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'US Does Not Care About Pakistan’

GUNNER

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The unflattering perspective - Part I: ‘The US does not care about Pakistan’




NEW YORK: Professor Noam Chomsky sits on the eighth floor of the quirky-looking Stata Center of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, US. Former head of the linguistics department, the author and intellectual now serves as Professor Emeritus at the university.

The man is known worldwide for his incredibly popular and polarising criticism of American foreign policy.

“The US doesn’t care about Pakistan, just like the Reagan administration didn’t care about either Afghanistan or Pakistan,” says Chomski, when asked how he sees the relationship between Pakistan and the US. “They supported Zia, the worst dictator in Pakistan’s history, and pretended they didn’t know that Pakistan was developing nuclear weapons. So basically they supported Pakistan’s nuclear weapon programme and radical Islamisation in their bid to defeat the Russians. And that has not helped Pakistan.”

According to Chomsky, the reason the Pak-US relationship hasn’t worked is because the concern of US planners is not the welfare of Pakistan, it’s the welfare of their own constituency. “But it’s not the people of US either, just the powerful sectors within the US,” he said. “If the US policy towards Pakistan happens to benefit Pakistan it would be kind of accidental. Maybe it will to some extent, but that is not the purpose.”

Chomsky believes Pakistan has serious internal problems but says there are solutions. But, he insists, these problems have to be solved from within instead of from outside. “These problems have to be dealt with inside Pakistan, and not by the US; providing them with massive military aid, carrying out drone strikes, which enrages the population rightly,” he says.

“Drone attacks are target assassinations and therefore a crime. Whether they are militants or not, these people are being targeted because the US doesn’t like them. Targeted assassination is an international crime. United Nations’ special rapporteur Philip Alston, a very respected international lawyer, came out with a report which simply says that it is a criminal act.”

He also supports the 1973 constitution and believes it is suitable for Pakistan. “It looks sensible on paper. It provided a degree of autonomy within a federalised system, which makes sense for a country like Pakistan,” he says. “Devoting resources to education, development and not military will help.”

Relationship with India

Speaking about Pakistan’s relationship and outlook towards India, he said that the Pakistani military has a strategic doctrine that they have to have a military presence in Afghanistan to counter India. “That’s a losing proposition because Pakistan cannot compete with India in terms of military force. Besides, the strategic position in Afghanistan doesn’t really mean anything in case of a war,” he says. “Pakistan has undoubtedly supported terrorist groups in Kashmir and terrorism in India, which has made the situation worse.”

The Americans are avoiding the Kashmir issue, he says, which is central to the resolution of conflict in South Asia. “India has a very ugly record in Kashmir – horrible atrocities, fraudulent elections, most militarised place in the world. You can’t just ignore it,” he says.

US-India relations

Professor Chomsky says that it is a “joke” when US talks about giving aid for civilian nuclear facilities in India. “The aid for the civilian nuclear use can be easily transferred to military use. By granting India the right to import US nuclear technology, it has not only allowed India to freely develop nuclear weapons, the US has also violated the nuclear non-proliferation treaty,” he says.

Afghan war’s future

“It is a complicated situation but I think there is good evidence that the US military and political structures recognise that they cannot have a military victory,” Chomsky says.

However, he says, they [US] can conquer whatever they like, but the Russians also won every battle in the 1980s but eventually lost the war. “The Americans are therefore trying to find a way to extricate themselves in some fashion, that it can be presented as a victory. They don’t want to admit they’ve lost the war, like the Russians.”



The unflattering perspective – Part I:
 
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Besides, the strategic position in Afghanistan doesn’t really mean anything in case of a war,” he says. “Pakistan has undoubtedly supported terrorist groups in Kashmir and terrorism in India, which has made the situation worse.”

BTW,if US doesn't care for pakistan ,then why did they help u so much in 2010 floods???
they were the main contributors for ur people..don't forget that...
 
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it wd be foolish to think any second country will care abt u. one has to look after its own interests be it india or pakistan.
 
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BTW,if US doesn't care for pakistan ,then why did they help u so much in 2010 floods???
they were the main contributors for ur people..don't forget that...

yeah.. they ve helped us a lot by killing hundreds of innocent people in the name of war on terror...

anything to up the image aye?
 
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Without being on sides of anyone, I think they do care for Pakistan.

The only problem, however, is that they like to put that 'Care' in light of their own national interests. Which I think is quite fair.

The unfair is: that we guys dont place our decisions in light of our own national interests while we are interacting with them and taking national level decisions.
 
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BTW,if US doesn't care for pakistan ,then why did they help u so much in 2010 floods???
they were the main contributors for ur people..don't forget that...

Because they need to look like the 'good guys'.

Once your a super-power your image is more important than anything else. Basic rule.

It was a chance to show-off, most westerners are quick to judge Pakistan as a 'terrorist stae'. But it isn't.

We are cleaning up thier mess. USA doesn't really care. Do you actually believe they care?
 
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Without being on sides of anyone, I think they do care for Pakistan.

The only problem, however, is that they like to put that 'Care' in light of their own national interests. Which I think is quite fair.

The unfair is: that we guys dont place our decisions in light of our own national interests while we are interacting with them and taking national level decisions.

They are very worried about Pakistan... they know we are going to replace their puppets with something that is going to be a nightmare scenario for them...

God has control over all things... There is no power above Allah swt...
 
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BTW,if US doesn't care for pakistan ,then why did they help u so much in 2010 floods???
they were the main contributors for ur people..don't forget that...

if cut down the aid process, your reality will change to a more learned one.
 
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US does not care about anyone ... it only cares about itself......... nothing new... They follow a policy of use and throw
 
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no body care him after dirty job

dirty-jobs.jpg
 
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The U.S. only cares about its own interests and their interests today is the same as India's.

Pakistan's interests today is the same as China's.


Lets see if Pakistan will protect its interests in the region.
 
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We urge forum members and readers to judge, based on reality and facts, who is really killing innocent Muslims The biggest murderer of Muslims, be they Pakistani, Afghan, or Arab, are insurgents and terrorists who have killed thousands through suicide attacks, bombings and road-side bombs . While it is certainly true that US military operations have inadvertently killed innocents, these cases are simply incomparable to the thousands killed quite intentionally by the very people we are fighting. These are the same insurgents and terrorists who took control of Swat and unleashed havoc on millions. Have you forgotten the horrors those Al Qaeda terrorists like Abu Musab Al Zarqawi brought to Iraq?

You witnessed the government relinquishing power over Swat Valley to the Taliban in the hopes that they would prove themselves worthy to the Pakistani people. You witnessed your own people fleeing Swat, and running from unimaginable TTP atrocities. You witnessed what happened in Swat, how the Pakistani Army stepped in and after bitter fighting defeated the TTP and forced them from Swat. While they were in Swat the TTP denied fundamental rights, freedoms and wrongfully ended the lives of your Pakistani brothers and sisters. Do you propose that your government appease the TTP and once again witness other Swat-like incidents all over the country?

Why disown the War on Terror as an outsider’s war, when the bulk of Pakistani suffering is caused by our common enemy within Afghanistan and Pakistan? Some continue to labor under the delusion that the extremists who rose to prominence in Afghanistan while the US had turned its back on the region will somehow evaporate if we were to disengage once again from the region. Does that really make sense to you? The international community, including other Muslim countries, is supporting and aiding Pakistan to rid the country of these extremists who harm the image of Islam and Muslims all over the world. There is no doubt that forum readers are intelligent and educated enough to realize that it is in the best interest of Pakistan and the US to eradicate extremist terrorist groups who have destabilized Pakistan, and killed thousands of Pakistanis.

As for Afghanistan, we are committed to establishing a stable and capable Afghan Army and Police that will be able to fight an insurgency who wants to send Afghanistan back to the stone ages.

On all levels, diplomatic, military and civilian we are ready for a transitional phase. As our Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said, “To do this once, we have to do it right. We need to underscore that we are transitioning, not leaving, and that we are building an enduring partnership with Afghanistan that will last well beyond 2014.” In our commitment and dedication toward achieving a peaceful and stable Afghanistan and Pakistan, we have the help of our Pakistani allies; with whom we may have small disagreements but both sides realize that our overarching goals of peace, stability, security and an end to terrorist organizations is a common denominator of our successful relationship.

Finally, I would tell you that we certainly are involved in this fight to advance our own national security, and I would not expect you to believe that our country casts such interests aside in making policy decisions. But why is it so difficult to accept the reality that in this case, our interests and yours are one and the same? Doesn’t a region free of violent extremism benefit both our peoples, regardless of religion, race or class?

CDR Bill Speaks,
DET –U.S. Central Command
U.S. Central Command
 
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Pakistan seems to be learning the same lesson again and again. Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
 
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