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The report, which looks at Pakistan over a one-to-three year time horizon, rules out the possibility of a Taliban takeover or of it becoming the world's first nuclear-armed failed state
Reuters Published: 00:00 January 13, 2010
London: Pakistani society is likely to become more extremist and increasingly anti-American in the coming years, complicating US efforts to win its support against militant groups, a report released Tuesday said.
The report, which looks at Pakistan over a one-to-three year time horizon, rules out the possibility of a Taliban takeover or of it becoming the world's first nuclear-armed failed state.
"Rather than an [extremist] takeover, you should look at a subtle power shift from a secular pro-Western society to an [extremist] anti-American one," said Jonathan Paris, who produced the report for the Legatum Institute, a London-based think tank.
Paris forecasts that Pakistan is most likely to "muddle through", with its army continuing to play a powerful role behind the scenes in setting foreign and security policy.
"Speculation of a Taliban takeover dramatically overestimates the willingness of the political and military elites to surrender power to the Taliban," says the report, the result of months of research on the outlook for Pakistan.
Paris, who also works for the Atlantic Council of the United States, nonetheless sees Pakistan slipping away from the West at a time when Washington needs its support in Afghanistan.
He drew a parallel with Turkey, arguing that societies in countries traditionally dominated by pro-Western secular elites were becoming more extremist, while those that had lived under extremist rule, such as Iran, were shifting away.
"US and UK leverage over Pakistan is not growing. It is decreasing. Pakistani society is moving toward anti-Americanism and toward more Sharia," he says.
Transformation
The rising influence of extremist political parties and of militant groups in its Punjab province will slowly transform Pakistan by exploiting local grievances, including over the economy and the slow and often corrupt legal system.
"The danger for the army, and for Pakistan generally, is not Talibanisation but [influence] from Punjab-based militants and their allies," the report says.
Islamist political parties which thrive on anti-American rhetoric would not become dominant, but would raise pressure on the government to reject public cooperation with Washington and make it harder to crack down on militant groups.
"The religious parties have generally been opposed to any police or military action taken against any group which is nominally religious " the report says.
Such a shift would have implications for relations with India, which wants Pakistan to dismantle militant groups such as the Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for the attack on Mumbai in 2008.
Paris, whose research background was originally in the Middle East, said he saw a risk of militant organisations fragmenting into smaller and sometimes more extreme splinter groups.
gulfnews : Pakistan society could become more extremist: report
Reuters Published: 00:00 January 13, 2010
London: Pakistani society is likely to become more extremist and increasingly anti-American in the coming years, complicating US efforts to win its support against militant groups, a report released Tuesday said.
The report, which looks at Pakistan over a one-to-three year time horizon, rules out the possibility of a Taliban takeover or of it becoming the world's first nuclear-armed failed state.
"Rather than an [extremist] takeover, you should look at a subtle power shift from a secular pro-Western society to an [extremist] anti-American one," said Jonathan Paris, who produced the report for the Legatum Institute, a London-based think tank.
Paris forecasts that Pakistan is most likely to "muddle through", with its army continuing to play a powerful role behind the scenes in setting foreign and security policy.
"Speculation of a Taliban takeover dramatically overestimates the willingness of the political and military elites to surrender power to the Taliban," says the report, the result of months of research on the outlook for Pakistan.
Paris, who also works for the Atlantic Council of the United States, nonetheless sees Pakistan slipping away from the West at a time when Washington needs its support in Afghanistan.
He drew a parallel with Turkey, arguing that societies in countries traditionally dominated by pro-Western secular elites were becoming more extremist, while those that had lived under extremist rule, such as Iran, were shifting away.
"US and UK leverage over Pakistan is not growing. It is decreasing. Pakistani society is moving toward anti-Americanism and toward more Sharia," he says.
Transformation
The rising influence of extremist political parties and of militant groups in its Punjab province will slowly transform Pakistan by exploiting local grievances, including over the economy and the slow and often corrupt legal system.
"The danger for the army, and for Pakistan generally, is not Talibanisation but [influence] from Punjab-based militants and their allies," the report says.
Islamist political parties which thrive on anti-American rhetoric would not become dominant, but would raise pressure on the government to reject public cooperation with Washington and make it harder to crack down on militant groups.
"The religious parties have generally been opposed to any police or military action taken against any group which is nominally religious " the report says.
Such a shift would have implications for relations with India, which wants Pakistan to dismantle militant groups such as the Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for the attack on Mumbai in 2008.
Paris, whose research background was originally in the Middle East, said he saw a risk of militant organisations fragmenting into smaller and sometimes more extreme splinter groups.
gulfnews : Pakistan society could become more extremist: report