"You might remember a Shekhar Suman gag on Zee TV's Movers and Shakers several 
years ago: An angry George W Bush announces that the United States will bomb 
the place where Osama bin Laden is found to be hiding.Hearing this, Vajpayee 
looks under his bed, pauses, and with a characteristic flick of his wrist says: 
"Thank God! He isn't here!"Over in Rawalpindi, General Musharraf looks under 
his bed, sighs in relief, and says: "Thank God! He is still here!"Shekhar 
Suman, more than most Western analysts, got the plot right. Keeping Osama bin 
Laden out of Washington's hands was vital in order to prevent having to 
publicly deal with revelations of how the Pakistani military-jihadi complex not 
only was connected with al-Qaeda, but might also have been involved in the 
conspiracy behind the 9/11 attacks.Moreover, when the Pakistani military 
leadership was getting paid hundreds of millions of dollars per year to hunt 
bin Laden down, it made little sense to give
 him up quickly. As early as October 2001, a month after 9/11, wags in 
Islamabad coined the phrase "al-Faida" (the profit) in anticipation of the 
rewards Pakistan would reap for joining the war on terror that it had played a 
part in creating. Pakistan was in an international doghouse at that time. Its 
economy was crumbling under the weight of sections imposed by the international 
community for having carried out nuclear tests in 1998. Its government, then 
under General Musharraf's military dictatorship, was seen as odious, not least 
for supporting the original Taliban regime in Kabul. It was barely surviving on 
Saudi largesse until September 2001, when General Musharraf's ditching of one 
set of allies for another changed his country's fortunes -- from being nearly 
toast, Pakistan was the toast.Just how much was the al-Faida worth? According 
to data compiled by K Alan Kronstadt, of the US Congressional Research Service, 
between 2002 and 2010, US
 direct overt aid and military reimbursements to Pakistan amounted to $19.6 
billion, of which $13.3 billion was for security-related heads. Obviously, if 
there is "direct, overt" aid, there is likely to be "indirect, covert" aid. 
There is also the money from other countries and loans from the IMF. 
Because the military-jihadi complex dominates the Pakistani political economy, 
it is the primary beneficiary of this largesse. Between 2002 and 2008, my 
estimate suggests that the business of shipping US and NATO containers from 
Karachi to Kabul alone made $500m per year for the military establishment and 
$300m per year for the militant groups. Why would they want the gravy train to 
stop?They wouldn't, but the Obama administration had other ideas. It made three 
changes that caused the Pakistani military establishment to redo its sums. 
First, the Kerry-Lugar-Berman legislation made it harder for the military to 
capture the funds. It also came with more
 strings attached. Second, the Obama administration increased the number of 
drone strikes against targets in Pakistan, while increasing pressure on the 
Pakistani army to go after the taliban groups in its tribal areas. Finally, by 
indicating a timeline for withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, Washington 
triggered the endgame.With the Obama adminstration taking a harder line on the 
Pakistani army, the al-Faida from the war against al-Qaeda began to be less 
attractive. At the same time, with a US withdrawal in sight, Afghanistan began 
to look more attractive as a prize. For General Kayani to stand a chance for 
claiming this prize, it is necessary for President Obama to prevail over other 
members of his administration and get US troops out earlier.Playing the bin 
Laden card is a brilliant way to achieve this outcome. Although US officials 
claim they did it without Pakistan's knowledge or permission, it is hard to 
believe he could be found without the
 Pakistani military establishment permitting it.Either way, bin Laden's 
elimination provides the right political cover for President Obama to declare 
victory and order his troops out of Afghanistan. Once withdrawal starts, 
President Obama will be politically dependent on General Kayani to ensure that 
it takes place in a manner that doesn't damage his re-election prospects. 
Expect the latter to use the leverage to ensure that the military-jihadi 
complex gets its proxies into the government in Kabul.As I wrote on my blog 
yesterday, "the United States is unlikely to punish Pakistan for the decade of 
duplicity, subterfuge and violence that consumed innumerable lives and 
astounding amounts of money." President Obama will not ask why Osama bin Laden 
was living it up in Abbottabad, a bus stop away from the Pakistan Military 
Academy, and not in a cave somewhere in Waziristan. You won't find Washington 
too interested in confronting General Kayani on when bin
 Laden moved in there and why his presence went undetected for so long.Rather, 
Washington will seek plausible reassurances that after it leaves, Afghanistan 
will not play host to terrorists targeting the United States. It will place 
some anti-Taliban and anti-Pakistan Afghans into positions of power in Kabul to 
balance Pakistan's proxies. It might retain some troops and drones in 
Afghanistan just in case it needs to use a stick. That apart, it will accede to 
Pakistani demands that Kabul be made over to a pro-Pakistani regime.In time, 
the Pakistani military-jihadi complex will seek to reconquer Afghanistan 
(called "gaining strategic depth") with China's support or connivance.We are 
staring at a return of the 1990s. This is a bad outcome for Afghans, Pakistanis 
and Indians. The military-jihadi complex will gain in strength. Pakistan's 
civilian government will be more powerless. It will only be a facade with which 
to seek foreign assistance. It will also be
 the whipping boy, blamed for the worsening state of Pakistan. Hundreds of 
thousands of triumphant militants will need to be given new targets. Compared 
to the early 1990s, it is far more difficult today---strategically and 
operationally---to push them across into India. Yet, the interests of the 
military-jihadi complex and the absence of a miracle job-machine will pose a 
serious threat to India's national security. We may be, at best, two summers 
away from an escalation of the proxy war in Kashmir and elsewhere."Nitin Pai is 
founder & fellow for geopolitics at the Takshashila Institution and editor 
of Pragati - The Indian National Interest Review, a publication on strategic 
affairs, public policy and governance. He blogs at The Acorn and is active 
on Twitter too.
Uttam Kumar Borthakur
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