The Darkest Days of The US-Pakistan Relationship
by Michael Kugelman
I’ve been in Washington for 15 years, and I’ve never seen such high levels of hostility directed toward Pakistan.
I don’t attribute this sentiment solely to the steady stream of incidents that have angered America. Tension points have been present for decades; the Shakil Afridi incident and the refusal to reopen Nato supply lines are simply the latest incarnations.
That said, one cannot overstate the extent of US government anger about the Pakistan-based Haqqani network’s repeated attacks on American troops and interests in Afghanistan. I recently attended a private meeting involving high-level US government officials, and the group’s assault on the US embassy in Kabul last September was cited as a chief reason for Washington’s unhappiness.
This anger is a bit easier to understand in light of recent revelations that a June 1 attack on a US military facility in Khost Province (carried out by the Haqqani network, in Washington’s view) was much more serious than originally reported. Initially described as a US-casualty-free incident, the operation in fact involved a truck bombing, two American and five Afghan deaths, and dozens of wounded troops.
Beyond all this, however, a larger force is at play — what political scientists refer to as a paradigm shift. In recent days, two noted Washington Pakistan-watchers have published commentaries in prominent outlets that suggest the relationship is doomed. In a Washington Post op-ed, the Stimson Center’s Michael Krepon asserted that “more Pakistanis and Americans are reaching the same conclusion: that it is not worth the effort, money or subterfuge required to patch up relations.” Meanwhile, Shamila Chaudhary, formerly a National Security Council staffer and top aide to Hillary Clinton, wrote in a Foreign Policy piece (entitled “The Patience Runs Out”) that up to now, “we’ve all just put up” with Pakistan’s “outdated and destabilising Afghanistan policy” because “it’s been taken as gospel that the United States needs Pakistan. That truism, at last, is no longer true.”
Such conclusions come on the heels of Leon Panetta’s recent trip to India, where he openly advocated for India to play a larger role in Afghanistan — for years, a suggestion US officials wouldn’t dared have made publicly for fear of offending Pakistan. Instances like these prompt Chaudhary (one of the savviest Pakistan analysts in town) to conclude that Washington is “actively looking to replace Pakistan.”
If one steps back and places this all in the proper strategic context, Washington’s behavior starts to make sense. The Obama administration has announced its intention to pursue an “Asia pivot,” which involves intensifying engagement with countries in the Asia-Pacific. In recent days, President Obama met with the president of the Philippines; Clinton hosted officials from Cambodia, Thailand, and South Korea; and Panetta travelled to Singapore, Vietnam, and, of course, India. While rarely stated explicitly, a chief motivation for this policy shift is to counter the rise of China, one of Pakistan’s closest allies. Washington, of course, views India as a counterweight to China’s rise.
Yet one need not resort to grand strategy to understand what’s afoot. Given America’s domestic troubles during this election season, it’s simply not politically expedient for Washington to be advocating for a long-term, aid-driven relationship with Pakistan.
Take the case of Reading, Pennsylvania. Last week, I travelled to this city — a three-hour drive from Washington — to give a talk to the local chapter of the World Affairs Council. In its heyday, Reading prospered from coal and steel production. Today, it has the nation’s largest share of residents living in poverty. The city has residents interested in foreign affairs (about 75 of them attended my presentation), but with a poverty rate of 41 per cent, there’s much more concern about struggles closer to home. Pakistan rarely registers on radars, except in dismissive ways (“That’s a pretty crazy country, isn’t it?” a waitress said to me a ta local restaurant).
This is not the ideal venue to make an impassioned appeal for, say, continued US economic assistance to Pakistan.
Thankfully, Washington is not giving up completely on the bilateral relationship. Behind the scenes, policymakers and think tanks are feverishly exploring how to get the relationship back on track. Increasingly, Americans are grudgingly acknowledging this will have to be done knowing that Pakistan will not help attain many key US interests (including the elimination of the Haqqani network’s Pakistan-based sanctuary).
Still, these efforts will not get any easier with the dismissal of Pakistan’s prime minister earlier this week, and the general outlook remains gloomy. There’s a saying heard often around these parts: Pakistan and the United States have a failing marriage, yet they insist on keeping the relationship together for the sake of their child, Afghanistan.
Alas, the situation now appears so grave that the two sides may be prepared to act against the best interests of their child — and, perhaps, of each other.
The author is the program associate for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC. You can reach him at michael.kugelman@wilsoncenter.org and follow him on Twitter: @michaelkugelman
Source: Dawn




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USA had taken for granted Pakistan would as MASTER SAYS! I.e. SLAVE /MASTER RELATIONSHIP
Also here Author shows clearly ARROGANCE WITH RACIAL OVERTONES of USA
USA had moving GOAL POST With Pakistan DO MORE NOTHING SATISFIED the master
Well WHAT RIGHT HAS USA to INAVED AFGHANISTAN or declare any group which opposed to USA policies or invasion to be terrorist?
GOODBYE USA !
Yes,Pakistan will suffer but lych called USA must be shaken off!
REMOVED NOT ONLY FROM PAKISTAN BUT WHOLE OF MIDDLE EAST AND THEN AFRICA!
Pakistan Awwal, Pakistan Aakhir, Saya-a-Khuda-a Zuljilaal, Amiin.
Your time has come America. It is the beginning of the end of the ‘good old USA!’ They massacred majority of the Red Indians, started wars elsewhere, killing millions and for what?Crazy Yellow-bellies never leant a thing, and never will.
The USA/NATO unwittingly messed with a people who fear ALLAH, Alone. Now see the eventual doom, slowly, but, surely!
Pakistan Zindabaad, Paendabaad.
ALLAHU-AKBAR!
Just how long did Pakistan think it could play a double game? 10 years hiding OBL and supporting the Taliban while taking billions as an ally is pretty good. Now comes the part where Pakistan pays for it’s choices.
wow ure never going to stop spreading lies are u? there is absolutely NO credible prrof that OBL lived in pakistan. i have proven this b4. why dont u go back and find the comment in which i have proven this? and those “billions” never went to us anyways. I have ALSO proven that.
@Andy
Your statement”Now comes the part where Pakistan pays for its choice” shows,though no sign of it, that you have plans for saving your 150,000 odd soldiers from the graveyard of Afghanistan.
But no.The graves have already been prepared.Time has come for paying for your dirty deeds since WW 1.
All that apparent frustration on Washington’s part is due to their unrealistic expectations from Pakistan and their overwhelming confidence in their ability to force Pakistan at will. That was unrealistic goal that Americans wanted to achieve through the use of so-called carrot and stick policy. American ears are not used to hear a ‘no’ from the weak rulers in Islamabad. But with an increased awareness in Pakistani people and a deep realization of betrayal (due to repeated aggressive actions by US) government in Pakistan has drastically reduced US ability to blackmail or even pressurize Islamabad. Pakistanis increasingly view the whole American game plan as tool aimed at continuous bleeding of Pakistanis and Afghans. That plan is based on deception, lies, incentives, and threats. Their plan has now failed as well as Americans stand exposed. It’s silly of them to still dreaming of coercing and blackmailing Pakistan. They are frantically making trips to India and trying to instigate and pit them against Pakistan. Then they try to use certain Afghan elements to harm Pak interests. That certainly is not going to work because Indians and Afghans are also in full realization of the evil intents of the invaders. Pakistan needs to stand firm of its principled stand of asking for a thorough apology for murdering dozens of Pak soldiers at Salala and for payment of all dues for using Pak infrastructure for supplies to war criminals in occupied Afghanistan. After all that gets settled, if at all, routes should only be opened for withdrawing troops and their war machinery.
What for americans are waiting ? Consider Pakistan as Iraq and hit it till it surender and obey the orders of US. US has created Pakistan in 1947 with alliance Britain for cater communist Russia and China . Pakistan was used as a buffer state. At Least Balochistan must be seperated to allow sea access to AFGHN.
GOTYA is living in la la land! His foreign minister begged U.S. to recruit them to helpinvade afghanistan, but was rebuffed.Now he would like them to invade Pakistan, ( wishful thinking but quite stupid!) He wishes to separate Baluchistan to “allow sea access to AFGHN”. FYI “AFGHN” already has sea access through Pakistan. It will be denied only to undesirables.