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Pakistan Is Not America's Enemy - WSJ

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Pakistan Is Not America's Enemy


A sustained U.S.-Pakistani partnership after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan could have produced a very different history than the one we wrestle with today.

By RYAN CROCKER

The news from Pakistan is grim. NATO helicopters engage suspected militants inside Pakistan, killing three, only to discover they are Pakistani soldiers. The angry Pakistani government blocks NATO fuel shipments at the Khyber Pass, and militants attack the stalled trucks. An Obama administration report to Congress charges that the Pakistanis aren't doing enough against the Taliban and al Qaeda. Press accounts quote unnamed officials asserting that elements in Pakistani intelligence are encouraging the Taliban to step up attacks on NATO forces. And Bob Woodward cites President Obama as saying "the cancer is in Pakistan."

One could easily conclude that we are describing an enemy, not an ally. Many in Pakistan feel the same way. And yet the prospects for stabilizing Afghanistan, defeating al Qaeda and preventing further attacks on the United States are a direct function of that strained alliance. It is time for a collective deep breath.

Pakistan's historical narrative focuses on how the U.S. worked with Pakistanis and Afghans to drive the Soviets from Afghanistan in the 1980s: We succeeded—and then we left. And on our way out, we slapped sanctions on Pakistan, ending all security and economic assistance because of the country's nuclear program, which we had known about since 1974 when Pakistan's prime minister announced it publicly. We left Pakistan alone to deal with a destabilizing civil war in Afghanistan, and when the Taliban emerged as a dominant force in the mid-1990s, Islamabad supported them as a means of ending the conflict.

Then came 9/11 and the U.S. was back. Pakistanis welcomed the renewed assistance. But a constant question I heard while serving as ambassador to Pakistan from 2004-2007 was "How long will you stay this time, and what mess will you leave us with when you go?" For a fragile state with innumerable problems, including a vicious internal insurgency, these are existential questions.

Never in Pakistan's six decades of existence has the U.S. sustained a long-term, strategic commitment in the country. The Bush administration recognized this and enacted security and economic assistance programs designed to make a long-term difference in education, health care and governance. In 2006, I argued successfully for a five-year assistance package for Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), which are notable both for chronic underdevelopment and extremism. The Obama administration has built on this, and last year's Kerry-Lugar bill provided $7.5 billion in assistance over five years. So we have the architecture in place to build a strategic relationship.

Still, short-term pressures risk undermining long-term strategy. When I was ambassador, voices in Congress, the media and even the administration were constantly calling for the U.S. to get tough on Pakistan, make Pakistanis do more, threaten them with consequences. Such exhortations were—and remain—generally counterproductive, as they fuel fears that the U.S. will again abandon Pakistan.

The U.S. can better work with Pakistan if we improve our understanding of history: Given its rivalry with India and its organic disunity, which dates back to its founding, Pakistan fears for its basic survival. The country has always had a difficult relationship with Afghanistan, not least because in the 19th century the British deliberately drew the Pakistani-Afghan border, the so-called Durand Line, in order to divide the Pashtun people. Today Pashtuns make up Afghanistan's largest community, but there are more Pashtuns in Pakistan.

The Durand Line also set the groundwork for the tribal areas, which are legally distinct from the rest of Pakistan because the British could never exert direct control over them. No central authority ever has. Winston Churchill's first published work, "The Story of the Malakand Field Force," is about fierce tribesmen declaring jihad against a Western army. It could be a contemporary account.

So what does this mean in concrete terms?

First, the U.S. should appreciate Pakistan's challenges and support its government in dealing with them. This summer's devastating floods have disappeared from the U.S. media but will continue to wreak havoc in Pakistan for a long time to come. In 2005 and 2006, after an earthquake in Kashmir killed almost 80,000 Pakistanis, the U.S. organized the largest relief operation since the Berlin Airlift. The floods' death toll is lower, but their long-term damage will be far greater. U.S. support should be commensurate.

Second, the U.S. should not carry out cross-border military actions, which I strongly resisted as ambassador. They are clearly counterproductive, and not just because we hit the wrong target. If NATO can carry out military actions in Pakistan from the west, Pakistanis wonder, what stops India from doing the same from the east? There are other options, including drone strikes, which the U.S. is now coordinating more closely with Pakistanis.

Third, with Pakistan's government (as with Afghanistan's), we must be private in our criticism and public in our support. Private talks should deepen regarding challenges like the insurgent Haqqani network in North Waziristan, and we need to listen at least as much as we lecture.

Fourth, any talks between the U.S. or Afghanistan and the Taliban must be transparent to the Pakistanis. A nightmare for Islamabad is the prospect that the Americans and Afghans come to some accommodation with Taliban elements that would leave them hostile to Pakistan. If Pakistan is not part of the process, we will be working at cross-purposes and only the Taliban will benefit.

Pakistan's arrest of Taliban leader Abdul Ghani Baradar—at a time when he had begun reconciliation talks with Afghan authorities—underscored the risks of leaving Islamabad out of the loop. Going forward, the timing and nature of talks with the Taliban should be set by Afghans, Pakistanis and Americans working together.

None of this will be easy, but it is essential. A sustained U.S.-Pakistani partnership after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan could have produced a very different history than the one we wrestle with today. Writing a different future requires making long-term commitments—on both sides of the Durand Line.

Mr. Crocker, the dean of Texas A&M's George Bush School of Government and Public Service, was U.S. ambassador to Pakistan from 2004 to 2007 and U.S. ambassador to Iraq from 2007 to 2009.


Ryan Crocker: Pakistan Is Not America's Enemy - WSJ.com
 
news reports say different. i do not understand what america want!! america bombing in pakistan one way and giving aid another way. friend or foe? critical.
 
" NATO helicopters engage suspected militants inside Pakistan, killing three, only to discover they are Pakistani soldiers. "

This one statement is more then enough to show the biased & liars approach by the US.

Knowing the post is of Pakistan, helicopters doing multiple sorties over the post and then engaging is more then enough to tell, it was a deliberate attack on the so called ally's post and the killing of this so called ally's soldiers was a deliberate action, it was an act of aggression by the so called ally of Pakistan.
 
Taimi, this is an article intended for an American audience. Obviously, the Ambassador will use phraseology which is not found jarring or disturbing by his readership, even if it has him dabbling with border line untruths. The intent behind the article, I believe, is good.

In a nutshell, Frmr. Amb. Crocker is trying to explain to the US public and decision makers how things got to where they are, and is pointing out that Pakistan has a justified position and has in fact been wronged by US policy in the past. It has been all too easy for folks in the US, distant from and uninterested in the events of the world, to form opinions based on a couple of often-biased sound bites. Mr. Crocker and people like him need to take responsibility to spread awareness inside America, because no country can afford to be an island in the world of today.
 
Taimi, this is an article intended for an American audience. Obviously, the Ambassador will use phraseology which is not found jarring or disturbing by his readership, even if it has him dabbling with border line untruths. The intent behind the article, I believe, is good.

In a nutshell, Frmr. Amb. Crocker is trying to explain to the US public and decision makers how things got to where they are, and is pointing out that Pakistan has a justified position and has in fact been wronged by US policy in the past. It has been all too easy for folks in the US, distant from and uninterested in the events of the world, to form opinions based on a couple of often-biased sound bites. Mr. Crocker and people like him need to take responsibility to spread awareness inside America, because no country can afford to be an island in the world of today.

Yes, agreed that the intention of the article and the writer is positive, but still he shouldn't justify the deliberate killing of the Pakistani soldiers as a mistake or that they were trying to kill insurgents.

And i hope, someone in the US admin listens to what he and people like him have to say, not the ones who want war.
 
Pakistan Is Not America's Enemy

A sustained U.S.-Pakistani partnership after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan could have produced a very different history than the one we wrestle with today.

By RYAN CROCKER

The news from Pakistan is grim. NATO helicopters engage suspected militants inside Pakistan, killing three, only to discover they are Pakistani soldiers. The angry Pakistani government blocks NATO fuel shipments at the Khyber Pass, and militants attack the stalled trucks. An Obama administration report to Congress charges that the Pakistanis aren't doing enough against the Taliban and al Qaeda. Press accounts quote unnamed officials asserting that elements in Pakistani intelligence are encouraging the Taliban to step up attacks on NATO forces. And Bob Woodward cites President Obama as saying "the cancer is in Pakistan."

One could easily conclude that we are describing an enemy, not an ally. Many in Pakistan feel the same way. And yet the prospects for stabilizing Afghanistan, defeating al Qaeda and preventing further attacks on the United States are a direct function of that strained alliance. It is time for a collective deep breath.

Pakistan's historical narrative focuses on how the U.S. worked with Pakistanis and Afghans to drive the Soviets from Afghanistan in the 1980s: We succeeded—and then we left. And on our way out, we slapped sanctions on Pakistan, ending all security and economic assistance because of the country's nuclear program, which we had known about since 1974 when Pakistan's prime minister announced it publicly. We left Pakistan alone to deal with a destabilizing civil war in Afghanistan, and when the Taliban emerged as a dominant force in the mid-1990s, Islamabad supported them as a means of ending the conflict.

Then came 9/11 and the U.S. was back. Pakistanis welcomed the renewed assistance. But a constant question I heard while serving as ambassador to Pakistan from 2004-2007 was "How long will you stay this time, and what mess will you leave us with when you go?" For a fragile state with innumerable problems, including a vicious internal insurgency, these are existential questions.

Never in Pakistan's six decades of existence has the U.S. sustained a long-term, strategic commitment in the country. The Bush administration recognized this and enacted security and economic assistance programs designed to make a long-term difference in education, health care and governance. In 2006, I argued successfully for a five-year assistance package for Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), which are notable both for chronic underdevelopment and extremism. The Obama administration has built on this, and last year's Kerry-Lugar bill provided $7.5 billion in assistance over five years. So we have the architecture in place to build a strategic relationship.

Still, short-term pressures risk undermining long-term strategy. When I was ambassador, voices in Congress, the media and even the administration were constantly calling for the U.S. to get tough on Pakistan, make Pakistanis do more, threaten them with consequences. Such exhortations were—and remain—generally counterproductive, as they fuel fears that the U.S. will again abandon Pakistan.

The U.S. can better work with Pakistan if we improve our understanding of history: Given its rivalry with India and its organic disunity, which dates back to its founding, Pakistan fears for its basic survival. The country has always had a difficult relationship with Afghanistan, not least because in the 19th century the British deliberately drew the Pakistani-Afghan border, the so-called Durand Line, in order to divide the Pashtun people. Today Pashtuns make up Afghanistan's largest community, but there are more Pashtuns in Pakistan.

The Durand Line also set the groundwork for the tribal areas, which are legally distinct from the rest of Pakistan because the British could never exert direct control over them. No central authority ever has. Winston Churchill's first published work, "The Story of the Malakand Field Force," is about fierce tribesmen declaring jihad against a Western army. It could be a contemporary account.

So what does this mean in concrete terms?

First, the U.S. should appreciate Pakistan's challenges and support its government in dealing with them. This summer's devastating floods have disappeared from the U.S. media but will continue to wreak havoc in Pakistan for a long time to come. In 2005 and 2006, after an earthquake in Kashmir killed almost 80,000 Pakistanis, the U.S. organized the largest relief operation since the Berlin Airlift. The floods' death toll is lower, but their long-term damage will be far greater. U.S. support should be commensurate.

Second, the U.S. should not carry out cross-border military actions, which I strongly resisted as ambassador. They are clearly counterproductive, and not just because we hit the wrong target. If NATO can carry out military actions in Pakistan from the west, Pakistanis wonder, what stops India from doing the same from the east? There are other options, including drone strikes, which the U.S. is now coordinating more closely with Pakistanis.

Third, with Pakistan's government (as with Afghanistan's), we must be private in our criticism and public in our support. Private talks should deepen regarding challenges like the insurgent Haqqani network in North Waziristan, and we need to listen at least as much as we lecture.

Fourth, any talks between the U.S. or Afghanistan and the Taliban must be transparent to the Pakistanis. A nightmare for Islamabad is the prospect that the Americans and Afghans come to some accommodation with Taliban elements that would leave them hostile to Pakistan. If Pakistan is not part of the process, we will be working at cross-purposes and only the Taliban will benefit.

Pakistan's arrest of Taliban leader Abdul Ghani Baradar—at a time when he had begun reconciliation talks with Afghan authorities—underscored the risks of leaving Islamabad out of the loop. Going forward, the timing and nature of talks with the Taliban should be set by Afghans, Pakistanis and Americans working together.

None of this will be easy, but it is essential. A sustained U.S.-Pakistani partnership after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan could have produced a very different history than the one we wrestle with today. Writing a different future requires making long-term commitments—on both sides of the Durand Line.

Mr. Crocker, the dean of Texas A&M's George Bush School of Government and Public Service, was U.S. ambassador to Pakistan from 2004 to 2007 and U.S. ambassador to Iraq from 2007 to 2009.
 
I was reading the comments at WSJ and it apperas that alot of Americans Hate Pakistan or look it with suspicion and thats quit sad .. !!!

To add salt to wounds some of Indian posters dont even hesitate to add fuel to fire,.. !!!
Unfortunately this is a sad reality of our relations with the US...!
 
To add salt to wounds some of Indian posters dont even hesitate to add fuel to fire,.. !!!
They're just sad individuals who do nothing but wait for an opportunity to jump on the 'bash Pakistan' bandwagon. A strong hatred exists unfortunately.

It's not the first time, and won't be the last. Trolls will be trolls.
 
Pakistan is the best friend US can have , it was Pakistan who brought China to come near to US in 60's. China came out of USSR camp and started links with US with the help of Pakistan.
 
It's not the first time, and won't be the last. Trolls will be trolls.

So true. Let trolls be trolls. I doubt they can make any significant difference on foreign policy so preaching to them is a waste of time. Even on a "liberal" news site like MSNBC these crackpots spam the comments section with lame brouhaha. We should target the sane American audience, which I am sure are in the majority and who can be brought to understand our point of view. Rest should be ignored.
 
Pakistan is practically bending over backwards to accommodate US's so-called WoT, at severe cost to itself, yet they still have the galls to suggest thinking of Pakistan as an 'enemy'. :disagree:
 

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