To give apologists of the Taliban and jihadi groups among the politicians and journalists the benefit of the doubt, let us presume that either they are politically naïve or they are suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. Their usual refrain is that the Taliban’s terrorism would go away if the government stops taking foreign dictation. I wish it were that simple. Statements of Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Saad Rafiq, Imran Khan and many fellow journalists reflect this mindset and one is amazed how they tend to forget the historical and ideological background of the rise of militant Islam in Pakistan. Blaming the government in this regard is just political point scoring, though sadly on a wrong issue.
Nobody can deny their assertion that interference in the national security policy should not be allowed. But for a moment let us assume we have no US interference in deciding our policy regarding the local and Afghan Taliban. And there is no pressure to wind up the India-specific terrorist networks. Suppose the PML-N is in power trying to work out the national security policy, if at all the GHQ would permit them to enter this sacred zone. In this situation, would they be able to deliberately gloss over the historical and ideological basis of the terrorists’ war against the state?
They will have to analyse the objectives of the people of Pakistan, the Afghan Taliban and the local jihadi organisations and then see whether these objectives are reconcilable with the interest of the majority of Pakistanis.
Once burdened with the power to rule, their analysis would have to be dispassionate, not idealistic. Their government’s ultimate responsibility would be to protect the democratic rights of the people and work towards raising their living standard. I am sure the PML-N realises that in a country where almost every third person lives below the poverty line, we cannot afford to fight the world in the name of promoting an Islamic caliphate.
So let us see what the major actors of this sad saga want:
1) The people of Pakistan: end of Talibanisation and religious extremism in the country; putting a stop to interference in Afghanistan; protection of Pakistan’s legitimate interests in Afghanistan; good relations with the Afghan government and the US; normalisation of relations with India.
2) The local Taliban and jihadi organisations: control over all the tribal areas to begin with, and enforcement of their version of shariah by force; support of the Afghan Taliban’s war against the US and Afghan government; fighting with Pakistani forces if they try to stop militants from joining the Afghan war and entering India for terrorist attacks; continue to support to al Qaeda; bring down the Afghan government; oust the US and NATO forces from Afghanistan; and liberate Kashmir through an armed struggle.
3) The Afghan Taliban: Take over Afghanistan by force and establish a government with their brand of shariah; resist any move by Pakistan to stop them from using its territory as a hinterland.
4) Al Qaeda: Help the Taliban in restoring their government in Afghanistan; continue using Afghanistan as their headquarters to export Islamic revolution through the barrel of the gun to the world; bring down the Pakistani government, which does not support al Qaeda’s ideals.
Now if we look at these demands keeping in view the interest of the people of Pakistan, it is clear that whether we listen to the US or we make indigenous policies, no compromise can be made with the Taliban and jihadis.
First, the people of Pakistan are Muslims, but they do not approve of extremism. They support democracy, which in essence is pluralistic and means tolerance of dissent.
Second, it does not suit Pakistan to help the Afghan Taliban who want to enforce religious fascism in Afghanistan and annoy the West.
Third, Pakistan has to stop interference in Afghanistan. There can be no two views about it. The UN Resolution 1373 “decides also that all states shall: refrain from providing any form of support, active or passive, to entities or persons involved in terrorist acts, including by suppressing recruitment of members of terrorist groups and eliminating the supply of weapons to terrorists.”
True, Pakistan should neither support the Taliban nor the US and NATO forces. But this would only be possible if the Taliban stop using Pakistan as their base and join the Afghan democratic process.
Fourth, Pakistan’s legitimate interest can only be protected in Afghanistan if there is a stable government in Kabul. A prerequisite of achieving this objective is to find a regional solution instead of a Pakistan-India proxy war in Afghanistan.
Fifth, we have to have good relations with the Afghan government. Those who suggest that we should stop supporting the Karzai government tend to forget it is recognised by the entire world and the UN.
Sixth, Pakistan cannot afford to have adversarial relations with the US and other Western countries. There is no reason that we should be fighting with them. Almost the entire economy of Pakistan is dependent on these countries. Over 50 percent exports go to these countries, leave alone the investments and loans, which we get from them. Any conflict with them would lead to sanctions that would mean closure of industries and immense damage to the economy — directly hurting the poor.
Last, no country is supporting the al Qaeda agenda because it is not in sync with 21st century political, social and economic values. Also, their terrorist means and Salafist ideology is unacceptable to the majority of Muslims around the world.
Apologists of the Taliban should realise that no matter who is ruling, it is high time that these terrorists should be dealt with. There should be no confusion that it is the agenda of the people of Pakistan. This is what Pakistan needs. Just because the US is saying the same thing does not mean we should foolishly tell the Taliban that we are on their side. There are no two options. Of course talks with the local and Afghan Taliban are possible if they renounce violence and join the democratic process in their respective countries. The interest of the people of Pakistan should be at the top of our list instead of anti-government and anti-US emotions. The Taliban have offered a deal to the Punjab government. It has a Faustian choice that no apologist can afford to make.
March 23, 2010
On whose side are the Taliban apologists?
March 22, 2010
Tribal Council Says Crush Taliban
A tribal council from the regions near the Pak-Afghan border have shown themselves to be REAL Pak Nationalists this weekend. Unlike Shahbaz Sharif’s crying for Taliban to please spare his province, this jirga has made strong statements against terrorism and called for Taliban to be crushed.
Hundreds of tribesmen from regions near the Pak-Afghan border ended a rare tribal council on Saturday with a declaration calling for the army to crush the Taliban.
The meeting in Peshawar was called by an umbrella group of aid organisations and political parties in an effort to bring together people from the region.
Participants called for the army to escalate attacks against the Taliban across the tribal regions, dismissing Pakistan’s earlier offensives as “military dramas”.
“It should be a genuine military operation like the Sri Lankans did against the Tamil Tigers,” said Sayd Alam Mehsud, a powerful tribal leader, referring to the brutal military campaign that destroyed the separatist Tamil army in Sri Lanka.
They also called for more power for traditional councils.
“If we strengthen these councils and make them more functional, I believe it will win us half of the war,” said one participant, Salar Amjad Ali, 34. “We, the Pashtuns, live for our culture and tradition and we die for it,” he added.
While Saturday’s meeting was not a formal jirga, it is rare to have so many tribal leaders gather together.
A declaration at the end of the meeting called democracy vital to rooting out terrorism, arguing that the military should keep out of politics.
“A sapling of terrorism cannot grow in democracy. Any attempt to derail democracy is like letting the terrorists walk all over us,” the declaration said.
One organiser, Sayd Alam Mehsud, said the meeting was a way to bring together people from the area that is suffering most in Islamabad’s war against the militants.
“We have just tried to unite people for the sake of peace,” he said. Participants said they had little faith in the US-Pakistan alliance, and that Washington and Islamabad were more worried about internal political issues than dealing with the deep-set social issues at the root of much of the violence.
“If we do not address the mindset of the terrorists, we will not be able to eliminate terrorists,” said Alam.
Crush the unwilling: The tribal leaders urged the government in Pakistan to reach out to the militants – but also to crush those unwilling to negotiate.
“We tribesmen are more patriotic than anybody else,” said one participant, Din Muhammad Khan, who had come South Waziristan, where a government offensive that began last fall is thought to have killed hundreds of terrorists.
“Pakistan is ours. We are for Pakistan… we will die for this country if required,” he said. Meanwhile, in Karachi, police arrested three Taliban militants on Saturday and seized a bomb-making factory, a counter-terrorism official said.
Police raided a house in the city’s industrial area and forced the militants to surrender after a gunbattle, said Raja Omar Khatab, No one was injured.
After their arrest, the suspects led police elsewhere to the bomb factory, and a large number of explosives, detonators and other bomb-making material was seized, he said.
Violence has surged in Pakistan in recent days as terrorists – thought to be part of a loose network of insurgents fighting the US-allied Islamabad government – launched a wave of suicide bombings.
March 18, 2010
Shahbaz Sharif's Dupatta
Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) Member of Provincial Assembly (MPA) Nighat Orakzai on Monday removed her ‘dupatta’ and threw it on the floor during the NWFP Assembly session on Monday, asking the Punjab chief minister (CM) to wear it, in protest against a statement given by him in which he asked the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) to “spare the province of Punjab from its terrorist activities”.
According to a private TV channel, the PML-Q MPA said that if Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif is so scared of the Taliban, then he should starting wearing a ‘dupatta’. She said the Punjab CM’s statement had revealed that he was only concerned for the safety of his province, and called it a “betrayal” of those killed in terrorist activities in the NWFP.
PLEASE CONTACT PML-N HEAD OFFICE AND DEMAND THAT SHAHBAZ SHARIF BE REMOVED!!!
PML-N Head Office
House No 20-H streets 10, sector F-8/3 Islamabad.
Secretary General Direct NO : 051-2852661
Secretariat Phone and Fax No : 051-2852662,
051-2852663 and 051-2852665
E-mail : pmlisb@hotmail.com
March 17, 2010
Remove Shahbaz Sharif
What is the difference between asking for a truce with TTP and trying to surrender Pakistan? This action by CM Shahbaz Sharif makes me sick. Why hasn’t PML-N at least kicked him out? How can he stay in office after this act of TREASON???
Of course he is trying to back up and save his own skin after his words were caught. But for all the talk about corruption in government, is there anything so sinister as trying to SURRENDER TO TALIBAN!!!???
PLEASE CONTACT PML-N HEAD OFFICE AND DEMAND THAT SHAHBAZ SHARIF BE REMOVED!!!
PML-N Head Office
House No 20-H streets 10, sector F-8/3 Islamabad.
Secretary General Direct NO : 051-2852661
Secretariat Phone and Fax No : 051-2852662,
051-2852663 and 051-2852665
E-mail : pmlisb@hotmail.com
March 16, 2010
Shahbaz Sharif and the “Spare Punjab” Doctrine
Not all lives are worth the same to Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif.
In a shocking display of callousness, Mr. Sharif publicly requested the Taliban cease targeting the Punjab province…but to carry on business as usual elsewhere in the country. This “Spare Punjab Doctrine” gives extremists a free pass to extremists and essentially justifies their actions throughout Pakistan!
There aren’t many words that can capture the CM’s utter lack of humanity or its shocking implications? Has he turned a blind eye to the people the Taliban have massacred in Lahore’s sister cities of Karachi and Islamabad? Does he not consider the grief and anguish of residents in Peshawar and the NWFP to be genuine? Is he accepting of the blood of Pakistanis – so long as they are not in his province?
All Pakistanis are equal. The Taliban and other extremist groups do not discriminate; their purpose is strike fear into the hearts of all Pakistanis and to destroy our culture and spirit. In a previous post, we wrote about the pain suffered by the people of Lahore. We understood the extremists’ desire to attack large cities and called for a spirit of unity.
Yet with his comments, CM Shahbaz offers up all Pakistanis as sacrifice so that Punjab may be safe from harm. Sindh and Peshawar, areas hit with attack after attack, perhaps do not matter to him and his party.
Pakistanis need to move beyond regionalism and religion. Pakistanis are first and foremost Pakistanis. The country boasts of diversity – there are many different ethnicities and languages spoken by our people – and none is less sacred than any other. Our fight against the Taliban is a fight to keep all our people safe and prosperous.
The CM’s remarks have been roundly denounced by other officials. Perhaps the harshest criticism comes from the Army Chief Ashfaq Pervez Kayani. The Army Chief called for a one-on-one meeting with CM Sharif, in which the reprehensible comments were the main topic. The CM was told that his remarks could potentially undermine the entire military operation in which over 2,000 army personnel, countless Pakistani civilians and scores of foreign aid workers had lost their lives.
His words have caused a firestorm, as they absolutely ought to and now he stands in defense. To be sure, his people will commence a strong campaign of damage control but can anyone ever forget the reprehensible sentiment expressed so breezily? There is no doubt the public will be told that the words were taken out of context, that the media has twisted the CM’s message, etc et al.
But Pakistanis cannot be made fools of by a shoddy political tactic; we cannot stand by and allow a man of power to attempt divisions within our nation. We cannot allow anyone, of any party, to exploit the dire situation caused by religious extremists. 
Extremists are happy to accept the CM’s offer, as evidenced by Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) spokesman has said that the organization would stop targeting public and government places in Punjab if the provincial government gave an assurance that the Taliban would be spared from any action. As Punjabis make up a solid number of the Pakistani Army that request is essentially impossible. Our Army will NOT stop its fight, our people will not bow to the ideology of hatred and our cultures will not be divided.
What Chief Minister Sharif has said is unreservedly heartless and the public is correct in its furious reaction. We will not tolerate this attitude in anyone who claims to be a proud Pakistani.
Pakistan Zindabad.
March 1, 2010
Conspiring With The Enemy?
A disturbing report in Daily Times today says that Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah took Sipah-e-Sahaba (SSP) leader Maulana Muhammad Ahmed Ludhianvi on a ride in his car and visisted the extremist organization’s madrassa. This organization has been banned by the government, but still Rana Sanaullah is visiting and treating its leader as a V.I.P. What can be the excuse for this?
The Daily Times says,
Mr Sanaullah was on a by-election campaign for a provincial assembly seat in Jhang, but it cannot be said with certainty if he paid a visit to the seminary for electoral purposes or deep-rooted extremist linkages. Even if it was for purely electoral purposes, should the law minister have taken along a sectarian leader with him on an election campaign?
Obviously, the answer is no. Even if it was only for purely electoral purposes, this is unacceptable because it gives some false authority to SSP as a legitimate organization when it is clearly not one. Actually, not only is this organization banned but it is known to be a principal ally to militant groups that are attacking and killing our innocents.
According to a report, ‘Pakistan: The Militant Jihadi Challenge’ by the International Crisis Group published in 2009, “The recent upsurge of jihadi violence in Punjab…demonstrates the threat extremist Sunni-Deobandi groups pose to the Pakistani citizen and state…Punjab-based radical Deobandi groups like the SSP and its offshoot Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ) provide weapons, recruits, finances and other resources to Pakistani Taliban groups…The SSP and LJ are also al Qaeda’s principal allies in the region.”
Rana Sanaullah should have not contact with groups like SSP except as working to forever remove their menace from Pakistan’s soil. That a government official would be conspiring with the enemy – even in looks only – is beyond understanding.
The Punjab government has long been in denial over the presence of terror outfits in Punjab, particularly South Punjab. The audacity of the PML-N to call itself a ‘progressive’ party — at best, it is a centre-right party — when it is pursuing such policies should serve as a wake up call for the people of Pakistan. If we want to rid our country of extremist ideology, our lawmakers should set an example instead of giving official patronage to terror outfits. An appeal to the Punjab government: stop living in denial and take effective measures to make our country safe from extremist elements.
November 2, 2009
Let's Start Honoring Our Heroes!
Two police officers at a security checkpoint near Lahore saved countless lives today.
Alert and watchful, they were doing their jobs — among the most dangerous in the world — and protecting the people of Lahore.
A white Suzuki caught their attention. Wanting to investigate further, they tried to stop the vehicle from entering Lahore when it suddenly exploded, killing both of the amoral brutes inside.
These men should be lauded and praised for their heroic efforts, solid instincts and selflessness. We should honor those who put their lives in danger every single day for the sake of stability in their country. They are not just doing their jobs, they are safeguarding the future of Pakistan.
I have never understood the casual dismissing of incredible actions — indeed, it is an absolute shame upon the media of Pakistan for not extolling the integrity and righteousness of these men and others like them.
Let’s stop for a moment and remember the myriad of ignorant voices nonchalantly dismissing extremist activity spreading out of FATA/NWFP to the south, to Punjab, near Lahore.
These two men knew better than to be comforted by the lullabies of the Sharif brothers, who have sung song after song denying Punjab was in any danger.
Ignoring the political vitriol, these police officers knew better…and hence, showed up to work both physically and mentally. Their names have not been printed anywhere but as far as I am concerned, they are our heroes…the Sharif brothers and all of Pakistan should recognize and honor them.

October 22, 2009
Are Pakistan’s Anti-US Hawks Indian Trojan Horses?
Are Pakistan’s anti-American hawks – those constantly attacking the Americans and standing against close ties between Pakistan and the United States – Indian Trojan Horses? After all, at a time when India’s close relations with Washington are bringing it billions of dollars in investment and trade, sophisticated defence equipment and a civil nuclear deal, Pakistan’s anti-American turn can only benefit India.
The term “Trojan Horse” dates back to the Greek civilization and basically means “any trick that causes a target to invite a foe into a securely protected bastion or place.” We now know that even Baitullah Mehsud was an Indian agent as he received lots of funds from the Indian intelligence agencies. But for years Pakistan’s Jihadis and their media advocates built Mehsud up as an anti-American hero.
Indian support for Mehsud is no surprise. As we proved in the first part of this series, only India stands to gain from the destabilization of Pakistan’s government and from worsening Us-Pakistan relations. The question for this part of the series, then, is who are the Pakistani anti-US hawks that are intentionally or inadvertently acting as Indian Trojan Horses?
A daarhi does not a patriot make.
The meddling by Indian intelligence service RAW in Afghanistan and support for the destabilizing religious militants there is also no secret. Of course they do not want to see a strong and independent Islamic republic in Afghanistan that has normal relations with Pakistan, and they know the most effective way of ensuring that Afghanistan is unstable – and by that effect, sapping Pakistan’s resources – is to support militants.
Likewise, it has been well documented that Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan and Baitullah Mehsud received substantial funding and support from RAW. And this should come as no surprise, really – after all, should Mehsudis prevail, it will be India that gains the most.
This use of religion to confuse and manipulate the ummah is a most diabolical act, but there are just as many civilian Trojan Horses also. Let us take a look at all those people who in the last one year have been attacking the attempts by the elected Zardari government to build better ties with United States.
Hypernationalists, Anti-Americanism, and India’s Prospering
Hypernationalists are often specifically targeted by intelligence agents who manipulate their passionate loyalties. We must not forget that, despite his support for Musharraf, Ahmed Quraishi’s anti-American rants created problems between the Americans and the Musharraf administration. Could it be that he is manipulated by India as what in intelligence parlance is known as “an unwitting agent?”
An inadvertent agent is often more valuable to intelligence agencies than intentional ones because they can easily pass lie detection devices and do not give themselves away so easily. After all, if Ahmed Quraishi believes he is being a nationalist, he will be more believable.
Let us also look at people like Hamid Gul and Shahid Masood. Again these people are well known anti-Indians, but their pitch has always been more anti-American. Why does Shahid Masood live in Dubai? Whom does he meet in Dubai? There are lots of Indians in Dubai and do any of them finance or influence him? Should that not be the subject of some analysis or concern in Islamabad?
Trojan Horses in Parliament?
Jamaat-e-Islami’s founder Maulana Maududi was opposed to the creation of Pakistan from the beginning and since independence the JI’s chief goal has been to grab power in the name of Islam. The overall effect of the Jamaat-e-Islami’s policies –whether in erstwhile East Pakistan or in Pakistan today—has been to weaken the Pakistani state? The Jamaatis constantly divide Pakistanis along religious lines. They make us think of each other as Kafirs or bad Muslims or unpatriotic. There is no difficulty visualizing that RAW is creating Trojan Horses from Jamaatis with the objective of not letting Pakistan live in peace.
If we turn to the Pakistan Muslim League (Q) are there any persons there who could be Trojan Horses? During Musharraf’s era they wanted to normalize relations with India and were content with being US surrogates. Both Tariq Azeem and Khurshid Kasuri who these days are screaming at the top of their lungs about the Kerry-Lugar bill were championing the opening of ties with India.
Pakistan Muslim League (N) is no better. Its hostility to the Pakistan army resulted in the 1999 coup d’etat and the party has no lost no opportunity to control the army or to put down the army top brass. While in power PML (N) initiated the bus diplomacy with India and even invited Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee to Pakistan against the wishes of the military. It maintained good relations with the United States. But out of power it is happy to push the anti-India, anti-US button as if destablising Pakistan is its real objective.
So what have these Trojan Horses tried to do?
One, engineer a clash between the civilian government and the military to make Pakistan unstable and weak.
Two, tried to also create a clash between US and Pakistan to ensure that India is not whipped by the superpower and US interests in America continue to expand while Pakistan’s ability to lobby the US continue to weaken.
Three, launched an attack campaign to discredit the reputation of those in the government who are well liked by Americans like President Zardari, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and Ambassador Husain Haqqani and others to make Pakistan appear weak and childish in front of the world. If the hawks are the only Pakistani faces for Americans, the US will continue to turn against Pakistan thereby strengthening the Indo-US relationship.
Four, it is very interesting that this debate on Kerry-Lugar is the first debate in Pakistan where there is no mention of India, only anti-Americanism. Since when have we heard so little about the RAW involvement in such an issue?
Trojan Horses weaken Pakistan
Pakistan has been a nuclear power for over 20 years and yet doesn’t seem to have obtained the security it sought. Why? This is because the Indian lobby and RAW has worked nonstop to interfere with our relations with other world powers. It was India that helped create a clash between Nawaz Sharif and the United States over the nuclear weapons program while making sure that India obtained a nuclear deal as well as supply of nuclear fuel. Today, this interference with Pakistan’s security continues through the manipulation of Kerry-Lugar debate by these Indian Trojan Horses.
REAL Pak Nationalists
Pakistanis know that in order to stand up to the Indian threat they need support – military and economic – from the Americans and need American understanding to make sure India does not throw its weight around in South Asia. Causing a clash between Pakistan and its oldest ally, United States, cannot be the work of true Pakistani nationalists. It has to be the work of Indian Trojan Horses who claim to be acting in Pakistan’s interest while actually undermining it.
October 19, 2009
US Reviews Kerry-Lugar aftermath
The News
US reviews Kerry-Lugar aftermath
October 12, 2009
By Sami Abrahim
WASHINGTON: US officials have started reviewing the Pakistani reaction to the Kerry-Lugar Bill with a view “to addressing concerns expressed by our Pakistani partners” but are alarmed at how “falsehoods and
myths” determined the discussion over the bill in Pakistan.
“We want to build a multi-dimensional partnership with Pakistan and the Kerry-Lugar Bill is the centre piece of that effort. We are offering $7.5 billion in unconditional military aid over the next five years for schools, clinics and roads. We are promising continued military assistance. But still some people distort our motives and spread lies and that is hurtful,” said one American official.
He said that President Obama’s policy was to listen to allies, so we will listen to Pakistanis. According to the official, the US will do “what it takes” to satisfy the Pakistanis and bring down the temperature. “We trust that your foreign minister will tell Pakistan’s parliament what he told us and that critics will realise their concerns were based on distortions of language that was put in by our Congressmen to satisfy their own concerns,” he added.
Briefing this reporter, a senior US official pointed out, “Perhaps, the language of the Kerry-Lugar Bill could have been more sensitive to Pakistani concerns, but the current language reflects the will of our Congress. More than 500 members of the two houses of Congress sometimes use language about other countries that is intemperate. That is not different from the way your parliamentarians criticise the US and use harsh language. But our sovereignty is not impinged by your parliament, saying the US is doing this or that, and if our Congress has made a few observations about past Pakistani conduct and said our secretary of State should report to them about some developments, that is not an infringement of your sovereignty either.”
Other US officials were at pains to describe the American law-making process and said much of the reporting in the Pakistani media on the subject was erroneous and in some cases malicious. “We do not want to criticise your media and respect its freedom but with all due respect many commentators are confusing reporting requirement of Congress with conditions or interference.”
Congressional staffers echoed the sentiments expressed earlier by House Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Howard Berman that the opposition to the Kerry-Lugar Bill in Pakistan was “a created crisis, by people who either haven’t read the bill or don’t want to describe it accurately, and whose goal is either to destabilise the (Pakistani) government, or challenge some of the Pakistani military’s priorities.”
Several dozen congressional delegations have visited Pakistan since the Kerry-Berman Bill started being drafted and many have briefed civilian and military leaders at all levels. They met opposition leaders too and everyone should have known the concerns of Congress even if the exact language of the bill was not finalised until recently. “Knowing that all the issues they are now raising their voices about — Jihadi centres, nuclear proliferation, civilian oversight over the military — were going to be in the bill, why did they not pay closer attention to what was being written?” one hill staffer asked.
One staffer said some people had acted irresponsibly by risking the US- Pakistan relations, jeopardising civil-military relations in Pakistan and undermining the good the Kerry-Lugar Bill does only because they
hate President Zardari or some of his appointees. “They come to us to lobby for themselves, thinking wrongly that America makes or breaks governments in Pakistan. Why didn’t they come to us to discuss what language we were putting in the Kerry-Lugar-Berman bill,” she added.
“The whole debate over how far Pakistan’s government could have influenced the language of the bill, especially words that are supposed to have offended your military, ignores the fact that this bill is an American bill. There are members of Congress who will say it is an insult to the US to suggest that some Pakistani officials can or should dictate to us what words to use in our law,” said an irate
Senate staffer.
He pointed out that the Indian Caucus in Congress is thrice as large as the Pakistani one and that Senators Kerry and Lugar and Congressman Berman had to go out of their way to bring opponents of any aid to Pakistan to tone down their opposition. The Senate staffer also stressed that even President Obama at the peak of his popularity had not been able to get Congress to change its mind on his Healthcare bill, which is still stuck in Congress, and to think Pakistan could have done better with a different set of leaders, lobbyists or negotiators is “the height of lack of information”.
US experts blame the political opposition and some “reckless anti-American elements” in the Pakistani media for creating the crisis by presenting the bill’s language in a negative way. “These are the same
people who spread false rumours about Blackwater’s presence in Pakistan and falsely alleged that one thousand marines were coming to Islamabad. Many of them were cheerleaders for the Taliban in the
past”.
American officials believe that PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif stayed away from the debate and even kept in touch with US officials from London so that his party could attack the US over the Kerry-Lugar Bill, but
he would still keep his options open. “The opposition parties were simply cynical and showed no regard for US-Pakistan ties,” observed one diplomat. The government’s response was weak under the opposition attack and most ministers knew little on the subject to be able to stop the attack in its earliest stages.
Some Americans believe that the opposition and its media sympathizers manipulated public sentiment by distorting the bill’s contents. For example, many TV talk show hosts repeatedly said that the Kerry-Lugar
Bill requires US oversight on promotions and other internal operations of the Pakistani military. As pointed out in a US Senate fact sheet, “there is absolutely no such requirement or desire.”
This disinformation stems from an item to be included in one of the US monitoring reports, which could have existed even without the bill. It requires the secretary of state to describe the extent to which civilian authorities exercise control over the Pakistani military. It does not require such control, nor does it place any restriction whatsoever on Pakistan. This benchmark, like all benchmarks in the monitoring reports, is informational. It presents a data-point on which US policy-makers can base decisions.
“How is our Congress telling our government what information to share with it an infringement of Pakistani sovereignty?” a Senate staffer wondered, adding that those who put out the disinformation did so deliberately to drive a wedge between civilian and military leaders in Pakistan and to manipulate public sentiment.
Regarding what they described as the military’s “carefully worded” response issued by the ISPR, the Americans say they see it as “a response to furore generated by the media and politicians.”
“The Pakistani military cannot afford to be seen as being out of touch with public sentiment, and how the people feel affects the commanders,” is how a US official put it. The intent of the ISPR statement according to him was to dampen the debate by saying parliament should examine concerns, but it was exploited by some to exacerbate the crisis, he said.
“We have learnt a few lessons here about how to improve our public diplomacy and anticipate that anything, we do will be seen negatively in Pakistan so we should be prepared. But we hope the government, the opposition and the media have also learnt something. Created crises, motivated by hatred of some government leaders should not rock the boat and risk depriving your country of much-needed resources,” a
Senate staffer emphasised.
He pointed to the harsh words of usually anti-Pakistan Democratic Representative Gary Ackerman, who said he had no interest in a partnership characterised by “suspicion, resentment and political
manipulation.”
Even the head of the Pakistan Caucus in the House of Representatives, Sheila Jackson-Lee voiced surprise at the Pakistani reaction though she refrained from characterising it as manipulated or contrived. She
said, “My colleagues in Congress and I designed this legislation to help the people of Pakistan” and called upon Pakistan’s National Assembly to endorse the bill for its “altruistic” nature.
“Pakistan has consistently been a crucial ally in the fight against al- Qaeda, and I expect this assistance package to enhance our already strong bilateral relationship,” Sheila Jackson-Lee observed, adding, “I firmly believe that this assistance package will create important educational, democratic, and economic opportunities for the people of Pakistan.”





