Behind The Nightmare In Swat

By Ashley Smith

29 May, 2009
Dissidentvoice.org

An Interview With Saadia Toor

More than 1 million people have fled the Swat region of Pakistan in
one of the worst humanitarian crises since the slaughter in Rwanda
during the mid-1990s.

The refugees from Swat — in the north of Pakistan, near the
Afghanistan border — are victims of a Pakistani Army offensive, backed
by the U.S., against forces of the Taliban, which operate in both
countries. Under pressure from the U.S., the Pakistani military broke
a ceasefire arrangement with the Taliban and is carrying out a
scorched-earth assault — with the excuse that this is the only way to
flush out Taliban fighters. But the civilian population is paying a
terrible price.

The nightmarish scene in Swat and other areas in the north marks the
latest stage of Pakistan’s crisis, brought to a boil by the U.S.
escalation of its war in Afghanistan, which is spilling across the
border. But it also a sign of the deepening contradictions of
Pakistani politics following the downfall of the U.S.-backed
strongman, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, last year amid growing unrest.

Musharraf was replaced by Asif Ali Zardari, the husband of former
Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and leader of the Pakistan Peoples
Party. But Zardari, who has a long record of corruption, has quickly
lost credibility. He only reinstated Pakistan’s Chief Justice Iftikhar
Chaudhry — whose ouster by Musharraf spurred a mass movement
spearheaded by lawyers — after huge protests in March forced his hand.
Now, with the attacks in Swat, the Pakistani military is regaining the
initiative.

Saadia Toor, an assistant professor of Anthropology and Social Work at
Staten Island College and part of the group Action for a Progressive
Pakistan, talked to Ashley Smith about the situation in Pakistan
today.

Ashley Smith: For last few weeks, the media have been filled with
reports of the “imminent threat of the Taliban,” and then coverage of
Pakistani military assault on the Taliban in Swat. Why has the
Pakistani military abandoned the former peace and launched this
attack?

Saadia Toor: Finally, we’re beginning to see a lot of good analysis
coming out of the left media. Earlier, the U.S. government’s rhetoric
was being picked up uncritically. We’ve seen scaremongering in the
media over the imminent takeover of Pakistani nukes by the Taliban.

The U.S. has created this bizarre new moniker “Af/Pak” as a way to
cover over their expansion of the war from Afghanistan into Pakistan.
Building consent for this expansion has been what all the State
Department, Pentagon and media propaganda has been about in the last
few weeks.

To address your question about why the Pakistani Army abandoned the
peace, we have to step back and understand the relationship between
the Army and the Taliban. The Pakistani military has not been
interested in dealing with the Taliban because the Taliban don’t
appear as a threat to them. The military’s primary and existential
obsession is with India, and that’s where the majority of the
Pakistani Army is deployed. The Pakistani Army knows that the Taliban
is, in part, its own creation, and it can deal with them.

Moreover, the military knows very well that the Taliban are not in any
sense an existential or military threat to the country. The army
therefore allowed the Taliban to enter Swat. They accepted that Swat
and some of the other border provinces are incompletely integrated
into the country, and allowed the Taliban to exert its control.

The army has been under massive pressure from the U.S. to deal with
the “Taliban problem,” and the fact that the Taliban broke the peace
deal allowed the army to prove to its American masters that it’s a
reliable ally. So now the military has driven back the Taliban quite
easily from Buner and pummeled them in Swat.

The Pakistani Army isn’t concerned about what their attack on the
Taliban would do to the civilian population in Swat, so what we have
now is a humanitarian nightmare, with over a million internally
displaced civilians.

Why did the Obama administration push Pakistan to abandon the peace deal?

Saadia Toor: The U.S. doesn’t respect any Pakistani rules or laws. It
has its own imperial ambitions and priorities in the region. So it
pressured Pakistan to essentially rip up the peace deal, and go on
this brutal offensive.

The peace deal with the Taliban that was struck by the ruling party in
the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) was pragmatic. The Taliban had
been upping its threat in NWFP. It had killed ruling politicians and
threatened their families. The civilian ANP government in the province
also got no support from the army, and so was backed into a corner and
had to accept the peace deal.

But the U.S. told the Pakistani government to ignore that deal after
the Taliban attack on Buner.

Still, that’s only the superficial cause for the U.S. to back the
assault on the Taliban. Tom Hayden has a fabulous piece in The Nation
entitled “Understanding the long war” that goes a long way to
explaining what U.S. ambitions are.

To understand those, you have to step back and examine the whole “war
on terror.” It’s in reality a renewal of the “Great Game” of rivalries
in the region over who’s going to control the oil and natural gas
resources. Beyond that geopolitical battle, the military industrial
complex has a material interest in perpetual warfare.

The U.S. wants to wind down its occupation in Iraq, which it sees as a
distraction, and push ahead with a much larger scenario — what the
U.S. State Department calls the arc of instability, from North Africa
to the Middle East to South and Central Asia. The U.S. is gearing up
for, in the shocking words of one official, 50 years of warfare in
this area.

The question of resources is central. This is the new Great Game —
between the U.S., Russia, China, India, Pakistan and Iran, to name a
few — that we have been observing since the beginning of the war in
2001. The U.S. had planned a pipeline to go from Central Asia through
the Pakistani province of Balochistan. It saw Afghanistan as
strategically important in these designs.

Balochistan, in particular, is under the radar right now, but it’s
going to be a key region in the imperial competition. The Chinese have
already been active in Balochistan; they helped build one of the
ports. To counter this Chinese presence, the CIA has overrun
Balochistan. With the help of the Pakistani military, it’s also also
been training forces for black ops in Iran.

You said that the Pakistani Army is primarily focused not on the
Taliban, but India. How has the recent tilt by the U.S. toward India
affected this?

Saadia Toor: The U.S. has cultivated India, which has been happy with
this new relationship, and shifted toward a much greater alignment
with the U.S. India has made a huge break with its traditional
non-alignment posture of the past.

We saw that come together dramatically right after 9/11, when India,
the U.S. and Israel formed a block of so-called democracies against
terror. We saw the reactivation of this alignment after the terror
attacks in Mumbai. Sadly and tragically, the attack in Mumbai gave
India the boost it needed to convince the U.S. to pay attention to
India’s strategic needs in relationship to Pakistan.

So in the State Department’s Af/Pak policy document, you see that
India isn’t considered one of the regional players that needs to sit
together and be told what to do. India has bought itself out of this
trap. It’s not going to be asked to do anything.

For example, the U.S. isn’t going to pressure India to do anything
about Kashmir. Because extremist groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba and
Jaish-e-Mohammed, as well as the Pakistani military, are so
Kashmiri-focused, the logical thing would be to force India and
Pakistan to sit down with the Kashmiris to work out a solution that
respects the Kashmiri people’s wishes.

Of course, if that were to happen, the Pakistani military wouldn’t
change, nor would Lashkar-e-Taiba or Jaish-e-Mohammed disband. But it
would result in stability along the border with India.

Since India has managed to extricate itself from these regional talks,
it has avoided getting pressured toward a solution in Kashmir. But
this, in turn, guarantees an ongoing conflict between Pakistan and
India over Kashmir, at the expense of the region, and especially the
people of Kashmir.

Couldn’t U.S. plans backfire and cause of further destabilization not
only of Afghanistan, but now Pakistan as well?

Saadia Toor: We can’t underestimate the hubris of an imperialist state
like the U.S. Despite eight years of war, occupation and
counter-insurgency, and seeing that they aren’t working and are, in
fact, backfiring, U.S. thinking doesn’t seem to be shifting at all.

In Pakistan, the U.S. policy could really destabilize the country. A
military coup is a real possibility. The military is always happy to
step in and overrule civilian democracy. The reason that it hasn’t
done so is because it suffered such a severe public relations crisis
in the last few years of the Musharraf regime. It did not feel it
could come back.

But given the way things are going — especially all the finger-wagging
by Secretary of State Hilary Clinton against the civilian government
for being fragile and incapable of handling things–it seems like the
U.S. might support a return to military dictatorship.

The U.S. has always been happier dealing with the Army, whether it has
been in power or not. And the Pakistani Army’s most important backer
is the U.S. state. The U.S. has fed the army, nurtured it and allowed
it to become the monster it is. Certainly, the Pakistani military has
had no support from below — that all comes from above, and from the
U.S. in particular.

The army suffered this huge PR crisis under Musharraf because it was
seen as doing the U.S.’s dirty work — which, to be honest, it has been
doing for 50 years. So it retreated. Gen Ashfaq Kayani has been very
happy to work behind the curtain of the civilian government, because
the military ultimately knows that it’s always in control. It will do
whatever it has to, and let the blame fall at the feet of the civilian
government.

But if events turn in such a direction and the army is successful in
winning back moral authority, it could take power. Part of the
hysterics about “the Taliban are coming; the Taliban are coming” was
drummed out for the U.S., and part was for the domestic consumption of
the Pakistani elite.

The liberal elite supported the Pakistani Army in attacking the
Taliban. This is just after having pushed Musharraf out of power.

There’s a constant vacillation among the liberal elite between
democratic rule and the Pakistan Army. So knowing that the Pakistani
military helped create and backed the Taliban in the first place, the
liberal elite supported the attack. This is dangerous, since it is
re-legitimizing one of the most reactionary forces in Pakistan — the
military.

Recent opinion polls in Pakistan show the majority of Pakistanis are
concerned about the economic mess, and not terrorism. What do you make
of this?

Saadia Toor: What you see in these polls is the split between the
haves and have-nots.

The aim of the army has been to win back the liberal elite. Of course,
the military would love the support of the masses. But the liberal
elite is what matters to them. And on the ground, conditions are so
dire for the masses of the people that nothing the Pakistani military
is doing is going to shore up mass support for it.

For example, people in Swat say that before this current operation,
the Pakistani military targeted the Taliban. In the U.S. and Pakistani
media, military leaders played out a drama for our consumption — they
pretended to attack the Taliban, when, in fact, they weren’t.

The Pakistani state has always provided safe haven to the Taliban, as
well as Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, even when Musharraf
declared them illegal. That was only done to please the U.S. It was
obvious these groups were never repressed. When the military raided
the offices, no one was there. When it arrested people, it wasn’t the
leadership. This was all a drama staged for American consumption.

In Swat, the Pakistani military was doing nothing but terrorizing
civilians. On top of that, those who lived close to the border with
Afghanistan have had to deal with the U.S. drone strikes. So the
masses of people feel completely helpless and angry at all sides.

The Pakistani military will never be able to win over those people who
actually experienced what is happening on the ground. And certainly
those people are not Taliban supporters either, since they have
experienced the terror of the Taliban.

But the elite sitting in the cities are really terrified of the
Taliban. Now, if one could assume the Taliban could become a major
force in those cities, there would be something to be afraid of. But
that’s not going to happen. My worry is that this whole fear of the
Taliban will function to make that the Pakistani elite willing to
accept anything else — from the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif,
with all of his connections to the fundamentalists, to the military
itself.

How has U.S. pressure for Pakistan to attack the Taliban affected the
lawyers movement that developed in opposition to Musharraf after he
got rid of Pakistan’s chief justice? Now the movement has had to
confront the new president, Asif Ali Zardari, the corrupt husband of
assassinated political leader Benazir Bhutto who succeeded Musharraf.
Does the lawyers’ movement offer hope for progressive social change in
Pakistan?

Saadia Toor: To begin with, some of leadership of the lawyers movement
did come from the upper class, but the main section came from the
middle class–the petty bourgeoisie–and extended on down from there.

So when the confrontation between the lawyers movement and Zardari
came to a head, the liberal elite was against the Long March to demand
that Zardari restore the chief justice. The elite’s biggest fear is
the Taliban — that is, this religious takeover of Pakistan.

Never mind that they have been fine with the general religiosity that
has flooded Pakistan since General Zia-ul-Hak’s dictatorship. They
felt that it had no effect on their lives; they could go to their
clubs and say, “So what if the rest of Pakistan is becoming more and
more religious.”

The liberal elite was thus complicit with this spread of Islamism. It
failed to step up and make secularism mainstream the way it used to
be. In the 1970s, the political discourse was so different than it is
now. This liberal elite therefore supports Zardari uncritically
because it sees him as the only secular force.

Musharraf made his whole political career by saying that if it weren’t
for him, the fundamentalists would take over. He sold this very
effectively to the U.S., but also to the upper-class liberals. They
very much saw him as their man until that was untenable.

This same kind of thinking is now behind the uncritical support for
Zardari, because the elite wrongly believe that if it weren’t for him,
the whole country would be taken over by the Taliban. The upper-class
liberals were therefore critical of the Long March because they
thought it was attacking Zardari, and any action or criticism would
therefore open the floodgates for the fundamentalists or the army.

How has the left in Pakistan responded to the military operation
against the Taliban?

Saadia Toor: The left is very fragmented and small in Pakistan. That,
of course, has its own history because of its complete decimation
under the U.S.-backed dictatorship of Zia-ul-Haq. Among some elements
of the left, there is tremendous confusion about the situation.

For example, I can speak about the Communist Party of Balochistan and
its positions. It has been anti-Taliban and pro-secular, and trying to
speak from the position of the Swati people. But the discussion for a
long time on its e-mail list was that it should support the army going
in and attacking the Taliban.

This is a disastrous position. It does not take a very sophisticated
analysis to see that the army stands to gain from this whole
operation. The action is designed to build up support for the army and
show that it is an effective force that needs more money.

Of course, there are always small groups and individuals which have
taken a principled stand.

There have also been a few altercations between the principled left
and the liberal elite on this issue. The elite’s position has been
pro-army. The principled leftists have argued against army action
because the army is deeply involved in creating this mess, isn’t
interested in addressing the main issue of the Taliban, and the whole
action is window-dressing. So there were actual altercations at public
meetings between these two positions.

What should the principled left position be?

Saadia Toor: The principled position is always to be anti-army — not
just on an abstract level, but drawing on the actual history of the
relation of the army to groups like the Taliban and the Pakistani
people. If you’ve been paying any attention to these things, it
boggles the mind that someone would call on and expect the army to
protect the people. It shows the ideological confusion.

It’s not so long ago that we were marching against the army for its
cozy relationship with the US, the “war on terror,” and the
disappearances under Musharraf. I don’t understand the basis on which
the left would be calling on the Pakistani Army to solve the current
problem.

I think a principled position would denounce the army for its
disinterest in dealing with these groups, for actually cultivating
these groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan, for its continuing
extraction of money from the U.S., and for its ongoing mobilization
against India.

Now with India’s investment in Afghanistan growing, the Pakistani Army
investment in the Taliban is even higher. The Pakistani Army supported
the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, which they perceived to be
supported by India.

With India giving aid to Afghanistan, establishing an embassy there,
and supporting infrastructural projects, the Pakistani Army will have
a greater stake in supporting forces like the Taliban as a
counterweight. The Pakistani Army is locked in this conflict with
India, which is increasingly a sub-imperial power in the region.

What should the left say about the Taliban?

Saadia Toor: It’s sad and shocking to hear people talk about the
Taliban as an expression of class anger. At one level, that analysis
is really troubling because it presumes the Taliban has a vast amount
of popular support. But if you talk with refugees coming from Swat,
it’s clear that the Taliban doesn’t. We must oppose the Army, but
clearly not because we support the Taliban. A principled left position
is to oppose both.

A left position must talk about the disenfranchised and the federal
issues in Pakistan, as well as expose the Pakistani military and the
entire ruling elite’s complete disinterest in its people. The
Pakistani state has never honored the rights of its federated units.
[In the war of 1971], the ruling West Pakistani establishment was
happy to let go of East Pakistan [now Bangladesh], rather than give in
to its demands for a more balanced relationship between the center and
the provinces. And East Pakistan was not a small federated unit; it
was the majority of the population at the time.

The West Pakistani establishment constructed an image of East Pakistan
as a hotbed of Hindus and communists, and during the army action in
1971, the army brutalized the population of East Pakistan, for which
the Pakistani state has never apologized. That’s the real face of the
army and its relation to the Pakistani people.

A left position should focus also on the developing class anger and
struggles among the peasants, as well as among the proletariat across
whole of the country, including in Punjab. These struggles must be
reported and not ignored. The fact that they are ignored has a huge
impact on the balance of power in the political sphere.

If you don’t acknowledge that these struggles exist and that they
matter, then it can seem as if the Islamists are the only opposition
to injustice and imperialism. That’s simply not the case, as the
massive lawyers movement, as well as these many local class struggles,
prove.

What should the U.S. antiwar movement say about Obama’s new surge in
Afghanistan and his expansion of the war into Pakistan?

Saadia Toor: In liberal circles, Iraq is looked upon as the bad war,
of course. That was Obama’s main argument. He was never an antiwar
candidate. He was against the war in Iraq to some extent as a
distraction.

But now, after his election victory, we’ve seen the split in the
antiwar movement between people who opposed the entire “war on terror”
and those who just opposed the Iraq war. So there is no effective
antiwar movement to counter Obama’s escalation of the war into
Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In this context, the American military is having a field day. It’s
obvious for anyone to see that Obama has carried over the personnel,
the ideologies and the policies of the Bush Administration.

The Obama administration is certainly trying to repackage essential
continuity with the Bush administration’s policy in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. But there isn’t a whole lot of finessing that needs to be
done to sell this to the American public, since there is a whole lot
of agreement that the Afghan war is the moral war, and that Pakistan
is thought of as an untrustworthy and reluctant ally that is crawling
with militants.

In this context, the antiwar movement must educate people about the
true situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan. It must demand that the
drone attacks stop, and that the U.S. get out of Iraq, Afghanistan and
Pakistan.

The rhetoric of the Obama administration is disingenuous; the concern
is not about getting bin Laden if it ever was. They have had eight
years to do this and haven’t succeeded. Their real ambitions have
little to do with bin Laden, and are actually much larger.

As Pepe Escobar, Tom Hayden and Gareth Porter have argued, the U.S. is
planning a 50-year engagement, a new Great Game for control of the
region — and that is not something that the U.S. antiwar movement
should endorse. The antiwar movement should not let Obama continue
this imperial policy of aggression into Afghanistan, Pakistan and
potentially lots of other states.

Ashley Smith is a writer and activist from Burlington, Vermont. He
writes frequently for Socialist Worker and the International Socialist
Review. He can be reached at [email protected].

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