Dedicated to all who love and value Pakistan before any other:
A tattered coat upon a stick
Ejaz Haider
While in Islamabad, US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief Leon Panetta told the highest echelons of Pakistani government that Predator attacks inside Pakistani territory will not be stopped.
The report in this newspaper quoted diplomatic and government sources as saying: He [Panetta] refused to end the drone attacks in Pakistan, saying a number of top Al Qaeda leaders had been killed in the assaults.
This, for now, has put paid to assurances given by the top government leadership that because the United States is in the process of reviewing its strategy, it would come around to Islamabads viewpoint on this issue as well.
Far away in Brussels, Richard Holbrooke, President Obamas special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, was quoted as saying at the Brussels Forum that The heart of the problem for the West is in western Pakistan. But there are not going to be US or NATO troops on the ground in Pakistan. There is a red line for the government of Pakistan and one which we must respect.
What should we make of this?
First, a word about the new US administrations review process, a concept completely misunderstood.
A review means the US wants to have a more effective Afghanistan policy i.e., it would continue with what it has done, or is doing, successfully and change course only where it has failed. In other words, the US would build on its strengths and address its weaknesses.
If this obvious definition of a review process is accepted, then it should be clear that the US would not agree to stop drone attacks that have proved successful and taken a heavy toll of top Taliban-Al Qaeda leadership.
At this point one must also refer to what Holbrooke has said in Brussels about the red line. This red line has remained effective so far not only because of a technicality but also for concrete operational reasons.
The technicality refers to the problem of justifying foreign troops on the ground (like the ground infiltration near Angoor Ada on September 3, 2008 by US special forces) as opposed to suspected US strikes from the air.
There are two technical points here, as identified by Ahmer Bilal Soofi, one of our leading experts in International Law. One, airspace violation is less tangible and therefore less serious than ground incursion. Two, even more than that the gravity of the airspace violation has to be seen on the basis of the reaction of the state whose airspace is being violated.
Seen from this perspective, the Government of Pakistan has not done much and consistently except sending in occasional notes verbales and summoning the US ambassador only once and that too when Pakistan army troops got killed in an air raid. That summoning had less to do with the violation and was more about the killing of Pakistani troops.
But more than the legal-technical side of it, respect for the red line about ground incursions springs from operational dangers inherent in sending in troops. Ground infiltrations, even when based on credible intelligence, can go wrong because of a number of factors (a discussion of those factors is outside the scope of this article).
Also, if Predator attacks have been generally successful in taking out targets, it makes no sense, both because of legalities as well as operational constraints, to opt for ground infiltration. Put simply, the red line Holbrooke talked about draws respect for three reasons: it would be virtually impossible for any Pakistani government not to retaliate to such incursions into Pakistani territory; ground infiltration will be cost-heavy for invading troops for many reasons including hostility from Pakistan; drone strikes are relatively easier to live with by Islamabad and they have been effective for the US.
This is why we have one statement by Holbrooke in Brussels and another by Panetta in Islamabad. What works will continue to work; what is risky and untried will remain on hold until what works is working and circumstances do not change drastically for US-led forces to take the risks involved in ground infiltration.
Let it be said that were such change of circumstances to come to pass and if the US thought that the cost of inaction on the ground was heavier than acting on the ground, it would act. The red line would be tested at that point and it would then be left to Islamabad to react to the crossing of that line by a foreign government.
So far, however, that point has not been reached. In fact, not entering into Pakistani territory is a policy NATO General Secretary Jaap de Hoop Scheffer also talked about when I met him in Brussels as part of a delegation of Pakistani journalists. Scheffer categorically said that NATO had absolutely no plans to cross into Pakistani tribal areas. This was also voiced by NATO spokesperson James Appathurai.
This said, the question of how Pakistan should react to drone attacks remains. I have often said in this space that I do not believe that these attacks are carried out without the knowledge of the Pakistani government. There is enough evidence to support this assertion. But let us, for the sake of the argument, accept the official version i.e., we know nothing about them, which is why we have made such a fuss.
To this then we need to apply a simple framework through some questions. Is it correct that we are fighting an enemy in the tribal areas, an enemy that poses an existential threat to Pakistan? Is the United States an ally, despite many areas of friction?
If the answer to both questions is yes, then we need to ask another. If someone is killing the enemies of this state, even if for its own interests, should we be too bothered about that, especially if we may not have the capacity to do what is required? As for the issue of sovereignty, it is a bit more complex than the simplistic construct we put on it whether wittingly or otherwise. Consider.
Sovereignty works at two levels: internal and external. In fact, much before a state invokes it vis-à-vis the outside world, it is supposed to have actualised it internally, that supposition being the basis of the very existence of a state and its claim to being such an entity.
In a situation where a states writ is being eroded from the inside, any attempt from the outside to restore that writ, far from an invasion of that states sovereignty, is an action necessary to help it reclaim its internal sovereignty.
It is somewhat intriguing that Pakistanis should consider drone attacks meant to take out the enemies of the Pakistani state as an attack on its sovereignty while that sovereignty, to quote Yeats take on old age, has increasingly come internally to look like A tattered coat upon a stick.
To be fair to the world and ourselves, if our state had not lost its internal sovereignty and thus worried everyone, we would not have seen these attacks on our sovereignty. The thing to do therefore, before we lecture the world on sovereignty, is to reclaim it at home.
Ejaz Haider is Op-Ed Editor of Daily Times and Consulting Editor of The Friday Times. He can be reached at sapper@dailytimes.com.pk