S-2
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2007
- Messages
- 4,210
- Reaction score
- 0
"...therefor one must see on the comparative advantages Pakistan has, and right now it is the supply route."
That's not certain. Didn't you note my comment below?
"So be it. Use it.
I think it's important. I don't think it's insurmountable. If so, you've got us over a barrel. If strained, maybe we talk.
If not, you'll have some visibly p!ssed off Americans showing Pakistan what cards WE hold."
Three outcomes of your proposed supply-route closing noted in my comment. Closing a NATO supply route will making clear your disinterest in the U.N. Afghanistan mission.
The defeated afghan taliban army retreated to and have encamped within your nation. Your concerns about your "sovereign" status pale in comparison to the carnage that these men have reaped upon Afghanistan in the interim. Equally, your concerns about your own growing insurgency make clear the latent threat that had existed by your duplicity.
Now you reap the whirlwind.
Try this- cut your supply routes, make what accomodation is possible with the militants and terrorists, accept the utter absence of foreign military and civilian aid, and prepare yourselves for war. War from within and without.
It will come as sure as the sun rises in the east.
I'd approach the notion of cutting NATO supplies in the most circumspect manner possible. You'd better make damned certain that you understand our abilities, current and projected capacities, un-used transportation assets and full supply needs before doing so.
You also will need a firm understanding of other agreements now in place and their status-contingent, active, or in disrepair. Finally, you of all people should recognize the mercurial nature of politics in central asia.
My suspicion at this board is that there exists a very poor understanding of Russian military and economic capability. So too the Chinese. I'll simply say that neither nation is interested in seeing Afghanistan slip to chaos for obvious reasons tracing to their own muslim insurgencies.
I might be wrong but I suspect that your "leverage" will prove illusory. Worse, you'll only come to realize that after-the-fact to your extreme detriment. It would be, in short, disastrous for Pakistan to play that card under any conceivable circumstance for the near and medium term.
That's not certain. Didn't you note my comment below?
"So be it. Use it.
I think it's important. I don't think it's insurmountable. If so, you've got us over a barrel. If strained, maybe we talk.
If not, you'll have some visibly p!ssed off Americans showing Pakistan what cards WE hold."
Three outcomes of your proposed supply-route closing noted in my comment. Closing a NATO supply route will making clear your disinterest in the U.N. Afghanistan mission.
The defeated afghan taliban army retreated to and have encamped within your nation. Your concerns about your "sovereign" status pale in comparison to the carnage that these men have reaped upon Afghanistan in the interim. Equally, your concerns about your own growing insurgency make clear the latent threat that had existed by your duplicity.
Now you reap the whirlwind.
Try this- cut your supply routes, make what accomodation is possible with the militants and terrorists, accept the utter absence of foreign military and civilian aid, and prepare yourselves for war. War from within and without.
It will come as sure as the sun rises in the east.
I'd approach the notion of cutting NATO supplies in the most circumspect manner possible. You'd better make damned certain that you understand our abilities, current and projected capacities, un-used transportation assets and full supply needs before doing so.
You also will need a firm understanding of other agreements now in place and their status-contingent, active, or in disrepair. Finally, you of all people should recognize the mercurial nature of politics in central asia.
My suspicion at this board is that there exists a very poor understanding of Russian military and economic capability. So too the Chinese. I'll simply say that neither nation is interested in seeing Afghanistan slip to chaos for obvious reasons tracing to their own muslim insurgencies.
I might be wrong but I suspect that your "leverage" will prove illusory. Worse, you'll only come to realize that after-the-fact to your extreme detriment. It would be, in short, disastrous for Pakistan to play that card under any conceivable circumstance for the near and medium term.