pakistani342
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@A-Team, below is an article published by retired Pakistani diplomat (in an Indian paper) -- If you want to know what the GHQ thinks, I'd suggest you read it here.
I hate to say it -- the GHQ is going to unleash a whirlwind in Afghanistan, Pakistan will get singed too -- but I think the thinking to "level Afghanistan (the gains since 2001)" is taking hold.
Before you replay how regional cooperation can do this or that -- Afghanistan's only reality is:
1. What the GHQ thinks and
2. Whether the GHQ can act on its thinking
All else on what can be, could be, should be is sadly irrelevant.
...
The establishment — military brass and intelligence apparatchiks — has been peeved, badly stung, by the Afghan government’s open and ‘blatant’ hobnobbing and flirtation with Pakistan’s arch rival, India. For years since the Americans hunkered down in Afghanistan, Islamabad has watched with sheer angst the rising curve of Indo-Afghanistan co-operation. Modi’s high-visibility, media-focused engagements in Afghanistan last month — dedicating a newly built dam in Herat and inaugurating the new parliament building in Kabul — were as good as hard evidence for Pakistan’s policy makers that Kabul was ‘sleeping with the enemy.’ Afghanistan has been seen by Pakistan’s omnipotent military establishment, traditionally, as its bailiwick, its backyard that mustn’t be open to any outsider’s poaching. The old logic for it was that Afghanistan provided Pakistan the much-needed ‘strategic depth’ against India. Pakistan readily became the fulcrum of the organised ‘jihad’ against the Russians out of the same consideration, i.e. it must be seen as a genuine guardian of Afghanistan’s interest.
... Hamid Karzai was a huge disappointment to Islamabad because he, despite his years in Pakistan as a refugee, not only challenged Pakistan’s proclivity to treat Afghanistan as its turf, embarked on flirtation with Delhi, garnering benefits from Pakistan’s rival in spades.
Ashraf Ghani, Karzai’s successor, was expected to be more even-handed between Islamabad and Delhi — and his initial gestures to Islamabad were reassuring — but he, too, seems to have gravitated, daringly and, to Pakistan’s key policy planners provocatively, to Delhi so much so that he has the gall to reopen the old and settled issue of the boundary with Pakistan. Islamabad — GHQ and its brass, to be precise — thinks time is now to nip the ‘evil’ of Ghani in the bud and call his bluff early. His sin of consorting with India at the expense of Pakistan’s core interests is unpardonable in the eyes of Pakistani pundits.
I hate to say it -- the GHQ is going to unleash a whirlwind in Afghanistan, Pakistan will get singed too -- but I think the thinking to "level Afghanistan (the gains since 2001)" is taking hold.
Before you replay how regional cooperation can do this or that -- Afghanistan's only reality is:
1. What the GHQ thinks and
2. Whether the GHQ can act on its thinking
All else on what can be, could be, should be is sadly irrelevant.
...
The establishment — military brass and intelligence apparatchiks — has been peeved, badly stung, by the Afghan government’s open and ‘blatant’ hobnobbing and flirtation with Pakistan’s arch rival, India. For years since the Americans hunkered down in Afghanistan, Islamabad has watched with sheer angst the rising curve of Indo-Afghanistan co-operation. Modi’s high-visibility, media-focused engagements in Afghanistan last month — dedicating a newly built dam in Herat and inaugurating the new parliament building in Kabul — were as good as hard evidence for Pakistan’s policy makers that Kabul was ‘sleeping with the enemy.’ Afghanistan has been seen by Pakistan’s omnipotent military establishment, traditionally, as its bailiwick, its backyard that mustn’t be open to any outsider’s poaching. The old logic for it was that Afghanistan provided Pakistan the much-needed ‘strategic depth’ against India. Pakistan readily became the fulcrum of the organised ‘jihad’ against the Russians out of the same consideration, i.e. it must be seen as a genuine guardian of Afghanistan’s interest.
... Hamid Karzai was a huge disappointment to Islamabad because he, despite his years in Pakistan as a refugee, not only challenged Pakistan’s proclivity to treat Afghanistan as its turf, embarked on flirtation with Delhi, garnering benefits from Pakistan’s rival in spades.
Ashraf Ghani, Karzai’s successor, was expected to be more even-handed between Islamabad and Delhi — and his initial gestures to Islamabad were reassuring — but he, too, seems to have gravitated, daringly and, to Pakistan’s key policy planners provocatively, to Delhi so much so that he has the gall to reopen the old and settled issue of the boundary with Pakistan. Islamabad — GHQ and its brass, to be precise — thinks time is now to nip the ‘evil’ of Ghani in the bud and call his bluff early. His sin of consorting with India at the expense of Pakistan’s core interests is unpardonable in the eyes of Pakistani pundits.