After all, it is Muslim.

 

B

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9429/pub_detail.asp

 

May 5, 2011


Pakistan: Public Enemy Number One


Spies, Lies and Terrorists In (Not Much) Disguise

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.192/author_detail.asp>
Ralph Peters

                                

 

 

Pakistan has done the impossible: It's bumped Saudi Arabia from the top slot
as America's number-one enemy. Al Qaeda is, at most, sixth or seventh on the
list, a symptom, not a cause. Without Saudi money and Pakistani protection,
al Qaeda would be about as relevant as VHS cassettes. Pakistan's
intelligence service (ISI) and its military leadership have managed to hide
Osama bin Laden since he fled Tora Bora; continue to harbor and support the
leadership of the Afghan Taliban; collude with the savage Haqqani terror
network; and nurture a range of anti-Indian terror organizations the ISI
created. Iran plays in the terrorist bush leagues compared to our Pakistani
"ally."

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110504_Pakistan2Map.jpg

 

Meanwhile, Washington continues to do the implausible: Kid itself that
Pakistan, the world's leading terror sponsor and haven, will ultimately
reform and give up its vast investments in terrorism if only we send more
money to Islamabad. One administration after another in D.C. convinces
itself that we can break a junkie's heroin habit by providing the addict
with an endless supply of heroin.

 

There is no way that Osama bin Laden could have lived in an eyesore
mega-compound in the shadow of multiple military installations in a key
garrison town without anyone in the Pakistani security establishment knowing
who was living there. On the contrary, the compound appears to have been
custom built for bin Laden as a gilded cage: The deal would have been that
the key insider Pakistani generals (who run the ISI, as well as the
military) would protect him and allow him to continue to provide al Qaeda
with strategic direction through couriers-but bin Laden would have to play
by ISI rules, keeping them informed about his orders to his terrorists;
remaining within the compound; and, essentially, staying on ice until the
Pakistanis felt they could unleash him to their advantage. Meanwhile, an
alive but undetected bin Laden guaranteed that billions in military and
civilian aid programs would continue to flow from the USA to Pakistan. For
the men who really run Pakistan, whether or not the military is formally in
power, this was the perfect self-licking ice-cream cone.

 

Now the Pakistanis have been caught out with their salwar-khameez trousers
around their ankles. And Washington, which has been oh so shocked by this
massive betrayal, appears determined to help the Pakistanis get those
trousers back up around their national waist as soon as possible. Yeah,
we're "demanding" explanations. But we'll accept any Pakistani lies that
allow this "important relationship" to go forward.

 

After all, the entire relationship with Pakistan has been built on lies and
our enthusiastic self-delusion. The most recent whopper was the
administration's claim that the SEALs destroyed the helicopter that suffered
mechanical problems so the top-secret technologies on board "wouldn't fall
into the hands of al Qaeda." That's pure bull. The al Qaeda thugs on that
compound were dead or had become prisoners. We destroyed our
helicopter-thoroughly-because we didn't want the Pakistanis to grab the
assorted black boxes, communication devices and night-flying avionics. We
knew the Pakistanis would share anything they got with their real friends,
the Chinese.

 

What do you do with an "ally" that hides your most-wanted enemy from you;
actively helps kill your troops in Afghanistan; uses terrorists to attack
the world's largest democracy (India); tries to convince the Afghan
government you've erected to boot you out and line up with Beijing, instead;
and views terror as an essential tool of strategy and statecraft?
Washington's answer is to send billions more in aid.

 

Even as I write, the State Department and various members of Congress
solemnly warn that cutting off aid to Pakistan could have dire results.

 

Really? Exactly how could this relationship get any worse? They were hiding
Osama bin Laden from us, for Heaven's sake.

 

The Pakistanis do have one practical hold over us: Idiotically, our Afghan
strategy relies heavily on extended supply lines through Pakistan to support
our troops. This is, and long has been, absolutely nuts. But you want it
bad, you get it bad.

 

And bloated blusterers whine that "Pakistan has nuclear weapons! What if
they fall into the hands of terrorists?" As if the current government in
Islamabad would miss the right chance.

 

In the short term, if our special-operations forces can pull off a brilliant
black op deep inside a hostile country such as Pakistan once, we can do it
again. And again. And next time there could be devastating air cover at the
ready, in case Pakistan's punk military gets any ideas.

 

But that's short-term operational stuff. We need to deal in imaginative
strategies. And the clear way to cope with Pakistan's nukes comes down to
one word: "India." Instead of supporting a nut-case, treacherous,
Islamist-infiltrated regime that helps kill our troops, we should cut all
aid-and all ties-with Pakistan. We need to remove most (not all) of our
troops from the brainless boondoggle in Afghanistan anyway (the only reason
any U.S. service member should stay in Afghanistan is to keep killing
terrorists in Pakistan-forget trying to break the death-grip of extremist
Islam by teaching Afghan villagers better hygiene). We should not have one
more soldier or system in Afghanistan than we can resupply or evacuate by
air in an emergency (crazily, our back-up supply lines run through
Russia-yeah, we're strategic geniuses, all right). Then we should close our
consulates in Pakistan and the embassy in Islamabad. Treat Pakistan as
exactly what it is: A lawless rogue state.

 

Simultaneously, throw all of our support, military and diplomatic, behind
India. India's democracy may be flawed-our own isn't exactly perfect--but it
has proven robust for over six decades (with one brief hiccup under Indira
Gandhi). And India is a country of the future with vast potential, a natural
long-term ally for the U.S. (we're both worried about China, too). Pakistan
has only a wretched past that repeats itself in a deteriorating cycle.

 

India could deal with Pakistan's nuclear "threat" just fine. As it is,
Pakistan launches terror attacks on India, confident that, before India can
retaliate, we'll jump in and prevent New Delhi from taking action-making us
complicit in Pakistan's terrorism. Think the Pakistanis would continue their
provocations if we weren't there to protect them from India's outrage? Think
the Pakistanis, with their 175-million anti-American Muslims, believe they
can take on 1.3 billion Indians in a nuclear exchange? Pakistan would be a
cinder.

 

 But don't hold your breath. Our "strategic thinkers" in Washington still
live in the Cold War, when we "needed" Pakistan. Perhaps, in twenty or
thirty years, when someone on the Potomac notices that we're living in the
21st-century and that, uh, the Congress of Vienna isn't especially relevant,
we might get an initial glimmer of strategic innovation. For now, though,
you can bet your life that the aid dollars will still flow to Pakistan;
we'll avidly accept Islamabad's promises to be really, really good; and
we'll go back to pretending that the Pakistani whore can be reformed for a
successful strategic marriage.

 

Osama bin Laden is dead, no thanks to the Pakistanis. The only qualifying
note I can offer is that it's quite possible that President Zardari, who's
regarded as a buffoon by his own security services, was never read in on the
secret that Pakistan's generals had cut a deal to protect bin Laden. But the
man who knows all is the army chief of staff, General Ashfaq Kiyani, for
whom many of us initially had some hope. General Kiyani's previous job was
as head of the ISI. And it's utter nonsense to pretend that bin Laden might
have been shielded all this time-and in the garrison city of Abbottabad
(which translates, loosely, as "Heeeeyyyy Abbottttt!)-by "rogue elements
within the ISI." It beggars belief that renegade operatives in the tightly
controlled ISI could shield bin Laden; support anti-India terrorists;
protect and aid the Afghan Taliban; and collaborate with the Haqqani network
without a succession of ISI chiefs knowing what was going on and signing off
on the activities. Just not possible.

 

Oh, and our old buddy, General Pervze Musharraf, former chief of staff and
Pakistani president, had to know, too.

 

But Washington will go on playing pretend. It's a whole lot easier than
thinking.

 

Meanwhile, we've lost the only man in Pakistan we could trust: Osama bin
Laden. He, at least, meant what he said.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> Family Security Matters
Contributing Editor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.192/author_detail.asp>
Ralph Peters is a retired Army officer, a former enlisted man, a journalist
and a bestselling author. He has experience in seventy countries on six
continents. His latest books are "
<http://www.amazon.com/Officers-Club-Ralph-Peters/dp/0765326809> The
Officers' Club," a novel of the post-Vietnam military, and "
<http://www.amazon.com/Endless-War-Middle-Eastern-Western-Civilization/dp/08
11705501> Endless War: Middle-Eastern Islam vs. Western Civilization." Ralph
Peters worked briefly with the Pakistani military and intelligence
leadership during in the mid-1990s. His military report on his on-the-ground
experience warned of growing Islamization within the Pakistani forces.
Nobody in Washington cared.

 



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