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Pakistan Lost Its Chance For Security

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Pakistan Lost Its Chance For Security


WASHINGTON -- As America begins to pull back its troops from Afghanistan, there's one consequence that gets little notice but is likely to have lasting impact: Pakistan is losing the best chance in its history to gain political control over all of its territory -- including the warlike tribal areas along the frontier.

Pakistan has squandered the opportunity presented by having a large U.S.-led army just over the border in Afghanistan. Rather than work with the U.S. to stabilize a lawless sanctuary full of warlords and terrorists, the Pakistanis decided to play games with these outlaw groups. As a result, Pakistan and its neighbors will be less secure, probably for decades.


This is a catastrophic mistake for Pakistan. Instead of drawing the tribal areas into a nation that finally, for the first time since independence in 1947, could be integrated and unified, the Pakistani military decided to keep the ethnic pot boiling. It was a triumph of short-term thinking over long; of scheming over strategy.

America has made many blunders in Afghanistan, which will have their own consequences. But U.S. problems are modest compared to those of Pakistan, which nearly 65 years after independence still doesn't have existential security as a nation. Like most big mistakes people make in life, this is one that Pakistan's military leaders made with their eyes wide open.

The G-8 and NATO will hold summit meetings in the coming days, and announce the exit strategy from Afghanistan. Fortunately, President Obama is planning a gradual transition, with at least 20,000 U.S. troops remaining until 2024, if necessary, to train the Afghan army, hunt al-Qaeda and steady Afghans against the danger of civil war.

But what can Western leaders say when it comes to Pakistan? Basically, the Pakistanis blew it. By playing a hedging game, they missed a moment that's not likely to return, when a big Western army of well over 100,0000 soldiers was prepared to help them. Instead, Islamabad used the inevitability that America would be leaving eventually as an argument for creating a buffer zone that was inhabited by a murderous mélange of the Taliban, the Haqqani network and other Pashtun warlords.

Yes, it would have been hard to bring under Pakistani law the rebellious badlands known as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. I have a shelf full of books describing how the process of pacification eluded the British raj and was gingerly handed over to the new government of Pakistan like a bag of snakes. But hard is not impossible -- especially when you have modern communications and transport, and the most potent army in history ready to help.

What comes through reading these old books is how long the problem has persisted. A 1901 British "Report on Waziristan and Its Tribes" lists the tribes, clans and sub-clans the British were paying off more than a century ago through their political agents rather than risk a fight with these stubborn warriors. After their disastrous Afghan wars, the British decided that payoffs made more sense than shoot-outs -- a decision the Pakistanis have repeated ever since at the price of permanent insecurity.

The notion of the tribal areas as a warrior kingdom impenetrable to outsiders has a romantic "Orientalist" tone. I was disabused of it in 2009 when I met a group of younger tribal leaders who had gathered in Islamabad to tell U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke that the region needed economic development, good governance and less hanky-panky from the central government. In a move that embodied everything that's wrong with the Pakistani approach, these brave young men were intercepted on the way home by the Inter-Services Intelligence and quizzed about why they had dared talk to the farangi.

Surely the most foolish move the Pakistanis made was to compromise with the terrorist Haqqani network, which operates from its base in Miran Shah, a few hundred yards from a Pakistani military garrison. This was like playing with a venomous cobra -- something the Pakistanis seem to imagine is an essential part of regional realpolitik. No, you kill a cobra. If the ISI had been up to the task, it would have had some formidable snake-killing allies.

The Pakistanis lost a chance over the past decade to build and secure their country. It won't come back again in this form. That's a small problem for the U.S. and its allies, but a big problem for Pakistan. What a shame to see a wonderful nation miss its moment so completely.
RealClearPolitics - Pakistan Lost Its Chance For Security
 
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Once Nato and other forces are out from Afganistan then their will be none to feed terorrist to blast Pakistan. The role of India will also decrease.
 
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Another Bharat Verma type analysis which is completely off the ground fact..and only bashes or belittles Pakistan.
 
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Once Nato and other forces are out from Afganistan then their will be none to feed terorrist to blast Pakistan. The role of India will also decrease.
They won't be completely out in any case. As far as India is concerned, only time will tell.
 
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They won't be completely out in any case. As far as India is concerned, only time will tell.

it doesnt change the situation whether they are in or out. Taliban are still here as they were in last decade. Yes about india time will kick india out of afganistan..
 
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And then the Pakistani Taliban will rise in Pakistan.
All Pakistani men will grow beard. Will wear mini shalwars. All women will wear burqas. Not sure if internet will be allowed.
it doesnt change the situation whether they are in or out. Taliban are still here as they were in last decade. Yes about india time will kick india out of afganistan..
 
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Time has a strange habit of kicking you when you least expecting it ..good luck
 
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Ah, Pakistanis have lot riding on Americans leaving Afghanistan in 2014..Lets see how it turns out.
 
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And then the Pakistani Taliban will rise in Pakistan.
All Pakistani men will grow beard. Will wear mini shalwars. All women will wear burqas. Not sure if internet will be allowed.
:lol:I just don't understand the support for Taliban amongst the Pakistani posters here. When the time would come, hardly anyone would want to give up all their luxuries of life and live the Taliban way.
 
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And then the Pakistani Taliban will rise in Pakistan.
All Pakistani men will grow beard. Will wear mini shalwars. All women will wear burqas. Not sure if internet will be allowed.

when taliban were created back in history there were no effects on Pakistani society. So again we wont have.
 
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its only pakistan is playing games? lolz every party is playing but when they lose their game they blame and bash pakistan lolz

Here's the thing. Every nation has played games in Afghanistan. But the only one which stands to loose stability is Pakistan. The fear Pakistan had of Afghanistan becoming an Indian ally seems to have overshadowed the possibility of Pakistan gaining control over its tribelands and at the same time having an ally in Afghanistan.

Net result, Karzai govt is closer to India than it truly should have been, US no longer believes in Pakistan as an ally, Your own tribesmen kill your own soldiers and the 20,000 US troops that stay back will most likely train the Afghan Army and I'm guessing the doctrine and attitude passed won't be pro-Pakistani at all.
 
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I'm guessing the doctrine and attitude passed won't be pro-Pakistani at all.
Exactly.Manipulation of mind and opinion is what US has been doing for the past 10 years.Consequently the Afghan opinion towards Pakistan has become very negative.
 
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