http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=NjQ5OTQ2MDM0
Analysis
Pakistan's ten years of chaos
Published Date: August 30, 2011 
By Jennie Matthew 



The 9/11 attacks that thrust Pakistan into the war on terror have brought the 
nuclear-armed state to its knees, fighting Islamist radicals at home and 
risking pariah status abroad. It was already evening in Pakistan when 
television channels, recently deregulated by then president General Pervez 
Musharraf, began broadcasting the terrifying scenes from the twin towers in New 
York.

Few slept that night, realizing immediately that the world had changed forever 
and that Pakistan was in the eye of the storm after spending years fostering 
extremist movements for its own ends. "My immediate thought was 'oh my God, 
more trouble coming onto Pakistan'," said author Imtiaz Gul, who has written 
extensively about the subsequent war and its fallout at home. "My fears have 
been borne out... The 9/11 events shocked Pakistan into an unprecedented crisis 
of insecurity," he said.

It didn't take long for Musharraf to weigh up conditions imposed by Washington 
and announce on September 19 that Pakistan would offer its airspace, territory 
and capabilities to help the United States defeat terrorism. But as America put 
the finishing touches to its war plans, Pakistan desperately tried to persuade 
its Taleban allies in Afghanistan to give up Osama bin Laden and avert 
catastrophic military action, to no avail. Within weeks, bin Laden, his future 
successor Ayman al-Zawahiri and Taleban le
aders had fled the American invasion into Pakistan.

And there in the northwestern tribal belt, which no government has been able to 
subjugate, they found refuge among an extremist support network dating back to 
the 1990s jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan. They regrouped, forming 
bases used by the Taleban to direct the insurgency in Afghanistan and training 
camps for Al-Qaeda to brainwash young extremists from all over the world into 
carrying out terror attacks.

As a result, the last decade has made the only Muslim nuclear power more 
unstable than ever before in its bloody and chaotic 64-year existence. The 
watershed came in July 2007 when government troops cleared out extremists 
preaching hate from the Red mosque in the heart of the capital Islamabad. The 
militants declared war and in the past four years, around 500 bomb attacks have 
killed 4,600 people, according to an AFP tally.Just when it appeared things 
couldn't get worse, this year the US discovered bin La
den living close to Pakistan's equivalent of West Point, sending in Navy SEALs 
to kill him and sinking already fractured US-Pakistani relations.

No doubt that this is absolutely the worst time for the country," said 
Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid, whose book "Taleban" became an international 
bestseller after 9/11. Rashid describes Pakistan as "completely isolated" by a 
war that "brought terrorism, sectarianism, a weakening of the state (and) much 
greater ethnic insurgencies" within the country. But the blame-he says-is 
Pakistan's for frittering away American aid money and refusing to realign its 
national security priorities. "Politically, the
most far-reaching mistake was the hosting and relaunching of the Afghan Taleban 
by the military and the intelligence agencies.

That was enormously detrimental and led to the growth of the Pakistani 
Taleban." Pakistan routinely proclaims to have sacrificed the most of any 
country fighting terror. The government claims that 35,000 people have been 
killed. The army confirms the deaths of 3,019 soldiers since 2001 - more than 
the 2,684 Western soldiers to have died in Afghanistan. More than three million 
people have been displaced by violence and counter-terrorism activities in 
Pakistan since 9/11, according to International Crisis Gr
oup figures released in 2010.

The army says 147,000 troops are deployed in the northwest compared to 35,000 
in October 2001, a drastic reversal from the previous concentration along the 
Indian border in the east. Yet extremism has increased. An average of one US 
drone strike every four days against militants in the tribal belt is raising 
fears that the campaign is recruiting a new generation of insurgents and 
suicide bombers. Jihadist groups-fostered by Pakistan's security establishment 
to fight India in Kashmir and maintain Afghanist
an as a strategic asset-have splintered, and increasingly turned the guns on 
their old allies in the state.

Pakistan is a lot less secure country now than 10 years ago, because it has 
become a battleground, an extension of the Afghan war. Pakistan is now facing a 
serious threat for its stability," said journalist Zahid Hussain. Yet the 
public discourse concentrates less on how to defeat militancy than debating the 
merits of the hugely unpopular US alliance. Trust between Islamabad and 
Washington is at an all-time low. Cooperation between the CIA and Pakistan's 
ISI spy agency is poor. Blame games on both sides
are played out in the media.

Compounding the sense of crisis is the country's economic meltdown. Pakistan 
says losses related to the war are $68 billion. Critics say the country has 
squandered up to $20 billion in aid given by the United States. "The biggest 
mistake was the failure to really address strategic issues in the economy. 
Pakistan could have changed its very weak economic structure at that point in 
time," said Rashid. Instead crippling inflation, rampant unemployment and an 
energy crisis with power cuts of up to 16 hours a
day have left millions wondering how to fill the void.- AFP

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