Source: Carnegie
Reprinted with permission from The Times, October
20, 2001.
LAST week, as I watched Pakistani soldiers with machineguns guard against the
threat of Islamist rioting, I wondered what possible motive these uniformed
farm boys from Attock and Gujranwala had to protect me; and more importantly,
what motive they have to defend the interests of the West in the present war.
The discipline of the Pakistani Army is extremely strong, but no army can insulate
itself completely from the feelings of the population from which it springs.
It is a question that American and British policymakers
should be asking themselves urgently. For not just in Pakistan, but in much
of the Muslim world, we are asking Muslim soldiers to be prepared to fire into
crowds of their countrymen in the name of a cause that most of them almost certainly
despise, and on the orders of regimes that, in many cases, we ourselves have
described as illegitimate.
It is especially important that we take account of the interests
of the Pakistani armed forces, because at some point they are going to be asked
by the US to end support for the struggle to oust India from Kashmir.
The United States is bound to demand this because the militants
fighting in Kashmir are mixed up with the Taleban and the wider world of Muslim
extremism and terrorism. But belief in a just struggle in Kashmir has been part
of the core ideology of the Pakistan Army since its creation, and a government
that demands its sacrifice will be taking a serious risk.
The soldiers therefore need to be compensated, not only
with certain Indian concessions but also with concrete benefits to Pakistani
society in general and the armed forces in particular.
In the short term, economic concessions are also of key
importance. President Musharraf has justified his support for the allied campaign
with two key arguments. The first is that Pakistan must avoid the mortal threat
of an alliance of the US and India against Pakistan. The second has been that
Pakistan will derive great economic benefits from aligning itself with America
in this struggle.
Such benefits are, indeed, desperately needed. The Pakistan
economy has been stagnant for years, its problems worsened by Western sanctions
and protectionism. Since coming to power, General Musharraf has bowed to IMF
demands to slash price subsidies to agriculture, promising long-term economic
improvement but at the cost of a steep drop in the earnings of farmers, who
comprise most of Pakistan’s population.
This is bound to increase the likelihood that economic discontent
will fuel Islamist protests. The West therefore urgently needs to “front-load”
economic aid to Pakistan, to show the Pakistani people that General Musharraf’s
pro-Western stance is really helping them.
Britain and the EU have both made useful first steps: Britain
by writing off ?20 million in Pakistan debt and providing ?105 million of new
money over two years. The EU has announced an end to tariffs and relaxation
of quotas on Pakistani textiles, which should increase their exports by $900
million (?608 million) over the next five years. But Islamabad estimates that
it will suffer export losses of about $1.4 billion this year alone due to increased
shipping costs and other factors.
There was, therefore, severe disappointment here that Colin
Powell, the US Secretary of State, during his visit to Islamabad did not announce
new economic benefits to Pakistan. There seems to be a widespread belief in
US circles that easing sanctions and ending the “isolation” of General
Musharraf’s regime is a major first step.
As far as the vast majority of Pakistanis are concerned,
this belief is empty. Aitzaz Ahsan, a leader of the opposition Pakistan Peoples
Party, said: “If people feel that Musharraf has made a satisfactory economic
deal with the US, they will feel more comfortable with government support for
the US. But if it looks otherwise, they will think he is an idiot who has allowed
himself to be cheated.”
Copyright Anatol Lieven/The Times, October 20, 2001.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/