STATEMENT BEFORE THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE MIDDLE EAST AND SOUTH ASIA UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
JANUARY 16, 2008
"U.S.-PAKISTAN RELATIONS"[1]
The
dramatic events in Pakistan over the last ten months, punctuated by the
December 27, 2007, assassination of liberal politician and two-time
Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, cast doubt on the future stability of
the country and raise questions about U.S. policy options for helping
tame the growing unrest. In addition to frequent civil protests
deploring President Pervez Musharraf's heavy-handedness toward the
judiciary, violent conflict has escalated, including: a bloody
confrontation last July between Pakistani military forces and Islamic
extremists at a mosque in the heart of Islamabad; a spate of suicide
bombings that have left over 600 Pakistanis dead in six months; and a
growing presence of Taliban-backed extremists in the northwest part of
the country, particularly in the Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan.
Conventional
wisdom holds that in this part of the world stability and democracy are
mutually exclusive. But in the case of Pakistan, it is increasingly
clear that holding fair and transparent elections provides the best
chance for stabilizing the country. Ultimately a popularly elected
civilian government working hand-in-hand with a strong military focused
on its primary mission of battling extremists will provide stability
and security for the Pakistani people. There has been some discussion
of the formation of a national unity government in the run-up to an
election, but such a step should only be pursued with the full
agreement of the major political parties and with the understanding
that it would help restore democratic rule. A major complicating factor
for the election process is the continuing campaign of suicide
bombings, including last week's attack in front of the Lahore High
Court that killed dozens of police officers.
A flawed election
viewed as rigged by Musharraf would lead to further civil unrest that
could bring Pakistan to a dangerous tipping point. The violent protests
and arousal of ethnic tensions sparked by the Bhutto assassination
demonstrate the state's fragility. Pakistan has held eight elections in
its 60-year history, but next month's may prove to be the most
important one yet. President Musharraf's credibility has plummeted in
the eyes of most Pakistanis, and his regime's handling of the Bhutto
assassination has only compounded his problems. Video footage of the
attack shows Bhutto was probably killed by a bullet, rather than from a
head fracture, as initially claimed by the Interior Ministry. The
contradictory statement has fueled public mistrust of the Musharraf
government, which was already running high due to his imposition of
emergency rule in early November last year.
The situation in
Pakistan is fluid and delicate. The U.S. should refrain from making
abrupt policy changes, and instead remain engaged with both civilian
politicians and the military leadership in an effort to ensure Pakistan
weathers the current tumult. Washington should increasingly view
Musharraf as a transitional figure whose influence is likely to decline
in the months ahead. The U.S. relationship with Pakistan will likely go
through an adjustment period as Washington shifts from dealing mainly
with Musharraf to a more broad-based government run by civilians. The
U.S. needs to exercise patience as Pakistan seeks to resolve its
domestic turmoil, encouraging the democratic process and criticizing
any further attempts by Musharraf to undermine it.
Confronting Extremist Threat
The
Bhutto assassination demonstrates the extent to which the Musharraf
government has failed to rein in extremism and terrorism in the
country. Three years ago Musharraf had articulated a goal of
"enlightened moderation" for his country, but his actions have not
lived up to his words. Instead of taking an unambiguous approach to
Islamic extremism by closing down religious schools that preach hatred
of the West and applying the rule of law equally to all terrorists, his
government continues to distinguish between homegrown and foreign-born
extremists and to jail more peaceful democratic activists than violent
militants.
Confronting terrorism and extremism in Pakistan will
be a long-term and multi-pronged effort. In the immediate term, the
U.S. and Pakistan need to work cooperatively in addressing the
terrorist safe haven along the border with Afghanistan, which
constitutes a threat to worldwide security. Al-Qaeda and Taliban-backed
terrorists in this region seek to destabilize both Afghanistan and
Pakistan and to project terrorism throughout the world through both
operational support and ideological inspiration. The Pakistani approach
of pursuing tactical peace deals with the terrorists in this region has
proved futile. Washington and Islamabad need to develop a strategic
approach to the problem.
The Pakistan Army has had some recent
success in confronting Taliban-backed extremists in the Swat Valley
region of the Northwest Frontier Province and must now focus on
replicating those advances in the Tribal Areas. Pakistani success in
confronting the terrorist scourge lies in the hands of the Army, now
led by General Ashfaq Pervez Kiyani. Kiyani has a reputation for being
a serious, professional soldier disinterested in meddling in Pakistan's
internal politics, which may facilitate U.S.-Pakistan counterterrorism
cooperation. Next month's election of a new parliament and Prime
Minister is unlikely to impact substantially the overall approach of
the military leadership in dealing with the terrorist safe haven along
the Afghan border.
Pakistani officials in the past have tried to
separate the Pakistani radicals from al-Qaeda's global objectives and
negotiate with Pakistani Taliban leaders to pacify the situation. The
government has tried to pursue peace deals with local tribal leaders to
rein in al-Qaeda activities along the Afghanistan border, but these
deals backfired by emboldening the terrorists and allowing them to
strengthen their influence in the region. Musharraf's attempt to find a
non-military solution to the terrorist problem in the border areas was
probably aimed at avoiding upheaval in the Army: One-quarter of
Pakistan's soldiers share an ethnic Pashtun identity with the region's
inhabitants. The precariousness of the situation in the northwest
became clear in early November, when Musharraf freed 25 Taliban
militants to secure the release of some 200 Pakistani soldiers being
held hostage by Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Masood.
Remaining
sympathies and links between elements of the Pakistani security
establishment and militant groups that previously fought in Kashmir or
with the Taliban in Afghanistan hamper Pakistan's ability to gain the
upper hand against the extremists. The mid-December escape of terrorist
Rashid Rauf (allegedly involved in the 2006 plot to blow up planes
flying between Washington and London) from Pakistani custody is
emblematic of the murky relations between Pakistan security agencies
and international terrorists. Rashid Rauf is connected by marriage to
Masood Azhar, head of the Jaish-e-Mohammed, a Pakistani terrorist group
operating in Kashmir with links to Pakistani intelligence. Rauf's
mysterious escape raises questions about Pakistan's overall commitment
and ability to bring to justice international terrorists with local
ties. Although Pakistan's senior Army leadership almost certainly
recognizes the problem, they have yet to address the issue in a
forthright and systematic manner.
The implications of theRed
Mosque showdown in July for Pakistan's future are far-reaching. Most of
the suicide bombings over the last six months are likely retaliation
for the Pakistani military operation at the mosque, which resulted in
at least 100 deaths. The revenge suicide bombings throughout the
country and the recent confrontation between Taliban-backed militants
and the Pakistan Army in the Swat Valley are changing the dynamics
between Pakistani religious parties and their former Taliban
benefactors. The phenomenon is similar to the "Anbar Awakening" in Iraq
in which the harsh tactics of al-Qaeda fighters led to a backlash from
the Sunni tribes. According to recent media reports, the leader of the
religious party Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) Fazlur Rehman is trying to
disassociate himself from the new generation of Taliban that is
targeting the Pakistani state. One reason for the JUI's shifting
position is that militants themselves are now lashing out against the
same Islamist parties who supported them in the past.[2]
The major difference from the situation in al Anbar, however, is that
rather than Sunni tribes, the Pakistan Army is directly confronting the
Taliban militants in the Swat Valley.
The growing cleavages
between the Pakistani religious parties and the militants targeting the
Pakistani state will assist the Pakistani Army's efforts to uproot the
terrorists along the border with Afghanistan. The U.S. military should
stand ready to assist the Pakistanis with any equipment or training
necessary to fight these terrorists who now seek to destroy the state
of Pakistan. Direct and uncoordinated U.S. military intervention in the
Tribal Areas would likely have disastrous consequences. Such military
intervention risks further destabilizing the Pakistan government and
tipping the political balance in favor of religious extremists. The
U.S. must follow the Pakistan Army lead, demonstrating that it values
the stability of the Pakistani state and a cooperative relationship
with the Pakistan Army.
Dealing effectively with the terrorist
problem also requires Pakistani leaders to take an unequivocal stand
against the threat and back up their public statements with actions.
Benazir Bhutto had campaigned on a promise to steer her country away
from extremism. This was a message that resonated with the Pakistani
people and one that was ridiculed by some of Musharraf's closest
supporters. In late October, for example, then Railways Minister Sheikh
Rashid said during a press conference, while referring to Benazir
Bhutto, "Those who try to raise the flag of imperialistic policies
would have to face suicide attacks."[3]
Statements like these bolster the cause of the terrorists and
contribute to Bhutto supporters' suspicions of government complicity in
her murder.
As Pakistan works to combat extremism, it should
consider adopting policies to deprogram or de-radicalize militants that
pose less of a direct security threat. Singapore launched in 2003 "The
Religious Rehabilitation Group," in which volunteer clerics lead weekly
one-on-one counseling sessions with detainees to expose them to the
distortions of the radical Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) doctrine.[4]
Indonesia has been experimenting with similar de-radicalization
programs for the last three years using reformed, high-profile
prisoners to convince radicals of the error of their ways through the
force of argument.[5] These are serious efforts worthy of a careful assessment by Pakistani authorities.
U.S. Assistance Programs
Washington
should continueto providerobust economic and military assistance
programs to Pakistan, but improve the way it monitors and leverages
this aid. The Bush Administration's recent decision to begin
programming through the U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) the $200 million annual direct cash transfer was a welcome
development. Providing this aid in the form of socio-economic projects
that directly impact the lives of average Pakistanis, rather than
through cash transfers to the Musharraf government, constitutes a major
improvement in how the U.S. disburses and administers its large-scale
assistance programs to Pakistan. The majority of this assistance should
go toward public education to boost current U.S. aid to the education
sector, which now stands at about $60 million annually. Only about 42
percent of Pakistani children between the ages of five and nine attend
school, and adult female literacy is only about 40 percent.[6]
Recent
calls to cut military assistance, on the other hand, are unhelpful. The
U.S. already cut F-16 sales to Pakistan once in the past, and doing so
again will only confirm for many Pakistanis that the U.S. is a fickle
partner not to be trusted. Cutting U.S. military assistance to Pakistan
would demoralize the Pakistan Army and jeopardize our ability to garner
close counterterrorism cooperation, thus playing into the game plan of
extremists seeking to create a sense of chaos in the country.
Tribal Areas:
The Bush Administration's commitment to provide $750 million over five
years to develop the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) is a
step in the right direction. Broad-based economic development of this
impoverished area is necessary to uproot extremism. USAID has
implemented assistance programs in the FATA for several years,
including road building and school construction, and through opium
cultivation eradication programs that were successful in the 1980s.
USAID and the government of Japan are currently rebuilding 130 schools
in the FATA. Although the U.S. will have to provide aid initially
through Pakistani government channels, especially in areas where
security is an overriding issue, USAID should seek out potential
non-governmental organizations that could work in these areas so that
eventually it can work through them rather than relying solely on the
local administration.
Over the long term, U.S. assistance should
encourage political reform that incorporates the institutions of the
tribal lands fully into the Pakistani system. Some have argued that
the Pakistan military is loath to implement political reform in these
areas, and that only the democratic parties would move in this
direction. Political parties are currently prohibited from operating in
the FATA, while a political agent, or federal bureaucrat, runs the
affairs of each of the seven FATA agencies. There are 12 seats reserved
for FATA members in the National Assembly (the lower house of
parliament) and eight in the Senate. However, parliament has no
authority to legislate on matters concerning FATA, and the FATA
legislators wield little authority.[7]
The Pakistan People's Party (PPP) has petitioned the Supreme Court to
enforce the Political Parties Act in the FATA that would extend
Pakistan election laws to the region and encourage political activity.
The petition claims that since the political parties are not allowed to
field candidates for elections, the mosques and madrassahs (religious
schools) have been able to assert undue political influence in the
region.[8]
Nuclear Issues
Preventing
Pakistan's nuclear weapons and technology from falling into the hands
of terrorists is a top priority for the U.S. While there is no
immediate threat to the security of Pakistan's nuclear weapons during
the current political transition, Washington will need to be diligent
in pursuing policies that promote the safety and security of
Islamabad's nuclear assets. The results of investigations into
Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan's nuclear black market
and proliferation network demonstrate the devastating consequences of
nuclear proliferation by individuals with access to state-controlled
nuclear programs.
Although A.Q. Khan avoided engaging al-Qaeda
on nuclear issues, earlier revelations about a group of former
Pakistani military officials and nuclear scientists who met with Osama
bin Laden around the time of September 11, 2001, remind us of the
continuing threat of the intersection of terrorism and nuclear weapons
in Pakistan. On October 23, 2001, acting on an American request,
Pakistani authorities detained Bashiruddin Mahmood and Abdul Majeed,
two retired Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) officials. Since
their retirement from the PAEC in 1999 they had been involved in relief
work in Afghanistan through a non-governmental organization they
established called Ummah Tameer-e-Nau (UTN). In November 2001, the
coalition forces found documents in Afghanistan relating to UTN's
interest in biological weapons. This prompted Pakistani security
forces to arrest seven members of UTN's board, most of whom were
retired Pakistani Army officials and nuclear scientists.[9]
Recent
media reports reveal that the U.S. has been assisting Pakistan in
improving the safety and security of its nuclear weapons over the last
six years.[10]
This kind of cooperation is possible because the Bush Administration
carefully nurtured relations with Pakistan, including through provision
of military hardware and military-to-military exchange programs.
Recent
media hype surrounding the issue of the safety of Pakistan's nuclear
weapons, including statements about the possibility of the U.S. seizing
Pakistani nuclear assets, is damaging to the bilateral relationship.
The current civil unrest does not directly endanger the safety of
Pakistan's nuclear arsenal. The main threat stems from the potentiality
of al-Qaeda penetrating the system clandestinely through retired
officials with extremist sympathies as in the UTN case cited above. For
this reason, it is more important to focus on helping Pakistan
institute procedures like improving its personnel reliability programs
than to discuss openly plans for emasculating its nuclear capabilities.
Former Deputy Director of the CIA John McLaughlin summed up the
situation well when he said recently that he was confident "that the
Pakistanis are very serious about securing this (nuclear) material, but
also that someone in Pakistan is very intent on getting their hands on
it."
U.S. Policy Recommendations
Pressure Musharraf for Free Polls.
The U.S. must make up for lost time in its support to Pakistan's
civilian politicians and civil society. For too long, U.S. policymakers
have equated the political survival of President Musharraf with success
in the war on terrorism, and have largely avoided dealing with civilian
leaders. When Washington finally began to shift its policy last year
and support Benazir Bhutto's return to Pakistan, it made the mistake of
picking favorites and failed to support the return of the other major
opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif. The U.S. must support the process
of democracy and not any particular individual or party. The Pakistani
people, by and large, do not support extremist policies and would
likely vote into power one of the mainstream democratic parties--so
long as they have a range of political choices and perceive the
elections as transparent and free. A popularly elected civilian
government could provide a public mandate for fighting terrorism and
extremism. Musharraf's loss of public support and his close association
with the U.S. and its counterterrorism policies has translated into a
loss of public support for fighting terrorism in general.
To
support free polls, the U.S. should publicly call on Musharraf to lift
media curbs; release all activists, lawyers, and politicians detained
during emergency rule-- including President of the Pakistan Supreme
Court Bar Association and PPP leader Aitzaz Ahsan; work with the
political parties to ensure the neutrality of the election commission;
re-establish the independence of the judiciary; and lift unnecessary
restrictions on international observers, such as banning exit polling.
Develop a Strategic Approach to Defeating the Taliban and use Tough Diplomacy to Bring Islamabad on Board.
While continuing large-scale military and economic assistance programs
to Pakistan, the U.S. should use tough and reasoned diplomatic
persuasion to convince Islamabad to work closely with the U.S. not only
against al-Qaeda but also against the Taliban, emphasizing that such an
approach will serve Pakistan's long-term strategic interests.
Convincing Pakistan on this front becomes much more difficult if we
start cutting military assistance programs.
We must avoid repeating past mistakes. In his new book How We Missed the Story: Osama bin Laden, the Taliban, and the Hijacking of Afghanistan,
author Roy Gutman details many of the mistakes made by U.S. officials
in developing policy toward Afghanistan and Pakistan in the run-up to
the 9/11 attacks. In Gutman's book, a senior retired Pakistani Army
official notes that U.S. policymakers could have convinced Pakistani
military officials to adopt a tougher policy toward the Taliban in the
late 1990s. He said that top U.S. officials should have sat down with
Pakistan's top military strategists and convinced them that the Taliban
was ultimately a threat to Pakistan itself. The senior retired military
official noted that Pakistan at the time feared that putting pressure
on the Taliban would provoke an extremist backlash, but that
well-argued outside persuasion could have coaxed Pakistan into
"extricating itself to the winning side." [11]
Gutman
provides several examples of a fragmented U.S. policy toward the
terrorist threat in Afghanistan and Pakistan throughout the 1990s and
the lack of a strategic, diplomatic approach to achieve the goal of
defeating al-Qaeda and its Taliban affiliates. To develop such a
strategy, it is important to understand the symbiotic relationship
between the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The Taliban receives valuable
assistance from al-Qaeda in fighting coalition forces in Afghanistan,
while al-Qaeda relies on Taliban support to sustain a safe haven in the
Pashtun-dominated areas of Pakistan. While it is possible to peel off
"guns-for-hire" that may not be ideologically motivated by anti-West
pan-Islamism, it would be folly to believe the U.S. or Pakistan can
convince the Taliban leadership to break its relationship with
al-Qaeda. As Gutman notes, "pursuing patient diplomacy with the Taliban
in 1999--even after top U.S. officials knew that bin Laden had
effectively hijacked the regime...sent a signal of indecision and
weakness to both Mullah Omar and bin Laden."
In many ways, we
are in the same diplomatic position that we were during the late 1990s
with Pakistan. We need Pakistan to crack down harder on Taliban
elements within its borders but its fears that this will cause a
backlash in Pakistan and its mistrust of U.S. objectives in the region
are hampering our ability to obtain full Pakistani cooperation. It is
essential that the U.S. and Pakistan develop a strategic dialogue on
defeating the Taliban/al-Qaeda phenomenon and view the issue in a
context that also addresses Pakistan's strategic stakes vis a vis
Afghanistan. The Bush Administration's recent plan to send 3,000
additional U.S. Marines to Afghanistan is an important signal that the
U.S. is committed to stabilizing Afghanistan and ensuring a moderate,
pro-West regime succeeds there.
Build up Pakistan's Capability to Confront Terrorists and Focus on Developing Tribal Areas.
The U.S. will need to build up Pakistan's capacity to take on the
Taliban and al-Qaeda in the Tribal Areas and focus substantial
attention on developing these areas economically. Washington must
convince Islamabad to work more closely in joint efforts that bring
U.S. resources and military strength to bear on the situation in North
and South Waziristan and employ a combination of targeted military
operations and economic assistance programs that drives a wedge between
the Pashtun tribal communities and the international terrorists.
A
large-scale U.S. troop invasion of Pakistan's Tribal Areas could have
disastrous consequences for the Pakistani state and would not provide a
lasting solution to the problem. A more effective strategy involves
working cooperatively with Pakistan's military to assert state
authority over the areas. Once they are secure, substantial assistance
should be provided to build up the economy and social infrastructure.
Washington's pledge of $750 million to develop the Tribal Areas over
the next five years is welcome, but the aid should not be delivered
until it is clear the Pakistani authorities have the upper hand in the
region and can ensure the aid does not fall into the wrong hands. This
will require U.S. access to the region and a clear commitment from the
Pakistan government to counter Taliban ideology.
The U.S. should
conduct counterinsurgency training programs for the Pakistan military,
especially the Frontier Corps, whose troops know the terrain of the
FATA but have little experience with counterinsurgency operations. This
training will both build trust and stronger ties between the U.S.
military and its Pakistani counterparts, as well as better prepare the
Pakistan security forces to fight al-Qaeda and Taliban in the Tribal
Areas.
To address rising Islamic extremism, Washington should
encourage the Pakistan government to enforce the rule of law against
militants who use the threat of violence to enforce Taliban-style
edicts and to close down madrassahs that are teaching hatred against
the West that leads to terrorism. The Pakistan government also needs to
take steps to root out from the security establishment any remaining
pockets of support for militants, including those with links to the
Kashmir insurgency or the Taliban. Without a complete break from
Islamist militancy, Pakistan's security apparatus will be increasingly
unable to protect Pakistani citizens from terrorist violence, leading
to further destabilization of the country.
Maintain Robust Assistance Programs.
The U.S. should refrain from cutting assistance to Pakistan because it
sends a wrong signal at a time when we need to demonstrate that the
fight against terrorism is a joint endeavor that benefits Pakistan as
much as it does the U.S. and the global community. Because of the
abrupt cutoff of U.S. aid to Pakistan in 1990, the U.S. lost valuable
leverage with Pakistani leaders and created a feeling of mistrust
between our two countries that still plagues the relationship. The
Pakistan military views the U.S. as a fickle partner that could exit
the region at any time. This lack of faith in U.S. commitment to the
region hurts our ability to garner the kind of counterterrorism
cooperation we require from the Pakistani government. Pakistani
soldiers are dying in the battle against terrorism, and average
Pakistanis are beginning to question whether these sacrifices are
being made solely at the behest of the U.S. rather than to protect
their own country. Conditioning assistance only fuels the idea that
Pakistan is taking action to fight terrorism under coercion, rather
than to protect its own citizens.
In conclusion, the U.S. must
remain closely engaged with Pakistani civilian politicians and the
military leadership during the political transition. The U.S.-Pakistan
relationship is crossing troubled waters, and anti-Americanism is
reaching the boiling point. A strong U.S. public stance supporting the process
of democracy without focusing on any one particular leader or party
would help calm the situation. Despite frustration over lack of
Pakistani success in uprooting the terrorist safe haven in the border
areas, the U.S. should refrain from cutting military assistance and
develop a strategic approach to addressing the problem.
[1]The
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& Touche. A list of major donors is available from The Heritage
Foundation upon request. Members of The Heritage Foundation staff
testify as individuals discussing their own independent research. The
views expressed are their own, and do not reflect an institutional
position for The Heritage Foundation or its board of trustees.
[5] International Crisis Group, "Deradicilisation and Indonesian Prisons," Asia Report No. 142, November 19, 2007.
[6] James
R. Kunder, Acting Deputy Administrator, U.S. Agency for International
Development, "U.S. Assistance to Pakistan," Congressional testimony
before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, U.S. Senate, December
6, 2007.
[7] International Crisis Group, "Pakistan's Tribal Areas: Appeasing the Militants," Asia Report No. 125, December 11, 2006.
[9]Zahid Hussain, Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle with Militant Islam (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), pp. 154-155.
[10] David Sanger and William Broad, "U.S. Secretly Aids Pakistan in Guarding Nuclear Arms," New York Times, November 18, 2007.
[11] Roy Gutman, How We Missed the Story: Osama bin laden, the Taliban, and the Hijacking of Afghanistan, (Washington, DC: Unites States Institute of Peace, 2008), pp. 163 - 164.