US President Donald Trump. His much anticipated national address on
Monday, in which he laid out a new strategy to win the United States'
longest war, marked a dramatic increase in pressure on Pakistan. AFP
PHOTO | NICHOLAS KAMM
WASHINGTON
In military terms, US President Donald Trump's long-awaited new Afghanistan strategy looks very much like the old one.
But, on the diplomatic front, he took a risk in confronting unruly, nuclear-armed Pakistan.
Washington
has long been frustrated by Pakistan's provision of cross-border safe
havens to some of the Taliban factions and armed Islamist groups
fighting against US troops and their Afghan allies.
Trump's
predecessor Barack Obama risked triggering a breakdown in the long US
alliance with Islamabad when, without forewarning, he sent commandos
into Pakistan in 2011 to kill Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden.
But,
rhetorically at least, Trump's much anticipated national address on
Monday, in which he laid out a new strategy to win the United States'
longest war, marked a dramatic increase in pressure on Pakistan.
PRESSURE ON PAKISTAN
"We
have been paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars at the same
time they are housing the very terrorists that we are fighting," Trump
said.
"That will have to change and that will change immediately."
Following
up on Trump's speech on Tuesday, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
warned that Pakistan could lose its status as a major US ally and see
its US military aid halted.
While Washington may hope
that this motivates Islamabad to crack down on the groups that launch
attacks into Afghanistan and Indian-administered Kashmir, it does not
come without risk.
Pakistan holds the Muslim world's
only known nuclear arsenal and its government is a sometimes shaky
balancing act between elected civilians and a powerful military that
maintains ties with the militants.
Harsh US measures
could provoke Pakistan and, if the government feels its Cold War-vintage
pact with America is under threat, it could turn towards China — the
great rival of both India and America.
And, much more
than the implied threat to cut military aid to Pakistan, Trump's request
that India play a greater role in stabilizing Afghanistan will rattle
New Delhi's most bitter and long-standing foe.
INDIA'S ORBIT
But,
US experts agree, Pakistan is unlikely to step up its support for the
Haqqani extremist group and the Afghan Taliban if that would mean the
collapse of the Kabul government and driving out US troops.
Instead,
despite some of his more vainglorious rhetoric, Trump's revamped
strategy could lay the basis for dealing with Afghanistan as a long-term
chronic problem rather than an imminent threat.
James
Jeffrey, a fellow of the Washington Institute and former senior national
security adviser to the George W. Bush White House, said: "There's
really no way to pressure Pakistan."
Pakistan has made
the decision that keeping Kabul out of India's orbit is more important
than clamping down on cross-border militancy, and cutting aid would only
be counterproductive, he argues.
Beyond Afghanistan,
the United States has an interest in preventing Pakistan from going to
war with India or collapsing and allowing its government or nuclear
weapons to fall into the hands of extremists.
And,
while the US footprint is smaller now that it was at the height of the
occupation, its forces still need access to Pakistani supply lines and
airspace.
"There's really very little we can do," Jeffrey said.
"To
cut all aid or, even more dramatically, to start striking the Haqqani
network and all that ... doesn't guarantee that they'll do what we say."
But
Pakistan also has no interest in driving the United States out, and
Jeffrey saw Monday's speech as confirmation that Trump has come around
to the idea of a strategy of "long-term containment."
"Other
than the unfortunate reference to 'winning' there — that's something
that nobody can promise because no one can achieve it — I think that
this is basically sensible strategy," he said.
STEPPING ON TOES
Sadanand
Dhume, an Indian commentator and resident fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute, argued that Washington has many tools at its
disposal to turn up the pressure on the Pakistanis — from cutting
military aid, to stripping them of allied status or declaring them a
state sponsor of terror.
But the biggest stick may be the outreach to India.
"The US have always encouraged Indian involvement in Afghanistan, but it was careful not to step on Pakistani toes," he said.
"What
we're seeing now, is the US feeling it no longer needs to be that
careful about Pakistani sensitivity," he said, admitting that, after 16
years of war, it is hard not to be sceptical about Trump's chances of
success.
Seth Jones, a former senior Pentagon official
and now director of RAND Corporation's International Security and
Defence Policy Centre, sees room for a more stable future with a better
balance of power.
"Pakistan certainly doesn't want
Afghanistan to collapse and nor do they want an Afghan government that
is strongly and closely tied to New Delhi," he said.
"I
think what they'd like is a relatively stable Afghanistan, and one
whose government — and some of the tribal and sub-tribal actors near the
border — have at least decent relations with Islamabad."
And key to all of this, all experts agree, is that the US military remain in Afghanistan for the long haul.
No comments :
Post a Comment