Providence | 2.15.18
By Alan W. Dowd
What would you call a regime that employs terrorism as part of its foreign policy,
allows its intelligence agencies to coordinate attacks on United States forces,
provides support to groups that wage war on its neighbors, and offers safe
haven to the most-wanted, most-notorious terrorist in history? Most Americans
would call such a regime an enemy, and they would be right about Pakistan.
With his often-blunt language about the world and critical comments about multilateral institutions, President Donald Trump is not
particularly popular overseas. But there’s at least one place that likes him so much he’s
been awarded a medal for bravery. The honor was bestowed by the
people of Logar province, Afghanistan, after Trump announced that the U.S. would
freeze military assistance for Pakistan, due to what he described as a record
of “lies and deceit.” The president was right to take this action.
It’s important to note that Pakistan’s
Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency (ISI) spawned the Taliban—the Islamic
fundamentalist political movement that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, made common cause with al-Qaeda, and
continues to wage war against civilization.Military historian
Joseph Micallef callsISI the “Taliban’s financer, organizer
and principal patron.”
After the 9/11
attacks, Pakistan was offered a chance at repentance, when then-Secretary of
State Colin Powell gave Islamabad an ultimatum to end its support for the Taliban and terror, or be
considered an enemy.“Powell,” as The Washington Post concluded, “would be asking Pakistan to help destroy what
its intelligence service had helped create and maintain: the Taliban.”
Islamabad got
the message and sided with the United States—for a while. It had no choice, really. After all, with
Manhattan still smoldering, the Bush administration warned Pakistan to get on board, get out of the
way or “be prepared to be bombed…back to the Stone Age.” An enraged superpower
can be very persuasive.
But America’s rage faded, and Pakistan’s ISI reverted to its old ways.
Micallef describes today’s Taliban, which
is destabilizing Afghanistan, as “dependent on Pakistani military and financial
support.” He observes that while “the United States has a vested interest in
the establishment of a secure and stable Afghan government…Pakistan seems
determined to use the Taliban and possibly other jihadist groups to ensure that
doesn't happen.”
For instance,
in January, ISI’s partners in crime executed two massive terror
attacks in Afghanistan. One, carried out by Taliban gunmen, left 30 people
dead, including four Americans. The other was
carried out by Haqqani Network operatives, who drove a bomb-laden ambulance
into a crowd, murdering more than 100 people. (Former Joint Chiefs
Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen called the Haqqani Network “a veritable arm of
Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Agency.”)
Haqqani
operatives in Afghanistan, “with ISI support,” in Mullen’s words, conducted
truck-bomb attacks on U.S. and NATO bases, assaults on government facilities, the
2009 attack that killed seven CIA personnel, and the2011
Kabul siege.
Stanford
University research details how the Haqqani Network
“facilitated al Qaeda’s escape during the U.S. battle at Tora Bora in 2001,
enabling the jihadists to move from Afghanistan to a safe haven in Pakistan”
and how the Haqqani Network is responsible for several attacks against the U.S.,
NATO, the Afghan government, and foreign government missions. These attacks,
which have claimed 374 lives, include some truly unspeakable
acts against humankind.
ANATO report concludes, “the
Haqqani family…resides immediately west of the ISI office at the airfield in
Miram Shah, Pakistan… ISI is thoroughly aware of Taliban activities and the
whereabouts of all senior Taliban personnel.” Pentagon officials describe the Haqqani Network as a “critical enabler of al Qaeda.”
“The support of terrorism is part of their national strategy,”
Mullen said of Pakistan. National
Security Advisor Gen. H.R. McMaster notes that Pakistan “goes after terrorist insurgent groups…selectively,
and uses others as an arm of their foreign policy.”
Of course, the most damning piece of evidence against Pakistan is the fact
that Osama bin Laden was permitted to live in a mansion just miles outside
Pakistan’s capital, in Abbottabad. It’s impossible to believe that Pakistani
military and intelligence personnel there were unaware that the most wanted man
on earth was living next door.
After SEAL Team 6 found bin Laden hiding in plain sight, a Pakistani court found the
man who was instrumental in confirming bin Laden’s whereabouts guilty of
treason. For doing what Islamabad should have done, Shakil Afridi was sentenced
to 33 years in prison, where he remains today.
Yes, Pakistan has been
scarred by its (halfhearted) fight against (certain) terrorist groups—a 2017 report estimates 62,000 Pakistanis died in terrorist attacks from
2003 to 2017—but this is a monster of
Pakistan’s own making. Islamabad sowed the wind and is reaping the whirlwind.
Pakistan’s apologists in
Washington say the best we can hope for is a transactional relationship with
Islamabad. If that’s true, what exactly are the American people getting in exchange
for the $33 billion the U.S. has
shoveled into Pakistan since 2002?
It’s one thing for Americans to collaborate with the enemy of
our enemy to achieve some greater objective. It’s quite another to work with an
unsavory regime and be reminded that we are collaborating with the friend of
our enemy—with a regime that flouts our values. According to
the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, religious
freedom in Pakistan has “hit an all-time low due to
chronic sectarian violence” targeting Christians, Shiites, Ahmadis, and Hindus
(actions for which Islamabad is not necessarily responsible) and due to the
fact that “the Pakistani government failed to intervene effectively” to protect
these groups (inaction for which Islamabad is totally responsible). When
suicide bombers attacked a church in Peshawar, killing 100 people, and mobs
rampaged through Christian villages in Punjab, destroying 100 homes, “few, if
any, perpetrators were held to account.”
“It is time for Pakistan to demonstrate its
commitment to civilization, order and to peace,” Trump says. “We
have been paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars at the same time
they are housing the very terrorists that we are fighting…That will have to
change.”
In the face of the chaos
and carnage spawned by organizations supported by elements inside the Pakistani
government, Islamabad declared in August, “Pakistan does not allow use of its territory against any country.”
After a U.S. drone killed a Haqqani leader hiding in northwest Pakistan in
January, Pakistani officials claimed the U.S. had
“targeted an Afghan refugee camp in Kurram.” The U.S. Embassy refuted the
claim, noting that there are no refugee camps in Kurram.
A Heritage Foundation-Hudson Institute research team proposes a range of
options, including: no longer referring to Pakistan as an ally; prioritizing
humanitarian programs; collaborating with China to pressure Islamabad;
developing “calibrated actions” to end Islamabad’s support for the Taliban and
the Haqqani Network; noting that Pakistan runs the risk of being designated a state
sponsor of terrorism; and leaving the door open to unilateral action against
terrorist groups in Pakistan.
At the other end of the spectrum, perhaps the toughest
response for Islamabad to swallow would be for Washington to cut it off and treat
it like a pariah. As McMaster recently asked, “does Pakistan want to
become North Korea?”
Playing hard ball
with Islamabad raises the important matter of how to sustain U.S. operations in
Afghanistan without Pakistan’s “help.” To be sure, Pakistan’s duplicity puts the
United States on the horns of a dilemma: Afghanistan is land-locked. Iran is an
enemy regime. Russia has pressured the ‘Stans to end or limit arrangements that
enabled the U.S. to resupply Afghanistan. The logistics corridor through Russia
(which carried nonlethal equipment into Afghanistan from 2006 until 2014) is a relic
of the pre-Crimea era. But any nation that has the creativity and capacity,
audacity and ambidexterity to plant democracies where Hitler and Tojo ruled, to
mount the Berlin Airlift, to face down Stalin and hunt down bin Laden can find
a way to persuade Pakistan to change—or find a way around Pakistan. Read more here.