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U.S.-Pakistani Relations Beyond Bin Laden


May 10, 2011 | 0854 GMT 

By George Friedman

The past week has been filled with announcements and speculations on how
Osama bin Laden was killed
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20110502-tactical-irrelevance-osama-bin-la
dens-death>  and on Washington's source of intelligence. After any operation
of this sort, the world is filled with speculation on sources and methods by
people who don't know, and silence or dissembling by those who do.

Obfuscating on how intelligence was developed and on the specifics of how an
operation was carried out is an essential part of covert operations. The
precise process must be distorted to confuse opponents regarding how things
actually played out; otherwise, the enemy learns lessons and adjusts.
Ideally, the enemy learns the wrong lessons, and its adjustments wind up
further weakening it. Operational disinformation is the final, critical
phase of covert operations. So as interesting as it is to speculate on just
how the United States located bin Laden and on exactly how the attack took
place, it is ultimately not a fruitful discussion. Moreover, it does not
focus on the truly important question, namely, the future of U.S.-Pakistani
relations
<http://www.stratfor.com/geopolitical_diary/20110411-pakistans-uneasy-relati
onship-united-states> .


Posturing Versus a Genuine Breach


It is not inconceivable that Pakistan aided the United States in identifying
and capturing Osama bin Laden, but it is unlikely. This is because the
operation saw the already-tremendous tensions between the two countries
worsen rather than improve. The Obama administration let it be known that it
saw Pakistan as either incompetent or duplicitous and that it deliberately
withheld plans for the operation from the Pakistanis. For their part, the
Pakistanis made it clear that further operations of this sort on Pakistani
territory could see an irreconcilable breach between the two countries. The
attitudes of the governments profoundly affected the views of politicians
and the public, attitudes that will be difficult to erase.

Posturing designed to hide Pakistani cooperation would be designed to cover
operational details, not to lead to significant breaches between countries.
The relationship between the United States and Pakistan ultimately is far
more important than the details of how Osama bin Laden was captured, but
both sides have created a tense atmosphere that they will find difficult to
contain. One would not sacrifice strategic relationships for the sake of
operational security. Therefore, we have to assume that the tension is real
and revolves around the different goals of Pakistan and the United States.

A break between the United States and Pakistan holds significance for both
sides. For Pakistan, it means the loss of an ally that could help Pakistan
fend off its much larger neighbor to the east, India
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100427_three_points_view_united_states_pak
istan_and_india> . For the United States, it means the loss of an ally in
the war in Afghanistan
<http://www.stratfor.com/geopolitical_diary/20100510_conflicting_objectives_
afghanistan_and_pakistan> . Whether the rupture ultimately occurs, of
course, depends on how deep the tension goes. And that depends on what the
tension is over, i.e., whether the tension ultimately merits the strategic
rift. It also is a question of which side is sacrificing the most. It is
therefore important to understand the geopolitics of U.S.-Pakistani
relations beyond the question of who knew what about bin Laden.


>From Cold to Jihadist War


U.S. strategy in the Cold War included a religious component, namely, using
religion to generate tension within the Communist bloc
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100628_30_year_war_afghanistan> . This
could be seen in the Jewish resistance in the Soviet Union, in Roman
Catholic resistance in Poland and, of course, in Muslim resistance to the
Soviets in Afghanistan. In Afghanistan, it took the form of using religious
Islamist militias to wage a guerrilla war against Soviet occupation. A
three-part alliance involving the Saudis, the Americans and the Pakistanis
fought the Soviets. The Pakistanis had the closest relationships with the
Afghan resistance due to ethnic and historical bonds, and the Pakistani
intelligence service, the Inter-Services Intelligence
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/pakistan_anatomy_isi>  (ISI), had built
close ties with the Afghans.

As frequently happens, the lines of influence ran both ways. The ISI did not
simply control Islamist militants, but instead many within the ISI came
under the influence of radical Islamist ideology. This reached the extent
that the ISI became a center of radical Islamism, not so much on an
institutional level as on a personal level: The case officers, as the phrase
goes, went native. As long as the U.S. strategy remained to align with
radical Islamism against the Soviets, this did not pose a major problem.
However, when the Soviet Union collapsed and the United States lost interest
in the future of Afghanistan, managing the conclusion of the war fell to the
Afghans and to the Pakistanis through the ISI. In the civil war that
followed the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, the United States played a
trivial role. It was the ISI in alliance with the Taliban - a coalition of
Afghan and international Islamist fighters who had been supported by the
United States, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan - that shaped the future of
Afghanistan.

The U.S.-Islamist relationship was an alliance of convenience for both
sides. It was temporary, and when the Soviets collapsed, Islamist ideology
focused on new enemies, the United States chief among them. Anti-Soviet
sentiment among radical Islamists soon morphed into anti-American sentiment.
This was particularly true after the Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait and Desert
Storm. The Islamists perceived the U.S. occupation and violation of Saudi
territorial integrity as a religious breach. Therefore, at least some
elements of international Islamism focused on the United States; al Qaeda
<http://www.stratfor.com/graphic_of_the_day/20110503-al-qaeda-and-global-jih
adist-movement>  was central among these elements. Al Qaeda needed a base of
operations after being expelled from Sudan, and Afghanistan provided the
most congenial home. In moving to Afghanistan and allying with the Taliban,
al Qaeda inevitably was able to greatly expand its links with Pakistan's
ISI, which was itself deeply involved with the Taliban.

After 9/11, Washington demanded that the Pakistanis aid the United States in
its war against al Qaeda and the Taliban. For Pakistan, this represented a
profound crisis. On the one hand, Pakistan badly needed the United States to
support it against what it saw as its existential enemy, India. On the other
hand, Islamabad found it difficult to rupture or control the intimate
relationships, ideological and personal, that had developed between the ISI
and the Taliban, and by extension with al Qaeda to some extent. In Pakistani
thinking, breaking with the United States could lead to strategic disaster
with India. However, accommodating the United States could lead to unrest,
potential civil war and even collapse by energizing elements of the ISI and
supporters of Taliban and radical Islamism in Pakistan.


The Pakistani Solution


The Pakistani solution was to appear to be doing everything possible to
support the United States in Afghanistan, with a quiet limit on what that
support would entail. That limit on support set by Islamabad was largely
defined as avoiding actions that would trigger a major uprising in Pakistan
that could threaten the regime. Pakistanis were prepared to accept a degree
of unrest in supporting the war but not to push things to the point of
endangering the regime.

The Pakistanis thus walked a tightrope between demands they provide
intelligence on al Qaeda and Taliban activities and permit U.S. operations
in Pakistan on one side and the internal consequences of doing so on the
other. The Pakistanis' policy was to accept a degree of unrest to keep the
Americans supporting Pakistan against India, but only to a point. So, for
example, the government purged the ISI of its overt supporters of radial
Islamism, but it did not purge the ISI wholesale nor did it end informal
relations between purged intelligence officers and the ISI. Pakistan thus
pursued a policy that did everything to appear to be cooperative while not
really meeting American demands.

The Americans were, of course, completely aware of the Pakistani limits and
did not ultimately object to this arrangement. The United States did not
want a coup in Islamabad, nor did it want massive civil unrest. The United
States needed Pakistan on whatever terms the Pakistanis could provide help.
It needed the supply line through Pakistan from Karachi to the Khyber Pass
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100128_pakistan_nato_supply_trucks_attac
ked_karachi> . And while it might not get complete intelligence from
Pakistan, the intelligence it did get was invaluable. Moreover, while the
Pakistanis could not close the Afghan Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan, they
could limit them and control their operation to some extent. The Americans
were as aware as the Pakistanis that the choice was between full and limited
cooperation, but could well be between limited and no cooperation, because
the government might well not survive full cooperation. The Americans thus
took what they could get.

Obviously, this relationship created friction. The Pakistani position was
that the United States had helped create this reality in the 1980s and
1990s. The American position was that after 9/11, the price of U.S. support
involved the Pakistanis changing their policies. The Pakistanis said there
were limits. The Americans agreed, so the fight was about defining the
limits.

The Americans felt that the limit was support for al Qaeda. They felt that
whatever Pakistan's relationship with the Afghan Taliban was, support in
suppressing al Qaeda, a separate organization, had to be absolute. The
Pakistanis agreed in principle but understood that the intelligence on al
Qaeda flowed most heavily from those most deeply involved with radical
Islamism. In others words, the very people who posed the most substantial
danger to Pakistani stability were also the ones with the best intelligence
on al Qaeda - and therefore, fulfilling the U.S. demand in principle was
desirable. In practice, it proved difficult for Pakistan to carry out.


The Breakpoint and the U.S. Exit From Afghanistan


This proved the breakpoint between the two sides. The Americans accepted the
principle of Pakistani duplicity, but drew a line at al Qaeda. The
Pakistanis understood American sensibilities but didn't want to incur the
domestic risks of going too far. This psychological breakpoint cracked open
on Osama bin Laden, the Holy Grail of American strategy and the third rail
of Pakistani policy.

Under normal circumstances, this level of tension of institutionalized
duplicity should have blown the U.S.-Pakistani relationship apart, with the
United States simply breaking with Pakistan. It did not, and likely will not
for a simple geopolitical reason, one that goes back to the 1990s. In the
1990s, when the United States no longer needed to support an intensive
covert campaign in Afghanistan, it depended on Pakistan to manage
Afghanistan. Pakistan would have done this anyway because it had no choice:
Afghanistan was Pakistan's backdoor, and given tensions with India, Pakistan
could not risk instability in its rear. The United States thus did not have
to ask Pakistan to take responsibility for Afghanistan.

The United States is now looking for an exit from Afghanistan
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20100927_pakistan_and_us_exit_afghanistan> .
Its goal, the creation of a democratic, pro-American Afghanistan able to
suppress radical Islamism in its own territory, is unattainable with current
forces - and probably unattainable with far larger forces. Gen. David
Petraeus, the architect of the Afghan strategy, has been nominated to become
the head of the CIA. With Petraeus departing from the Afghan theater, the
door is open to a redefinition of Afghan strategy. Despite Pentagon
doctrines of long wars, the United States is not going to be in a position
to engage in endless combat in Afghanistan
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20100214_afghanistan_campaign_special_seri
es_part_1_us_strategy> . There are other issues in the world that must be
addressed. With bin Laden's death, a plausible (if not wholly convincing)
argument can be made that the mission in AfPak, as the Pentagon refers to
the theater, has been accomplished, and therefore the United States can
withdraw.

No withdrawal strategy is conceivable without a viable Pakistan. Ideally,
Pakistan would be willing to send forces into Afghanistan to carry out U.S.
strategy. This is unlikely, as the Pakistanis don't share the American
concern for Afghan democracy, nor are they prepared to try directly to
impose solutions in Afghanistan. At the same time, Pakistan can't simply
ignore Afghanistan because of its own national security issues, and
therefore it will move to stabilize it.

The United States could break with Pakistan and try to handle things on its
own in Afghanistan, but the supply line fueling Afghan fighting runs through
Pakistan. The alternatives either would see the United States become
dependent on Russia - an equally uncertain line of supply - or on the
Caspian route, which is insufficient to supply forces. Afghanistan is war at
the end of the Earth for the United States, and to fight it, Washington must
have Pakistani supply routes
<http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20090424_pakistan_facing_reality_risk_paki
stan> .

The United States also needs Pakistan to contain, at least to some extent,
Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan. The United States is stretched to the limit
doing what it is doing in Afghanistan. Opening a new front in Pakistan, a
country of 180 million people, is well beyond the capabilities of either
forces in Afghanistan or forces in the U.S. reserves. Therefore, a U.S.
break with Pakistan threatens the logistical foundation of the war in
Afghanistan and poses strategic challenges U.S. forces cannot cope with.

The American option might be to support a major crisis between Pakistan and
India to compel Pakistan to cooperate with the United States. However, it is
not clear that India is prepared to play another round in the U.S. game with
Pakistan. Moreover, creating a genuine crisis between India and Pakistan
could have two outcomes. The first involves the collapse of Pakistan, which
would create an India more powerful than the United States might want. The
second and more likely outcome would see the creation of a unity government
in Pakistan in which distinctions between secularists, moderate Islamists
and radical Islamists would be buried under anti-Indian feeling. Doing all
of this to deal with Afghan withdrawal would be excessive, even if India
played along, and could well prove disastrous for Washington.

Ultimately, the United States cannot change its policy of the last 10 years.
During that time, it has come to accept what support the Pakistanis could
give and tolerated what was withheld. U.S. dependence on Pakistan so long as
Washington is fighting in Afghanistan is significant; the United States has
lived with Pakistan's multitiered policy for a decade because it had to.
Nothing in the capture of bin Laden changes the geopolitical realities. So
long as the United States wants to wage - or end - a war in Afghanistan, it
must have the support of Pakistan to the extent that Pakistan is prepared to
provide it. The option of breaking with Pakistan because on some level it is
acting in opposition to American interests does not exist.

This is the ultimate contradiction in U.S. strategy in Afghanistan and even
the so-called war on terror as a whole. The United States has an absolute
opposition to terrorism and has waged a war in Afghanistan on the
questionable premise that the tactic of terrorism can be defeated,
regardless of source or ideology. Broadly fighting terrorism requires the
cooperation of the Muslim world, as U.S. intelligence and power is
inherently limited. The Muslim world has an interest in containing
terrorism, but not the absolute concern the United States has. Muslim
countries are not prepared to destabilize their countries in service to the
American imperative. This creates deeper tensions between the United States
and the Muslim world and increases the American difficulty in dealing with
terrorism - or with Afghanistan.

The United States must either develop the force and intelligence to wage war
without any assistance, which is difficult to imagine given the size of the
Muslim world and the size of the U.S. military, or it will have to accept
half-hearted support and duplicity. Alternatively, it could accept that it
will not win in Afghanistan and will not be able simply to eliminate
terrorism
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20101004_terrorism_vigilance_and_limits_war_
terror> . These are difficult choices, but the reality of Pakistan drives
home that these, in fact, are the choices.

 

Reprinting or republication of this report on websites is authorized by
prominently displaying the following sentence, including the hyperlink to
STRATFOR, at the beginning or end of the report.

"U.S.-Pakistani Relations Beyond Bin Laden
<http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20110509-us-pakistani-relations-beyond-bin-l
aden>  is republished with permission of STRATFOR."



Read more:
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