Pakistan - America Relations

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

http://www.dawn.com/2011/07/06/us-has-backup-plan-if-pakistan-shuts-shamsi-base-officials.html

US has backup plan if Pakistan shuts Shamsi base: officials

**WASHINGTON: The United States plans to keep using an airstrip inside Pakistan for non-lethal drone flights against militants near the Afghanistan border despite demands from some Pakistani officials that Washington vacate the base, three US officials said.
**
The airstrip at Shamsi in Balochistan will continue to be used for some drone surveillance operations, while the CIA, which is principally responsible for the missions, is already using facilities in Afghanistan to launch some armed drone aircraft strikes on targets over the border in Pakistan.

“The facility remains fully operational and supports American counterterrorism operations in Pakistan,” one of the officials told Reuters on Monday.

But the official added: “If, for whatever reason, it was no longer available, there are certainly other ways to continue the program and to sustain the intense pressure it’s put on al Qaeda and its militant allies.”

The Washington Post reported on Saturday that three months ago the CIA had suspended using the base as a launch site for armed drones targeting al Qaeda and other militants.

**However, a US official said any temporary lull in drone operations from the Pakistani base was part of a wider dropoff instituted by the United States during bilateral tensions over Pakistan’s arrest and detention of CIA contractor Raymond Davis on murder charges.
**
**US officials said CIA and Pakistani personnel remain stationed at the Shamsi facility.
**
**Keeping the base open for US drone flights and maintaining Pakistani involvement in base operations is regarded in Washington as a means of ensuring that Islamabad retains a stake in the CIA’s use of the remotely controlled drones.
**
The two US officials said the United States already has adequate infrastructure outside Pakistan —principally in Afghanistan, though one official said ships could also be used —to continue substantial drone operations against militant targets in Pakistan.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

This topic is very serious and I am unable to take part due to my poor knowledge on the issue but
Don’t worry Malkoo N is there.

http://cache.pakistantoday.com.pk/2011/07/152-115x115.jpg

Pakistan and US vow to jointly curb use of IEDs

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

I am not really sure about this newspaper, but the CIA’s past is not that rosy either. They have been known to overthrow rulers in other countries, and in that process killed millions in korea, vietnam, iraq, and afghanistan wars.

http://article.wn.com/view/2011/07/06/Will_the_CIAs_TehrikeTaliban_Pakistan_Become_Another_SAVAK/Will the CIA’s Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan Become Another SAVAK?

Article by WorldNews.com Correspondent Dallas Darling.In the midst of an ongoing investigation into the deaths of two detainees who died while being interrogated, not to mention hundreds of others that were overlooked by the United States Justice Department, comes another Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) disclosure of a clandestine operation in Pakistan. But first, Gul Rahman died in a secret CIA prison in Kabul, Afghanistan after being shackled to a concrete wall and beaten. Manadel al-Jamadi, who was hooded and chained to bars at the notorious Abu Graib prison in Iraq, was found dead with a noose around his neck. Incoming U.S. Department of Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced this chapter of shady CIA dealings were closing. But really, is it?

In Pakistan, thousands of CIA operatives and their trainees have infiltrated insurgency groups. The covert program, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), is supposed to destabilize the Taliban and al-Qaeda and other Pakistani insurgency groups that are coordinating resistance to foreign military occupation. One Pakistan paper claimed the CIA’s new creation will also be used to subvert Pakistan, including bribing and pressuring Pakistani officials to favor U.S. policies in the region. Furthermore, sources say the CIA has armed and equipped operatives to target certain Pakistan Army personnel and political officials, ones that either challenge or disagree with Washington’s Global War on Terror.

It is obvious that the more U.S. officials claim things are changing, like Panetta, the more they remain the same. The CIA’s TTP, which has already been equipped with biological and chemical weapons and state of the art weaponry, is eerily similar to Iran’s National and Intelligence Security Organization (SAVAK). The SAVAK, another creation of the CIA, was also used to destabilize and overthrow Iran’s government 1953. Back in 1953, the excuse for funding and arming these secret operatives in Iran was to save the country from the Soviet Union and communism. Once the CIA, SAVAK and U.S.-backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi seized power, widespread fear and torture became common.

Life under the CIA, SAVAK and Shah Pahlavi consisted of grinding poverty, disappearances, and police terror. With CIA weapons and military training, Iran’s SAVAK quickly crushed dissent. Thousands of political opponents were executed in the name of fighting communism and U.S. national security. The CIA, which instructed the SAVAK in torture techniques, also employed Israel’s secret police, the Mossad. Under the guidance of the CIA, Israel, and SAVAK, Iranian dissidents and opponents of U.S. and Israeli foreign policies were hunted down around the world and punished. In 1976, Amnesty International said the SAVAK’s history of torture and executions were beyond belief.(1)

Under the SAVAK and Shah Pahlavi, Iran experienced corruption that “startled even the most hardened observers of Middle Eastern thievery.”(2) They received almost twenty billon dollars in military aid from the CIA between 1974 and 1978. Meanwhile, Iran’s incalculable oil wealth reached few hands. Unemployment, especially among the youth, remained high. At the same time, twenty percent of Iran’s population lived around Tehran in shanty dwellings that lacked sewage, electricity, medicines, and other basic necessities. To repress labor and Islamic religious movements, the CIA and SAVAK used whips, fists, electric shock pliers, boiling water, fire, glass, and, of course, water-boarding.(3)

When rights groups singled out the SAVAK and Shah Pahlavi for human rights abuses, both merely claimed they were using the same tortuous methods as the U.S. and CIA, and then added: “Who hasn’t got a secret police?”(4) In Iran, the CIA had met the enemy and it was just about everyone. In order to ensure support for Shah Pahlavi to control Iran’s resources, the CIA turned to their most trusted weapon-money.(5) It is estimated the CIA paid four-hundred million dollars a year to influence some Iranian politicians and religious leaders, ones that refused to bow to U.S. foreign policy. It was in this corrupt and tortuous environment, then, that the 1979 Iranian Islamic Revolution occurred.

In fighting the so-called Global War on Terror, specifically in Afghanistan and now Pakistan, the CIA has met the enemy in Pakistan too, which is just about everyone. The CIA is still the Grand Coordinator of coups and the Grand Inquisitor. Sadly, the more things “appear” to change, the more they remain the same. The only new chapters that will be written will mirror the CIA’s legacy of torture in Iran and dozens of other nations around the world, a legacy that was revived again under the Bush-Cheney Administration. The problem has not only been with abusive interrogators, ones that take the blame, but with tortuous senior officials in the CIA, Defense Department, and White House.

**The CIA’s seven thousand operatives and Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan are powerful political and military forces within Pakistan. They will unfortunately suppress dissent, maintain corrupt and tortuous institutions, and pressure Pakistani politicians for years to come. There will also be more drone strikes and assassinations, and there will be more covert warfare, CIA coups, and human rights abuses. **A former Punjab Regional Commander, Brigadier (retired) Aslam Ghuman, said it best: “During my visit to the U.S., I learned Israeli spy agency Mossad, in connivance with Indian agency RAW, under the direct supervision of CIA, planned to destabilize Pakistan at any cost.”

For U.S. citizens, the CIA has another nefarious legacy: Gathering domestic intelligence, carrying-out domestic break-ins to install wire-taps, collecting files on thousands of anti-war protesters and dissidents, infiltrating Congressional electoral campaigns, conducting electronic and physical surveillance of newspaper reporters and news services, maintaining hundreds of journalists and college professors on its payroll, and “donating” millions of dollars to private corporations and their media outlets for the purpose of socially engineering the public. From the United States to Iran and Pakistan, it is evident the CIA, SAVAK and TTP will continue their heritage of mental, emotional and physical torture.

Dallas Darling ([email protected])

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Here’s some history of Savak. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAVAKWho knows who the CIA instructors in Pakistan are training, PA or TTP?

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Kion dra rahay ho Sahib.
Yahan to qaht ul rajal hay.
Saray ohdon par to mama chacha system walay meri tarah kay nalaiq log hain ya phir
our beloved intermediate pass intellectuals .
Who will counter?

(Please **Ali_Syed](http://www.paklinks.com/gs/members/ali_syed.html) , Give some time to the thread about new provinces, you have already shared a very very important post, some more !)
**

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Well thats not the case, there are many hardworking, honest people in Pakistan and thats the reason why that country is still functioning.

I agree that our leaders are sell outs who dont have any vision, and its because of that the army gets a chance to rule the country. Even now we have a so called democratic dispensation but the foreign policy, and balochistan issue is with the army. Whose weakness is that?

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

NYT calls on US to get ISI chief removed

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/08/opinion/08fri2.html?_r=1

EDITORIAL
A Pakistani Journalist’s Murder
Published: July 7, 2011

After the Pakistani journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad was murdered in May, suspicion fell on Inter-Services Intelligence, the country’s powerful spy agency. Mr. Shahzad reported aggressively on the infiltration of militants into Pakistan’s military and had received repeated threats from ISI. Other journalists said they, too, have been threatened, even tortured, by security forces.

Now the Obama administration has evidence implicating the ISI in this brutal killing. According to The Times’s Jane Perlez and Eric Schmitt, American officials say new intelligence indicates that senior ISI officials ordered the attack on Mr. Shahzad to silence him. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, confirmed on Thursday that Pakistan’s government “sanctioned” the killing, but he did not tie it directly to ISI. The murder will make journalists and other critics of the regime even more reluctant to expose politically sensitive news. The ISI is also proving to be an increasingly dangerous counterterrorism partner for the United States.

After Mr. Shahzad’s killing, ISI insisted it had no role, contending the death would be “used to target and malign” its reputation. The ISI and the army, which oversees the intelligence agency, were once considered Pakistan’s most respected institutions. Now they are sharply criticized at home for malfeasance and incompetence.

There is evidence that they were complicit in hiding Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad and that the ISI helped plan the Mumbai attack in 2008. They failed to prevent the recent attack on a naval base in Karachi. Mr. Shahzad disappeared two days after publishing an article suggesting the attack was retaliation for the navy’s attempt to crack down on Al Qaeda militants in the armed forces.

It’s not clear how high up the culpability for Mr. Shahzad’s murder goes — or whether there are any officials left in the ISI or the army who have the power and desire to reform the spy agency. President Asif Ali Zardari and his government, while not implicated in these heinous acts, have been a disappointment, largely letting the military go its own way. They need to find Mr. Shahzad’s murderers and hold them accountable. And they must find the courage to assert civilian control over security services that have too much power and are running amok.

Mr. Zardari needs to speak out firmly against abuses, insist on adherence to the rule of law and join his political rival, Nawaz Sharif, in pressing the security services to change. That can start by insisting on the retirement of Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the ISI chief, and the appointment of a more credible successor.

The United States needs to use its influence to hasten Mr. Pasha’s departure. It should tell Pakistan’s security leadership that if Washington identifies anyone in ISI or the army as abetting terrorists, those individuals will face sanctions like travel bans or other measures. The ISI has become inimical to Pakistani and American interests.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

I would have to add to your post that the real rason why so many innocent people have been killed by bomb blasts and suicide bomb attack because parts of the ISI ad Military are in co-hoot with the terrorists. If these officials were not playing double games then so many lives would not have been lost.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Interesting, so after failure to get ISI chief removed after May 2 saga they are trying different angle to remove him. As much as I don’t like ISI they are making me think that ISI chief must be doing something right.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

The other day I was thinking about the matter, for the past few weeks the American media is trying to malign Pakistani military and intelligence agencies. The same was done by them to prior to Iraq Invasion.

We need to put into perspective a few incidents:

1) May 2, Osama Bin Laden operation which proved that either Pakistani intelligence was incompetent or complicit.

2) Saleem Shahzad's Killing which the Americans at the highest levels like Hillary Clinton spoke out against, and now Mike Mullen has said that the state killed him since he knew the elements within military and intelligence which had close links with Taleban/Al qaeda.

3) Nuclear profileration case, every one knew that in Pakistan that was not possible without military involvement. The Americans kept it shelved for so many years and now its also out.

4) At some stage (maybe soon) the target killings in Balochistan will also be on the table, and the army/intelligence should be wary of that.

The American media is now trying to paint Pakistan army as a rogue army with a shady intelligence, like an army which is involved in nuclear trade, and has close ties to dangerous militants. Which kills its own people who point out the facts, and carrying out mass killings in some areas. All these can become a part of a charge sheet against Pakistan, which might be issued at any time.

Maybe a detonation of a small firecracker by some one with an iota of link to Pakistan would prompt Americans to take action, as they are already preparing their nation/world for that.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Good riddance:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/10/world/asia/10intel.html?_r=1&hp

U.S. Is Deferring Millions in Pakistani Military Aid[

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is suspending and, in some cases, canceling hundreds of millions of dollars of aid to the Pakistani military, in a move to chasten Pakistan for expelling American military trainers and to press its army to fight militants more effectively.

**Coupled with a statement from the top American military officer last week linking Pakistan’s military spy agency to the recent murder of a Pakistani journalist, the halting or withdrawal of military equipment and other aid to Pakistan illustrates the depth of the debate inside the Obama administration over how to change the behavior of one of its key counterterrorism partners. **

Altogether, about $800 million in military aid and equipment, or over one-third of the more than $2 billion in annual American security assistance to Pakistan, could be affected, three senior United States officials said.

This aid includes about $300 million to reimburse Pakistan for some of the costs of deploying more than 100,000 soldiers along the Afghan border to combat terrorism, as well as hundreds of millions of dollars in training assistance and military hardware, according to half a dozen Congressional, Pentagon and other administration officials who were granted anonymity to discuss the politically delicate matter.

Some of the curtailed aid is equipment that the United States wants to send but Pakistan now refuses to accept, like rifles, body armor and night-vision goggles that were withdrawn or held up after Pakistan ordered more than 100 trainers in the United States Special Forces to leave the country in recent weeks.

Some is equipment that cannot be set up, certified or used for training because Pakistan has denied visas to the American personnel needed to operate the equipment, including some surveillance gear, a senior Pentagon official said.

And some is assistance like the reimbursements for troop costs, **which is being reviewed in light of questions about Pakistan’s commitment to carry out counterterrorism operations. For example, the United States recently provided Pakistan with information about suspected bomb-making factories, only to have the insurgents vanish before Pakistani security forces arrived a few days later.
**
“When it comes to our military aid,” Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a Senate committee last month “we are not prepared to continue providing that at the pace we were providing it unless and until we see certain steps taken.”

American officials say they would probably resume equipment deliveries and aid if relations improve and Pakistan pursues terrorists more aggressively. The cutoffs do not affect any immediate deliveries of military sales to Pakistan, like F-16 fighter jets, or nonmilitary aid, the officials said.

**Pakistan’s precise military budget is not known, and while the American aid cutoff would probably have a small impact on the overall military budget, it would most directly affect the counterinsurgency campaign. **The Pakistani Army spends nearly one-quarter of the nation’s annual expenditures, according to K. Alan Kronstadt of the Congressional Research Service.

While some senior administration officials have concluded that Pakistan will never be the kind of partner the administration hoped for when President Obama entered office, others emphasize that the United States cannot risk a full break in relations or a complete cutoff of aid akin to what happened in the 1990s, when Pakistan was caught developing nuclear weapons.

**But many of the recent aid curtailments are clearly intended to force the Pakistani military to make a difficult choice between backing the country that finances much of its operations and equipment, or continuing to provide secret support for the Taliban and other militants fighting American soldiers in Afghanistan.

“We have to continue to emphasize with the Pakistanis that in the end it’s in their interest to be able to go after these targets as well,”** Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta told reporters on Friday en route to Afghanistan.

Some American officials say Pakistan has only itself to blame, citing the Pakistani military’s decision to distance itself from American assistance in response to the humiliation suffered from the American commando raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, that killed Osama bin Laden, as well as rising anger from midlevel Pakistani officers and the Pakistani public that senior military leaders, including Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the powerful army chief of staff, are too accommodating to the Americans.

Pakistan shut down the American program to help train Pakistani paramilitary troops fighting the Taliban and Al Qaeda in the lawless border regions near Afghanistan, prompting the Americans to take with them equipment Pakistani troops used. The Central Intelligence Agency has been relying more heavily on flying armed drones from Afghanistan since Pakistan threatened to close down a base the C.I.A. was using inside the country.

But in private briefings to senior Congressional staff members last month, Pentagon officials made clear that they were taking a tougher line toward Pakistan and reassessing whether it could still be an effective partner in fighting terrorists.

**“They wanted to tell us, ‘Guys, we’re delivering the message that this is not business as usual and we’ve got this under control,’ ” one senior Senate aide said.

Comments last week by Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also reflected a potentially more confrontational approach to Pakistan. Admiral Mullen, who is retiring in two months, became the first American official to publicly accuse Pakistan of ordering the kidnapping, torture and death of the journalist, Saleem Shahzad, whose mutilated body was found in early June.**

Besides the growing tensions, the slowdown in aid can also be attributed to tightening military budgets as lawmakers seek deeper cuts in Pentagon spending to help address the mounting government debt.

There is growing opposition on Capitol Hill to sending security assistance to Pakistan. Last week, the Republican-controlled House approved a Pentagon budget bill that limits the Defense Department from spending more than 25 percent of its projected $1.1 billion budget for training and equipping Pakistani troops next year, unless the secretaries of defense and state submit a report to Congress showing how the money will be spent to combat insurgencies.

The Pakistani military is the most important institution in the country. But it has been under intense domestic and international pressure because of the humiliation of the Bin Laden raid, an attack on Pakistan’s main navy base in Karachi weeks later, and continuing fallout from the arrest and subsequent release of a C.I.A. security contractor, Raymond A. Davis, who shot and killed two Pakistanis in January in what he said was a robbery.

The United States has long debated how hard it can push Pakistan to attack militant strongholds in the tribal area. Washington, however, depends on Pakistan as a major supply route into Afghanistan. American officials also want to monitor as closely as they can Pakistan’s burgeoning nuclear weapons arsenal.

The decision to hold back much of the American military aid has not been made public by the Pakistani military or the civilian government. But it is well known at the top levels of the military, and a senior Pakistani official described it as an effort by the Americans to gain “leverage.”

A former Pakistani diplomat, Maleeha Lodhi, who served twice as ambassador to the United States, said the Pentagon action was short-sighted, and was likely to produce greater distance between the two countries.

** “It will be repeating a historic blunder and hurting itself in the bargain by using a blunt instrument of policy at a time when it needs Pakistan’s help to defeat Al Qaeda and make an honorable retreat from Afghanistan,” Ms. Lodhi said of the United States.


Washington imposed sanctions on Pakistan in the 1990s, and in the process lost influence with the Pakistani military, Ms. Lodhi said. Similarly, the Obama administration would find itself out in the cold with the Pakistani Army if it held up funds, she said.**
**
Within the Pakistani Army, the hold on American assistance would be viewed as “an unfriendly act and total disregard of the sacrifices made by the army,” said Brig. Javed Hussain, a retired special forces officer.**](“http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/10/world/asia/10intel.html?_r=1&hp”)

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

http://www.thefridaytimes.com/beta2/tft/article.php?issue=20110708&page=6

The death of strategic depth?

“The US has made preliminary contacts with Afghan Taliban guerrillas,” Defence Secretary Robert Gates recently acknowledged. He went on to reveal the most accurate details of these negotiations. Germany and Qatar are at the forefront as mediators.

“But we have a serious problem with that,” said a senior Pakistani security official who had attended talks between the US and Afghanistan.

Before this, Pakistani military generals had made several attempts to mediate between Hamid Karzai’s government and Afghan insurgents, especially the Haqqani faction.

“Any resolution that does not include Pakistan will not guarantee Pashtun interests and will therefore not be sustainable,” the official said.

Pakistan has historically ensured that it “micro-manages everything in Afghanistan”, says Ahmed Raza Popalzai, a revered Afghan tribesman.

**Pakistan’s obsession with the US-Taliban talks can be measured from the fact that it arrested Mullah Baradar - Mullah Omar’s number two and an important member of the Quetta Shura - when he tried to go freelance and started talking with the Americans via the Saudis in Dubai. **

Baradar was caught from Karachi’s Khuddamul Quran madrassa linked with Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam in early 2010 in a CIA-ISI raid, to the dislike of the Afghan president who was then talking to the Taliban.

**Pakistan is also accused of providing safe havens to the Quetta Shura and the Haqqani network to promote its interests in Afghanistan.

What is the reason for this immense desire for a negotiated settlement with the Taliban?

“India,” according to Afghanistan’s former intelligence chief Amrullah Saleh. Pakistan is concerned about Indian influence in Afghanistan and instead wants a strategic depth in Kabul against its eastern neighbour. “Pakistan has Mullah Omar hiding in Karachi and supports active insurgency inside Afghanistan,” Saleh said. **

US President Barack’s Obama’s decision to withdraw 10,000 troops from Afghanistan after the killing of Osama bin Laden raises a number of questions about the endgame in Afghanistan.

**“If the enemies of Afghanistan think they can wait it out until we leave, they have the wrong idea. We will stay as long as it takes to finish our job,” said NATO secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen. **

It is not clear who he referred to as the enemy of Afghanistan, but NATO and ISAF commanders often accuse Pakistan of orchestrating attacks on Afghanistan.

“The irony is that if Pakistan Army and the ISI hadn’t let the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan become a festering sore in Waziristan, these fighters would not now be transiting through Afghanistan to attack Pakistan,” a former CIA operative said. “The Taliban had been trained by Pakistan to control Afghanistan so it would have a ‘strategic depth’ - a direction from which they would not be attacked,” he said. “But now, Pakistan has enemies on both sides and it had paid to train and arm one of them.”

“I believe General Aslam Beg’s nonsensical idea of strategic depth has long been buried and mourned,” said Brig (r) Shaukat Qadir. “A peaceful, stable Afghanistan will not be antagonistic towards Pakistan. To ensure that, there should be a quick and total withdrawal of US troops and negotiations between Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Taliban. India should have minimal influence in Kabul.”

**Although negotiations are likely to take the centre stage, Pakistan is becoming increasingly isolated. Both the US and the Afghan Taliban are sceptical of Pakistan’s role in Afghanistan. **

At one time, after 9/11, Pakistan had tried to install the Haqqanis in Kabul as caretakers of Afghanistan, but they declined the offer, deciding to remain loyal to Mullah Omar. **Islamabad still considers the faction its strategic assets and has tried to market the network to both the US and the Afghan government.

But “the recent attack on Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel changed everything,” according to a US military insider. “It will expose the Haqqani network’s links with Al Qaeda and we would want to push Pakistan to carry out operations in the Kurram Agency and North Waziristan.”**

NATO and ISAF causalities have risen from 191 in 2006 to 521 in 2009, 711 in 2010, and 284 so far in 2011. The Americans would not mind a quick exit and Pakistan will try hard for a good bargain in the endgame. But it seems like it will have to face problems of its own making. The Taliban have decided to bypass Pakistan and negotiate on their own.

Ali Chishti is a TFT reporter based in Karachi. He can be reached at [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]

](http://www.thefridaytimes.com/beta2/tft/article.php?issue=20110708&page=6)

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

I see this as a good thing. I am just afraid that the military will start to "make up" the losses by taking a larger share of the budget. Beyond the military and debt servicing, Pakistan will not have many funds left for education, health and economic development.

Pakistanis: Welcome to the post OBL reality. You WILL be thrown out like yesterdays garbage. I had been saying this all along. On a side note, the US will also leave Afghanistan and watch the Talibs come back in power.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

This article explains the current war going on in Pakistan and Afghanistan, which many of us thought was about control of resources in the region.

Don’t Be Spooked by Pakistan

More than two months after the raid by U.S. Navy SEALS on the Abbottabad compound of Osama bin Laden, the relationship between the United States and Pakistan is at its lowest point in the almost six decades of a rocky, on-again-off-again alliance. The United States has suspended some $800 million in military aid, and the outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, is traveling to Pakistan this week for what is certain to be a chilly meeting with his counterpart, Pakistani Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

Maybe these developments are not altogether bad, for amid this turmoil the leaders of both countries, if not their vocal populations, are beginning to understand that a new, interests-based regional partnership must be forged before some political point of no return is crossed. Pakistan and the United States need a new paradigm for cooperation, one that will not only guide the bilateral relationship through the endgame in Afghanistan, but also influence Pakistani and U.S. policies in an Indian Ocean region on the verge of a new Great Game for mineral resources and economic domination.

The main players in that game are India and China; the prizes are Afghan and Pakistani resources and overland trade routes to the Arabian Sea. The United States’ role is important, even critical, but it is as yet undefined by American political leaders. Ultimately, the United States may have to shift part of its security and political focus from its Atlantic relationships to the Indian Ocean region.

The mineral resources of Afghanistan and Pakistan – copper, gold, rare-earth elements, iron, the list goes on – will play a major role in driving the hungry Chinese and Indian economies through the 21st century. Afghan minerals alone, valued by the U.S. Geological Survey conservatively at about $1 trillion, could follow a natural route south from Afghanistan through Pakistan’s Baluchistan province, itself mineral rich, to the newly completed port at Gwadar on the Arabian Sea. From there, the minerals would find markets in China, India, and the West, producing along the way a greatly expanded Pakistani mining industry and transportation infrastructure, as well as tens upon tens of thousands of jobs for dangerously idle young Baluchi men.

But none of this will likely happen until Pakistan takes a bold leap into the 21st century, shedding its 1947 mindset of believing that it is just a hair trigger away from war with India and that it must at any cost be buttressed against Indian encroachment on its western flank in Afghanistan.** To become a player in this new Great Game, Pakistan will first need to rework its relationship with the United States and, following that, with Afghanistan and India.

One obvious starting point will be redesigning the relationship between the CIA and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) directorate, Pakistan’s most powerful intelligence agency.**

During a swing through the region in June, I spent many hours with senior ISI officers in remarkably free exchanges on the relationship between their agency and its U.S. counterpart. From those meetings, I concluded that both sides view rebuilding the overall U.S.-Pakistan relationship as possible and necessary. But both sides also see this as a daunting task, one with little support from either the American or the Pakistani people. Nevertheless, with the announced withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan over the next three years, and with the development of a new American strategy for counterterrorism, the moment is right to begin overhauling the partnership.

As Gen. David Petraeus leaves Afghanistan and takes over at the CIA, one of his first tasks will be sitting down with his Pakistani counterpart, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, a man he has met in the past as commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan. The two generals are a perfect and, indeed, an even match. Petraeus goes to Langley from multiple combat commands; Pasha is an experienced combat operations commander in his own right, having led military operations in Pakistan’s turbulent tribal areas. Both generals are thoughtful, perhaps even brilliant tacticians – Pasha made Time’s 2011 list of the 100 most influential people in the world – and each has a keen sense of political imperatives. They can enter the relationship fresh; cut through the shrillness, the schoolyard taunts that characterize what is visible to the public in the current feud between their services; decide on what is worth fixing; agree on important common goals; and get to work.

They will come to their first meeting understanding the depth of CIA-ISI problems, based on hard intelligence – on what is known. They will be able to discount the often rococo and venomous accusations and counteraccusations that form the basis of American and Pakistani public opinion. It will be a tough slog for the two generals. One example of the disconnect will be the four recent “intelligence tests” – the passage of U.S. intelligence to Pakistan on bomb-making sites in the tribal areas and the apparent compromise of that information before military action could be taken. The “tests” are viewed by American intelligence as an example of double-dealing by the ISI. But the ISI views those same events as an American trap: Midlevel officers believe the Americans tipped off the bomb-makers to embarrass the ISI.

At their first meeting (perhaps a one-on-one without note-takers) Petraeus and Pasha will have to decide how to cut through the distractions. They will inevitably discuss such matters as:

The so-called trust deficit. In my discussions with senior ISI officers, the question of the “trust deficit” quickly arose and was equally quickly dismissed. Forget about trust, I was told. The ISI and CIA should be prepared to work together, without trust, on common interests and goals. How much was trust an underpinning of our common goal of driving Soviet forces out of Afghanistan during the 1980s?, I was pointedly asked.

In reality, institutional trust played no role. Indeed, institutional trust is not a critical element of a functioning intelligence liaison with any foreign intelligence service. In my years of working with the ISI as the CIA chief in Pakistan during the late 1980s, there was a single common goal – get the Soviet Army out of Afghanistan. Within that narrowly defined mission there was close cooperation, even friendships that have endured to this day. On occasion I put my life in the hands of individual ISI officers, but there was never a sense of institutional trust. In executing that joint mission there were, to be sure, serious frictions as each side fused its own sovereign policy goals into the common mission – Pakistan concentrated its assistance almost entirely on favored Pashtun elements of the Afghan resistance while the CIA strove to provide broader assistance to include other ethnic groups in northern and western Afghanistan. But as long as the primary mission remained valid for both sides and as long as progress was being made, the differences were managed. In effect, the United States and Pakistan went their own ways when their national policies demanded it, but we got along.

Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. Afghans profoundly believe that the ISI is behind most of the attacks on Afghan soil. The Kabul rumor mill already sees a Pakistani hand in the recent attack on Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel. Some of the accusations may be real; some may be a self-serving deflection of blame for security gaps on the ISI bogeyman. In discussing this issue, Pasha might relate to Petraeus a conversation he had with Afghan President Hamid Karzai in which he pointedly asked the Afghan leader which country, aside from Afghanistan, has suffered most from the Afghanistan war; which country, aside from Afghanistan, would benefit most from peace in Afghanistan; and how could Pakistan benefit from doing the things it is accused of. These are reasonable questions.

The ISI leader might also share a belated realization within the Pakistani Army that Pakistan’s exclusive focus on Afghanistan’s Pashtun population as Pakistan’s strategic reserve on its western flank no longer makes sense, if that ever did. This Pashtun-centric policy was the unfulfillable dream of “strategic regional consensus” of late Pakistani President Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, a new Mughal Empire that Zia envisioned from Ankara to Islamabad counterbalancing India to the east. Zia’s dream always began with a co-opted, Pashtun-dominated Afghanistan. It was handed down to his successors at Army House over the next quarter-century, but it was as unachievable then as it is today. Pakistan’s current military leaders know this. Their challenge is to convince the Pakistani population. Pakistan’s military leaders understand that their country’s relationship with Afghanistan must be broadened. They also know that Pakistan would ultimately find the Pashtun Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan a national disaster, one that would before long spread to India, fulfilling the prophecy of the hair-trigger event that has so occupied the Pakistani Army for decades. Afghanistan is a good starting point for Pakistan to reorder its regional relationships, and the United States can play a limited, but important role of arbiter.

North Waziristan. Pakistani Army leaders understand that this remote, mountainous region must be cleared of foreign fighters and associated groups, but it cannot now appear to succumb to American demands that the Army launch a full-scale assault on the terrorist-infested tribal agency. Pakistani military operations just launched in the Kurram agency fit with Pakistani plans to move against neighboring North Waziristan in the coming months, but any such operation must be recognized as being in Pakistan’s interest to do so, not occurring because Americans have demanded it. The Pakistan Army will have fresh ideas and will expect the Americans to hear them out. An underlying concern that the Americans must overcome will be Pakistan’s conviction that U.S. forces are moving toward the exits in Afghanistan. Memories of being left holding the American bag run deep. The Army leadership remembers the Soviet exit from Afghanistan in February 1989, American sanctions imposed on Pakistan the next year, the end of U.S.-Pakistan military-to-military contacts, and the Americans turning their back on Pakistan and Afghanistan for a decade. The rest is sad history.

Pakistan-India. Pakistani Army leaders understand that fundamental change is needed in Pakistan’s relationship with India. The Kashmir question could be deferred indefinitely, the Army leadership is convinced, as a new relationship with India is developed and a new set of national goals for Pakistan are devised to make the country a player in the region. **It is understood within the Pakistan military that India has a historically based interest in Afghanistan and that India’s exploitation of Afghan mineral resources need not be a zero-sum game. Indeed, India has indicated it may be prepared to use the southern route through Pakistan’s Baluchistan province for the export of iron ore from its massive mining claim at Hajigak in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan province (an alternate, politically more challenging route would be from Afghanistan through Iran to the Iranian port of Chabahar on the Arabian Sea). **Similarly, another economic imperative that demands Pakistan-India cooperation is a proposed 1,700-kilometer gas pipeline, TAPI, which will bring gas from the massive Dauletabad fields in Turkmenistan, through Afghanistan and Pakistan, and into the Indian energy grid at Fazilka in India’s Punjab state. TAPI, a huge, multibillion-dollar project, offers the best solution to the energy needs of all the countries on the pipeline’s route, according to negotiators of the four countries involved in developing the project.

These issues of potentially vital cooperation between India and Pakistan would be difficult under any circumstances, but without a reasonably functioning U.S.-Pakistan relationship based on common interests, they may well be unachievable.

It is often said that Pakistan never misses a chance to miss a chance. If it misses this one, the world will pass it by, and its isolation will only deepen. The same may hold true for the United States. Its influence in the Indian Ocean is slipping as China and India flex their growing economic muscle. It will have to make a course correction as it approaches the end of its military enterprise in Afghanistan. Pakistan is as good a place to start as any, and the two generals, Pasha and Petraeus, might be the right players for the first step.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

^

Good article, but why should Pakistan be doing ANYTHING at the behest of the US at this point? Where are the Pro-American Pakis right now? Pakistan is yet again thrown away like garbage as the US misadventure in Afghanistan winds down.

You know what made more sense? The IPI pipeline -- since Iran was in the mix, of course the US and her munafiq politician minions had to squash that project. How about we put Pakistan FIRST? Not play into the grand designs of the US, China or whomever. If we need to cut deals with Iran, lets do it. Lets wait for the amrikis to get the F out Afghanistan and lets cut the deals with the Talibs (Karzai is DONE) -- bring back the Occidental deal. Make Pakistan the transit point for energy allocation. Lets make this "aid cutback" and IMF/World Bank Khairat a thing of the past.

We need a stable Baluchistan, so lets grant political autonomy in exchange for peace, cut deals for true economic improvement and generous royalties to the province. In KP we must CRUSH TTP and all anti-state outfits, ensure that the province has greater piece of the economic pie. I say we flip the paradigm -- not become the enemies of the US but rather more economically driven. Our interests should be providing goods, service and facilities and maximizing the advantageous geography and the deep talent of our people.

Now I must admit I have been pretty harsh lately -- its only because I see our national sovereignty slipping away and the conditions deteriorating from bad to worse. I ask, is being allied to the US worth it? The answer, at this juncture, is no.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

I agree with you on all points, the government and army should not bow to the Americans. They should independently make their decisions as per our interests and not based upon american interests/great game.We should make peace in balochistan, by giving the separatists immunity and try to restore normalcy there. Leave afghanistan alone to make their own decisions, the afghans will not be anti pakistan as both countries depend upon each other. Try to solve the ttp issue independently from US according to our interests and not be seen as mercenaries. Try to have the drone issue resolved as it's creating more problems as compared to providing solutions to the issue. American CIA should be kicked out of Pakistan as they have their own nefarious designs.

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

ISI chief Shuja Pasha heads to US for talks

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

Shuja to discuss Pak media trial in US with Petraeus[

DG ISI General Shuja Pasha leaves for the US on one day visit.

**He will meet CIA Chief General David Petraeus during his visit. Sources say they will discuss intelligence-sharing and security of the region in the meeting.

Pakistan’s media trial in US media and statement of Defence Secretary Leon Panetta will also come under discussion. Defence secretary claimed Al Qaeda Chief Al Zawahiri was in Pakistan’s tribal areas. **

The United States has decided to withhold a third of its annual $2.7 billion security assistance to Islamabad after Pakistan ordered dozens of military trainers to leave following a US raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

The cuts of $800 million reportedly include about $300 million used to reimburse Pakistan for costs of deploying more than 100,000 soldiers.](“http://dunyanews.tv/index.php?key=Q2F0SUQ9MiNOaWQ9MzA0NDU=”)

Re: Pakistan - America Relations

this ONE-day trip sound’s more like a ‘High powered’ sales trip…to sell-out Pak in exchange of paltry baKhsheesh kii baHaalii ke liye. it’s sad!