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US ropes in Pak security experts, India jittery
The Times of India ^ | 8 Nov 2008, 0404 hrs IST

Posted on 11/07/2008 5:06:50 PM PST by MyTwoCopperCoins

NEW DELHI: As new US Centcom commander General David Petraeus begins a strategy security review in Tampa, Florida, the presence of two security analysts from Pakistan as consultants have raised eyebrows here.

Ahmed Rashid, an acknowledged authority on the Taliban and Afghanistan, and Shuja Nawaz, author of a book on the Pakistan army, have been named "consultants" at the classified review starting in Florida this weekend. The aim is to review the war plans in Afghanistan and Iraq as the Barack Obama administration considers the wisdom of a troop surge in Afghanistan.

About 100 military specialists, known as the Joint Strategic Assessment Team, will help with the wide-ranging assessment and are expected to report in February. They will be helped by policy officials from the participating countries.

India's concern stems from the possibility that Rashid's latest recommendation of the "grand bargain" to solve Afghanistan's mammoth problems of security and terrorism may have found fertile ground in the Obama set. Certainly, the central argument in the article draws the same connections between "solving" terrorism in Afghanistan and "solving" Kashmir that Obama has been advocating for a while, including in the same journal some time ago.

In a much quoted article in the esteemed 'Foreign Affairs' journal, Rashid and America's best known Afghanistan expert Barnett Rubin wrote that Pakistan would be persuaded to stop supporting terrorism if India can be persuaded to solve Kashmir, which they argue to be a bigger strategic threat to Pakistan than terrorists on their soil, which "can be controlled". This is a "grand bargain" that India will not support.

However, sources said, it's premature to be hyperventilating about such a diplomatic initiative. Indian policymakers believe that once the new US administration takes shape, the realities of the situation will become much clearer to the new Washington. At its worst, India expects to have to do some diplomacy to counter any such perceptions.

The Rashid-Rubin article goes on to make the following suggestions:

• Pakistan should not be "pressured", because its security establishment believes that it is threatened by a US-India-Afghan alliance to dismember Pakistan. • Pakistan's military command continues to believe the two-nation theory and wants Kashmir to be incorporated into the South Asian homeland for Muslims. To this extent, Afganistan, they say, is "within Pakistan's security perimeter".

Pakistan continues to believe that the Indian threat is superior to stabilizing Afghanistan. The article goes on to recommend a "contact group on the region authorized by the UN Security Council. This contact group, including the five permanent members and perhaps others (NATO, Saudi Arabia), could promote dialogue between India and Pakistan about their respective interests in Afghanistan and about finding a solution to the Kashmir dispute."

According to the article, the rest of the world should be involved in a single exercise — to "reassure Pakistan" that it is under no threat. And the best way to do that would be to "resolve Kashmir". Only then will Pakistan lift its umbrella of support of terrorists and terrorism. In short, Pakistan should be rewarded for its support to terrorism.

"A central purpose of the contact group would be to assure Pakistan that the international community is committed to its territorial integrity — and to help resolve the Afghan and Kashmir border issues so as to better define Pakistan's territory," the article says. For good measure, the US should consider a nuclear deal for Pakistan and India should "become more transparent" about its activities in Afghanistan, it adds.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: consultants; globaljihad; india; jihad; muslim; obamatransitionfile; pakistan

1 posted on 11/07/2008 5:06:51 PM PST by MyTwoCopperCoins
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To: MyTwoCopperCoins

We’ve been at work for the last five years trying to build an alliance with India. I hope we don’t now mess this up.

Because much of what we do requires cooperation from Pakistan, we always walk a bit of a tight-rope, and mostly India understands that. But taking sides with Pakistan over Kashmir doesn’t strike me as a bright idea unless our intent is to drive India away. At the end of the day, we need both countries, but we need India about ten times, a hundred times more than we do Pakistan. We need to work with Pakistan but India is who we are fundamentally more in tune with. It will be a big mistake to forget that.

There is a reason you don’t let amateurs live in the White House. Or shouldn’t.


2 posted on 11/07/2008 5:34:27 PM PST by marron
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To: marron

Petraeus would be wise to listen to Rashid...He knows more about the Taliban than anyone. He has contacts that no American could ever get and his knowledge is vast. That said, in the ways of Islam, one always must be a skeptic, for lying and deceit are time honored traditions.


3 posted on 11/07/2008 5:47:08 PM PST by milwguy (........)
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To: milwguy

Just about anyone from the Paki army is an “authority” on Taliban, they are the ones that created them and are running them. Paki army is part of the problem not part of the solution. So good luck with Rashid!


4 posted on 11/09/2008 9:14:58 PM PST by moreofthesame
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To: moreofthesame

Ahmed Rashid is not from the army. He is a journalist. His book Taliban written in 2000 is one of the BEST books on what is going on in Afghanistan and that region of the world. I read it right after 9/11/01 and would recommend anyone wanting to understand the situation over there buy it on amazon. What he wrote in 2000 is just as relevant todat as it was before 9/11.


5 posted on 11/10/2008 5:24:26 AM PST by milwguy (........)
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To: milwguy
Is he the sam guy who said this about Bush?......
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/postglobal/america/2007/08/ahmed_rashid_bush_pakistan.html

No wonder he found such favour from Obama administration/

There are many so-called “journalists” in Pakistan that are just part of the establishment who put on a pretense that of being against the army. It really doesn't take much to see thru a well concealed Paki army agenda put forth by a “journalist” who suggests “Kashmir” and “India” as part of a bargain over Afghanistan. There are scores of “experts” on Taliban to be found on every street corner in Pakistan..... but they are not part of the solution.

6 posted on 11/10/2008 6:45:58 AM PST by moreofthesame
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