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Pakistan's Critical Hour

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By Ahmed Rashid
Tuesday, May 5, 2009

LAHORE, Pakistan -- Pakistan is on the brink of chaos, and Congress is in a critical position: U.S. lawmakers can hasten that fateful process, halt it or even help turn things around. The speed and conditions with which Congress provides emergency aid to Islamabad will affect the Pakistani government and army's ability and will to resist the Taliban onslaught. It will also affect America's image in Pakistan and the region. Pakistanis are looking for evidence of the long-term U.S. commitment about which President Obama has spoken.

Since Obama announced his strategic review of U.S. policy on Afghanistan and Pakistan, worsening conditions here have nudged Afghanistan from the top of his foreign policy agenda. Pakistanis are beset by a galloping Taliban insurgency in the north that is based not just among Pashtuns, as in Afghanistan, but that has extensive links to al-Qaeda and jihadist groups in Punjab, Sindh and Baluchistan.

That means the Taliban offensive in northern Pakistan has the potential to become a nationwide movement within a few months. Violence is already spreading. In recent days, at least 36 people have been killed in Karachi.

In the past, many of these jihadist groups, including the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, have been fostered by Pakistan's army and intelligence services -- at the cost of global security, democracy and civil society. The Bush administration ignored this trend for years while it pumped more than $11 billion into Pakistan. The bulk of that funding went to the military, which bought arms to fight Pakistan's historic enemy, India, rather than the insurgency.

The army's recent counteroffensive against the Taliban was prompted in part by U.S. pressure and, more significant, by a dramatic shift in public opinion toward opposing the Taliban. Many people are beginning to see the country threatened by a bloody internal revolution. This public pressure can lead to a major change in army policies toward India and Afghanistan.

But the army and the civilian government still lack a comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy as well as a plan to deal with the 1 million refugees who have fled the fighting. Every government official I have met says that the country is bankrupt and that there is no money to fight the insurgency, let alone deal with the refugees.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has asked Congress for $497 million in emergency funds to stabilize Pakistan's economy, strengthen law enforcement and help the refugees. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has asked for $400 million in aid to the army, funds that would be monitored by U.S. Central Command. Lawmakers are hesitating, wanting to tie these emergency funds to the $83 billion the administration has asked for to fight the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But delays are dangerous. Congress should authorize these funds quickly, giving the Obama administration tools to convince the Pakistani people that it is standing behind them. Immediate aid, and providing U.S. helicopters for the army's use, would shore up Pakistanis' resolve and could help persuade the army to accept the counterinsurgency training the United States has offered for the past year (but which has been refused because of the army's focus on India).

Other legislation before Congress would provide $1.5 billion a year to Pakistan for the next five years. But the extensive conditions -- as varied as improving relations with India, fighting the Afghan Taliban and allowing the U.S. interrogation of Pakistani nuclear scientists -- are too much for any Pakistani government to accept and survive politically.

Certainly the United States can demand that its money be used for good purposes. The original Biden-Lugar bill introduced last year had the mix just right, setting down three strategic benchmarks -- that Pakistan be committed to fighting terrorism, that Pakistan remain a democracy (in other words, the army must not seize control), and that both nations provide public and official accountability for the funds. Unlike the extensive conditions that lawmakers are seeking to impose now, such broad parameters would provide space for further negotiations and progress between Pakistan and the United States.

Pakistan is deteriorating. Congress should pass the emergency funds quickly and, at minimum, offer the first year of the $1.5 billion without conditions to foster stability between the two sides at this critical juncture and ensure that the powerful right wing here has no excuse to once again decry U.S. aid as politically motivated. At the least, U.S. lawmakers should stipulate that aid for Pakistani and Western aid agencies involved in development, particularly agriculture, education and job creation, should not be conditioned.

U.S. flexibility to set a minimum of conditions that can be further negotiated once aid delivery begins could become a model for donors in Europe and Japan.

For three decades, I have written about the fire that Islamic militancy has lit in this region. I do not want to see my country go down because Congress is more concerned with minutiae than with the big picture. Yes, there must be a sea change in attitudes and policies in the army, intelligence services and civilian government. But tomorrow may be too late. Pakistan needs help today.

Ahmed Rashid - Pakistan's Critical Hour
 
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How Pakistan Can Fix Itself

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari arrives in Washington this week at a tough time for his country. Gen. David Petraeus has stated that the next two weeks are crucial to Pakistan's survival, while counterinsurgency expert David Kilcullen has claimed that the country could collapse within six months. Indeed, Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani, Pakistan's Army chief of staff, could declare martial law imminently if his military's counteroffensives in the Swat region prove ineffective against the Taliban. But irrespective of whether the Army takes over yet again from civilian authority, Pakistan has been a failure for over a decade, and the essential prescriptions to restore the state apply to both the elected government and the military -- and preferably a coordinated effort between the two.

Pakistan's hubristic and shortsighted leadership has been caught off guard by both the strength of the Taliban and virulent autonomy of militant groups such as Lashkar-e-Taiba. The current "wake-up" operations to retake Swat and Buner are crucial, but not decisive. Halting Predator drone strikes against senior al Qaeda and Taliban commanders would be no panacea either because American popularity and public acceptance of the Pakistani Army are already near zero in the tribal areas. Resentments will outlast such tactical switches. A much deeper strategy is needed that simultaneously tackles the political, military, economic, and social dimensions of Pakistan's failure.

It is now the Pakistani government that must actively, but constructively, agitate in restive provinces to regain the upper hand -- or risk losing even its nominal sovereignty over Pashtun-dominated areas forever. On the political level, the National Assembly must pass a constitutional amendment to integrate the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) into the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and mandate a fresh round of provincial elections. Only in this way can the government offer an alternative to the hands-off Frontier Crimes Regulation that has abetted the Taliban's rise in authority in the tribal regions. Zardari must also finally sign the Political Parties Act to enable the formation and campaigning of political groups. Together, these steps would constitute an assertion rather than a surrender of sovereignty -- and they would justify a strengthened presence of the Frontier Corps and police to monitor elections in the FATA while forcing the Taliban to consider secular options.

A smarter balance between military and police efforts is also needed. Pakistan should launch its own, indigenous version of the NATO-led provincial reconstruction teams (PRTs) that have had some success in maintaining local order, building relationships with district-level authorities, and stimulating small-scale economic activity in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Pakistani government's focus to date has been almost exclusively on military-driven counterinsurgency, but real success requires boosting police recruitment and training while deploying civilian forces to oversee the construction of roads, schools, hospitals, and government offices. For its part, the military must now focus on internal defense, disrupting militant networks that have gained strength even in the Punjabi heartland.

Under the forced apathy of ineffective governance, Pakistan's disaffected masses have developed greater tolerance for antigovernment forces such as the Taliban, no matter how intolerant they are. The silent majority is increasingly becoming acquiescent, allowing radicals to find safe haven among them rather than repelling this insidious threat. While wealthy Pashtuns flee Taliban intimidation in Peshawar and some of the elites of Islamabad and Lahore gloomily consider abandoning Pakistan altogether, what remains of the country's educational system and economic resources must be directed toward national stabilization.

Giving millions of mainstream Pakistanis a stake in the economy is the only way for the country to avert a deeper failure. A country in existential crisis does not have the luxury of separate education and labor policies. Twenty million children ages 10 to 17 are not in school, and of the almost 25 million Pakistanis ages 18 to 24, more than half have either not completed school or graduated but remain underemployed. Many in these poor and disenfranchised classes are listless young men; most suicide bombers are the 18- or 19-year-olds who come from their ranks.

The textbook approaches to supporting secondary education don't make sense unless the economy is geared toward employing the educated. So much international research and commentary on Pakistani education has focused on madrasa reform, ignoring the older portion of the population that most needs to be engaged. Vocational schools must get immediate funding to recruit and train able-bodied youth in basic engineering and construction work, and university students should be dispatched to participate in PRTs as well as "Teach for Pakistan" programs. There are many shura councils in the FATA, including even in North Waziristan, that have expressed a desire to receive outside assistance provided it works with them rather than around them.

International assistance must support each of the aforementioned strategies seamlessly, but to date this has not happened. In both Pakistan and Afghanistan, recent years have seen a USAID gravy train of contracts for U.S. and European companies and NGOs with little accountability or effectiveness. Not surprisingly, they have been outspent, at least in terms of effectiveness, by even the 100 rupees per day the Taliban will pay the families of boys from NWFP to join its campaign. The State Department, White House, Congress, and Pentagon are presently at odds over how to certify or validate that Pakistan is spending U.S. assistance on the right purposes -- to say nothing of the $5.3 billion in aid pledges that Pakistan received at the recent donors conference in Tokyo. President Zardari has to use his Washington meetings this week to make progress on spending this money right.

If the protests against the Taliban that have recently rippled across Pakistan are any indication, the elite are becoming quite vocal. Now this sliver of Pakistan's population must mobilize with the help of its government, the international community, the rest of the country, and Pakistan's extensive diaspora. Pakistan has been unhelpfully called the "most dangerous country in the world." Its citizens must now decide if that is the case.

Foreign Policy: How Pakistan Can Fix Itself
 
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Gen. David Petraeus has stated that the next two weeks are crucial to Pakistan's survival, while counterinsurgency expert David Kilcullen has claimed that the country could collapse within six months.

Both are absolutely off the mark and nothing they predict here will come about. Focusing on the economy and education will definitely help. Taliban problem is there, yet overblown.
 
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Both are absolutely off the mark and nothing they predict here will come about. Focusing on the economy and education will definitely help. Taliban problem is there, yet overblown.

You have a point here, but how can one ' underplay' a situation wherein the Govt first handed over a part of its territory to the Taliban who promptly asked for more & made threatening noises.

The Govt after a protracted period of slumber decided to act & began to fight the same people with whom it had struck a deal. First the ppl of Swat were asked to move - only to rescinded later.

Effective governance has virtually come to a halt in some regions and so on. The only reason why the PA has not taken over is the US wants an ' elected' govt to remain.

The world has genuine reasons to fear a situation when the nukes too fall into the wrong hands .
 
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As PA has started a offence against taliban, and i think that PA should continue to push taliban out of pakistan to that calmness can be prevaled uintil that it would be hard time not critical time for pakistan. If things happen as the what GOP & PA may have planed than Pakistan can consentrate more of Economic growth and to do so GOP has to focus on education system as mentioned by blain2.
 
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well firstly the title of the thread should be "PAKISTAN's FINEST HOUR".....the reason being that for once pakistanis really care about pakistan....a soft revolution is taking place and pakistanis are slowly and steadily starting to say enough is enough.....


You have a point here, but how can one ' underplay' a situation wherein the Govt first handed over a part of its territory to the Taliban who promptly asked for more & made threatening noises.

well the government tried to adress the grievences that people of the area had and taliban seemed to be fighting for the people of the area....however once the nizam-e-adal got approved taliban got carried away and thought hell pakistan government and army are afraid or incapable of defeating the taliban so they started making audacious comments....hence pakistan government finally stood up and said don't think our non action is a sign of weakness of our armed forces...
 
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