Ok, so according to Ms Simbal Khan's analysis, the focus will shift to the East, more reliance on drones and the expansion of the territorial scope of Drones and of course the use of Afghan territory to launch these attacks --- but below are editorials and note their offering, what is clear is that along with most oif us, the media signal a confusion about what the Afghan war was about and what it's potential end is about and for Pakistan and particularly the armed forces, an end, finally to it's relationship with radical Islamism :
Withdrawing from Afghanistan
By Editorial
Published: June 24, 2011
With the US troop draw down in Afghanistan, expect the focus to shift on to Pakistan, who may be tempted to revive its Taliban policy from the 1990's.
After its 10-year adventure in Afghanistan, the US finally seems to be looking for a way out rather than conjuring new ways to get further bogged down in a country that no foreign invader has ever successfully invaded. But US President Barack Obama’s Afghanistan pull-out speech should not be seen as a hasty withdrawal; rather by next year he will have removed only the 33,000 troops that he himself sent to the country as part of his much-hyped ‘surge’.
The president will never admit that much but the surge has failed to the extent that he sees no point in keeping these troops around. The extra soldiers were supposed to help train Afghan police to carry on the fight against the Taliban. Given the fact that the US, too, has now approved negotiations with the Taliban, the surge has not been anything remotely resembling a success.
Even with this initial drawdown, the original Isaf troops who have been bogged down in Afghanistan will remain. And for Pakistan that may be a good thing. If the US decides to wash its hands off Afghanistan altogether, the focus will turn even more heavily on Pakistan. Drone attacks will become even more frequent and, having failed to defeat the Taliban on its own, the US will be even more insistent that Pakistan’s military tackle the Taliban in North Waziristan and elsewhere on its own.
US and Nato troops may still remain in great numbers in Afghanistan but Obama’s announcement is nonetheless a policy shift. And it is one that is likely to make Pakistan and its military continue its double game. With the US likely to be out of the picture soon, the military leadership may feel that Pakistan will need the Taliban as a buffer against India and to secure its interests in Afghanistan more than ever. As predictable as it is that this is what the military will be thinking, it is important to point out that this is a flawed tactic. Empowering the Taliban only leads to greater militancy at home. It is also high time we abandon our obsession with India and realise that peace, not confrontation, is the way ahead.
EDITORIAL: Endgame in Afghanistan
US President Barack Obama is finally going to deliver on his promise of pulling out US troops from Afghanistan. Apart from announcing that 10,000 troops will be removed by the end of this year and some 23,000 next year, Mr Obama said that by 2014, “this process of transition will be complete, and the Afghan people will be responsible for their own security”. The US’s NATO allies welcomed this decision and will also proceed with a gradual drawdown of their troops. Even though many in Afghanistan are wary of this decision, it has all but established that this war cannot continue endlessly. It is for this reason that the western forces are now negotiating with the Afghan Taliban to reach a political settlement before they leave. When the US invaded Afghanistan back in 2001, the more perceptive analysts had warned that the US would not succeed. By now this has been proved despite the US’s insistence that it has been successful. While the US was able to overthrow the Taliban government and bring a democratic government in place, things generally were far from hunky-dory. With the resurgence of the Taliban, the situation got even worse because of incremental war weariness at home and the global recession on the one hand and the safe havens provided to the Afghan Taliban in Pakistan on the other, which made it impossible to win this war.
It is perhaps because of this reason that Mr Obama made some rather significant points about Pakistan in his speech regarding a phased troop withdrawal. Mr Obama hailed the Abbottabad raid and pressed that “our efforts must also address terrorist safe havens in Pakistan”. He warned that so long as he is the president, “The United States will never tolerate a safe haven for those who aim to kill us: they cannot elude us, nor escape the justice they deserve.” This means there can be more raids like the May 2 one if Pakistan continues to harbour terrorists and there will certainly be more drone attacks. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also stressed that it was time for Pakistan to deliver. Ms Clinton said, “When it comes to our military aid, we are not prepared to continue providing that at the pace we were providing it unless and until we see some steps taken.” It is significant that she mentioned only military aid. Despite receiving billions of dollars in aid to the Pakistan Army, our military top brass continues the policy of exporting jihad. We have consistently cautioned that the shelf life of the policy of pursuing ‘strategic depth’ is over but the military has so far not paid any heed to such warnings. The US is now talking tough when it comes to our military. Whereas Senator John Kerry observed that the US has to continue working with Pakistan, Robert Gates has gone so far as to say that success in Afghanistan is possible even if Pakistan fails to cooperate. What all these statements mean is one thing: the world is no longer ready to support Pakistan’s duality when it comes to terrorist networks.
Statecraft involves that in grave situations and at seminal moments, a country’s leadership has to take hard decisions in the national interest. Having been wedded to the policy of exporting jihad for the last 40 years has only brought about diminishing returns for Pakistan. We have seen the damage that it has already done to our country. If we continue to stubbornly follow it, the consequences can be too dangerous to fathom. It is better to cut our losses now and save Pakistan.
Unclear goals
(10 hours ago) Today
“THE choice facing the Taliban is clear,” said US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Thursday, “Be part of Afghanistan`s future or face unrelenting assault. They cannot wait us out.” Except that, now with the American withdrawal a reality, the assault will not be unrelenting and the Taliban could well bide their time. Not that pulling out is a bad idea: Afghanistan`s current violence is a response to foreign occupation. What is troubling is the lack of clarity about America`s goals. President Obama`s speech on troop withdrawals offered little specificity about what the country should look like in three years. Two of three objectives mentioned — “reverse the Taliban`s momentum” and make Afghan forces capable of defending the country — seem beyond reach. Tailored to address domestic concerns in the run-up to an election rather than the more informed worries of international players who have stakes in Afghanistan`s stability, the president`s remarks could easily spark panic among regional governments. Such fears will only hamper America`s ability to depart in three years without leaving an unstable Afghanistan behind.
Statements from American officials also indicate a worrying lack of consensus within the US administration. Military officials had reportedly asked for a slower drawdown, and Adm Mike Mullen has said the timeline is riskier than he would have liked. And various interviews, testimonies and speeches over the last few days have betrayed internal disagreements, as old as the war itself, about what America is trying to achieve in Afghanistan. Adm Mullen used the term `counterinsurgency`, while President Obama said the overarching goal was to deny safe havens to terrorists working against the US or its allies. The same confusion was apparent when the president was devising his Afghanistan strategy in 2009, and it will only encourage regional players to look out for themselves.
Uncertainty also surrounds the reconciliation process, or at least what is publicly known of it. The UK, Germany, Saudi Arabia, America and Pakistan all seem to be involved, despite their public refrain that the process should be `Afghan-owned` and `Afghan-led`. One hopes these various efforts are part of a coordinated international plan. And while it is encouraging that giving up violence, renouncing Al Qaeda and abiding by Afghanistan`s constitution are now “necessary outcomes” of talks (according to Secretary Clinton) rather than preconditions, is it realistic to expect that the Taliban will stop fighting before foreign forces leave, or abide by a constitution they had no role in writing? Like many other aspects of the withdrawal and reconciliation efforts, the answers are unclear and the odds discouraging. The memory of 1989 looms large.