muse
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2006
- Messages
- 13,006
- Reaction score
- 0
Learning from eight anniversaries
Friday, September 11, 2009
Mosharraf Zaidi
Today marks the eighth anniversary of the atrocities of Sept 11, 2001. The United States and its allies may have launched a poorly planned war in Afghanistan, and a poorly motivated one in Iraq. However, eight years since almost 3,000 innocent people from 90 different countries were killed in New York City, in Washington DC and in the skies above Pennsylvania, it is Pakistan that is identified as the location of the epicentre of the 21st century global terrorist enterprise. In every major world capital, around every important boardroom, and across the booming security, counter-terrorism and ****** analysis industry, there is almost total consensus and unanimity that the war to secure ordinary people from the horrors of terrorist attacks will be won (and lost) in Pakistan.
On this sombre anniversary of a horrific human tragedy, Pakistanis of all persuasions must begin to embrace some simple facts of geopolitical economy. It doesn't matter who conducted the 9/11 attacks. It doesn't matter that most Pakistani Muslims aspire to be good Muslims, and that a good Muslim cannot possibly support terrorist attacks. It doesn't matter that Pakistan has suffered, especially since 2005, perhaps the most significant death toll, and the deepest scars to its young, immature and undernourished institutions of public life. It does not matter that, at last count, according to the South Asian Terrorism Portal, almost 7,000 Pakistani citizens have been killed in terrorist attacks since 2003. It does not matter that more than 3,500 of those citizens were killed since January 2008 alone. It does not matter, even, that more than 2,600 of Pakistan's brave soldiers, have given the ultimate sacrifice, making up for the mistakes and missteps of a handful of megalomaniac generals. And it matters little that the Pakistani middle class, the military, and the political elite have come together in the war against terrorists in Pakistan to drive them out of Swat and its surrounding areas.
What matters, eight years after 9/11 altered the very DNA of global politics, Muslim identity in the 21st century and Pakistan's sense of itself, is whether Pakistan has a comprehensive strategy to deal with the direct threat of terrorism and the indirect impacts it has had on the country. It doesn't. That should not surprise us, given how poorly served the Pakistani people are by their state. It should however scare us. After all, it scares everyone else.
Instead of measuring and preparing for the elemental challenges that this young nation faces, the Pakistani state is engaged in an almost constant obsession with the news ticker. Like a lost puppy chasing its own tail, Pakistan's military and political elite are constantly engaged in feeding the beast of the news cycle. The ISPR and the Ministry of Information are the Pakistani versions of Dan Rather and Lucille Ball--always on the airwaves, always sharing a snippet or two of breaking news. The news media that enables this obsession, contrary to the myopic criticism that has been piled on it in recent weeks, is one of the only solid urban and middle class institutions that Pakistan has (no wonder the crusty old elite are gunning for it). Feeding the news cycle is vital to the sustenance of a broad-based and democratic public discourse, but it cannot be the only vocation of those that determine how Pakistan's resources--human, financial and military--are deployed.
Beyond the news ticker lies Afghanistan--the place where 9/11 began, and where it will eventually have to be buried. In eight years the Pakistani state has demonstrated no real awareness of its closest and most important neighbour. It seems plausible to conclude therefore that Pakistan is not at all prepared to deal with Afghanistan. Dealing with Afghanistan requires some crucial adjustments in expectations in Pakistan.
The first is that national security in Afghanistan and in Pakistan are, for the next generation, and maybe for longer, deeply inter-linked.
The second is that Afghanistan's national security interests, for the foreseeable future, will be tied to fiscal, operational, strategic and instrumental support from two regional powerhouses, namely India and Iran.
The third, by deduction, is that the ambient dysfunction of Islamabad's relationship with New Delhi and with Iran needs to be moderated. With India, in particular, Pakistan needs to get real. It needs to stop pretending that Kashmir is still the core bilateral bone of contention, because it is not. The core bone of contention between Islamabad and New Delhi now, whether either side is able to admit it or not, is Afghanistan.
Underpinning these three deeply interlinked geopolitical realities are some hard-to-digest domestic policy nuts and bolts. Without dramatically improved investments in the capacity of Pakistan's civilian law enforcement infrastructure, the military will have an overwhelmingly important role to play in Pakistan's international political future. As long as the GHQ has a default seat at the table on issues that are primarily of a political nature--such as Kashmir, Afghanistan, Sir Creek, the Indus River--the balance of power among Pakistan's young, immature and undernourished institutions of public life will continue to be entirely out of whack. The police in Pakistan has to be transformed in short order, from a parasitical organ of political patronage to an instrument of thorough professionalism that shoots bad guys and protects ordinary citizens. The best reminder of how good the police in this country needs to be is what has taken place in Swat over the last two years. No army in any country should have to be responsible for the displacement of over two million of its own people. Pakistan cannot sustain this imbalance between civilian and military force capacity.
State capacity, in the minds of many Pakistanis at least, is the real reason why former State Department tough guy Richard Armitage never could have lived up to his alleged threat to former President Musharraf to bomb Pakistan back to the stone age, in those heady days following 9/11. Of course, since 2001 Pakistani state capacity has been exposed for what it is--an enormous and glimmering heap of unrealized potential that has more loose ends than there are counters. The dapper suits, Cambridge accents and razor-sharp wit of its landed politicians, its privileged civil servants, and its Sandhurst-esque generals, all produce the mirage of a Pakistan that is much more capable of both damaging and fixing things than it really is.
An over-reliance on this mirage is what put Pakistan in the position of becoming the handmaiden of the Armitages and Holbrookes, in the first place. The urgency of embracing the realities of the neighbourhood it occupies and the role it must play in it could not be overstated. On this eighth anniversary of 9/11 Pakistan needs to look further into the future than it ever has before.
The writer advises governments, donors and NGOs on public policy. He can be reached through his website Mosharraf Zaidi
Friday, September 11, 2009
Mosharraf Zaidi
Today marks the eighth anniversary of the atrocities of Sept 11, 2001. The United States and its allies may have launched a poorly planned war in Afghanistan, and a poorly motivated one in Iraq. However, eight years since almost 3,000 innocent people from 90 different countries were killed in New York City, in Washington DC and in the skies above Pennsylvania, it is Pakistan that is identified as the location of the epicentre of the 21st century global terrorist enterprise. In every major world capital, around every important boardroom, and across the booming security, counter-terrorism and ****** analysis industry, there is almost total consensus and unanimity that the war to secure ordinary people from the horrors of terrorist attacks will be won (and lost) in Pakistan.
On this sombre anniversary of a horrific human tragedy, Pakistanis of all persuasions must begin to embrace some simple facts of geopolitical economy. It doesn't matter who conducted the 9/11 attacks. It doesn't matter that most Pakistani Muslims aspire to be good Muslims, and that a good Muslim cannot possibly support terrorist attacks. It doesn't matter that Pakistan has suffered, especially since 2005, perhaps the most significant death toll, and the deepest scars to its young, immature and undernourished institutions of public life. It does not matter that, at last count, according to the South Asian Terrorism Portal, almost 7,000 Pakistani citizens have been killed in terrorist attacks since 2003. It does not matter that more than 3,500 of those citizens were killed since January 2008 alone. It does not matter, even, that more than 2,600 of Pakistan's brave soldiers, have given the ultimate sacrifice, making up for the mistakes and missteps of a handful of megalomaniac generals. And it matters little that the Pakistani middle class, the military, and the political elite have come together in the war against terrorists in Pakistan to drive them out of Swat and its surrounding areas.
What matters, eight years after 9/11 altered the very DNA of global politics, Muslim identity in the 21st century and Pakistan's sense of itself, is whether Pakistan has a comprehensive strategy to deal with the direct threat of terrorism and the indirect impacts it has had on the country. It doesn't. That should not surprise us, given how poorly served the Pakistani people are by their state. It should however scare us. After all, it scares everyone else.
Instead of measuring and preparing for the elemental challenges that this young nation faces, the Pakistani state is engaged in an almost constant obsession with the news ticker. Like a lost puppy chasing its own tail, Pakistan's military and political elite are constantly engaged in feeding the beast of the news cycle. The ISPR and the Ministry of Information are the Pakistani versions of Dan Rather and Lucille Ball--always on the airwaves, always sharing a snippet or two of breaking news. The news media that enables this obsession, contrary to the myopic criticism that has been piled on it in recent weeks, is one of the only solid urban and middle class institutions that Pakistan has (no wonder the crusty old elite are gunning for it). Feeding the news cycle is vital to the sustenance of a broad-based and democratic public discourse, but it cannot be the only vocation of those that determine how Pakistan's resources--human, financial and military--are deployed.
Beyond the news ticker lies Afghanistan--the place where 9/11 began, and where it will eventually have to be buried. In eight years the Pakistani state has demonstrated no real awareness of its closest and most important neighbour. It seems plausible to conclude therefore that Pakistan is not at all prepared to deal with Afghanistan. Dealing with Afghanistan requires some crucial adjustments in expectations in Pakistan.
The first is that national security in Afghanistan and in Pakistan are, for the next generation, and maybe for longer, deeply inter-linked.
The second is that Afghanistan's national security interests, for the foreseeable future, will be tied to fiscal, operational, strategic and instrumental support from two regional powerhouses, namely India and Iran.
The third, by deduction, is that the ambient dysfunction of Islamabad's relationship with New Delhi and with Iran needs to be moderated. With India, in particular, Pakistan needs to get real. It needs to stop pretending that Kashmir is still the core bilateral bone of contention, because it is not. The core bone of contention between Islamabad and New Delhi now, whether either side is able to admit it or not, is Afghanistan.
Underpinning these three deeply interlinked geopolitical realities are some hard-to-digest domestic policy nuts and bolts. Without dramatically improved investments in the capacity of Pakistan's civilian law enforcement infrastructure, the military will have an overwhelmingly important role to play in Pakistan's international political future. As long as the GHQ has a default seat at the table on issues that are primarily of a political nature--such as Kashmir, Afghanistan, Sir Creek, the Indus River--the balance of power among Pakistan's young, immature and undernourished institutions of public life will continue to be entirely out of whack. The police in Pakistan has to be transformed in short order, from a parasitical organ of political patronage to an instrument of thorough professionalism that shoots bad guys and protects ordinary citizens. The best reminder of how good the police in this country needs to be is what has taken place in Swat over the last two years. No army in any country should have to be responsible for the displacement of over two million of its own people. Pakistan cannot sustain this imbalance between civilian and military force capacity.
State capacity, in the minds of many Pakistanis at least, is the real reason why former State Department tough guy Richard Armitage never could have lived up to his alleged threat to former President Musharraf to bomb Pakistan back to the stone age, in those heady days following 9/11. Of course, since 2001 Pakistani state capacity has been exposed for what it is--an enormous and glimmering heap of unrealized potential that has more loose ends than there are counters. The dapper suits, Cambridge accents and razor-sharp wit of its landed politicians, its privileged civil servants, and its Sandhurst-esque generals, all produce the mirage of a Pakistan that is much more capable of both damaging and fixing things than it really is.
An over-reliance on this mirage is what put Pakistan in the position of becoming the handmaiden of the Armitages and Holbrookes, in the first place. The urgency of embracing the realities of the neighbourhood it occupies and the role it must play in it could not be overstated. On this eighth anniversary of 9/11 Pakistan needs to look further into the future than it ever has before.
The writer advises governments, donors and NGOs on public policy. He can be reached through his website Mosharraf Zaidi