The reason analysts have been arguing that 'events are going Pakistan's way' is because the regional situation relative to a couple of years ago is markedly improved in Pakistan's favor.
The author's entire premise, 'The argument, which a beleaguered Pakistan Army is doing all it can to buttress, goes broadly as follows: with Obama looking to thin out forces substantially from Afghanistan before facing American voters in late 2012, the job of policing the AfPak badlands will fall into Islamabad’s lap. With a free hand to run the place, Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) will carry the Taliban to power in Kabul and then douse the flames in its tribal areas by reorganising it into a terror factory from where it can direct jehad towards India and the West', is flawed and a contradiction of everything Pakistani military and civilian officials have said, on and off the record, about the role they see for the Afghan Taliban and the potential US withdrawal.
No less than Gen. Kiyani has been quoted as saying that Pakistan does not want a Talibanized Afghanistan, and almost everyone is in agreement that a hasty US withdrawal (completely) will not be in Pakistan's interests.
It is only Indian commentators that continue to stick to outdated analysis in order to concoct some manner of stick to beat Pakistan with.
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