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Showing posts with label Ahmed Rashid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahmed Rashid. Show all posts

Saturday, June 16, 2012

For Pakistan army, it’s still good Afghan Taliban vs. bad Pakistani Taliban, War on Terror, NewAgeIslam.com

War on Terror
For Pakistan army, it’s still good Afghan Taliban vs. bad Pakistani Taliban
Bending our minds
BY Ahmed Rashid

Visits from three senior US officials in three weeks indicate troubles in the US-Pakistan relationship. Washington has failed to deliver on the regional strategy it promised this spring, and friction with Pakistan seems to be contributing to the long delay in announcement of a new US strategy in Afghanistan. Pakistan is critical to any Afghan strategy the Obama administration undertakes. Pakistanis hope that President Obama will push his state guest this week, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, to be more flexible toward Islamabad. But Pakistanis, too, must compromise if there is to be hope for Afghanistan and South Asia.

In their recent visits, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, national security adviser James Jones and CIA chief Leon Panetta promised to push the Indians on regional issues. But the Pakistani army does not trust American promises and has leaned on the civilian government in Islamabad to scale back its largely pro-US positions.

Any surge of US troops into Afghanistan would depend on the Pakistani army’s help to protect the truck convoys that would supply the extra Western troops in landlocked Afghanistan. Washington would need even greater clandestine cooperation from the Pakistani military in targeting terrorist hideouts along the border.

http://newageislam.com/for-pakistan-army,-it%E2%80%99s-still-good-afghan-taliban-vs.-bad-pakistani-taliban/war-on-terror/d/2158


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Pakistan on the brink, War on Terror, NewAgeIslam.com

War on Terror
Pakistan on the brink
By Ahmed Rashid
Sunday, September 21, 2008

Pakistan is at the centre of a gathering firestorm engulfing south and central Asia in the most volatile confrontation since 9/11. Pakistan, Afghanistan, the US and NATO all bear heavy responsibility for the crisis. President Bush had neither the inclination nor urge to do right by Afghanistan, despite pleas by President Hamid Karzai to eliminate cross-border terrorist strikes from Pakistan and effectively rebuild the country. Senior US officers serving in Afghanistan say they begged the White House and the State Department for action in 2006, but Bush was cosy with Pakistan’s former President Pervez Musharraf and Iraq occupied US attention. Meanwhile, veteran John McCain flails in effectively playing the national security card against Barack Obama because Republican policies failed to secure the homeland against future Al Qaeda attacks.

The Pakistan military and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) saw Bush’s lack of attention as a free pass to re-engage the Taliban as a Pakistani proxy force. As outlined in detail in my book, Descent into Chaos: The United States and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia, the army hedged its bets against possible US and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan or danger of India becoming too influential in Kabul, by moving pro-Pakistan Afghan leaders into Kabul and carving out a dominating position in Afghan politics.

http://newageislam.com/pakistan-on-the-brink-/war-on-terror/d/775


Friday, June 1, 2012

Pakistan: Beyond Musharraf, War on Terror, NewAgeIslam.com

War on Terror
Pakistan: Beyond Musharraf
By Ahmed Rashid
August 19, 2008; Page A13

In the next few days, internal coalition battles will continue as key questions arise, including where Musharraf should live, whether impeachment should proceed, how the senior judges Musharraf dismissed last November should be restored to their offices and who should become president.

Sharif is taking a hard line, while Zardari wants to move slowly and not confront the army by further humiliating Musharraf, a former army chief.

These power struggles within the coalition are magnified by the enormous mistrust that exists between the army and both parties. The army's mistrust of the PPP has a nearly 40-year history, and the military dislikes Sharif.

http://newageislam.com/pakistan--beyond-musharraf/war-on-terror/d/612



Monday, May 28, 2012

US lacks guts to tackle Pakistan, War on Terror, NewAgeIslam.com

War on Terror
US lacks guts to tackle Pakistan
By Premen Addy
Pakistani journalist and author Ahmed Rashid, with his extensive knowledge of the Taliban and the politics of Central Asia, has just written an arresting book, Descent into Chaos. It describes in graphic detail the continuing purgatory of Afghanistan, trapped between American confusion and ineptitude and Washington's talismanic ties with Pakistan's military; the military's own cancerous hatred of and paranoia about 'Hindu' India and the unending US quest for Osama bin Laden. The Pakistani Army's delusions are swaddled in the seamless robe of the Great Game, whose players strive mightily for the aphrodisiac of power and influence. America, writes Rashid, had a minimalist agenda for Pakistani democracy, its investment was in the future of the country's favoured Generals.