Can this new variety of threats and regional maneuvering by Washington work?
A few days ago, U.S. defense secretary, Jim Mattis, in a statement said that his country would try ‘one last time’ to cooperate with Pakistan in Afghanistan. “We need to try one more time to make this strategy work with them, by, with and through the Pakistanis, and if our best efforts fail, the president is prepared to take whatever steps are necessary,” Mattis said at a House Armed Services Committee hearing. In a separate Senate hearing, General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that “It is clear to me that the ISI has connections with terrorist groups.”
The new threatening tone adopted by Washington which demands cooperation from Pakistan is neither going to change the latter’s policy in any way nor is it going to be the last time that the two countries communicate with each other in this fashion. The very simple reason that the U.S.’s policy is set to achieve zero results in terms of extracting any cooperation from Pakistan is because the latter doesn’t see any value in cooperating in areas where Washington calculates its gains.
The statement by Mattis has not gone down well in Pakistan. The country’s civilian as well as the military leadership have not only rejected Washington’s Afghanistan policy but have also clarified Pakistan’s position in terms of Islamabad’s own expectations from Washington.
First, by inviting India’s broad role in Afghanistan, Washington has clearly alarmed policymakers in Islamabad. Pakistan, on its part, has always seen India’s presence in Afghanistan as a part of its national security concern. Second, U.S. has openly opposed the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a multibillion-dollar infrastructure project financed and backed by Beijing, by stating that the project “passes through a disputed territory” which is under Pakistan’s control. It’s important to note that previously, US has never followed a policy line that directly undercuts Pakistan’s core economic interests and security concerns.
The new policy line followed by Washington is going to prove counterproductive, for not a fraction of this policy takes into account Islamabad’s reservations regarding its own security concerns. Put simply, Islamabad views Washington’s new policy line as part of the longstanding security threat, which perhaps continues to force Pakistan into making costly choices linked with keeping ties with insurgent groups operating in Afghanistan.
In response to General Dunford’s statement that Pakistan’s intelligence agencies have ties with militant groups, the spokesperson of Pakistan’s military said that “There’s a difference between support and having links. Name any intelligence agency which does not have links. Links can be positive.” The spokesperson further added that “we have our own narrative” when it comes to the question of who U.S. considers as part of the problem in Afghanistan.
Last week, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister, Khawaja Asif, while speaking at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) said that “We are not supporting any form of terror but there was a time when we leveraged our position because we were not sure what the Americans will do after winning the war in Afghanistan.”
While addressing concerns related to Pakistan’s so-called selective counterterrorism policy, the minister said that “We didn’t go all out against terrorists [before], but since 2014 we have wiped them out [from our territory].” Asif challenged Washington’s claims of militant sanctuaries inside Pakistan by saying that there are no militant hideouts in Pakistan and if U.S. believes otherwise, it should provide coordinates of militant sanctuaries and “We will bomb them.”
Now, these rare responses coming out of Pakistan clearly show that Islamabad is not ready to capitulate to Washington’s demands. In fact, Islamabad seems ready to challenge Washington’s narrative and policy line by offering its own policy which actually addresses questions that were previously dubbed as “double standards” on Pakistan’ part.
Pakistan’s preference when it comes to dispute resolution in Afghanistan is to incorporate the Afghan Taliban as major stakeholders in any peace process. While Islamabad has been berated for asking for this approach, there appears no other practical solution to Afghanistan’s militancy problem otherwise. The U.S.’s preference of finding a military solution in Afghanistan has clearly failed. What is also important here is that Washington as well as the political elite of Afghanistan recognize that unless the Taliban become part of the country’s peace process, Kabul’s security woes will not go away. Afghanistan needs to engage the Taliban through domestic and regional channels without depending on Washington’s help which has only created complications.
Clearly, Pakistan remains undeterred by Washington’s new threats. Pakistan and the U.S. continue to be locked in a more than a decade old struggle which puts both countries interests on opposing ends. U.S.’s recent demands from Pakistan on Afghanistan and opposition to CPEC only confirm Islamabad’s deep-rooted conviction that Washington remains an unreliable ally. Moreover, Pakistan sees this new policy as the one which clearly favors India, Islamabad’s arch-rival in the region.
The two sides cannot seem to find common ground about how best to deal with the Afghanistan’s militancy problem while preserving their respective security and economic interests. Apparently, the Afghan conflict has become deadlocked with no resolution in sight. Unless Washington incorporates Islamabad’s concerns in its Afghanistan policy, the latter is not likely to cooperate regardless of the costs imposed.