ISLAMABAD, Pakistan As Pakistans powerful military leaders seek to overcome extraordinary public criticism after the killing of Osama bin Laden this month in a Pakistani garrison city, they are also facing seething anger in barracks across the country.
Some of the outrage among the ranks stems from shame that the Pakistani military failed to locate bin Laden or detect the stealth U.S. raid on bin Ladens compound in Abbottabad, according to officers and military analysts. But most of it is directed toward the United States, an ally that has given billions of dollars to help sustain Pakistans counterterrorism efforts but is voicing rising concern that the countrys military is not dedicated to that fight.
Members of Pakistans army, which by some accounts is the worlds fifth-largest, have said little publicly about the U.S. operation. But interviews with officers suggest that there is a raucous and broad internal debate one that is unlikely to undermine the institution, military analysts said, but that bodes poorly for U.S. hopes of an expanded Pakistani effort against Islamist militants.
To head off the discontent, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, Pakistans army chief, made town-hall-style appearances last week at five garrisons, where he faced barbed questions from officers about the U.S. raid, according to some who attended. After a 45-minute address to the 5th Corps in the southern port city of Karachi, Kayani took queries for three hours. Attendees said questioners focused on the perceived affront in Abbottabad and why Pakistan, in the words of one officer, did not retaliate.
In a meeting Sunday with visiting Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), Kayani relayed the intense feelings of the rank and file, according to a two-sentence military statement. Those sentiments have sparked fears of morale and discipline problems, retired Pakistani defense officials said.
Its never good for a military of that size to have a feeling of resentment, said retired Lt. Gen. Talat Masood, a security analyst. The discovery of bin Laden, he added, has stung them as much as it has stung the whole world.
Even so, no officers interviewed said that the bin Laden killing had convinced them that Pakistan needs to work harder to find terrorists or shift the focus of its defense strategy from archenemy India. Instead, some expressed hope that their superiors would stand up to the United States, by either cutting ties or extracting guarantees of an end to unilateral U.S. actions.
Pakistan should immediately suspend cooperation with the U.S., said one officer in the countrys north, who, like others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to discuss the matter publicly. In the lower ranks, anti-Americanism is at its highest.
Pakistani army’s rank and file seethes at U.S. over bin Laden raid - The Washington Post
Some of the outrage among the ranks stems from shame that the Pakistani military failed to locate bin Laden or detect the stealth U.S. raid on bin Ladens compound in Abbottabad, according to officers and military analysts. But most of it is directed toward the United States, an ally that has given billions of dollars to help sustain Pakistans counterterrorism efforts but is voicing rising concern that the countrys military is not dedicated to that fight.
Members of Pakistans army, which by some accounts is the worlds fifth-largest, have said little publicly about the U.S. operation. But interviews with officers suggest that there is a raucous and broad internal debate one that is unlikely to undermine the institution, military analysts said, but that bodes poorly for U.S. hopes of an expanded Pakistani effort against Islamist militants.
To head off the discontent, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, Pakistans army chief, made town-hall-style appearances last week at five garrisons, where he faced barbed questions from officers about the U.S. raid, according to some who attended. After a 45-minute address to the 5th Corps in the southern port city of Karachi, Kayani took queries for three hours. Attendees said questioners focused on the perceived affront in Abbottabad and why Pakistan, in the words of one officer, did not retaliate.
In a meeting Sunday with visiting Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), Kayani relayed the intense feelings of the rank and file, according to a two-sentence military statement. Those sentiments have sparked fears of morale and discipline problems, retired Pakistani defense officials said.
Its never good for a military of that size to have a feeling of resentment, said retired Lt. Gen. Talat Masood, a security analyst. The discovery of bin Laden, he added, has stung them as much as it has stung the whole world.
Even so, no officers interviewed said that the bin Laden killing had convinced them that Pakistan needs to work harder to find terrorists or shift the focus of its defense strategy from archenemy India. Instead, some expressed hope that their superiors would stand up to the United States, by either cutting ties or extracting guarantees of an end to unilateral U.S. actions.
Pakistan should immediately suspend cooperation with the U.S., said one officer in the countrys north, who, like others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to discuss the matter publicly. In the lower ranks, anti-Americanism is at its highest.
Pakistani army’s rank and file seethes at U.S. over bin Laden raid - The Washington Post