www.punjabics.com

Home

 

            Propaganda against an ally — a faulty engagement

The year was 1985. The end of Cold War was in sight. In one of the US War Colleges, a war game was conducted wherein the course members were presented with post-Cold War situation and asked to deliberate on the fate of overseas US forces with respect to their relocation. 

Many heads rolled and it was concluded that the most important strategic location for relocation of forces would be the Persian Gulf. The relocation would ensure control on the Straits of Hormuz and would provide firm control over the vast mineral and oil resources of the region. So, it was not a surprise when the CIA created conditions wherein the US supported Iraq in its war against Iran only to later encourage the former to invade Kuwait. The stage was then set to move in the US forces in the name of operation ‘Desert Storm’ to drive out the Iraqis from Kuwait. Since that fateful day the American forces placed their feet on the ground, the region remains destabilised. As if it was not enough, the US forces expanded their area of operations to include South Asia also. The US attacked Afghanistan, the people, their own creation of band of brothers in arms, the Mujahideen later called the Taliban, all of whom had tremendously helped the US to fight Russians and in the process laid their lives so that their ‘friends’ could achieve their aim. What could be the bigger irony that they attacked Afghanistan in the name of ‘war on terror’ even though none of the perpetrators of 9/11 attacks was an Afghan. Whatever the reasons, the US was successful in placing its forces in this arena also.
 

Admiral Mike Mullen and Richard Holbrooke have left Pakistan by now as I write this column having purportedly discussed the implementation of newly- framed US policy with the Pakistani authorities. The emphasis they must have put on had to be the expansion of their drone operations in Balochistan area as well. They seemed to have received the divine revelation yet again wherein they say that the Taliban Shura was hiding in Balochistan. Remember! They received one earlier also in connection with ‘Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction’.

With the way they are progressing, it won’t be a surprise if south of the Punjab is earmarked as the hiding place for Osama Bin Laden. Aren’t they slowly working on some other agenda? Remember there was a map published somewhere in the West showing Pakistan disintegrated and its discomfort with Pakistan’s nuclear status. CIA is at work here again but Pakistan’s ISI, the premier national agency, stands tall to safeguard Pakistan’s integrity and its national interests.
 

Having considered Pakistan’s armed forces and the ISI as stumbling blocks in implementing its agenda, the CIA has started a vicious propaganda war, primarily targeting the ISI by maligning it to the extremes. This is a veiled attempt to make Pakistan and the ISI, a scapegoat for all of its ills and conspicuous failures in Afghanistan.
 

The blatant propaganda against Pakistan Army and the ISI, as the two main targets coupled with the pressure being exerted through Obama’s Afghan-Pak policy, no significant progress towards handling of war on terror is possible. I wonder what incidents led the US administration to believe that there are rogue elements in the Army or the ISI and that these two state institutions are not fully committed to root out terrorism. There is a lot of trust deficit between the security agencies of the two countries.
 

The 26 November terror incident in India also worked towards furthering the distrust. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke has himself confessed lately in one of US television programmes ‘News Hour with Jim Lehrer’ that “We cannot succeed if the two intelligence agencies are at each other’s throat or don’t trust each other”. While still talking of trust, the betrayal of CIA on Afghanistan, support of Indian intelligence agency RAW by giving a blank cheque to destabilise Pakistan’s Balochistan and the Fata areas through its consulates along the borders, CIA’s nexus with Indian intelligence agency ‘RAW’ and Afghanistan’s secret agency ‘Khad’ and strange but mysterious quietness on the need to resolve the Kashmir conflict, the very basic issue that destabilises the South Asian region are few of the subjects that leave our minds boggled.
 

Pakistan has legitimate concerns about India’s involvement in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Balochistan province. Christine Fair, a leading American expert, revealed in a recently-held discussion on the subject in New York by saying, “Having visited the Indian mission in Zahedan, I can assure you they are not issuing visas as their main activity. India runs its operations from its consulate in Mazar Shariff and is likely doing the same from its consulates in Jalalabad and Kandahar.” She also said, “Indian officials have told me privately that they are pumping money into Balochistan. It would be a mistake to disregard Pakistan’s regional perceptions due to doubts about Indian competence in executing covert operations” inside Pakistan.
 

Shaun Gregory, director of the Pakistan Security Research Unit at the University of Bradford, during the same discussion emphasized addressing of Pakistan’s legitimate security needs. Sumit Ganguly, professor of Political Science at Indiana University, contributed in the discussion like this, “he never suggested that the Indians have purely humanitarian objectives in Afghanistan, that said their vigorous attempts to limit Pakistan’s reach and influence there stem largely from being systematically bled in Kashmir, their role in Afghanistan is a pincer movement designed to relieve the pressure in Kashmir”.

Despite all this, Americans do not want to realise the extent of the commitment of Pakistan in the war on terror even from the great sacrifices that have been rendered by its security forces, including those of its intelligence agencies. Why cannot they acknowledge its sincerity when it apprehended nearly 700 al-Qaeda operatives — including the alleged mastermind of 9/11 Khalid Sheikh? How can the US remain oblivious of the fact that by helping them, the people of Pakistan continue to face their reprisals through suicide bombings and other terror attacks? The tone, the malicious propaganda against the Army and the ISI by US generals, think-tanks and congressmen, is it the reward for the people of Pakistan for getting themselves associated with the US on its terror war? With the treatment being meted out is it still worth keeping their peace and prosperity hostage to the US war on terror or its quest to gain stronghold on the energy corridors of this region?
 

It must be understood that Pakistan’s security forces and the ISI are all educated enough to understand its security interests. They are educated enough to differentiate between white and black. We are against the Taliban perception of Islam. If the United States is to preserve its national security, then Pakistan also has the right to preserve its own. So if Pakistan is trying to preserve its national interests, it does not mean that it is supporting the Taliban or their brand of Islam. So, the US has to demonstrate respect, for Pakistan having done and lost so much, as its front ally on the war on terror. It is time they mull over their exit strategy and leave the region shape its destiny itself.

 (The News: Viewpoint :Friday, April 10, 2009:By Mashaal Javed)


 

 

Back to Previous Page                                                                                                                                                Home