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Solve the Pakistan problem by redrawing the map

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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...RSS/Atom&utm_source=World&utm_content=2278388

M. CHRIS MASON

M. Chris Mason is a retired diplomat with long service in South Asia and a senior fellow at the Center for Advanced Defence Studies in Washington.


Relations between the United States and Pakistan have reached an all-time low. The Khyber Pass is closed to NATO cargo, U.S. personnel were evicted from Shamsi airbase and Pakistani observers have been recalled from joint co-operation centres.

Much more importantly, senior officials in Washington now know that Pakistan has been playing them false since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and understand that Pakistan was sheltering Osama bin Laden a few hundred yards from its version of West Point. The recent shelling of Afghan troops inside Afghanistan by the Pakistani army, and the NATO counterstrike, cleared in error by Pakistan, has further embarrassed the Pakistani military.

It should be obvious by now that Pakistan has no intention of doing what the United States has wanted for the past decade. The combination of wishful thinking, admiration for the emperor’s new clothes and $10-billion in payments to the Pakistani military have accomplished nothing. Admiral Michael Mullen was not wrong when he testified recently that the terrorist Haqqani network is operating as an arm of the Pakistani army. He might have added that the Taliban is the Pakistani army’s expeditionary force in Afghanistan. Pakistan shelters, funds, trains, supplies and advises the Taliban. The simple fact is that Pakistan is the world’s No. 1 state supporter of terrorism.

In Afghanistan, Pakistan will never be happy unless it has a puppet regime in Kabul and can run the country like a colony. Islamabad does not intend to allow the current Afghan constitution to remain in effect, and as soon as NATO pulls out, it will push the Taliban into an all-out civil war in Afghanistan designed to return it to power. All of which has led to a lot of hand-wringing in Washington, accompanied by a revolving-door procession of senior U.S. officials going to Islamabad to read a toothless riot act the Pakistanis can now recite by heart.

The permanent solution to the Pakistan problem is not more of this chest-beating appeasement. The answer lies in 20th-century history. In 1947, when India gained independence, a British Empire in full retreat left behind an unworkable mess on both sides of India – called Pakistan – whose elements had nothing in common except the religion of Islam. In 1971, this postcolonial Frankenstein came a step closer to rectification when Bangladesh, formerly East Pakistan, became an independent state.

The answer to the current Pakistani train wreck is to continue this natural process by recognizing Baluchistan’s legitimate claim to independence. Baluchistan was an independent nation for more than 1,000 years when Great Britain notionally annexed it in the mid-19th century. The Baluchis were never consulted about becoming a part of Pakistan, and since then, they have been the victims of alternating persecution and neglect by the Pakistani state, abuse which escalated to genocide when it was discovered in the 1970s that most of the region’s natural resources lie underneath their soil. Since then, tens of thousands of Baluchis have been slaughtered by the Pakistani army, which has used napalm and tanks indiscriminately against an unarmed population.

Changing maps is difficult only because it is initially unimaginable to diplomats and politicians. Although redrawing maps is the definition of failure for the United Nations and the U.S. State Department, it has, in fact, been by such a wide margin the most effective solution to regional violence over the past 50 years that there is really nothing in second place. Among the most obvious recent examples (apart from the former Soviet Union) are North and South Sudan, Kosovo, Eritrea, Bosnia, Croatia, Macedonia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, East Timor and Bangladesh.

An independent Baluchistan would, in fact, solve many of the region’s most intractable problems overnight. It would create a territorial buffer between rogue states Iran and Pakistan. It would provide a transportation and pipeline corridor for Afghanistan and Central Asia to the impressive but underutilized new port at Gwadar. It would solve all of NATO’s logistical problems in Afghanistan, allow us to root the Taliban out of the former province and provide greater access to Waziristan, to subdue our enemies there. And it would contain the rogue nuclear state of Pakistan and its A.Q. Khan network of nuclear proliferation-for-profit on three landward sides.

The way to put the Pakistani genie back in the bottle and cork it is to help the Baluchis go the way of the Bangladeshis in achieving their dream of freedom from tyranny, corruption and murder at the hands of the diseased Pakistani military state.
 
This is right section. Strategic global geoplotical issue. View of American diplomat and think tank scholar at prestigious Center for Advanced Defence Studies, Washington.

Just think that if TT are contemplating such ideas sitting in washington. Then what American officials and pentagon thinking right now?? Any guesses? Lets discuss
 
Uh the article says , Baluchis were never asked about being part of Pakistan, but forced to do so.

Is the article writer retarded?
 
well let us for argument sake say this is the perception of the American think tank which published this . how would you go about changing this, by refuting it with facts . and if so what are they ? any one?
 
well let us for argument sake say this is the perception of the American think tank which published this . how would you go about changing this, by refuting it with facts . and if so what are they ? any one?

Oh we are well aware of American intentions.
we plan to counter those by waiting for long as possible.
One of us will crash and burn.

unfortunately, it is irrelevant for India who crashes, India will get a large burning sensation nonetheless.
 
well let us for argument sake say this is the perception of the American think tank which published this . how would you go about changing this, by refuting it with facts . and if so what are they ? any one?
Actually, the article is full of so much unsubstantiated rubbish (most of which has been debunked in threads related to those points) that the onus is on the author (and/or those who agree with the author) to substantiate his allegations with facts.

If X claims he was 'abducted and raped by aliens from Mars' you don't ask those who disagree with the claim to 'refute X's claims' - first and foremost it is X who has to validate his/her claims of 'abduction and rape by Martians'.

---------- Post added at 09:08 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:06 AM ----------

My Pakistany freinds this article is just a tip of the ice berg which is rightnow hypothetically flaoting in your waters , what do you think about US pressuring Iran to do ,(its not saving isreal but getting exclusive trade & oil corridores ) which incedentally are not possible without using Pakistany prowince of Baluchistan , even soviet war was cause the soviets wanted the same & it was a great thret to Saudi interests & american + British interests (thats why US+Nato & Saudies supported it), but Pakistan is lucky cause China also wants the same and Pakistanies are more than happy to oblige (Freindship & Anty Indian Stance ).
Kindly do correct me if you feel im wrong & kindly give your inputs.
An independent Baluchstan State would also require a war with Iran (since Iran also administers large areas of Baluchistan-Sistan), and good luck getting any international support in the UN for such an adventure, which would be opposed tooth and nail by Russia, China and Europe (barring the US's lapdog the UK).
 
Had to post some comments from the Globe and Mail on the piece:

Mark Shore
7:34 AM on December 21, 2011
I knew before scrolling down to the end that the author would be a member of one of the think tanks that infest imperial Washington.

Mason probably has little influence, but it is illustrative of the increasingly sociopathic approach to international relations taken by the US over the last couple of decades. Now even its allies get "offers they can't refuse".

It's an interesting question why the Globe ran this opinion piece in the first place.

yves couture
9:46 AM on December 21, 2011
I don't know enough about Pakistan to say if the case for a free Baluchistan has any moral merits.

But Mark Shore is right, the main aspect of this opinion piece is the hubris of Imperial Washington, where some people seem to day dream about redrawing maps at their convenience.

But Mark, you're partly wrong when you suggest this is new. We should instead put it in an historical perspective.

The US saw themselves, from the beginning, as the firts "new nation". That meant : i- not based on domination but on free adhesion ; ii- unified on the basis of constitutionnal principles. A third obvious aspect is more rarely expressed : unified by a common culture and language. (Details like first nations are put aside)

Based on those assumptions, the US have often been tempted to say that countries without i and ii were illegitimate in the first place. And the reason for that was often their imperial nature, meaning the domination of a national group over others.

So a good lockean liberal could see them as objects to be "redrawn". It helped when it was also considered the US national interest.

The principle of nationalities, after WWI, was precisely that, a tool to "redraw" Europe by dismantling old multinational empires. And in the process weakeking most possible challengers to the US.

The same mixture of principles and imperial interest could still be used against Russia, China, Pakistan, etc., all multinational "empires".

So in fact, the attitude displayed in this opinion piece was and is still one of the ideological joker that the US can used in international affairs. In this case, it is probably a way to put pressure on Pakistan.

exposehypocrisy
2:41 AM on December 21, 2011
What an extreme form imperialistic arrogance displayed by this author. Imperialism and the passion of empire building has been the favorite past time of the white supremacists and neo-cons such as Mr.Chris Mason. How disgusting to see bigotry,i gnorance and arrogance to be part of a diplomat's personality.

The game of empire building that this bigot suggests is the same game that has been the cause of so much unrest and violence in this world today. It is one of the main reasons why terrorism exists today. I think Mr.Mason has not seen the fruits of empire building in Iraq and Afghanistan.

How about this? Lets redraw the map by taking Quebec out of Canada or giving back California to Mexicans or lets rezone London by giving 75% of it to the Islamists.

This article seems to be authored by a wannabe coffee house intellectual rather than a diplomat.

Naveed in Calgary
4:27 AM on December 21, 2011
I am surprised that Globe and Mail has no Editorial Supervision....Chris Mason is hardly in contact with reality....Reality is the biggest terror is United States....Pakistan was pushed into this war on terror and this war has produced more terrorist....Pakistan, in my opinion should ask US to pack up and leave the country...

Majority of people in this world know that that the biggest terrorist country in the world is US, that has waged more wars than any other in the modern history.

I have met few Bangladeshi who has remorse on what happened in 1971. Bangladesh was surrounded by India and India took full advantage of the situation...

Chris you are writing from a country that had a bloody Civil war because the sitting President didnot want to let go of the southern Ports of USA because commerce of cotton was from southern Portz. That despite the fact he didnot won in any Southern States in 1861 Presidential Election.

Baluchistan is part of Pakistan....If in Chris mind there is any issue as such of Baluchistan, so Quebec and Alberta be allowed to separate from Canada, and California, Texas should be return to Mexico. Assam, Kashmir and other regions should be separated from India.

Writing carelessly from a region that you donot know much, look at US history before throwing ***** on another nations.

I am surprised at the state of Mind of Chris Mason and that the content of his column was not supervised

pcassidy2010
7:26 AM on December 21, 2011
Ahh...: the Raj returns.

IdeologyIsForLosers2

6:10 AM on December 21, 2011
The author misses the key fact that Afghanistan is no more a united national state than Pakistan and probably less viable or politically stable in the long run no matter what it neighbours do.

Louis Robert
8:47 AM on December 21, 2011
"Divide and conquer"

+++

The old, old, old trick... the Empire tries to use throughout the world.

+++

Judging by the results, after hundreds of years playing that old trick, for one to call that "solving problems" is like saying that whatever a magician does is not entertainment but REALITY!

As Chris Hedges insists: the "Empire of Illusion" (Nation Books, 2009) is "delusional".

"The US is living a delusion and no change can occur unless that insular bubble is popped. Personally, I am not hopeful, I think the population is so blinded by the illusion that positive change in the real world is not possible, the people have been so deluded and become so ignorant with myth and superstition as all there being to cling to, that the destruction will only increase in speed. The grand experiment is dead."

The New School

http://fora.tv/2009/12/08/Chris_Hedges_Empire_of_Illusion

rateee
8:35 AM on December 21, 2011
The writer has no knowledge of the Baluchistan problem and is writing this article based on personal bias and total ignorance of the Baluchistan problem.

All the Baluch leadership is represented by the feudal and Sardars whose forefathers were appointed by the British as area fiefdoms by the colonial British Government as they supported the colonial rule of Baluchistan and their fiefdoms when challenged by the local or Federal Governments they start playing the independence card. They do not have any support of the general local population. Moreover half of the population is Pathan or puktoon which is non-Baluch so how can they support independence of Baluchistan.

People of these areas are not allowed to study and are nearly slaves in the hands of the local rulers called Sardars and to protect their fiefdoms they are ruling these states and eliminate all opposition in these areas.

Before publishing these sorts of articles the Global post should analyze how can Baluchistan survive independently in this kind of neighborhood and wont Iran take advantage as it owns other half of Baluchistan??

Jim****
4:23 AM on December 21, 2011
"The simple fact is that Pakistan is the world’s No. 1 state supporter of terrorism."

What he doesn't say is that for all of this time that Pakistan was the No 1 supporter of terrorism, the number one supporter of Pakistan was the USA.

The US and Pakistan conspired throughout the eighties to wage a terrorist war first against the Afghans and then against the Soviets.

This author is simply a propagandist, seeking to minimise American culpability for the hellhole they have created.


Mr Summers
9:55 AM on December 21, 2011
"Solve the Pakistan problem by redrawing the map"

This is a classic divide and conquer tactic, expect the USA to try and hatch this scheme.

"In Afghanistan, Pakistan will never be happy unless it has a puppet regime in Kabul and can run the country like a colony"

Here is another scheme, Pakistan and Afghanistan merge to become one BIG powerful Islamic country.

The USA should be plenty happy about that.
 
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