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Obama’s South Asia policy

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WASHINGTON: In a marked departure from his earlier campaign rhetoric, US presidential hopeful Senator Barack Obama on Sunday saw the need for recognising Pakistan's interests for forging a better anti-terror cooperation between the two countries.

The Democratic senator acknowledged that the inception of a new democratic government provides an opportunity for the United States to start a wide-ranging relationship with the key South Asian country.

“We now have a new government in Pakistan. We have an opportunity to initiate a new relationship. We have got to send a signal to them that we are interested in national security, but we also recognise they are interested in figuring out how do they feed their people and how do they prosper economically.

“And instead of just focusing on our issues, we have got to focus on some of theirs, so that we can get better co-operation to hunt down al-Qaeda and make sure that does not become a safe haven for them,” he stated in his Meet the Press appearance on the NBC channel.

Obama’s remarks indicated a marked toning down of his earlier statements when he came under criticism for suggesting unilateral actions against any terrorists that may be hiding on the Pakistani side of the Afghan border.

On Afghanistan, he emphasised a more focused attention through more US troops and better reconstruction job. “I think we need more troops there, I think we need to do a better job of reconstruction there. I think we have to be focused on Afghanistan. It is one of the reasons that I was opposed to the war in Iraq in the first place.”

Continuing, Obama added, “We now know that al-Qaeda is stronger than any time since 2001. We have just received additional intelligence reports from our agencies, showing that they are growing in capability. That is something that we have got to address.”
 
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He is right about the need to focus on Afghanistan. If the US does that, it is ultimately good for Pakistan as we can send all the refugees home and this annoying demand to 'do more' will be gone.
 
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Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

Analysis: Obama’s South Asia policy —Najmuddin A Shaikh

What Obama said with regard to acting unilaterally if there was actionable intelligence about the location of Al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan’s tribal areas was really no more than what the Bush administration has been doing

First things first. It is clear that for Barack Obama, having been raised as a Muslim, having a Muslim middle name or having attended a Muslim school in Indonesia will not mean automatic sympathy for Muslim causes on religious grounds. In fact, the deliberately created controversy about Obama’s Muslim heritage has put him on the defensive and has caused him to stress — perhaps more than would otherwise have been the case — the depth of his Christian beliefs, and perhaps caused the prolongation of the crisis created by the intemperate remarks of his pastor Jeremiah Wright.

Some commentators have even taken delight in pointing out that in most Muslim countries, Obama would be termed an apostate and as such subject to a death sentence. Not exactly a recipe for eliciting sympathy.

While he has the strength of character to pursue policies he believes to be right despite allegations that they are influenced by his background, it is only natural that he will be careful in articulating and implementing policies that could invite such criticism overt or covert, particularly at a time when despite efforts, Islamophobia remains an important element in the American polity.

What one can expect, however, is that Obama will be less averse — as the candidate for change — to recognising that extremism in the Muslim world flows from causes other than religious injunctions, no matter how this may be portrayed by so-called spokesmen for Islam or misguided scholars in the West. He certainly will not be talking about crusades nor will he oppose direct talks with adversaries.

He underlined his wish to engage adversaries in a recent speech on Latin America, saying that, “After eight years of the disastrous policies of George Bush, it is time to pursue direct diplomacy, with friend and foe alike, without preconditions.”

This will influence his view of the role Hamas should play in the Palestine talks though even on this score, some Republicans have taken cheap shots at him for having received an endorsement from a Hamas leader. The joker in that particular pack is of course Israel. Like every candidate, Obama has been vocal in expressing his support for Israel and may well back away from any contact with Hamas if Israel objects as it is bound to do.

Obama may be a candidate for change. He may shift troops out of Iraq in the hope that this will force the Iraqis to work out political compromises. But he will be as strong on fighting terrorism as Bush has been. And that is the overriding foreign policy priority that determines the US-Pakistan relationship. He too will maintain that he is seeking a long-term relationship with the people of Pakistan; one that will be driven by the concern that a relationship with the US may keep a nuclear-armed Pakistan from going down the extremist path. In that sense there will be little difference between Bush and Obama.

What may change however are the instruments that Obama selects to meet his objectives. He will pay more than lip service to the counterterrorism doctrine enunciated by the Bush administration, which calls for 65 percent of the counter terrorism effort to be political and economic, 20 percent to be alliance building and only 15 percent to be military. He will unequivocally endorse the proposal of Democrat Senator Joseph Biden to triple economic assistance to Pakistan and will probably to the extent possible shift the emphasis in military assistance to Pakistan even further away from big-ticket items to those that are specific to counterterrorism. He will support talks with the Taliban by Afghan President Hamid Karzai; and with the Pakistani Taliban by the provincial and federal governments.

On the expulsion of foreigners and on hunting down Al Qaeda, there will not be an iota of difference between Obama’s position and that of the present administration. What he said with regard to acting unilaterally if there was actionable intelligence about the location of Al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan’s tribal areas was really no more than what the Bush administration has been doing.

Like Bush, Obama may, in deference to the sensitivities of the civilian Pakistan government — a government that he would like to help — refrain from public statements. While this is not certain, he may suggest that a democratic government in Pakistan would be better off, in terms of credibility, if it publicly acknowledged that it lacked the wherewithal to be able to act against Al Qaeda in certain locations and that it had entered into agreements to allow better equipped friends to do so.

The other major change — dependent on how events unfold in Pakistan over the next few months — will be reduced focus on the president and the army as American allies in Pakistan. A more extensive effort to develop people-to-people relations will be attempted and the present embassy efforts to develop ties with politicians and civil society will be carried further. Again this will not be a major change from what the Bush administration appears to be doing now, but it will be helped by the fact that the Bush-Musharraf equation will no longer be a factor.

Obama has spoken of wanting to work for a better and more tension free relationship between India and Pakistan. It is significant that he has done so not in the context of South Asia being a nuclear flashpoint, but in the context of a better relationship with India easing Pakistan’s need for retaining the Taliban option. In other words, it is again the Afghan and terrorist connections that colour Obama’s perception of Indo-Pak relations.

One of the big questions is going to be whether the current perception of the US in Pakistan will change after Obama comes to power. The big upswing in America’s approval rating when American helicopters were ferrying supplies to earthquake victims does not provide an appropriate analogy, but I have a feeling that the very fact of a Black man becoming president of the United States will create an even more positive image for America than the post-earthquake acts of compassion. One can only hope that sympathy for the underdog who made it to the top is not diluted by the perception that he is an elitist rather than a man of the underprivileged.

Who will be Obama’s Secretary of State? Among his foreign policy advisers are Zbigniew Brzezinski, former President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser, and Anthony Lake, who served in the same capacity in the Clinton administration. We also have confirmed “liberals” like Joseph Cirincione and Lawrence Korb. The former is better known in Pakistan as a strong non-proliferation proponent but he was also one of the people who argued that Saddam Hussein had been contained and military action against him was unnecessary.

It would perhaps be possible to conjecture that Lake could be a candidate for the Secretary of State post. He was Clinton’s national security adviser when Prime Minister Bhutto was able to secure some compensation for the undelivered F-16s, but beyond that he too was of the large number of American officials who were in a constant state of worry about Pakistan. Not much more can be said about what sort of influence he would exercise on policy towards South Asia.

Richard Clark, a counterterrorism expert, will probably have some position in an Obama administration and his view of what needs to be done in the tribal areas is not very far from the policies currently being followed.

The writer is a former foreign secretary
 
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Presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama has said that the United States should finish the fight against terror outfits Al Qaida and Taliban instead of sending troops to Iraq.

The Illinois senator lashed out at President George Bush and his Republican rival nominee John McCain for not holding Pakistan responsible for the failure to crack down the militant outfits.

"We should finish the fight against Al Qaida and Taliban instead of going into Iraq. We need to take more resources and put them in Afghan - at least two additional combat brigades and US$ 1 billion in non-military assistance each year," Obama said on Wednesday during a Retired Flag Officers event.

"And I've repeatedly challenged George Bush [Images] and John McCain's [Images] refusal to hold the Pakistani government accountable for inability to crack down on Al Qaida and Taliban operating within their borders. We are not going to get Afghanistan right until we get our Pakistan policy right," he said.

Obama's comments follow criticism by McCain that he lacked the national security expertise needed to become president.

"Why don't they explain to the American people what exactly we're doing in Iraq � staying indefinitely, building permanent bases in a country that doesn't want them and shortchanging our efforts in Afghanistan and our ability to deal with nearly every other national security challenge that we face," Obama said.

"We can finally end this disastrous approach to national security, because the record shows that George Bush and John McCain have been weak on terrorism. Their approach has failed. Because of their policies, we are less safe, less respected, less able to lead the world," he said.

"And it's time to end the war in Iraq responsibly. It's time to stop wasting time and start putting away terrorists. It's time to finally take out Al Qaida's top leadership and to finish the fight in Afghanistan."

Meanwhile, the Obama campaign has refuted charges by Republicans that the Illinois senator is naive in foreign policy issues.

"What Obama's got and all these people lack is judgment on critical foreign policy issues of the day. There's two ways to fight this war on terrorism: smart and stupid. We've had seven years of stupid on the part of George Bush and John McCain," Obama's top foreign policy adviser Susan Rice said in a teleconference with reporters.

"Let's go back and review the record. We had Osama bin Laden and his cadre trapped in Tora Bora. This administration allowed them to escape. They diverted our attention from Afghanistan and Al Qaida and sent us to a war in Iraq that had nothing to do with 9/11," Rice said.

"We spent US$ one trillion. We've lost over 4,000 lives in Iraq. And we're less safe. Our standing in the world is reduced. The Taliban is resurging in Afghanistan, and we're seeing attacks today," she said.

Stung by the swift response, the McCain campaign tried to take the heat off the blame game by stressing the need for a civil debate on the issues.

"We don't want to engage in name-calling. We want to have an honest, civil debate about the issues. And we're happy to talk about McCain's position and Obama's position on things like designating Iranian Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist group or on consequences of withdrawal from Iraq and what that would do to strengthen Al Qaida in Iraq," McCain's top financial adviser Randy Scheunemann said.

Link:US needs a tougher policy on Pakistan: Obama

Obama is most likely to become the next President of Usa, and is bound to have a new and fresh approach towards the War on Terror.This is what he has said when asked, what his policy is going to be on the war on terror. Is he right, or has he missed more than a point to be commenting this way??
 
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Dude, the reason people come here is to discuss various issues. Please dont be like the ostrich which digs its head in the sand, the reality is not going to change, I wish the best for Pakistan, but, dude, this is the truth and most importantly, this is real!!!! You need to understand for the future and plan accordingly....We need to face it rather than run away from it!!

It is almost impossible for US to attack Pakistan; we are not Iraq or Afghanistan. Yes we need to plan accordingly but let me clear it that conflict with a big country like Pakistan will not only destroy the south Asian region but will have impacts on the whole world.

Attack on Pakistan is like committing suicide!
 
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I think he has not realized his supply line to his forces runs through thecountry he wants to be tough with. We shut their bases and tell them to take a hike, They are in trouble.
Araz
 
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U.S doesn't have the capacity or the heart and will to attack pakistan they've already lost thousands of troops doubt they want to lose anymore ,they're forces are stretched much too thin on both afghanistan and iraq plus they have iran to deal with on top of that pak is their lifeline to afghanistan if they attack their wot will be completely screwed.Politicians always talk before they come to power what they do when they're actually in power is completely different.
 
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Its too early to say what will happen.

First he has to get elected POTUS, then he has to formulate policy based on information that he would not be privy to as a candidate.

Every candidate is going to make comments that are deemed to "resonate" with the American electorate, and lets face it - the perception of Pakistan is not that good (correctly or not) in the US right now.

However, I see nothing horrible in Obama's statements in this article.

Redif getting a little carried away.

Title changed to better reflect Obama's statement.
 
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Its all talk about holding Pakistan responsible for the failure to crack down on the militant outfits. When Obama gets into the office and faces the constraints of the region, geo-politics, balancing of relationships, he will realize that its not easy or reasonable for anyone to expect Pakistan to do everything.

I for one feel that Obama will actually be pretty good for Pakistan and what we currently hear is the usual trash that him and anyone else has to spew out before getting into the oval office. The key for Pakistan is to ensure that we continue to have a democratically elected government in Islamabad when he is in the office. Most of the problems with democrats arise because of lack of public representation in Pakistan.

The nuclear genie is already out of the bottle and the WOT requires interfacing and cooperation with Pakistan. So all in all, I do not think the relations will deteriorate because Obama comes into the office.
 
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Obama is blaming Pakistan and is making Pakistan the fall-guy. He has said before that he will not hesitate to bomb Pakistan if necessary. Pakistan is a sovereign state and Obama is just depserate for votes he would probably get anyways.
Traditionally, Republicans have been closer to Pakistan than Democrats. Let's hope McCain wins.
 
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Obama for better Indo-Pak ties
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Terms Afghan situation perilous
AMMAN: US Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Tuesday the US-led war against militants in Afghanistan might be made easier if the United States worked to improve trust between India and Pakistan.

Obama, who is on a foreign fact-finding trip and visited Afghanistan over the weekend, described Afghanistan as the central front in the war against terrorism and said the situation there was "perilous and urgent".

Trying to reduce tensions between traditional rivals India and Pakistan could help, he said. "A lot of what drives, it appears, motivations on the Pakistan side of the border, still has to do with their concerns and suspicions about India," Obama told a news conference in the Jordanian capital Amman.

"We haven't had a conversation between the Indians and the Pakistanis that has been sustained and meaningful about how they can arrive at a more sensible arrangement between the two countries that could relieve some of the pressure and help us go after ... some of these forces along the border regions."

He also said there was ìno doubtî the top US commander in Iraq opposes setting a deadline for withdrawing the American combat forces but said the situation there was improving and that the US urgently needed to turn its attention to Afghanistan.

Noting that the job of the US president and that of Gen David Petraeus were different, Obama said he was setting "a strategic vision of what's best for the US national security" that he believed must include a mid-2010 target for removing the American combat forces.

"There's no doubt Gen Petraeus does not want a timetable. ...In his role, he wants maximum flexibility to get done" what he thinks is necessary to the military mission. Obama acknowledged that security in Iraq had improved, but said: "Now, we need a political solution."

Obama said Afghanistan was now the "central front in the war against terrorism." He was joined by travelling companions Senators Chuck Hagel, a Republican from Nebraska, and Jack Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island.
 
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What BS. He only sees the concern on the Pakistani side showing as if we are some kind on ignorant fools who cannot predict the threat Pakistan is faced with. If he is so sincere in reducing the concerns on the Pakistani side why don't he address on what's happening on the Afghan soil to destabilize Pakistan and what that big mouth no good karzai is up to? His dream of reducing PA into a SWAT team isn't going to full fill. Obama will be the least favored person with regards to Pakistan and the only thing he can do if he's sincere to stop the already deteriorating relationship between the two sides is to keep his mouth shut. He maybe the next president of the world's sole superpower, that does not give him the right to put his will onto others otherwise it could lead to serious consequences.
 
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Obama is right now desperate to win the American presidency.
The problem started when one of the weapons used against him was his middle name and what it implied. Now, Obama is a populist, he needs to please the people to keep going. And he really wanted that Democratic candidacy. So desperate was he, that, to prove his anti-Islamic credentials that he said he was willing to bomb Pakistan, a sovereign nation that is also America's ally.:crazy:
Traditionally, Republican governments in America have always had closer ties to Pakistan than Democratic ones. But with Obama, this goes extreme.
I agree with IceCold and I think that anyone would be better for the post of president than Obama.
 
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Obama's bombshell: Pak plotting war on India
Washington: Accusing Pakistan of misusing the massive American aid to fight the war on terror, Democratic nominee for the US Presidential election Barack Obama, in a sensational comment, has said Islamabad was using these funds for "preparing for a war against India".


Senator Obama vowed to hold Islamabad accountable for the massive military aid it has received from Washington if he is elected to the White House. He said his administration will increase pressure on the Pakistan to come to terms with terrorist safe havens along its northern border with Afghanistan.


"What we can do is stay focused on Afghanistan and put more pressure on the Pakistanis," Senator Obama said in an interview with Fox News.


He noted that the US was providing Pakistan military aid "without having enough strings attached".


"So they're (Pakistan) using the military aid...Pakistan...they're preparing for a war against India," Senator Obama said.

Obama's bombshell: Pak plotting war on India
 
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