Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Pakistan, India and the U.S. (Pak the next target)
Stratfor.com ^ | 12/28/01 | Stratfor

Posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:28 AM PST by Rumierules

Pakistan, India and the United States

2230 GMT, 011227

Summary

With al Qaeda and Taliban elements fleeing Afghanistan, the United States will continue to grapple with strategic problems concerning its traditional ally, Pakistan. There are significant differences between what President Pervez Musharraf has said he will do to fight terrorism, what he intends to do and what he actually can accomplish. The threat of an imminent Indo-Pakistani war may be just the lever Washington needs to move Islamabad.

Analysis

The United States has been engaged in intense debate regarding the next steps it must take to eradicate al Qaeda. Two main strategies have emerged of late. One argues that there can be no solution to the problem of Islamic attacks on the United States until the regime of Saddam Hussein is eliminated. The other strategy argues that Iraq's role is secondary, and that the United States' primary mission is to prevent al Qaeda from establishing a command center in some other isolated country, like Yemen or Somalia.

Obviously, the strategies are not incompatible. Equally obviously, at least from STRATFOR'S point of view, the debate misses the point entirely: the next country on the agenda is Pakistan.

When planning for the Afghan campaign began immediately after Sept. 11, it was clear -- at least from a naive standpoint -- that Pakistan, which has an extensive border with Afghanistan and a long-standing strategic relationship with the United States, would be the strategic key to the campaign. The planners' first impulse was to deploy U.S. forces in Pakistan and prosecute the campaign from there. This proved impossible. Instead, U.S. ground forces had to deploy in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, while air attacks were carried out from carriers in the Arabian Sea and from strategic bombers on Diego Garcia and elsewhere. Clearly, some forces were deployed in Pakistan, but only under tight secrecy.

The need for secrecy is the key to everything. Simply put, the Pakistani government was not in a position to permit a war against the Taliban regime to be waged from its soil. This was not simply because of substantial sympathy for the Taliban in Pakistan, although that existed. Nor is it simply because Pushtuns, the foundation of Taliban power, live on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border, although they do.

Rather, it was because the Taliban was ultimately as much a Pakistani phenomenon as it was Afghan. In a sense, the Taliban was a Pakistani construct, designed to conclude -- on terms acceptable to Pakistan -- the civil war that raged in Afghanistan following the Soviet withdrawal. Pakistan feared the ascendance of the Northern Alliance as well as other groups in Afghanistan, and saw in the Taliban a government that was congenial to Pakistan both strategically and ideologically. The ISI, Pakistan's intelligence service, was in many ways the godfather of the Taliban government.

As the Taliban government provided al Qaeda with a secure operational base, the United States continued to parse the issue of Pakistan and Afghanistan. It is inconceivable that the Taliban would have been able to develop its relationship with al Qaeda without the knowledge of Pakistan's intelligence services and government, and it is difficult to imagine that they would not have given at least implicit approval. However, the United States was not prepared to frame the issue as an Afghan-Pakistani issue -- only as an Afghan problem fundamentally distinct from Pakistan.

This policy continued after Sept. 11 and throughout the campaign, despite the clear limits Pakistan placed on cooperation with the United States. Washington clearly and rationally wanted to contain the Afghan campaign. It placed sufficient pressure on President Pervez Musharraf to force him to remove senior officials who were too closely aligned with the Taliban, to permit at least some basing of U.S. forces in Pakistan and to publicly commit himself to use Pakistani forces along the frontier to prevent Taliban forces from crossing into Pakistan.

The United States recognized that much of this was cosmetic. Support for the Taliban ran deep in the government and deeper in the country. The U.S. forces based in Pakistan were hardly strategic. Finally, whatever he promised, there were significant differences between what Musharraf said, what he actually intended to do and what he ultimately was able to do.

The United States carefully refrained from pressing the issue, afraid that excessive pressure would topple Musharraf and throw Pakistan either into chaos or into a fundamentalist dictatorship. Or if excessive pressure threatened Musharraf's survival, he might simply reverse course and turn against the United States. In any case, the United States adopted a minimax policy -- it demanded the most it could get within the limits of what Islamabad could deliver, and it lived with the three differences: what was said, what was actually intended, what could really be delivered.

The manner in which the Afghan war concluded has suddenly rendered this policy untenable. While the Taliban has abandoned the cities, it continues to exist, both in alliances with particular warlords and in its own right. Where it exists most intensely, in fact, is in Pakistan, among Taliban sympathizers as well as among hundreds or thousands of Taliban fighters that have crossed into Pakistan during the past month. A very few have been very publicly apprehended, but most have gone to ground -- some protected by Pakistani forces.

Far more important than the fate of the Taliban is the fate of al Qaeda's senior commanders, including Osama bin Laden, and of its fighters. It is becoming increasingly obvious that neither the Taliban's high command nor al Qaeda's has been captured. The release of a new videotape that appears to have been made in the past few weeks, and perhaps as recently as last week, dealt a blow to speculation that bin Laden and the others were killed at Tora Bora. It was always problematic that bin Laden would have chosen to travel from Kandahar to Tora Bora in the chaos that followed his last known taping. This would be not only dangerous but pointless. It was far more likely that he went directly to Pakistan, where supporters hid him and may still be doing so.

Whether bin Laden is in Pakistan or has traveled elsewhere, it is clear that many of his forces as well as Taliban leaders went to Pakistan and that the vast majority of those remain. In other words, apart from native support for the Taliban and al Qaeda, elements from Afghanistan are now in Pakistan and operating under the protection of, if not the government, certainly elements of the government and powerful political forces.

If we are correct in this, then the problem the United States faces in destroying al Qaeda does not concern Somalia, Yemen or Iraq, but Pakistan. Ideally, the United States would like Musharraf to use his security and military forces to destroy al Qaeda's forces and hand senior leaders over to the United States. Certainly, this is something that Musharraf has assured the United States he would do. However, it is not clear that he is in a position to deliver on his promise -- it is not clear his orders are being obeyed. Nor, frankly, is it clear that he wishes to see these orders carried out. Certainly, he wants to placate the United States, but there is a huge gap between saying he will act, acting, and acting effectively.

A case in point is the Dec. 13 attack on India's parliament by gunmen, which the U.S. government says were Islamic militants based in Pakistan. There are two explanations for the attack. The first is that Musharaff knew about plans for the attack and sanctioned it. The second is that he neither knew of nor sanctioned the attack. In a real sense, it doesn't matter which it was. Either explanation raises serious questions about the course of Afghanistan.

All this creates a strategic crisis for the United States. Its fundamental goal is to defend its own territory against al Qaeda attacks and the global destruction of al Qaeda. In our view, al Qaeda has taken refuge in Pakistan -- historically an ally of the United States, and a country that poses a military challenge on an order of magnitude beyond that posed by Afghanistan. Launching a military campaign in Pakistan is possible but requires much greater resources than in Afghanistan, as well as the destruction of Pakistan's nuclear capability. Rather than use direct military action, the United States would prefer a more subtle lever.

The attack on India's parliament provides precisely that lever. Obviously, the shootout was as intolerable for India as a similar attack on Congress would be for the United States. India must react. But even apart from that, India sees itself as having an unprecedented opportunity to deal not only with the Kashmir issue but with the entire issue of the nature and future of Pakistan.

Pakistan's alliance with the United States has placed severe limits on how far India could go. However, a profound schism is developing between Washington and Islamabad as post-Sept. 11 events evolve. Clearly, both sides are doing everything to avert an open breach -- but equally clearly, if it becomes undeniable that Pakistan is harboring al Qaeda elements, a break becomes inevitable. At that moment, India would have the opening it has awaited for 50 years. The United States would be not be able to refrain from acting against Pakistan, nor could it act efficiently without Indian support and involvement. India was eager to help from the beginning; now the United States would have no choice but to accept that help.

The United States does not want an Indo-Pakistani war, but the threat of such a war is precisely what Washington needs to move Islamabad. For Pakistan, the threat of a war with India in which the United States either stood to one side or actively participated is the worst possible nightmare. By allowing the specter to rise, Washington has given Musharraf an opportunity to become more forthcoming. If he is in control but insincere, he is being shown the abyss and can change course. If he is sincere but not in control, he can show the abyss to Islamic fundamentalists in his government and bring them under control.

The problem is that many of the fundamentalists would actually welcome a war and even defeat by India. Their goal is to radicalize the Islamic world by demonstrating that Christians, Hindus and Jews have formed a vast alliance designed to crush Islam. A combined U.S.-Indian attack would be exactly what would be needed to demonstrate this to the world. The destruction of Pakistan's nuclear capability -- whether by nuclear or conventional weapons -- would further illustrate the point. It is therefore no accident that Islamic fundamentalists struck India at what would normally be considered the worst possible moment. From their point of view, it was the best possible moment to act.

This indicated that Musharraf may not be able to gain control of the situation, even if he wanted to. Thus, he visited Beijing in late December. China has historically been an enemy of India and an ally of Pakistan. Beijing has been extremely cautious since Sept. 11, but it remembers both the EP-3 spy plane incident and U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's redefinition of strategy toward the Pacific and against China prior to Sept. 11. Beijing is happy to see the United States diverted. It would not be happy to see India emerge without a threat on its western flank. Hence, Musharaff had a very cordial visit to Beijing.

At this point, the strategic imperative of defeating al Qaeda begins to intersect with Eurasian geopolitics. It is one thing to take Afghanistan apart, quite another to do the same with Pakistan. Afghanistan's fate is of little significance to great powers. The fate of Pakistan matters to China, among others. At the same time, if al Qaeda is using Pakistan as a base of operations or even as a transit point and the Pakistani government can't or won't do anything decisive and effective about it, this strikes at a fundamental U.S. interest and cannot be tolerated.

The United States is, therefore, in the midst of a veiled crisis over Pakistan. It is an odd crisis in that Washington, fearing the consequences of a public confrontation, is trying very hard to maintain the fiction that Pakistan has been fully cooperating in the battle against al Qaeda, that it is acting effectively against the Taliban and al Qaeda and that its forces would certainly arrest senior al Qaeda leaders if they could catch them. At the same time, the United States is quietly showing Pakistan the abyss in the hopes that the plausible fiction of U.S.-Pakistani relations might thereby become reality.

The problem is that in Pakistan, there are those who prefer an open breach with the United States to accommodation. Even if we assume that Musharraf is not one of these elements, it is not clear that he can control them. If he can't control them, the United States is faced with an extraordinary dilemma -- to go into Pakistan and get al Qaeda itself. It cannot do this without India, and India will not move unless Pakistan's nuclear weapons are destroyed. It is not clear that U.S. precision-guided munitions are sufficient for a task that will tolerate no failure.

The rest follows logically.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
I thought this was interesting.
1 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:28 AM PST by Rumierules
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
I've read several reports from Stratfor.com and they are about as accurate at forecasting world events as a Magic 8-Ball.

They need to change their name to 0-fer.

2 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:29 AM PST by keithtoo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
Bump!

NeverGore

3 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:30 AM PST by nevergore
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
It will be interesting to see what Musharraf does. I suspect that he may be the first among several other leaders in marginal countries to discover that the "nonaligned" game really is over.

When the two great powers of USA and USSR were vying for global advantage, many weaselly nations like PAK could play both ends against each other, and flatter themselves that they mattered in the scheme of things.

As long as there were two sides, they could get away with their duplicity.

China notwithstanding, those days are over, and GW is going to make them put their cards on the table--Pakistan first. Bluffers never like to be in the position of being called, but when the other guy has his iron on the table, they have little choice.

It will be interesting to see what Pakistan does next.

4 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:34 AM PST by hinckley buzzard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules, Aaron_A, Pericles, Sawdring, Red Jones, Travis McGee, MikeIII, AM2000, Madrussian
Bump!
5 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:52 AM PST by atc
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
Clap clap! I agree. Not only do I agree that this is interesting, but I agree with the guys who wrote it. I was kind of miffed when the US started working WITH Pakistan in September! This is all quite true...

I had thought Pakistan had it coming from the get-go, even more so than Afghanistan (I was wrong). Basically the reason being that my Indian roommate at the time of the attacks said "oh yeah... Pakistan has always supported bin Laden [etc etc]" (Of course he's somewhat biased, but I believe him).

Good writing, nice analysis.

6 posted on 12/29/2001 12:18:10 AM PST by Shuhite
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: hinckley buzzard
It will be interesting to see what Pakistan does next.

A rogue Paki commander, loyal to bin Laden, will lob a nuke into India. You can imagine the rest.

7 posted on 12/29/2001 12:18:11 AM PST by Publius
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
Pakistan has always been next.

The progression was always logical and the strategic means (India) should also have been obvious when 43 employed the NA in Afghanistan.

My prediction as to when remains unchanged since late September...before the spring equinox.

Following the same pattern the Asia/Middle East foothold (Iran) will be next once we have established a foothold in southern Asia

8 posted on 12/29/2001 12:18:11 AM PST by Amerigomag
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
The fate of Pakistan matters to China, among others.

President Bush's EO of yesterday becomes intelligible. I think Most Favored Nation Status was the price of Chinese neutrality in a war against Pakistan.

9 posted on 12/29/2001 12:18:16 AM PST by aristeides
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rumierules
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan began thinning out troops patrolling its western border with Afghanistan in search of Osama bin Laden, freeing men for possible duty on its eastern frontier as the threat of war with India grew.

President Bush, whose administration has been working to avoid a fourth war between the nuclear neighbors, telephoned his Pakistani counterpart Pervez Musharraf, state television said.

No details of the conversation were immediately available.

Foreign Minister Abdul Sattar urged caution, saying tensions were so high that one wrong move could ignite conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

At the southwestern border town of Chaman, a Reuters reporter saw troops pulling out and packing up anti-aircraft guns installed at some checkpoints with Afghanistan.

``We have received orders to move,'' one soldier said when asked why they were leaving the Afghan frontier where several battalions of additional troops had been deployed to keep out Saudi-born militant bin Laden and his al Qaeda fighters.

``You know what's going on there or what may happen,'' he said, referring to the troop build-up on the border with India and fears of war.

The two enemy states have mounted the biggest troop buildup on the border for 15 years following a December 13 attack on the Indian parliament.

New Delhi blames two Pakistan-based militant groups fighting Indian rule in the disputed Kashmir region for the raid, which left 14 people dead, including the five assailants.

It wants the leaders arrested and is furious that Pakistan has not done more to meet those demands.

``The possibility a... small action could trigger a chain of action and reaction leading to a conflict that neither side desires is unfortunately very high,'' Sattar sad.

``Pakistan does not seek any war,'' he told a news conference.

Musharraf would be happy to meet Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee to ease the tensions, he said.

``We have made no specific request. If there is a desire on the part of the Indian prime minister, then surely a meeting will be arranged,'' he said.

But he said Pakistan would not request a meeting, after India scrapped talks scheduled for a regional summit in Kathmandu next week.

``I am sure no responsible person would like Pakistan to make a request that would give India the satisfaction of saying they have rejected it,'' he said.

Musharraf said on Friday he was willing to meet if the Indian prime minister wished. ``I don't mind meeting with him but you can't clap with one hand,'' Musharraf told reporters.

India swiftly dismissed any possibility of talks.

Vajpayee vowed to crush what he called cross-border terrorism and said India would do its best to avoid a war with Pakistan.

___________________________________________________________

I'm keeping a close eye on this one. I've heard all along that Pakistan harbours more radicals than Afghanistan did. Time will tell whether Musharraf can clean up his country on his own or not.

10 posted on 12/29/2001 4:23:27 PM PST by sandonca
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson