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Sept 11, Dec 13: Pak dates with policy change
Musharraf’s
U-turn on Afghanistan should have been accompanied by a change
in other aspects of Pakistani policy. The key to becoming
part of a new order would have been a new approach towards
relations with India in general and resolving Kashmir in particular.
Husain
Haqqani
IF September 11 was a defining moment in America’s commitment
towards rooting out terror, December 13 could define India’s
response to militancy in the days to come.
The
brazen attack on the Parliament building in New Delhi will
most likely lead to stronger counter-insurgency measures than
have so far been adopted. The Government might heed calls
for ‘‘hot pursuit’’ of alleged terrorists, possibly across
the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir, notwithstanding
the dangers accompanying such a move.
In any case, General Pervez Musharraf has repeatedly made
a distinction between the Line of Control and Pakistan’s international
border with India in efforts to reject Indian charges of cross
border terrorism. India will now argue that if Pakistan cannot
control mujahideen crossing over the line of control, it should
not stop India from attacking them even if that entails action
across that line.
Having
supported the US right to bomb Afghanistan in pursuit of terrorists,
Pakistan will now be in a difficult position to deal with
India’s reaction. Just as the US rejected demands for evidence
against Osama bin Laden, saying its intelligence reports were
enough, India will identify its target of retaliation on the
basis of its own intelligence. Both India and Pakistan could
avoid a confrontation by cooperating in the anti-terrorist
effort. But that requires a paradigm shift that neither country
appears prepared for at the moment.
Pakistan has not benefited much from joining the US-led coalition
against terrorism. This poses no problem for those of us who
saw the war against terrorism as a moral issue. From our point
of view, terrorism is wrong and Pakistan should have supported
the global effort against terrorism without calculating gains
and losses. But General Pervez Musharraf sought support for
his decision to cooperate with the United States on grounds
of future political and economic benefits. With this prospect
looking thin on the ground, the general and his team need
a new justification for their decisions.
Paul Knox of the Toronto Globe and Mail summed up the situation
in a recent column. ‘‘The United States hailed Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf as a man of courage when he signed on to
the fight against Osama bin Laden and Afghanistan’s Taliban
regime in September,’’ he wrote. ‘‘But with the battle in
its final stages, General Musharraf has ended up at a disadvantage
on the political chessboard. He has few allies in the interim
Afghan government that was fashioned out of anti-Taliban opposition
groups last week. He has not won political support for pro-Pakistani
independence groups fighting against Indian rule in Kashmir.
And he has not been able to counter the strengthening of US
relations with India, Pakistan’s traditional rival for influence
in the region and its adversary in a nuclear standoff.’’
‘‘Well,
he got $1-billion,’’ Knox quotes Ashok Kapur, political scientist
and specialist on South Asian politics at the University of
Waterloo in Ontario as saying. Of course, Pakistan will get
the $1-billion in aid promised by President Bush last month.
Last week, the International Monetary Fund announced a $1.32-billion
poverty-alleviation loan — part of $9.5-billion that has been
promised to cushion the effects of the Afghan war. But in
return, General Musharraf abandoned Pakistan’s traditional
Islamic allies and has failed to reorient Pakistan’s foreign
policy to benefit fully from joining the US-led coalition.
According
to Professor Kapur, ‘‘We are looking at a picture of fundamental
realignment at the international level, where the US, India,
Israel and Russia seem to be coming together on a variety
of issues and poor Pakistan is left out in the cold.’’ Musharraf’s
only substantive benefit may have been that he gained legitimacy
for himself and his government, as J N Dixit, former Ambassador
to Kabul and Islamabad pointed out in an article in this newspaper.
Pakistan has little to celebrate about the new interim government
in Afghanistan. Two of the triumvirate of Northern Alliance
leaders now playing key roles Younus Qanooni, Abdullah Abdullah
and Mohammed Qasim Fahim — have visited India. The alliance
clearly remains concerned about Pakistan’s stance towards
them. When Islamabad maintained diplomatic relations with
the Taliban, New Delhi supported the alliance. The Indians
have also managed to cultivate the 30,000 Afghan refugees
living in their country and Qanooni, Abdullah and other Afghan
leaders have families there.
General Musharraf’s spinmeisters seek solace in the selection
of Hamid Karzai, a Pashtun living in Pakistan for two decades,
as head of the interim government. But even he was educated
in India and can best be described as favourably disposed
towards both India and Pakistan.
General Musharraf’s U-turn on Afghanistan should have been
accompanied by a swift change in other aspects of policy as
well. Support for the Taliban, tolerance of jihadis, and rejection
of consensus politics at home were all results of a worldview
that was shattered after the WTC attacks. So far, he has embraced
change only in part. He allied himself to the US in the destruction
of the Taliban but is unwilling to change other elements of
that shattered worldview. The key to becoming part of a new
order would have been a new approach towards relations with
India, in general, and resolving the Kashmir dispute, in particular.
Pakistan and the Kashmiri people have a legitimate case that
can be pursued in the political arena, without the stigma
of militancy and militarism.
If General Musharraf wants to make the most of the new, difficult
situation facing Pakistan, he will have to accept a diminished
role for Pakistan’s military establishment in making policy.
Since 1958, the military establishment has insisted on its
right to define national interest, instead of limiting itself
to its duty of defending it. ‘National interest’ has included
confrontation with India and the exclusion from effective
political power of civilians with a mind of their own. Perhaps
it is time for a more extensive U-turn than the one taken
so far.
(The writer served as adviser to Nawaz Sharif and Benazir
Bhutto and as Pakistan’s Ambassador to Sri Lanka)
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