if power in Afghanistan is pluralistically shared by its ethnic groups, for that alone can inhibit the pursuit of ethnically based territorial ambition. If we must live with a theocracy next door, it is better to live with an enlightened rather than a barbaric version of it. Also, if Afghanistan is to regain life, it needs a government hospitable to international aid; the Taliban are not.

It is unlikely that the architects of Islamabad’s Afghanistan policy shall pay heed to arguments such as these. Dissenting points of view have always been ignored in Pakistan with tragic consequences. After hesitating for a while on the side of wisdom, Ayub Khan ignored them in 1965. We were relatively young and gullible then, so they lost a costly war and declared victory. In 1971, Yahya Khan, Z.A. Bhutto and others dismissed the warnings of impending disaster as treachery, and lost half the country. Z.A. Bhutto rejected friendly early criticism of the failings of his government, suppressed the magazine in which they were published, and ruled on to be overthrown and executed by a usurper of his choice. He alone paid for his blunders personally; for those of the others only the land and the people continue to pay. Yet they do not hear and do not see even the obvious. No wonder they are looking for ‘strategic depth’.
 
The great Eqbal Ahmed. Sadly, less than one tenth of even the "educated" people know about him. His death was a loss for Pakistan, and the entire world.
 
The strategic depth here i believe in the sense is that any country who thinks is the super power of the world or the sole ruler could be pulled over to Afghanistan to fight Afghan people if they have guts. If it wins over the Afghan people then The world will accept it as sole superpower otherwise they will loose the status of world super power. The reason is that the Islam is left in Afghanistan in its original shape no sects nothing else. The people of Afghanistan fight with the power of Eman and Allah's will so no body can win over them.... that is why its called the graveyard of Empires. In the true sense aulia-e-Allah are fighting with the help of Malaikah....as is explained in quran : when ever a Muslim fight for Allah's sake , Allah send the military of malaikah to help them. :pakistan::pdf:
 
The Afghanistan has been part of Pakistan for centuries since Islam came there and India. So both the countries should be united and Durand line be removed which is put by cunning British Empire to divide the Muslims and rule them. By uniting the two countries as one country under the name of Islam is the strategic depth of Pakistan...in all sense...this what anti pak or anti-Islam dont let it happen. Anywayz now the time has come and a sole super power of Islam will rise with the Help of Allah...which is our destiny and as seen by Allama Iqbal in his writings.:pakistan::pdf:
 
The Afghanistan has been part of Pakistan for centuries since Islam came there and India. So both the countries should be united and Durand line be removed which is put by cunning British Empire to divide the Muslims and rule them. By uniting the two countries as one country under the name of Islam is the strategic depth of Pakistan...in all sense...this what anti pak or anti-Islam dont let it happen. Anywayz now the time has come and a sole super power of Islam will rise with the Help of Allah...which is our destiny and as seen by Allama Iqbal in his writings.:pakistan::pdf:

Thanks for the nice proposal, but i dont think people will agree with you.

The Afghanistan has been part of Pakistan for centuries since Islam came there and India.

i dont think so.
 
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