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Time to give up hidebound thinking
The News
Saleem Safi
January 27, 2011
Pakistan is faced with numerous problems, but its complex and troubled relations with India and Afghanistan are the source of most of its problems. Our internal and external troubles mainly flow from this source.
Our strained relations with India compelled us to maintain our defence capabilities at a level not maintainable with this countrys resources and capacity. Feeling the crunch, we looked to other support, and that inevitably turned Pakistan into a security state. A security state is unsuitable for the nurturing of civil society, and that is why democracy has not taken firm roots in this country.
The pursuit of the strategic depth doctrine on Afghanistan and the fierce competition with India to counter its influence in Kabul gave rise to the culture of extremism in Pakistan. This culture tarnished our image in the world community. The states ostensible helplessness in the containment of this threat earned us the tag of failing state.
So, any well-meaning leader in Islamabad who wants the country to develop a democratic culture, have an efficient state and achieve progress and prosperity will have to find ways to secure peace on both the western and eastern borders of Pakistan.
Tragically, these issues have never got the due attention of the political leadership, the intellectuals, the media and civil society. We have left the two fronts, Afghanistan and India, to the establishment, or at best to the Foreign Office.
The countrys political and media personalities are not eager to keep abreast with new developments in both India and Afghanistan. A few think tanks watching both countries are not worth the name because they either serve as mouthpieces of the establishment or look to Washington and London for financial survival.
In this situation we cannot expect fresh thoughts and new ideas on these critical issues.
Pakistanis have been made to develop certain stereotypes about India and Afghanistan. News and analyses in the print and electronic media merely strengthen those trite and old perceptions. The people are frightened with threats that no more exist. The emerging and real threats spawned by the changing environments in India and Afghanistan find no mention in such debates, discussions and analyses.
For many years, Indias priorities in the region, and the situation in Afghanistan, have undergone many radical changes. A few days back, an Indian diplomat came to my office. We hotly debated a range of issues, including Kashmir and Afghanistan. I told him that we cannot wrest Kashmir from the Indian clutches by force, but at the same time India will never be able to match us in Afghanistan.
He was unable to justify his countrys role in Afghanistan. I told him that Indias intention to exploit the situation of near-anarchy in Pakistan is suicidal, because Pakistan would not lose much in a possible war with India. If a war broke out between the two countries, India would be the bigger loser, because its dreams of becoming a superpower would be permanently shattered.
The diplomat stressed that India cannot afford a war with Pakistan. If it could afford such a conflict, then Kargil and the Mumbai attacks offered the best opportunities for a war with Pakistan. But I told him that, though unwillingly, India would be dragged into a war with Pakistan.
He was not convinced by this logic and asked how that would happen. I told him that India had provided to Al-Qaeda and its affiliates the means of triggering a war between India and Pakistan. India is playing into the hands of Al-Qaeda and its affiliates because it has signalled to the extremists and militants that a lone incident can derail the peace process between the two rival countries. So if Al-Qaeda and its affiliates felt threatened in the region, they would seek to cause a war between India and Pakistan as the last viable option. These groups have the capability of launching terrorist attacks and any Mumbai-like attacks in the future can trigger a war between the two nuclear powers.
During this discussion, I felt that the Indian establishment has not even thought of this possibility. Rather, they have the idea that, like in the past, Pakistan still controls the militants. I am certain that this new element in India-Pakistan relations has not been appreciated by our policymakers as well. And that is why we lack vision, direction and purpose to seek new avenues for healthy competition and better relation with India.
The ground realities have undergone a sea change in Afghanistan as well. For example, despite its being non-existent at the moment, we are still obsessed with the term Northern Alliance in that country. Most of the leaders of northern Afghanistan have turned against their friends of yesterday. Hamid Karzai, who used to play second fiddle to his Western friends, has now become a stumbling block in the way of the fulfilment of certain designs of those very friends, the United States and NATO.
Similarly, the Taliban are also a changed species. They were enemies of Iran in bygone days, but they have now established training camps on Iranian territory. During their rule in Afghanistan, they were against photography, but today they use video cameras, CDs and the internet as special tools in their war against the foreign forces in their homeland.
Similarly, we are told that the United States forces will flee Afghanistan, sooner rather than latter. However, against this perception, a few days back the US awarded supply contracts for ten years to keep its bases operative in Kandahar, Sheendand and Mazar Sahrif.
We need to get rid of traditional thinking on India and Afghanistan and determine new priorities in view of the new realities. We should do this with an open mind. This necessitates engaging collective wisdom. Unfortunately, we are victims of a huge gap between the views and beliefs of the military and the civil establishment on these issues. That gap should be bridged through discussion and constructive debate in order for Pakistan to forge a united approach on this critical juncture of our history.
We never needed this line of thinking so desperately. This is a difficult task, but not an impossible one. If we fail to do this, the fire will engulf the entire country, to the satisfaction of our enemies.
The writer works for Geo TV.
The News
Saleem Safi
January 27, 2011
Pakistan is faced with numerous problems, but its complex and troubled relations with India and Afghanistan are the source of most of its problems. Our internal and external troubles mainly flow from this source.
Our strained relations with India compelled us to maintain our defence capabilities at a level not maintainable with this countrys resources and capacity. Feeling the crunch, we looked to other support, and that inevitably turned Pakistan into a security state. A security state is unsuitable for the nurturing of civil society, and that is why democracy has not taken firm roots in this country.
The pursuit of the strategic depth doctrine on Afghanistan and the fierce competition with India to counter its influence in Kabul gave rise to the culture of extremism in Pakistan. This culture tarnished our image in the world community. The states ostensible helplessness in the containment of this threat earned us the tag of failing state.
So, any well-meaning leader in Islamabad who wants the country to develop a democratic culture, have an efficient state and achieve progress and prosperity will have to find ways to secure peace on both the western and eastern borders of Pakistan.
Tragically, these issues have never got the due attention of the political leadership, the intellectuals, the media and civil society. We have left the two fronts, Afghanistan and India, to the establishment, or at best to the Foreign Office.
The countrys political and media personalities are not eager to keep abreast with new developments in both India and Afghanistan. A few think tanks watching both countries are not worth the name because they either serve as mouthpieces of the establishment or look to Washington and London for financial survival.
In this situation we cannot expect fresh thoughts and new ideas on these critical issues.
Pakistanis have been made to develop certain stereotypes about India and Afghanistan. News and analyses in the print and electronic media merely strengthen those trite and old perceptions. The people are frightened with threats that no more exist. The emerging and real threats spawned by the changing environments in India and Afghanistan find no mention in such debates, discussions and analyses.
For many years, Indias priorities in the region, and the situation in Afghanistan, have undergone many radical changes. A few days back, an Indian diplomat came to my office. We hotly debated a range of issues, including Kashmir and Afghanistan. I told him that we cannot wrest Kashmir from the Indian clutches by force, but at the same time India will never be able to match us in Afghanistan.
He was unable to justify his countrys role in Afghanistan. I told him that Indias intention to exploit the situation of near-anarchy in Pakistan is suicidal, because Pakistan would not lose much in a possible war with India. If a war broke out between the two countries, India would be the bigger loser, because its dreams of becoming a superpower would be permanently shattered.
The diplomat stressed that India cannot afford a war with Pakistan. If it could afford such a conflict, then Kargil and the Mumbai attacks offered the best opportunities for a war with Pakistan. But I told him that, though unwillingly, India would be dragged into a war with Pakistan.
He was not convinced by this logic and asked how that would happen. I told him that India had provided to Al-Qaeda and its affiliates the means of triggering a war between India and Pakistan. India is playing into the hands of Al-Qaeda and its affiliates because it has signalled to the extremists and militants that a lone incident can derail the peace process between the two rival countries. So if Al-Qaeda and its affiliates felt threatened in the region, they would seek to cause a war between India and Pakistan as the last viable option. These groups have the capability of launching terrorist attacks and any Mumbai-like attacks in the future can trigger a war between the two nuclear powers.
During this discussion, I felt that the Indian establishment has not even thought of this possibility. Rather, they have the idea that, like in the past, Pakistan still controls the militants. I am certain that this new element in India-Pakistan relations has not been appreciated by our policymakers as well. And that is why we lack vision, direction and purpose to seek new avenues for healthy competition and better relation with India.
The ground realities have undergone a sea change in Afghanistan as well. For example, despite its being non-existent at the moment, we are still obsessed with the term Northern Alliance in that country. Most of the leaders of northern Afghanistan have turned against their friends of yesterday. Hamid Karzai, who used to play second fiddle to his Western friends, has now become a stumbling block in the way of the fulfilment of certain designs of those very friends, the United States and NATO.
Similarly, the Taliban are also a changed species. They were enemies of Iran in bygone days, but they have now established training camps on Iranian territory. During their rule in Afghanistan, they were against photography, but today they use video cameras, CDs and the internet as special tools in their war against the foreign forces in their homeland.
Similarly, we are told that the United States forces will flee Afghanistan, sooner rather than latter. However, against this perception, a few days back the US awarded supply contracts for ten years to keep its bases operative in Kandahar, Sheendand and Mazar Sahrif.
We need to get rid of traditional thinking on India and Afghanistan and determine new priorities in view of the new realities. We should do this with an open mind. This necessitates engaging collective wisdom. Unfortunately, we are victims of a huge gap between the views and beliefs of the military and the civil establishment on these issues. That gap should be bridged through discussion and constructive debate in order for Pakistan to forge a united approach on this critical juncture of our history.
We never needed this line of thinking so desperately. This is a difficult task, but not an impossible one. If we fail to do this, the fire will engulf the entire country, to the satisfaction of our enemies.
The writer works for Geo TV.