End of US-Pakistan Affair?

Donald Trump’s midnight brainstorm on Twitter abusing Pakistan for having had an endless party with the US aid of $33 billion, giving nothing in return except “lies and deceit” has come as a pleasant surprise to pundits and armchair warriors on the other side of the border.    

Ah! Finally, Uncle Sam seems to see what has been apparent all along to everyone in India. That the Pakistanis have been taking Americans for a grand ride with their continuing support to the Taliban and assorted militant groups has ostensibly been obvious to everyone except the Yanks themselves. 

   

Every time the Kashmiri militants struck or Indian and Pakistani forces clashed along the border, the media warriors would fume for the zillionth time why, oh why, the Americans while professing love for all things Indian continue to arm and finance the enemy.   

This is why Trump’s Twitter soliloquy in the true mad King Lear tradition declaring all his predecessors ‘fools’ for apparently pampering Pakistan for 15 years came as the veritable music to the likes of Arnab Goswami and his many imitators. The US has stopped all aid to Pakistan, dealing a devastating blow to an old ally. The decision affects about $1.3 billion worth of annual aid.

However, if the Americans and others in the neighbourhood expected the Pakistanis to cower in their pants and grovel at Trump’s feet begging for mercy and millions of dollars in aid, they must have been sorely disappointed. 

Far from trembling at the thought of being divested of Uncle Sam’s largesse and protection, the Pakistanis seem to remain remarkably cool and nonchalant in the face of America’s tough love and even tougher talk.  It is almost as though the Generals in Rawalpindi are daring the Yanks to bring it on. 

But why? For explanation, look to Pakistan’s geography, rather than history.  First, no matter what we Indians may like to think of the neighbour, Pakistan is no pushover.  It is not a banana republic but a nuclear power with the sixth-largest standing army in the world. 

Perpetually hobbling from crisis to crisis and surviving three major wars with a behemoth like India seems to have only strengthened their resolve and never-say-die spirit. For all the instability, poverty, corruption of their politicians and accusations of fomenting terror, the Pakistanis remain fiercely proud and patriotic.  

This is not a country that you can order about like one of those client states of the empire that remain dependent on their colonial masters for protection. The Pakistanis have treated Trump’s threats with the contempt they deserve. 

Besides, if you were to look at it from the Pakistani perspective, it is not the Americans but Pakistan that has received “nothing but lies and deceit”, repeatedly getting the short end of the stick in the bargain.  Beginning from the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in 1980s to the Western invasion of 2002, Pakistan has repeatedly been used by the US and its allies as the hired gun in their power games.

Contrary to popular perception in the West and in India, the Pakistanis believe they have suffered enough and done more than their fair share for Washington’s endless wars. 

To play the devil’s advocate, this conflict has claimed more than 50,000 Pakistani soldiers, the largest number any country has suffered fighting “terror.”  Its once vibrant economy and infrastructure lie in ruins.  The law and order situation is a mess with numerous militant groups, including those wanted by India, having a field day. And we are not even talking about the staggering cost of hosting three million Afghan refugees since 70’s and 80’s.   

No wonder many Pakistanis bristle at the American gripe of ‘not doing enough’ and complain of being used and dumped by the West in favour of India.  Not only does Delhi, once the champion of Non-Alignment, fit in nicely with the US project to check the rise of China as a global power, India holds out the promise of a massive new market of a billion plus people for American products and investments. Which is what really matters for businessman Trump. 

As former Indian diplomat and a rare pragmatist MK Bhadrakumar argues, the fact that China has heavily invested itself in Pakistan and the traditional friends are closer than ever also may have something to do with the US-Pakistan split.  Beijing has as many as $62 billion in investments riding on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and is prepared to pour in more if needed. 

Days before Trump’s Twitter rebuke, Pakistan’s Central Bank announced that the neighbours would now be using the Chinese currency yuan, instead of US dollars, in bilateral trade. It is a shift of epic proportions and may be yet another sign of the balance of global power weighing eastwards. Bhardakumar sees this announcement as the real reason behind the American ire.   

However, if an ungrateful US thinks it is now in a position to dump Pakistan, it needs to think again.  As Richard G Olson, who served as the US ambassador to Pakistan from 2012 to 2015 and as special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan until last year, argues in The New York Times in a brutally honest assessment: “Pakistan has greater leverage over us (Washington) than many imagine. Without Pakistani cooperation, our army in Afghanistan risks becoming a bleached whale!”

As long as the US remains involved in Afghanistan – it is not going anywhere anytime soon and this has nothing to do with “fighting terror” or promoting blessed democracy in the region. Afghanistan is now home to numerous US military bases that the Pentagon needs to keep Russia, China and Iran in check – it will be woefully dependent on Pakistan for transit and supply routes to its troops and bases. It cannot use the Central Asian routes because Russia’s Putin would not allow it. The other alternative of using Iran’s new Chabahar port, built with India’s support, is also out of the question for obvious reasons. That leaves only Pakistan around.   

As Olson puts it: “The Pakistani generals were never convinced that they had to choose between their relationship with the US and their relationship with the Taliban. The generals knew that as long as the US maintained an army in Afghanistan, it was more dependent on Pakistan than Pakistan was on it.”

Bhadrakumar agrees with the US diplomat: “Make no mistake; the Pakistani military will not be browbeaten. If push comes to shove, Pakistan does have the capability to make it difficult for the US and NATO forces to make even a withdrawal of troops out of Afghanistan in orderly fashion.”

So Trump or no Trump, it seems the US is stuck with Pakistan as long as it is stuck in Afghanistan.  Instead of blaming Pakistan for its woes in Afghanistan, the only option before the US is to address the sources of the Afghan conflict and turn the country over to its people before it meets the fate that befell the Soviet Union. 

Pakistan also needs to do some much-needed soul searching.  Instead of being forever indebted to the US or any other imperial power for its subsistence, the Pakistanis have the option of striving for self-reliance.  It is the only path to true independence and deliverance from the yoke of tyranny.  That is what Iqbal, the national poet of Pakistan, would suggest:

Aye tair-e-lahoti us rizq say maut acchi

jis rizq say aati ho parvaz mein kotaahi

O ethereal bird! It is better to starve to death

Than to live on a prey that clogs thy wings in flight.   

I am sure Jinnah, Pakistan’s founder, would agree. 

(Aijaz Zaka Syed is an independent writer and former newspaper editor)

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