http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20110502-dispatch-strategic-implications-os
ama-bin-ladens-death 


Dispatch: Strategic Implications of Osama bin Laden's Death


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<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20110502-dispatch-strategic-implications-o
sama-bin-ladens-death> 

May 2, 2011 | 1953 GMT

 

Analyst Reva Bhalla discusses the strategic implications of Osama bin
Laden's death on U.S. foreign policy.


Editor's Note: Transcripts are generated using speech-recognition
technology. Therefore, STRATFOR cannot guarantee their complete accuracy.


The death of Osama bin Laden is unlikely to have much of a tactical impact
on the wider jihadist movement, but the killing does carry significant
implications for U.S. foreign policy moving forward.

Let's look at the most obvious fact. Bin Laden was not killed up in the
tribal borderlands between Afghanistan and Pakistan - he was killed in a
highly secured compound, deep in Pakistani territory. The operation, carried
out by U.S. Navy SEALs, appears to have been done independently by the
United States and kept from the Pakistanis in order to avoid having the
operation compromised, as the United States has been burned a number of
times by Pakistani intelligence in pursuing high-value targets.
U.S.-Pakistani distress is really nothing new, but the details of the
operation do raise very important questions on the trajectory of
U.S.-Pakistani relations moving forward. Pakistan knows very well, and the
U.S. begrudgingly acknowledges, that the Pakistanis have vital intelligence
links to al Qaeda and Taliban targets that determine the level of success
the United States will have in this war. That is a reality the United States
has to deal with and Pakistan uses those intelligence links as critical
leverage in its relationship with Washington.

But what does Pakistan want out of its relationship with Washington?
Pakistan no doubt has been severely destabilized by the U.S. war in
Afghanistan. That has in effect produced in indigenous Taliban insurgency in
Pakistani territory. At the same time, Pakistan has a longer-term strategic
need to hold onto an external power patron, like the United States, to fend
against its much more powerful and larger neighbor to the East - India. And
so that puts the United States and Pakistan in quite the dilemma. No matter
how frustrated the United States becomes with Pakistani duplicity in
managing the jihadist threat, the United States cannot avoid the fact that
it needs to rely on Pakistan in order to forge a political understanding
with the Taliban in Afghanistan in order to shape an exit from the war in
Afghanistan.

In the short term, and Obama even carefully alluded to this in his speech
last night, the United States needs, and more importantly expects, Pakistani
cooperation in order to meet its goal of exiting the war in Afghanistan. But
the Pakistanis, now feeling more vulnerable than ever, do not want this war
to end feeling used and abused by the United States. The Pakistanis want the
United States to not only recognize Pakistan's sphere of influence in
Afghanistan but also want that long-term strategic support from Washington.
The United States will continue conducting a complex balancing act on the
subcontinent between India and Pakistan but really there's very little
hiding that deep level of distrust between Washington and Islamabad.

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