VCheng
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Please allow me to present the other side of the coin:
Pakistan needs to change its policies regarding support of non-state actors. Policy makers in Pakistan a.k.a the Army, also need to realize that USA is not a short-term planner as they perceive it to be, and will remain engaged in the region long after 2014.
So if USA concludes that Pakistan is a net negative and a failing and losing state, which side stands to lose more? Had Pakistan taken the advice to wind up its program to support non-state actors as extension of its foreign policies, Pakistan itself would have been far more peaceful internally.
International geopolitics is not a popularity contest. What exactly is this support that USA needs from such a mass of radicalized illiterates (mostly, no offence intended) and how is it valuable enough to be taken into account in the pursuit of its national interests?
The perception that USA is the enemy du jour is one that is reinforced intentionally by the Army to keep their flock in line. The vociferousness of the chatter is turned up and down to strengthen its hand in negotiations and to provide convenient excuses for not eliminating the roots of many problems.
As long as the many benefits exceed the relatively small political costs, the drones will continue to be used. I do not foresee that balance changing anytime soon.
Teeta, US has a lot of options, first and foremost, it must change it's policy of hostility towards Pakistan - such a policy is a terrible negative for the US and for Pakistan - in the US some policy makers are convinced that Pakistan are a push over, this is not just poor analysis but a terrible, even tragic, long term mistake.
Pakistan needs to change its policies regarding support of non-state actors. Policy makers in Pakistan a.k.a the Army, also need to realize that USA is not a short-term planner as they perceive it to be, and will remain engaged in the region long after 2014.
Had the US chosen a wiser course, that is to say, had not taken the advice of CIA radicals buffeted by certain think tanks in the US, Afghanistan would have been a done deal by now and the US would be a long way along in improving relations with Iran as well. Instead the US chose to allow Pakistanis to conclude that the US is a net negative, a losing proposition.
So if USA concludes that Pakistan is a net negative and a failing and losing state, which side stands to lose more? Had Pakistan taken the advice to wind up its program to support non-state actors as extension of its foreign policies, Pakistan itself would have been far more peaceful internally.
Had the US not chosen to lay the foundation of the international public perception that she is hostile towards Muslims, not just terrorists, and that the US needs the support of Muslim populations, things would be very different.
International geopolitics is not a popularity contest. What exactly is this support that USA needs from such a mass of radicalized illiterates (mostly, no offence intended) and how is it valuable enough to be taken into account in the pursuit of its national interests?
Less is More, the US really ought to consider how it can it leverage this notion - In Pakistan, with these AID programs, the US policy makers think they are making a dent in the negative perception of the populace, however, the reality is that these programs do not reach most people, and really it's unrealistic to imagine that they ever will -- what is required is the creation of the perception that the US is a friend - not a friend of the army or politicians but just simply, a friend, for this it must not be seen as too present in the affairs of Pakistan, in particular as a force in the creation of Policy - rest assured terrorism as an idea does not have the support in Pakistan, of any other than psychotics (though they mask their psychosis in religious rhetoric and imagery)
The perception that USA is the enemy du jour is one that is reinforced intentionally by the Army to keep their flock in line. The vociferousness of the chatter is turned up and down to strengthen its hand in negotiations and to provide convenient excuses for not eliminating the roots of many problems.
Drone are a great tool, effective even, however, they have become a political liability - think of Gen. Giap's comments on Tet.
As long as the many benefits exceed the relatively small political costs, the drones will continue to be used. I do not foresee that balance changing anytime soon.