http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/16-downhill+for+pakistan-hs-10


Downhill for Pakistan? 
By Tariq Amin-Khan 
Tuesday, 19 Jan, 2010 

The CIA recently lost its forward operating base in Khost. Pakistan is under 
pressure to attack North Waziristan. And the noise about redrawing Pakistan's 
borders has increased by a few decibels. 



Imperial machinations may desire such an outcome, but its realisation will 
depend on the internal dynamics of state and society. The latter alone can 
actually make or break a state. But what happens if the state is imploding?



Recently, Zardari's civilian government raised the spectre of the country's 
dissolution by actively but unsuccessfully playing the Sindh card. Zardari 
denies doing this, insisting that he has Pakistan's interests at heart, yet 
threatened to invoke the Sindh card. If Sindh has not descended into chaos and 
bloodshed despite the inflammatory speeches of PPP leaders, this speaks of the 
sagacity of the people living in the province.



Pakistan's survival as a viable state, though, depends on how the current 
conjuncture is negotiated: whether the 17th Amendment is rescinded; the courts 
are respected and the culpable and the corrupt are prosecuted; the problem of 
social neglect and public disservice is tackled; and that someone among the 
rulers finally stands up to the US rather than prostrating before its imperial 
diktats. 



These are the minimum steps needed to preserve Pakistan. But the bankruptcy of 
the current leadership is its inability to develop a sense of urgency in 
tackling the country's enormous problems. 



Under Zardari, the security situation has gone to the dogs not because the 
military is going after the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP); rather, these 
horrifically random suicide attacks are a result largely of incompetence, 
sloppy intelligence and the lack of coordination among different security 
services. Incredibly, there were more suicide bomb attacks during 2009 in 
Pakistan than in Iraq. 



Zardari's government has allowed Pakistan to be a veritable playground for 
Blackwater/Xe, US Special Forces, a much-expanded US embassy 'staff' and 
complex (mimicking Iraq's Green Zone), and the trigger-happy controllers of 
aerial drones. Collectively, these boys with their deadly toys will wreak 
further havoc in the country.



Furthermore, cowing before the demands of the US and the western world to 'do 
more' has been unprecedented under Zardari. He has effectively given a blank 
cheque to the Americans, while unprotected ordinary Pakistanis are left to face 
the fallout from his and the military's commitment to wage US's 'long war' 
(Pentagon's language for the 'war on terror'). 



The long war brings in its wake some terrible consequences in terms of untold 
death and destruction, unleashed as state militaries confront non-state players 
such as the Pakistani Taliban. 



This is not to say that the TTP should not be confronted, but it can't be at 
Washington's prodding. There cannot be two views about the havoc and human 
suffering caused by the TTP and their pernicious anti-women and anti-people 
violence, but the strategy to confront them has to be an indigenously developed 
mix of social, political and military responses. 



Beyond the internal dimension, external forces are imposing other indignities. 
One such xenophobic measure on which an edict was passed almost immediately 
following the failed bombing attempt over Detroit concerns travellers to the US 
from Pakistan and 13 other states. Respectable people from these 'bad' lands, 
seen as 'people of interest' from 'terror-linked' states, will now be singled 
out for additional scrutiny and invasive security checks. 



In addressing the consequences of the Christmas Day event, Obama missed an 
opportunity to mend fences with Muslims around the world by taking a fresh 
approach. Instead, he chose to take an old page from Bush and the 
neoconservative's white book of militarism.



As a result, indignities unleashed since Sept 11 have intensified as the 
fortress mentality of North America and Europe becomes increasingly white 
supremacist. Immigrant communities in the West, especially Muslims and people 
who look like Muslims, have faced a sustained and systemic campaign of racist 
profiling and targeting in an environment of xenophobic racism. 



More troubling, though, is that the long war has become a perpetual war. The 
inevitable troop surge in Afghanistan is one indication. The war's expansion 
into the Middle East and Africa is another. However, this perpetual war is 
placing an imperial chokehold on Pakistan.



As the troop surge begins, it will worsen the existing state of horrendous 
insecurity and instability in the country - as if what is already happening is 
not cataclysmic. In the face of this maniacal violence, the US impositions, the 
paralysis of the Pakistani state and the challenges to the country's survival 
are truly unprecedented.



Remarkably, this current state of instability has provided ample grist for the 
mills of western military planners and think tanks to dream up a host of 
scenarios: from imagining Pakistan's demise to the destruction of its nuclear 
assets. 

One such scenario has the Canadian military preparing a contingency plan to 
contain street battles in the provinces of British Columbia and Ontario whose 
cities are predicted to be in flames - courtesy of the conflict scenario that 
has Canadians of Pakistani and Indian descent at each other's throats (Toronto 
Star, Oct 17, 2009).



The Canadian military planners expect that Pakistan will collapse by 2016, and 
the territory will be occupied by India. Sound bizarre? Not so to the security 
analysts in Ottawa.


So, is everything downhill for Pakistan? It does not have to be. When all is 
said and done, the best-laid imperial plans, conspiracies and campaigns are no 
match for an internally cohesive society, especially if a visionary leadership 
refuses the $7bn US minefield developed as the Kerry-Lugar Act, prioritises 
people's wellbeing while respecting the rights and diversity of the respective 
ethnic/national groups, and strives for an honourable existence with its 
neighbours on the basis of regional cooperation. 



Given that the present leadership is incapable of promoting these ideals, the 
Pakistani people will have to decide whether they will roll over and submit or 
come together and resist. My view, based on the people's epic struggles for 
justice, is that they will choose the latter. 



The writer teaches and lives in Toronto, Canada.



Tags: zardari,ppp,taliban,obama,afghanistan 

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