[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Palestine Chronicle - The Pakistan Factor
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2007 19:55:23 -0500

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  M. Shahid Alam: The Pakistan Factor: Will History Repeat Itself? 
  By M. Shahid Alam 
Special to PalestineChronicle.com
  In January 2002, when President Bush named Iraq, Iran and North Korea as the 
first targets in his ‘global war against terror’ – the putative ‘axis of 
evil’—few noticed a curious omission. Pakistan was not on the list.
  The targeted countries – we were told – sought weapons of mass destruction. 
In truth, Iraq and Iran were targeted because they stood in the way of Israeli 
ambitions – and they had oil. 
  Although Pakistan has been unlucky in oil, it could make stronger claims as a 
target for American and Israeli ire. It is the only Muslim country with nuclear 
weapons, a nuclear proliferator, the Taliban’s chief patron, and a sponsor of 
jihadis in Kashmir. 
  Why, then, did the US not target Pakistan? 
  Six years later, this question is not less pertinent: and for two reasons. 
After being stalled by the Iraqi resistance, US plans for war against Iran are 
again gathering steam. If Iran is such a tempting target, why not take a few 
potshots at Pakistan also? 
  In addition, since their rout in Afghanistan, bands of Muslim ‘extremists’ 
have found safe havens in Pakistan’s northern districts, as well as Quetta and 
Karachi. More ominously, last July, the Taliban challenged the authority of the 
state in Pakistan’s capital. 
  Yet, there has been little talk in Washington or Tel Aviv about adding 
Pakistan to the ‘axis of evil.’ This is the Pakistani paradox.
  This paradox has a simple explanation. In Pakistan, the US had effected 
regime change without a change of regime. Almost overnight, following the 
attacks of 9-11, the US had drafted the Pakistani military to wage war against 
Muslim extremists. The US had gained an army: and Pakistan’s military dictators 
had gained longevity.
  Yet, could the Pakistani military deliver on its promise to fight the Taliban 
and Al-Qaida? At first, it appeared that it was succeeding. General Musharraf 
boasted that Pakistan had collected $50 million in exchange for extremists 
handed over to the US. 
  These losses, however, did not deter the extremists from regrouping; and 
before long they were attacking NATO forces in Afghanistan from bases inside 
Pakistan. As NATO casualties rose, the US ratcheted its pressure on Pakistan. 
And by August 2004, the Pakistan had deployed 100,000 troops to guard its 
frontier with Afghanistan. 
  The extremists now began targeting Pakistani troops. In September 2006, in 
the face of rising losses, Pakistan pulled out its troops from Waziristan in 
return for a Taliban promise not to mount attacks from bases in Pakistan. It 
was an improbable truce. 
  In reality, the Taliban had ‘liberated’ Waziristan.
  The US was unhappy about the truce. And with good reason: Taliban attacks in 
Afghanistan began to rise after the truce. Since then, US has been ratcheting 
its pressures on Pakistan to hunt down the extremists operating out of bases 
along its northern frontier. 
  According to the Newsweek of Oct. 8, the Pentagon is now demanding that 
General Musharraf “turn much of Pakistan’s military into a counterinsurgency 
force, trained and equipped to combat Al-Qaeda and its extremist supporters 
along the Afghan border.”
  This Latin American approach to counter-insurgency is not likely to work in 
Pakistan. Their military juntas were firmly rooted in the elites and middle 
classes, set apart from the leftist insurgents – mostly Amerindians or Mestizos 
– by both class and race. The boundary between the adversaries in Latin America 
was firmly drawn.
  In Pakistan, the insurgents are Muslim nationalists. They are drawn mainly 
from Pashtun peasants, but they enjoy broad support among the peasants as well 
as the middle classes all over Pakistan. 
  On the other side, about a fourth of Pakistan army consists of Pashtuns; and 
mid- and low-ranking officers are middle-class in their origin and orientation. 
Only the top military brass identify firmly with the elites. 
  In Pakistan, the boundary between the opposite camps is not as firmly drawn 
as in Latin America. As a result, as Pakistan army escalates the war against 
its own people, this boundary has been shifting, shrinking the support base of 
the military elite. 
  If this is the irreversible dynamic behind the US-inspired counterinsurgency, 
it is unlikely that Pakistani elites can long sustain their decision to fight 
America’s war against Muslim nationalists. 
  Recent events support this prognosis. As the military has escalated its 
offensive, its reputation has plummeted. Hundreds of soldiers have surrendered 
or, more likely, defected. General Musharraf has rescinded corruption cases 
against Benazir Bhutto to court her party; but this has eroded the standing of 
her party. 
  How is this ‘civil war’ likely to end? In one scenario, at some point, an 
alliance of Muslim nationalists – the fighters and their allies in the army and 
civil society – will enforce their own regime change, and create an Islamist 
Pakistan. 
  This will end the civil war, but not Pakistan’s troubles. Instantly, US and 
Israel will clamor for a regime change of the hard variety: through covert 
operations, air strikes, invasions, and civil wars.
  As these events unfold, the US may well decide to start a war against Iran. 
This can only advance the timetable for an Islamist take-over in Pakistan. When 
that happens, the US and Israel will be engaged in a major war along an Islamic 
arc stretching from Lebanon to Pakistan –and perhaps beyond, to the north and 
the east.
  Is this the ‘clash of civilizations’ that the Neocons had advocated – and 
have worked so hard to advance? Over the past century, the nations that 
initiated the two major wars eventually came to regret them. Is it likely that 
this history may repeat itself?
  Once begun, the course of wars cannot always be foretold. Germany, Japan and 
Italy learned this lesson the hard way. With some wisdom, the US and Israel 
could learn this lesson the easy way – from the mistakes of belligerent nations 
before. Even now, it may not be too late to take this lesson to heart, and 
avoid a major war that promises to be catastrophic for all sides.
  -M. Shahid Alam is Professor of Economics at Northeastern University, Boston. 
he is the author of Challenging the New Orientalism (North Haledon, NJ: IPI, 
2007). He may be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]



ABDUL WAHID OSMAN BELAL
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