Better late than never. The warning Chief of Army Staff General Kiyani sounded to the US-led coalition forces in Afghanistan to stay away from the Pakistani soil, was long overdue.
It has finally come, as it became almost imperative in the last couple of days when the US Administration unfolded the blueprint of a more aggressive strategy for military operations against the Taliban on "both sides of Pakistan-Afghanistan border". First it was President Bush who justified his move to send additional troops to Afghanistan, arguing that Pakistan had emerged as one the three "major battlefields" - the other two being Iraq and Afghanistan.
"They are all theatres in the same overall struggle", he told a gathering at the US National Defence University. This was on Tuesday, less than a week after a US forces-led ground assault inside Pakistan in which 20 Pakistanis, including women and children, were killed.
The Pakistani side offered a confused response: As the parliament unanimously condemned the brutal assault, the government expressed its helplessness. Somehow Defence Minister Ahmad Mukhtar was convinced that 'there must have been something that invited the assault' while the newly sworn-in President Zardari thoughtlessly remarked the land incursions were permitted under the UN Charter.
But what really forced the CoAS General Kiyani to come up with his warning was the lingering refrain in the western media that the Pakistan military high command in its hush-hush meeting with the American generalship on the USS Abraham Lincoln last month had given a carte blanche to conduct raids inside Pakistan.
The fact that the US-led ground raid was followed by a series of missile strikes at suspected places in Pakistan almost on daily basis only strengthened the speculated give-in by the Pakistani side.
The truth, however, is that the Pakistani commanders had convinced their interlocutors on the USS Abraham Lincoln of their commitment to fight militancy on their own, so much so that the US Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen enthusiastically conceded at a Pentagon media briefing that "Pakistan's focus is where it needs to be".
This was clearly in recognition of the stepped-up military operations by the Pakistani security forces in Bajaur Agency and Swat valley, which have not relented even during the holy month of Ramazan. Given the losses in terms of casualties of security forces and civilians and massive displacements of non-combatant population, Pakistan is paying a much heavier price than the US-led coalition in this so-called war on terror.
Seen in the backdrop of the latest turns and twists in US perceptions, it becomes evident that all along Pakistan was being led along the garden path. It was someone else's war foolishly joined by an unelected leadership in return for the pat on the back with exhortation: 'Well done. Do more, it's not enough yet'.
Thanks to General Kiyani's clearly worded statement, it should be known to the United States and its other allies in Afghanistan that strikes across border would not be tolerated. Such an activity is not covered by the agreed 'rules of engagement' as against the oft-repeated claim from the other side.
But, more importantly, the Army Chief has notified to both the Pakistan government and its supporters in the West that it should be a multi-pronged approach and not merely military operation that would help win this war against militancy.
And it would take time: "There are no quick fixes...Display strategic patience and help the other side (Pakistan) the way they want it rather than adopting a unilateral approach which may be counter-productive", he told the coalition partners led by the United States - where the contenders for the White House are hell-bent on outbidding each other in promising more war in this region.
The lame-duck Bush administration is desperately looking for a trophy to claim a mention in the American history, and can it be more rewarding than capturing bin Laden or Al-Zawahiri who the US forces think is in the mountains straddling the Pak-Afghan border. So much presumptuous is the US administration's perspective on the Taliban and their struggle to retrieve Afghanistan.
Another anniversary of the 9/11 tragic incidents has passed by, and the United States government has yet to prove its case to the world at large. Is that the war on terror that Pakistan is expected to fight against its own people, and win it for the United States?