Can't buy into Afghanistan's future umbilically-linked to Pakistan solely. It's value as a nation (if any) stems from it's geo-political positioning within central asia. It's a true cross-roads so get used to the Afghani gov't seeking close relations with the likes of CAR, Iran, Turkey, China, and India. That doesn't include the 41 nations there now with NATO/ISAF. They'll continue to play a role and, increasingly, one that's mercantile in nature
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Allow me to explain further: My point about seriously integrating the Afghan economy with that of Pakistan is based on first hand observation Pakistan is ideally situated to service the Afghan economy, as is Iran, India and China and CAR less so,(geography, cost of production and transport and culture). Iran cannot hope to be a cultural connection other than for a minority and even then its Shiah credentials are problematic.
The Coalition of the willing can of course play a economic role, but not in the kind of trade Pakistan can EU cannot be buying and selling daily commodities with the Afghan, unless it is very heavily subsidized indeed. For example, a plant to manufacture Cement or concrete, now the Indian, Iranian, Pakistani and Chinese manufacture such plants, such plants require parts and training and maintenance, it is my experience, that while Pakistan can provide these most economically, the Iranian (read German) will be preferred, so long as the coalition of the willing dominates in Afghanistan. Pakistan have for too long ignored the fact that its economy and business people can also function as tools of policy.
More than any other move, Pakistan must rediscover what the role of the state is. Readers will have noted that less than 1% of Pakistanis pay taxes, that Pakistan has the lowest tax to GDP ratio in the WORLD, that Pakistanis do not see taxes as obligations of citizenship but as punishment - as Mosharraf Zaidi notes (see Pak-US :Aid not Trade on the strategic board) :
Not only does Pakistan lack the basic capabilities that modern nation states must posses. It lacks them because it doesn't know why it should possess them. Pakistan's bureaucracy and parliament are crawling with LSE, Cambridge and Harvard graduates. This is not country that lacks generic capacity. It is a country that lacks a specific and overarching will. What use are the world's best classrooms, and most revered texts in the absence of a moral compulsion to use them? And how could they ever be used effectively in the absence of an institutional framework to regulate their use?
Most Pakistanis will tend to become defensive at the suggestion that in many respects Pakistan are a failed STATE but to these it must be asked what they make of a State in which less than 1% pay taxes? What would they call a state in which political parties and non-national individuals recruit, train and operate private armies and propaganda cells whose stated aim is to destroy the State? What would they call a state that refuses to see its duty towards its childrens right to a decent, modern education based on the values of science? The list is long, but reasonable people will have internalized the point being made.
Afghanistan geography is, at least in my experience, not well understood, even by Afghans the provinces are compartmentalized, some are unique climates and of course communication is a nightmare the suggestion that Afghanistans neighbors will have no role in Afghanistan, is not what I had in mind, quite the contrary, you will find that there is no objection to any Indian role there with the exception of security and this too may change, should Pakistan manage to rediscover what the role of a government actually ought to be and what the substance of sovereignty ought to be (Balouchistan and FATA, PATA).
Perceptions are interesting. Who's and with what accuracy comes to mind? If those here, are those perceptions shared by Pakistan's leadership? On India, it seems that your leader has spoken and your praetorian didn't object. Did I miss something or is Mr. Attaullah's notion of surrogates still in play with Islamabad? Judging by Gilani's comment India is seen as no adversary in comparison to the threat from the west. Kiyani certainly raised no objection. That matters, no?
I agree that Indian have not presented themselves, as yet, of the kind of threat they have helped create on the Western border, and even that is a function of their insecurity in occupied Kashmir now, some will suggest that this is rhetoric, fair enough, but I would point to events in Occupied Kashmir and the demonstration of public will and sentiment, for the objective, these will be instructive.
We have noted that the Indian has now positioned high performance Su30 aircraft at a base that has remained defunct for many years, they have also reopened a base for large transport aircraft traffic, they now prepare tunnel networks on the line of control, they (mis)use the Indus Water treaty and signal Pakistan that they control the head waters and deprive Pakistan of water - while Zardari and Gilani make noises in their self interest and Kiyani defers (what option is available to him?), it would be a misreading of the Pakistani establishment to imagine that these moves and others have gone unnoticed and their import unrealized.
Our objectives for Afghanistan, however poorly executed (again) are, I believe, quite transparent and benign. Improving their lot in life such that rejection of political movements like talibanism and, thus, avoiding a repeat of all this unpleasantness suffered by the people of NYC is the clear choice that must be firm in all afghanis minds.
Getting there is the trick. What offers the best path for an enduring and uniformly palatable accord that can be a reasonable platform to launch a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic tribal society with some modest prospects of equally modest success? Oh, and what vehicle(s) can eventually erode these same barriers of tribe, ethnicity, religion, and culture? The idea is that one man, one vote seeks to employ this tool to achieve his own aspirations-independant from the group-think so prevalent now.
I wanted to leave the objectives of the US for the last because this is a genuine bone of contention between not just establishment in both US and Pakistan but ordinary observers such as ourselves. I will grant you that by and large the US soldiers have got Haji hate out of their system and almost everyone I interacted with wanted the Afghan to have a better life, it was a human reaction and not one of ideology. However; I think you will have a difficult time convincing Pakistanis that US intentions and objectives are benign, because they most certainly do not appear to be benign The US is a partner of a particular side in a civil war, a liberal democracy in Afghanistan, really? Had you ever been to Afghanistan During the Communist years? The Afghan boasted to the provincial Pakistani how women in Kabul wear mini skirts, and they certainly did, outside Kabul, it was another world altogether even now, it is a replay of those years.
You will also have noted the Indian embassy attack in Kabul, It was not the Indian, but the US that sought to pin the blame for this attack on Pakistan and ISI in particular, It did not escape the attention of Pakistanis that the NYT was already being used and public opinion being prepared for viewing ISI and Mujahideen such as Haqqani as villans in what was otherwise a paradise of brotherly sentiment and behavior.
Now, I will grant you that we may not be privy to all the goings on and I will grant you that there are a multitude of players who will not object to seeing the US bleed there why exactly has US policy chosen to publicly identify Pakistan as one of those and not others is interesting and at least to Pakistanis, suggestive of US objectives that are benign and comforting to adversaries of Pakistan.
It is genuinely unfortunate that relations came to this, but it takes two to tango, Pakistans lack of capability and moral fortitude to save itself is definitely to be faulted, it remains to seen what the US evaluation of its policy and behavior will be.