http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm

 


Denying Terrorists Safe Haven in Pakistan

by Lisa Curtis

 

 


The recent upsurge in Taliban attacks against coa­lition forces in
Afghanistan and continuing links of global terrorist networks to groups
based in Pakistan are leading many in the United States to question
Islamabad’s commitment to fighting the global war on terrorism. Washington
should review Pakistani efforts to deny terrorists safe haven and its
overall policy toward Pakistan, which is at the center of interna­tional
anti-terrorism efforts.

Pakistan has made invaluable contributions to combating al-Qaeda over the
past five years by cap­turing scores of key leaders and helping to foil
numerous deadly plots. However, Islamabad will need to adopt a more
comprehensive policy against violent extremism to fully deny groups and
indi­viduals the use of Pakistani territory as a base for global jihad.

Pakistan has traditionally relied on violent extrem­ists to accomplish its
strategic objectives in both Afghanistan and India. Although President
Pervez Musharraf has articulated his desire to turn Pakistan into a moderate
and modern Islamic state, his govern­ment has taken little concrete action
to make the country inhospitable for individuals and groups seek­ing to
destabilize Afghanistan or India and plotting international acts of
terrorism. Reports of links between those involved in the foiled London
airliner bomb plot in mid-August and Pakistani terrorist groups that
traditionally operate in Jammu and Kash­mir demonstrate the dangers of not
cracking down on violent extremism in Pakistan.

Washington needs to strengthen its policy toward Pakistan in ways that both
demonstrate long-term U.S. commitment to the relationship and press Pakistan
to expand its efforts against violent extremists. The best chance for
success against vio­lent extremism in Pakistan lies in a strategy that
prioritizes economic and democratic development and the pursuit of better
relations with neighboring countries, namely Afghanistan and India.
Washing­ton should support these objectives and encourage greater economic
interdependence among these three South Asian countries.

Pakistanand the Taliban

Before the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, Pakistan supported and
recognized Taliban rule in Afghanistan. Although Pakistani officials largely
disagreed with the Taliban’s harsh interpreta­tion of Islam, they viewed the
Taliban as their best chance to achieve their own strategic objectives in
the region and believed that the international com­munity would eventually
accept Taliban rule in Kabul as inevitable. Pakistan continued to support
the Taliban into the late 1990s, long after Osama bin Laden took refuge
there in 1996 and despite the growing problems that it created in Pakistan’s
rela­tions with Washington. Pakistan’s high-stakes policy vis-à-vis the
Taliban derived from its aims of denying India, as well as Iran and the
Central Asian coun­tries, a strong foothold in Afghanistan and ensuring a
friendly regime in Kabul that would refrain from making territorial claims
on Pakistan’s Pashtun areas along the Pakistan–Afghanistan border.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn1> [1]

The 9/11 attacks and their impact on U.S. for­eign policy quickly changed
Pakistan’s earlier cal­culations on the benefits of supporting the Taliban.
President Musharraf broke off official ties with the Taliban, supported the
U.S. invasion of Afghani­stan, and contributed substantially to breaking up
the al-Qaeda network in the region. Pakistan has captured and turned over to
the U.S. scores of senior al-Qaeda leaders and has helped to disrupt
terrorist plots that would have resulted in hun­dreds, possibly thousands,
of deaths.

Despite the official break with the Taliban, Islam­abad has failed to crack
down forcefully on Taliban leaders or actively disrupt their activities in
Paki­stan. Officials of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelli­gence
Directorate maintain relationships with Taliban leaders and may see benefits
in keeping good ties with the Taliban in the expectation that the Taliban
might again play a role in Afghanistan’s politics. Taliban leaders
apparently roam freely in Quetta, Baluchistan, and Taliban fighters shelter
in Pakistani border areas after attacking coalition forces in Afghanistan.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn2> [2]

Pakistan’s lax attitude toward the Taliban has contributed to renewed
Taliban attacks in Afghani­stan, but other factors are also facilitating
instabil­ity. U.S. Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte says
the Taliban is exploiting local grievances on issues such as corruption and
poor governance to attract recruits and reestablish its power base. He also
attributes the recent increase in Taliban attacks to more NATO operations
along the Afghanistan–Pakistan border.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn3> [3]

Although Pakistan is not solely responsible for the increased Taliban
attacks, it could help to stem them by denying Taliban forces rest and safe
harbor on Pakistani soil. Washington should therefore make the issue of
denying terrorists safe haven in the border areas a focal point of its
partnership with Pakistan. The importance of denying terrorists safe haven
as part of an overall counterterrorism strat­egy is well documented. In its
July 2004 report, the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the
United States highlighted the need to develop a “realistic strategy to keep
possible terrorists inse­cure and on the run.”
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn4> [4]
The March 2006 National Security Strategy says that “we must prevent
terror­ists from exploiting ungoverned areas,”
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn5> [5]
and the 2005 State Department counterterrorism report indicates that
“[d]enying terrorists safe haven plays a major role in undermining
terrorists’ capacity to operate effectively, and thus forms a key element of
U.S. counterterrorism strategy.”
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn6> [6]

Musharraf’s Tribal Areas Deal: Curtailing or Emboldening Terrorism?

Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), which consist of
seven semi-autonomous tribal agencies along the border with Afghanistan,
constitute one of the most dangerous terrorist safe havens in the world
today. According to the 2005 State Department counterterrorism report, the
FATA has been “a safe haven for al Qaida and Tali­ban fighters since the
fall of the Taliban in Decem­ber 2001.”
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn7> [7]
The lack of central government authority in this region and the fact that
the local population shares a Pashtun identity with the Tali­ban make it a
particularly attractive location for the Taliban and its al-Qaeda supporters
to hide.

Since 2004, the Pakistan military has deployed some 80,000 security forces
to the area to disrupt the terrorists, but these military operations have
also damaged traditional tribal institutions, increased radicalism in the
region, caused the deaths of several hundred Pakistani soldiers, and met
with increasing opposition from the broader Pakistani population. Public
opposition to the mil­itary operations in the FATA spiked in late August
following the Pakistan military’s unpopular assassi­nation of an elderly
Baluch politician who had spearheaded a rebellion in Baluchistan province.

Because of the growing problems with the FATA military operations, President
Musharraf on Sep­tember 5 announced a “peace deal” with tribal lead­ers of
the North Waziristan Agency that includes an end to offensive Pakistani
military operations in exchange for the tribal rulers’ cooperation in
restricting Taliban and al-Qaeda activities. The Pakistan government wants
to restore the tradi­tional form of governance in the region and co-opt the
tribal elders and political representatives through an infusion of economic
assistance for new roads, hospitals, and schools. The U.S. supports
Pakistani efforts to bring more government services to the region and to
turn it into a regularly admin­istered province. Washington is also
providing assistance to help Pakistan control the region by equipping
Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps, funding the construction of more
than 100 border outposts, providing high-tech equipment to help Pakistani
forces better locate terrorists attempting to cross the border, and funding
an air wing with helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn8> [8]

 
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The next several months will be crucial in deter­mining whether Musharraf’s
Waziristan deal will advance U.S. interests by denying safe haven to
ter­rorists or enhance Taliban and al-Qaeda influence in the region, making
it easier for terrorists to plot, organize, and train. Although President
Musharraf denies that the pact was made with the Taliban, reports that
scores of Taliban militants were recently released from Pakistani custody
are worrisome.

To make the pact effective, Islamabad will have to enforce its terms
strictly, which means com­ing down hard on any elements that are found
protecting or shel­tering Taliban or al-Qaeda. This may require Musharraf to
punish lower-level individuals within his own intelligence and security
ser­vices who have helped Taliban leaders evade capture by U.S. forces in
the past. This is a tall order for Musharraf, given the deep institutional
links between the intelligence and security ser­vices and the Taliban. He
has already faced at least two assassi­nation attempts because of his
counterterrorism cooperation with the U.S. Although the U.S. sees an urgent
need to deny safe haven to terrorists along the Paki­stan–Afghan border,
President Musharraf carefully calculates each counterterrorism step that he
takes to ensure his own survival.

If, as Musharraf claims, the Waziristan pact is aimed at increasing
cooperation from the local tribes against the terrorists, Pakistan should
find it increasingly easier to close in on Taliban and al-Qaeda hideouts.
The U.S. will need to monitor the situation closely and judge the merits of
the pact based on whether it results in fewer cross-border attacks into
Afghan­istan and more information on Taliban/al-Qaeda activities and hiding
places. Washington needs to focus all of the tools and resources at its
disposal on dealing effectively with this troubled region. Fail­ure to do so
will further destabilize Afghanistan and make it easier for terrorists to
plan and execute their next international attack.

Tripartite Meeting: A Step in the Right Direction

The recent tripartite meeting of Presidents George W. Bush, Hamid Karzai,
and Musharraf in Washington is a first step in defusing tensions between the
Afghan and Pakistani leaders result­ing from the increased Taliban attacks.
It is now widely acknowledged that the fate of Afghanistan is closely linked
to Pakistan and the policies that it pursues over the next several years.
Therefore, the U.S. needs to continue these high-level three-way meetings to
bring the countries into greater align­ment and to build economic and
security linkages between their governments that will make them increasingly
interdependent and interested in their mutual stability and security.

The Administration is already moving in this direction with the pursuit of
reconstruction oppor­tunity zones (ROZs) in the Afghan–Pakistan border
areas, which would allow products produced in these remote areas to receive
trade preferences in the U.S.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn9> [9]
The U.S. Congress would need to pass legislation to implement the ROZ
program. The Bush Administration and the next U.S. Congress should work
together to fast-track implementation of the ROZs so that Afghan and
Pakistani leaders will immediately begin to benefit from working
cooperatively on peaceful trade-related projects.

During the tripartite meeting, Presidents Karzai and Musharraf also agreed
to establish tribal jirgas (gatherings) of Pashtun local leaders from both
sides of the border. President Karzai has commented that he hopes the jirgas
will provide assurances to both Islamabad and Kabul that each country’s
peace and prosperity is good for the other.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn10> [10]

Links Between Kashmiri Militancy and International Terrorism

Links between Pakistan-based Kashmiri militant groups and international
terrorist incidents further demonstrate the need for Islamabad to adopt a
zero-tolerance policy toward violent extremism. Reports surfaced in
mid-August that one of the prime suspects in the London airliner bomb plot
had family ties to Maulana Masood Azhar, the leader of the Jaish-e-Mohammed
(JEM), a radical Kashmiri terrorist group.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn11> [11]
Indian security forces captured Azhar in Kashmir in the early 1990s and then
released him in 1999 during a hostage swap to free 155 passengers on a
hijacked Indian plane that flew to Kandahar, Afghanistan. The Indian
govern­ment also released two other suspected terrorists— British-born Omar
Sheikh and Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar—to end the hijacking crisis.

The JEM had apparently made an earlier unsuc­cessful attempt to free Azhar
by kidnapping five Western tourists, including American citizen Donald
Hutchings. One of the tourists was beheaded, and the others were never found
and are presumed dead. Pakistan officially banned the JEM in 2002, but Azhar
has never been formally charged with a crime.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn12> [12]

The JEM has also been linked to the kidnapping and brutal murder of Wall
Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in January 2002. Pearl’s kidnappers
demanded the release of Pakistani prisoners from Guantanamo Bay, an
immediate end to the U.S. presence in Pakistan, U.S. delivery of F-16
fighter jets to Pakistan, and the release of Mullah Zaeef, the former Afghan
ambassador of the Taliban regime to Pakistan. Omar Sheikh later con­fessed
to Pakistani authorities that he masterminded Pearl’s kidnap­ping. Sheikh
was also involved in the kidnappings of Westerners in India in 1994 that
were aimed at freeing Masood Azhar. In July 2002, Sheikh was sentenced to
death by an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn13> [13]

The JEM has roots in the Afghan war against the Soviets, and its cad­res
trained at Taliban camps in the late 1990s. The JEM (then called the
Harakat-Ul-Mujahideen) reportedly suffered several casualties during the
U.S. strikes on terrorist training camps in Afghanistan in 1998 in
retaliation for al-Qaeda bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa.

Terrorist Attacks Jeopardize Indo–Pakistani Talks

Indian allegations of Pakistani involvement in the July 11 Mumbai train
blasts, which killed nearly 200 people, are severely straining
Paki­stan–India relations. On September 30, the Mum­bai police commissioner
told a news conference that the authorities had finished their
investiga­tions into the Mumbai blasts and had concluded that the attack was
planned by Pakistan’s intelli­gence service and carried out by the
Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LET) and their opera­tives in India. He
also said that the Students’ Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) had assisted
in the attacks. India has said that it will test Pakistani resolve in
countering terrorism through a joint mechanism agreed to by the Indian and
Pakistani leaders in Havana, Cuba, in late September. Pres­ident Musharraf
has so far been reluctant to take concrete steps to rein in jihadists that
fight in Kashmir, mainly because his government believes the militancy is
Islamabad’s only way to keep pres­sure on India and to force New Delhi’s
hand in negotiations over the contested territory.

 
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The U.S. considered labeling Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism for its
support to militant groups fighting in Kashmir in the early 1990s. Although
the Kashmir militancy erupted indige­nously in Srinagar—the Muslim-dominated
sum­mer capital of Jammu and Kashmir on the Indian side of the Line of
Control (LOC)—over griev­ances related to political representation of the
Muslim community, Pakistan quickly took advan­tage of the situation and
provided support to Kashmiri militant groups.

The U.S. again pressured Islamabad on its sup­port to militants fighting in
Kashmir during the 2001–2002 military crisis between India and Paki­stan, in
which a total 1 million troops were mobi­lized on both sides of the border.
To defuse that crisis, then Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
secured a commitment from President Musharraf in early June 2002 to end the
infiltration of militants across the LOC, which divides Kashmir. Armitage
conveyed the Pakistani pledge to Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihar Vajpayee,
who subse­quently agreed to pull back Indian forces, ending the military
standoff.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn14> [14]
Despite reduced military tensions, India did not agree to resume official
dia­logue until 18 months later in January 2004.

President Musharraf would find it politically challenging to pursue a
broader crackdown on domestic terrorists that strike in India and abroad.
The religious parties would label such a crackdown as a surrender to India
over Kashmir. However, he could draw support for such a crackdown from other
parts of Pakistani society, such as the secular political parties, the
business community, and Paki­stanis who have been involved in
people-to-people exchanges with Indians over the past few years.

A more serious dialogue on Kashmir between India and Pakistan and deeper
engagement by the U.S. would help to give Pakistan confidence that its
viewpoint has been taken into account. The U.S. should not try to involve
itself directly in resolving the dispute, but it should continue to talk
about the issue separately with both sides and inject ideas into their
dialogue process. President Musharraf is clearly hedging in talks with India
by allowing Kashmiri militant groups to continue to operate. The U.S. needs
to convince Musharraf to instead put his faith in the India–Pakistan
dialogue.

A genuine peace process between New Delhi and a wide spectrum of Kashmiri
leaders that addresses political grievances and human rights issues would
also help to temper the Pakistani public’s emotional reactions to Kashmir
and widen public support for a genuine crackdown on violent groups.
Encourag­ing travel back and forth across the LOC (started by the
Muzaffarabad–Srinagar bus link) and greater interaction and cooperation
between officials from both sides of the LOC will widen the constituencies
for peace and help to isolate violent extremists.

Weakening Extremism by Promoting Democracy

Promoting a more open and transparent political process in Pakistan will
also help to curb the influ­ence of extremist groups, thereby reducing
support for terrorism. Before the 2002 elections, religious parties that
backed the Taliban traditionally received less than 8 percent of the popular
vote and had been marginalized in the 1988, 1990, 1993, and 1997 national
elections.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn15> [15]
In the 2002 elec­tions, however, the religious parties performed well in the
areas bordering Afghanistan and increased their total vote share to about 11
percent, partly because of changes in election rules that favored them over
the secular parties and partly because of anti-American sentiment in the
Afghanistan–Paki­stan border provinces.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn16> [16]
The secular Pakistan Peo­ple’s Party (PPP), which is led in exile by former
Prime Minister Benazir Bhuto, grabbed about 25 percent of the popular vote
in the 2002 elections.

The full participation of the main secular demo­cratic parties, including
the PPP and the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), in the 2007 elections would
provide more political choices to Pakistani voters and instill greater
confidence in Pakistan’s democratic process. Charges of corruption leveled
against Benazir Bhutto and her husband have tainted her personal reputation,
but the PPP as a party con­tinues to attract individuals who support
secular-based policies. The PPP recently led efforts in the Pakistani
parliament to repeal the controversial Hudood ordinances that discriminate
against women. The Musharraf government has since put efforts to repeal the
controversial ordinances on hold as a result of pressure from the religious
parties.

The Pakistan military’s pervasive involvement in civilian affairs has
stifled the development of civil society and the establishment of democratic
insti­tutions. Pakistan has been ruled by the military for over half of its
existence. Even during periods of civilian rule, the military has wielded
tremendous power over decision-making. Although the military is unlikely to
submit fully to a civilian government in the near term, Washington should
set bench­marks that begin to restrict the military’s role in Pakistani
politics. U.S. legislation prevents Wash­ington from providing assistance to
a government put in place by a military coup, but the Bush Administration
has permitted assistance to Paki­stan since 9/11 under a waiver to this law.
The annual recertification of this waiver should be tied to free and fair
elections in 2007 and a return to civilian rule.

The Role of U.S. Assistance in Countering Extremism

Carefully targeted U.S. aid programs can also help to counter anti-American
sentiment and limit the influence of radicals who use hatred of the U.S. to
mobilize political support. A visible U.S. aid presence in the country will
reassure the Pakistani population that Washington is committed to aver­age
Pakistanis, not just to the military leadership. U.S. assistance programs
that focus on building institutions and promoting human rights and democracy
would also show that the U.S. is com­mitted to Pakistan’s success as a
stable and prosper­ous country and deflate extremists’ arguments that
Washington is interested only in exploiting Paki­stan for its own purposes.
Washington must work to overcome the suspicions of Pakistanis who remember
when the U.S. abruptly cut off its large-scale aid program because of
Pakistan’s nuclear program in the early 1990s.

Polling in Pakistan and other parts of the Muslim world has demonstrated the
significant impact that U.S. humanitarian aid has on peoples’ perceptions of
America. A poll by Terror Free Tomorrow, a U.S. nonprofit organization,
indicated that favorable attitudes toward America doubled following the U.S.
response to the October 2005 earthquake in Pakistan.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn17> [17]
The U.S. should search for ways to emulate the kind of humanitarian programs
that were employed following the earthquake on a more permanent basis and to
publicize more effectively the assistance that Washington has already
pro­vided. Regrettably, security concerns have forced the U.S. to limit the
size and scope of its assistance projects in the country. Most U.S.
assistance to Pakistan over the past five years has been in the form of
budgetary support and debt relief, which has helped Pakistan’s macroeconomic
indicators but has limited the direct impact of U.S. aid on the broader
Pakistani population’s attitudes toward America.
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftn18> [18]

What the U.S. Should Do

To strengthen U.S. policy toward Pakistan and to press Islamabad to address
the roots of violent extremism, the United States should:

*       Maintain a robust U.S. assistance program but make it more visible
to the Pakistani peo­ple. The U.S. should target more of its assis­tance to
development, health, and education projects that affect the grassroots of
society. Since 9/11, most U.S. economic assistance has gone either to debt
relief or to direct budget support of the Pakistan government. While this
aid has improved Pakistan’s macroeconomic indicators, it has had little
impact on the aver­age Pakistani’s perception of America. The U.S. embassy
and aid mission in Islamabad should work together to develop programs that
dem­onstrate Washington’s interest in promoting economic development and
democracy. The embassy’s public diplomacy office should sub­mit regular
stories to the local press detailing U.S. assistance programs and their
impact on the lives of average Pakistanis. Implementing more U.S. assistance
programs that focus on economic development and promoting human rights and
democracy will demonstrate that the U.S. is committed to the success of
Pakistan as a stable and prosperous country and help to deflate the
extremists’ arguments that Washing­ton is interested only in exploiting
Pakistan for its own purposes.

*       Provide a consistent message regarding denying safe haven to all
terrorists, regard­less of whether they attack coalition forces in
Afghanistan or innocent civilians in India or elsewhere. Washington should
privately acknowl­edge the links between the Taliban, al-Qaeda, and
Pakistan-based groups that target India and should convey U.S. expectations
that Islama­bad develop an equally uncompromising policy toward all three
groups. This means that Paki­stan must shut down training facilities
associ­ated with international terrorist incidents, including institutions
run by the Lashkar-e-Tayyiba in Muridke and the Jaish-e-Moham­med in
Bahawalpur. Washington should emphasize the dangers of Islamabad’s
maintain­ing a permissive attitude toward groups that commit terrorism and
remind Pakistani offi­cials that U.S. laws require sanctions against states
that support terrorist groups.

*       Develop a more proactive U.S. policy to sup­port the restoration of
democracy. Washing­ton should convey a consistent public message that calls
for free, fair, and transparent elections in 2007 and emphasizes the
importance of democracy as a way to lessen the influence of extremist
forces. The U.S. should also discour­age further changes in the election
rules or other government manipulations of the elec­toral process. The full
participation of the Paki­stan People’s Party and the Pakistan Muslim League
(Nawaz), the two main secular demo­cratic parties, in the 2007 elections
would pro­vide more political choices to the Pakistani voter and instill
greater confidence in the dem­ocratic process. Despite legislation that
gener­ally prohibits providing U.S. assistance to any government put in
place by a military coup, U.S. assistance to Pakistan is permitted under a
waiver to this law. The annual recertification of this waiver should be tied
to free and fair elec­tions in 2007 and a return to civilian rule.

*       Highlight the F-16 sale and how it demon­strates American support
for Pakistan’s long-term security in the region. The recent announcement of
the resumption of U.S. F-16 sales to Pakistan passed without much fanfare,
even though Pakistani officials had repeatedly told U.S. officials over the
past several years that releasing the F-16s was crucial to building
confidence in Pakistan about the U.S. commit­ment to the relationship. A
senior U.S. official should deliver a major speech on the U.S. inter­est in
Pakistan’s long-term security and describe how the F-16 sale fits into this
context. Pakistan’s reluctance to crack down on the Tal­iban and Kashmiri
militant groups is driven largely by Islamabad’s perception that it needs an
insurance policy vis-à-vis Afghanistan and India. The U.S. should search for
ways to dem­onstrate that Washington wants a long-lasting and broad-based
relationship with Islamabad and will remain committed to a secure and
sta­ble Pakistan, thereby enhancing Islamabad’s perceptions of its own
security in the region.

*       Maintain and fortify U.S. diplomatic efforts to facilitate the
building of peace between India and Pakistan. New Delhi’s allegations that a
Pakistan-based terrorist group and Pakistan’s intelligence agency were
involved in the Mum­bai bomb blasts could derail Indo–Pakistani bilateral
talks unless Pakistan takes concrete steps to crack down on domestic
terrorist groups. While Washington should encourage such a crackdown, it
will also need to acknowl­edge Pakistan’s interest in seeing substantive
movement on India–Pakistan talks on Kashmir. In this context, Washington
should encourage New Delhi to take additional confidence-build­ing measures
on Kashmir and to involve the Kashmiris in a peace process that addresses
human rights concerns and political grievances.

*       Institute regular trilateral meetings with senior U.S., Pakistani,
and Afghan officials, such as the Bush–Musharraf–Karzai meeting held in late
September. The U.S. needs to take the lead in mediating differences between
Kabul and Islamabad and injecting ideas into the discussions to help to
overcome their mutual mistrust. The U.S. should support the idea of
establishing tribal jirgas on both sides of the border as a way to build
confidence between the two governments. Washington should also strongly
discourage further mud­slinging between Kabul and Islamabad of the sort that
occurred in mid-September. Clearly, Pakistan has a role to play in achieving
a stable and prosperous Afghanistan. Washington needs to convey to Islamabad
both the priority that it places on ensuring stability in Afghanistan and
that the U.S. will remain committed to this goal over the long term.

*       Encourage economic integration among Paki­stan, Afghanistan, and
India so that each has a vested interest in overall stability in the region.
Washington should vigorously pursue trade, development, and investment
initiatives that mutually benefit all three countries. The Bush
Administration and the next U.S. Congress should fast-track legislation
implementing ROZs along the Afghan–Pakistan border. The U.S. should also
actively encourage trade between Pakistan and India and consider initiatives
that would bring Indians and Pakistanis together in cooperative efforts to
reconstruct and rehabili­tate Afghanistan. Greater economic interdepen­dence
and integration among the three countries will contribute to stability in
the region as each country begins to view good relations with its neighbors
as benefiting its own economy. Imple­menting the South Asia Free Trade Area
(SAFTA) would further this process.

*       Establish an interagency working group on Pakistan that meets
regularly to assess the cur­rent status of aid programs, counterterrorism
operations, democratic development, and Paki­stan’s relations with
Afghanistan and India. The working group should be led by the State
Department and be tasked with developing a more integrated U.S. policy
toward Pakistan. It is becoming increasingly clear that Pakistan is at the
center of the international fight against ter­rorism, and the U.S. needs a
stronger inter­agency process to develop its Pakistan policy. In the past,
the different U.S. agencies that deal with Pakistan have often argued over
issues related to the extent of Pakistani counterterror­ism cooperation. The
arguments have developed between those who have a vested interest in
con­tinuing to receive the Pakistani cooperation that is forthcoming and
those who see an urgent need for greater cooperation. The bureaucratic
infighting has often polarized the two camps of opinion and stifled the
development of a care­fully crafted approach toward achieving U.S.
counterterrorism goals in the region.

Conclusion

Stability in Afghanistan and in South Asia more generally is closely linked
to the policies that Islam­abad pursues over the next few years, including
actions that limit the Taliban’s ability to operate on Pakistani soil, peace
efforts with neighboring India, exploration of trade and investment
opportunities in the region, and a return to democratic politics. The U.S.
needs to pursue these objectives with equal vigor to help Pakistan address
the roots of violent extremism and begin to contribute to greater stabil­ity
and peace in the region and beyond.

 <http://www.heritage.org/about/staff/LisaCurtis.cfm> Lisa Curtis is Senior
Research Fellow for South Asia in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage
Foundation.

  _____  

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref1>
[1] Ahmed Rashid, Taliban (New Haven and London: Yale University Press,
2000), pp. 185–189.

[2] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref2>
Dr. Barnett Rubin, “Still Ours to Lose: Afghanistan on the Brink,” testimony
before the Committee on Foreign Relations, U.S. Senate, September 21, 2006,
at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.senate.gov/~foreign/testimony/2006/RubinTest
imony060921.pdf');>
www.senate.gov/~foreign/testimony/2006/RubinTestimony060921.pdf  (October 2,
2006), and Daniel Benjamin, America and the World in the Age of Terror
(Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic and International Studies Press,
2005), p. 117.

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref3>
[3] Gary Thomas, “Coalition, NATO Forces More Proactive in Southern
Afghanistan,” interview with Ambassador John D. Negroponte, transcript,
Voice of America, October 4, 2006, at
www.usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=texttrans-
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.usinfo.state.gov/xarchives/display.html?p=te
xttrans-english&y=2006&m=October&x=20061006175837xjsnommis0.5906946');> 
english&y=2006&m=October&
x=20061006175837xjsnommis0.5906946  (October 6, 2006).

[4] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref4>
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, 9/11
Commission Report, July 22, 2004, p. 367, at
www.9-11commission.gov/report/911Report.pdf
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.9-11commission.gov/report/911Report.pdf');>
(October 2, 2006).

[5] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref5>
The White House, “The National Security Strategy of the United States of
America,” March 2006, p. 12, at  www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2006/nss2006.pdf
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2006/nss2006.pdf');>
(October 2, 2006).

[6] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref6>
U.S. Department of State, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism,
Country Reports on Terrorism 2005, April 2006,p. 16,at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.state.gov/documents/organization/65462.pdf')
;> www.state.gov/documents/organization/65462.pdf  (October 18, 2006).

[7] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref7>
Ibid., p. 20.

[8] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref8>
Ibid. and news release, “Fact Sheet: Afghanistan and Pakistan: Strong Allies
in the War on Terror,” The White House, September 29, 2006, at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/09/2006092
9-2.html');> www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/09/20060929-2.html
(October 18, 2006).

[9] <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref9>
News release, “President Bush and President Musharraf of Pakistan Discuss
Strengthened Relationship,” The White House, March 4, 2006, at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/03/2006030
4-2.html');> www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/03/20060304-2.html
(October 18, 2006).

[10]
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref10>
Ahmed Rashid, “Karzai for Jirga to Crush Taleban,” BBC News, October 11,
2006, at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6032631.stm');>
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6032631.stm (October 11, 2006).

[11]
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref11>
“The Radical with a Perfect Cover,” Sunday Times (London), August 20, 2006,
at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2320777_1,
00.html');> www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2320777_1,00.html (October
18, 2006), and Stewart Tendler, Sean O’Neill, and Zahid Hussain, “Suitcase
Full of Bomb Equipment Found by Police,” The Times (London), August 18,
2006, at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2318431,00.ht
ml');> www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2318431,00.html  (October 18,
2006).

[12]
<http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref12>
Paul Watson and Mubashir Zaidi, “British Case Renews Focus on Pakistan,” Los
Angeles Times, August 13, 2006, p. A9, and “Profile: Maulana Masood Azhar,”
BBC News, December 16, 2002, at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/578369.stm
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/578369.stm'
);>   (October 11, 2006).

 

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref13>
[13] Husain Haqqani, “The Ideologies of South Asian Jihadi Groups,” Current
Trends in Islamist Ideology, Vol. 1, May 19, 2005, at
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_2172_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,wid
th=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,scro
llbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.futureofmuslimworld.com/research/ctID.5/ctre
nd.asp');> www.futureofmuslimworld.com/research/ctID.5/ctrend.asp  (October
18, 2006). 

 

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref14>
[14] Polly Nayak and Michael Krepon,“US Crisis Management in South Asia’s
Twin Peaks Crisis,” Henry L. Stimson Center Report No. 57, September 2006,
at www.stimson.org/southasia/pdf/USCrisisManagementFull.pdf
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_122004_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,w
idth=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,sc
rollbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.stimson.org/southasia/pdf/USCrisisManageme
ntFull.pdf');>    (October 16, 2006).

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref15>
[15] Aitzaz Ahsan and Meghnad Desai, Divided by Democracy (New Delhi: Lotus
Collection Roli Books, 2005), p. 134.

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref16>
[16] Stephen Philip Cohen, The Idea of Pakistan (Washington, D.C.: The
Brookings Institution, 2004), p. 187.

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref17>
[17] Terror Free Tomorrow, “Dramatic Change of Public Opinion in the Muslim
World: Results from a New Poll in Pakistan,” November 2005, p. 1, at
www.terrorfreetomorrow.org/upimagestft/Pakistan%20Poll%20Report--updated.pdf
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_122004_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,w
idth=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,sc
rollbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.terrorfreetomorrow.org/upimagestft/Pakista
n%20Poll%20Report--updated.pdf');>    (October 18, 2006).

 <http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/bg1981.cfm#_ftnref18>
[18]U.S. Agency for International Development, “Pakistan,” in Congressional
Budget Justification, Fiscal Year 2007, at
www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/ane/pk.html
<javascript:HandleLink('cpe_122004_0','CPNEWWIN:NewWindow%5etop=10,left=10,w
idth=500,height=400,toolbar=1,location=1,directories=0,status=1,menubar=1,sc
rollbars=1,[EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/ane/pk.htm
l');>     (October 18, 2006).

 



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