Consulting Pakistan Dawn Editorial
Tuesday, 03 Nov, 2009
The US will have to find a way to work with local partners in addition to a weak, discredited central government and thats precisely where Pakistans help can be most valuable, helping the Americans and Afghans differentiate between the various players.
BECAUSE we understand the area, we understand the tribes, we understand the local customs and traditions and our input might be useful for the Americans they should consult Pakistan on their on-going review of the strategy for Afghanistan. Thus has spoken Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and his advice makes much sense.
This is not to suggest that there has been no consultation at all; senior Pakistani government and army officials have met their American counterparts in Washington as well as Islamabad and Rawalpindi. However, there is a sense that the Americans have kept Pakistan at arms length during the whole process, probably because of doubts about Pakistans real intentions. Three issues dominate the American concerns about Pakistan: one, the safe havens for Al Qaeda and affiliated groups in Fata and other parts of the country; two, cross-border movement of militants that keeps the American and Afghan troops under pressure; and three, the supply lines that run through Pakistan that cannot realistically be totally replaced by alternative routes through Central Asia or Iran.
But in addition to these issues, there is another important factor in the Pak-Afghan-US matrix: Pakistans intimate knowledge of Afghanistan, especially of the Pakhtun population which will be at the centre of a hearts-and-minds campaign in any protect the population counter-insurgency strategy. If there is one thing that is clear about the American strategy towards Afghanistan it is that the US does not have the will to expend the blood or treasure necessary to turn Afghanistan into a semblance of a modern nation-state if indeed that is possible for an outside power to achieve at all. So going forward, the US will have to find a way to work with local partners in addition to a weak, discredited central government and thats precisely where Pakistans help can be most valuable, helping the Americans and Afghans differentiate between the various players.
Having said that, Pakistans approach to Afghanistan leaves much to be desired. Officially, the security establishment takes the line that Afghanistan should be a neutral place in terms of regional powers such as Russia, Iran and even India; however, there is a suspicion that neutral really means a predominant role for Pakistan. Similarly, the demand that the Pakhtun population should have its due share in any Afghan government is believed to mean virtual control of the country by the Pakhtuns, who comprise under 50 per cent of the population. Then there is the fact that, as yesterdays bombing in Rawalpindi again highlighted, Pakistans inability to put its own house in order makes it less of a credible interlocutor elsewhere.
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