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By Dr. Richard Benkin Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Americans of all ages and political stripes were in the streets on
May 1 cheering, waving the flag, and chanting “USA, USA!” They
were out all night—some of them mere children when the September 11th
terror attacks changed our nation forever—to celebrate the killing of
the man behind those attacks: Osama Bin Laden. At a time of
bitter partisanship, no one saw this as anything but an American
victory—an operation that began under President George W. Bush and
culminated under President Barack Obama.
That
night, Americans sorely needed a sign that US greatness is not a thing
of the past, and Bin Laden’s killing provided one. The euphoria
has subsided, however, replaced with the realization that the death of
even this terrible man does not mean the death of radical Islam or any
of the groups dedicated to its triumph and our demise. Al Qaeda,
the Taliban, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Hezbollah, Lashkar e taiba,
and myriad other terror groups continue to murder innocents.
Aside from the inevitable political jockeying that followed, the
subject that continues to occupy Americans in the wake of the Bin Laden
killing is Pakistan and the nature of our relationship with that
country. On the one hand, Americans cannot believe that Bin Laden
could have lived for years in a large compound less than 60 miles (100
kilometers) from its capital of Islamabad and 800 yards (700 meters)
from the Pakistan Military Academy without Pakistani officials knowing
about it; and many now ask how Pakistan can call itself an ally.
Its officials object to the US operation, and its citizens hold mass
demonstrations protesting Bin Laden’s killing—even though neither
objected to Bin Laden’s mass murder of Americans. Nor do they find
it necessary to show the same “understanding” they so glibly demand of
us. Diplomats and other insiders left and right, however,
acknowledge Pakistani duplicity while tolerating it as necessary for
effectively prosecuting the war in Afghanistan; as an Obama spokesperson
recently said, in Pakistan, “you have to accept what you find.”
Afghanistan
But reality demands more from us; much more. We had better get
it right—and soon because American troops will begin quitting
Afghanistan in two months, creating a power vacuum as they do. The
notion that the Afghan government of Hamid Karzai can fill the void is
not a sustainable position. The regime lacks the physical and
financial resources to maintain security in the country as well as the
hearts and minds of the Afghan peoples. With the Karzai government
out of contention, the list of possible alternatives is not
encouraging.
The Taliban could return to power, even though the US objective was
to prevent that and not to get Bin Laden. The Islamist group still
operates in force throughout much of the country, a fact they displayed
just days before Bin Laden’s death with a major prison break that freed
almost 500 Taliban fighters and with the deadliest attack on Americans
in over six years. Iran, which shares an almost 1000 kilometer
border with Afghanistan, is another candidate. Afghanistan remains
a nation of ethnic groups and tribes, the third largest of which is the
Hazara, an overwhelmingly Shi’ite group living in the center of this
Sunni Muslim country. The persecution they faced under the Taliban
has not stopped with the current regime. Taliban insurgents
attack them, clerics and fatwas demonize them, and the constitution
allows it, according to the US Commission on International Religious
Freedom and others. As the world’s leading Shi’ite nation, Iran
could fashion itself as their protectors and take effective power in
Afghanistan’s heartland—all while being hailed as a human rights
defender. Neither should it be forgotten that China borders
Afghanistan, and its meddling in the region is growing. It
effectively annexed Kashmir’s northeast using the same rationale as it
did to grab Tibet and took a “great leap forward” in regional ties with
last year’s Sino-Pakistan nuclear pact. The Chinese are
increasingly active diplomatically with the Karzai government and have
expanded their economic base by, to take one example, developing a major
copper field in Afghanistan’s Logar province.
As a titular US ally, Pakistan remains the major candidate to take
power, especially with the American government’s penchant to tolerate
Pakistani duplicity. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
recently referred to the “organic connection” between it and
Afghanistan, whose Islamist insurgents have worked cooperatively with
their Pakistani counterparts and found supporters in its military and
its intelligence service, which has made the US list of terrorist
organizations. Might the US withdrawal render the border between
an Islamist Pakistan and an Islamist Afghanistan nothing more than a
formality along the lines of that which separates Syria and Lebanon?
India
Given those multiple nightmare scenarios, it is perplexing that the
Obama administration continues to ignore the one regional power whose
interests are not inimical to those of the United States:
India. The administration and its spokesperson’s fatalism must be
replaced by a new paradigm that recognizes the free world’s long term
interests and the strengths we can use to leverage them. India
fits that bill for at least four basic reasons: its foreign policy
interests and those of the United States coincide; it is the only
effective counterweight against otherwise unchecked Chinese
expansionism; the one thing that scares the pants off the Pakistanis and
might get them to behave is the specter of increased Indian influence
in the region; and India has the economic, military, and intelligence
capability to carry it out effectively.
Like the United States and Israel, India is at the top of the
Islamists’ list of hated targets. Indians have faced a near
unbroken terror onslaught by Islamist and Maoist insurgents, who have
ideological and other ties with Pakistan and China respectively.
In May 2010, representatives of both met in the South India city of
Kerala and formally united “to fight against the common enemy.”
Their actions have included highly visible terror attacks in major
cities like Mumbai and Pune, abduction of public officials for ransom,
and coordinated attacks on military bases like the one not far from
where I was in 2010. A regular diet of individual,
Islamist-inspired crimes quietly plagues much of the country, as
well. In the Indian town of Meerut, for instance, only 65
kilometers (40 miles) from New Delhi, residents report frequent attacks
by a growing Islamic presence, including the murder of a Hindu community
leader only five days prior to my 2011 visit. In 2007, television
journalist Madhuri Singh uncovered the imposition of Sharia law in
Mundogarhi (also situated close to the Indian capital), which persists
despite the government’s efforts to retake legal control that followed
her revelations. India, unlike Pakistan, has not seen major
demonstrations protesting Bin Laden’s death, and its intelligence
services actually fights on our side in combating terrorism.
As critical as stopping a resurgent Taliban and its allies is to both
the United States and India, putting an effective halt to Chinese
expansion in the region is equally so. In March, the Chinese
hosted Karzai in Beijing where he was treated to closed-door meetings
with China’s highest officials. This “charm offensive,” as Tim
Sullivan of the American Enterprise Institute/Center for Defense Studies
calls it, resulted in “agreements on expanding economic cooperation,
ensuring favorable tariffs on Afghan exports, and creating scholarships
for technical training programs across a range of critical fields:
commerce, communications, education, health, economics, and
counternarcotics.” Not only is this designed to garner greater
Chinese control over South Asia and its considerable resources, but it
is also part of China’s greater strategy to encircle India; a strategy
that has included major efforts in Pakistan and Bangladesh (both with
strong Islamist elements), and Nepal (which is communist ruled).
Incredibly, rather than recognizing the threat to our common interests
and partnering with India to stop it, “the Obama administration is
practically rolling out an Afghan red carpet for China,” according to a
respected Asian affairs analyst out of Singapore.
It is all connected. On April 16, according to Matthew
Rosenberg, writing in the Wall Street Journal, “Pakistan is lobbying
Afghanistan’s president against building a long-term strategic
partnership with the U.S., urging him instead to look to Pakistan—and
its Chinese ally—for help in striking a peace deal with the Taliban and
rebuilding the economy, Afghan officials say.” The article goes on
to note that the effort came not from some rogue official but from
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani himself. Does that
sound like the words of an ally—no matter how Pakistan apologists try to
spin it?
There are several things the United States can and should do—now,
while we still have a strong presence in the region—starting with an
intensive diplomatic effort to engage India instead of China to further
American interests, not Chinese. With over 100,000 troops in
Afghanistan, the US still has the gravitas to influence events in the
country; and the best place to change direction and use that weight is
in Bamiyam, Wardak, and Parwan provinces. India is among several
countries bidding for right to extract iron ore from the enormous
Hagijak mine. Fifteen of the 22 companies bidding on the mine are
Indian, but India has two problems its Chinese competitors do not:
security with the mine located near the Afghan-Pakistan border and
transporting the minerals through hostile territory once they extract
them; and both can be solved in the same way that also will address some
other issues. The transport problem is less than 400 miles of
Pakistan that separates Afghanistan from India’s Punjab state.
Now, whereas we can expect Pakistan to balk at letting Indian goods (and
security forces) cross their territory, we should not expect them to
stop their ally—and financial benefactor—the United States. The
security and transport problems likely will keep the Indians from
getting the contract and consequently hand that mineral wealth to the
Chinese: India loses and so does the United States. But
changing the Indian bid to a joint venture with US transport and
security could be enough to overcome that. Moreover, the US
anticipates some presence in Afghanistan after major troop withdrawals,
and groups that help develop the nation’s mineral wealth and
infrastructure would be welcomed by the government in Kabul.
The Hagijak mine project is only the most obvious point at which the
India-US relationship can begin to provide a strong presence in
Afghanistan that can help stave off an impending foreign policy
disaster. While the details will vary, this is the sort of
initiative the Obama administration should be making now to protect our
interests, strengthen a strategic relationship with the one free nation
in the region, and counters China’s economic imperialism and its growing
strategic alliance in the Muslim world. Hagijak and Afghanistan
are only the beginning of what could be gained from such an
alliance. In a conversation last year in Chicago, former Indian
cabinet minister Dr. Swami Subramanian (an expert on regional economic
and political forces) laid out a plan that would transfer a major source
of Chinese economic power to the US and India.
For this effort to succeed, the United States and India would have to
recast their relationship as one of mutual respect between two great
and independent powers. Gone would be US animosity toward India
for its almost knee-jerk support for every UN measure that conforms to
the outdated leftist philosophy of the its “non-aligned movement”; gone
would be Indian animosity for US supporting Pakistan; and gone is the
almost craven political correctness with which both current governments
approach foreign policy, and especially the Muslim world and Islamic
threat. The current regime in India, as well as its counterpart in
the United States is guilty of appeasing terrorist entities (and
terror-supporting nations) and of looking the other way when their
immediate targets are not their own citizens; for example, India’s UN
support for the pro-Hamas Goldstone report and America’s refusal to
support Indian efforts against Lashkar e Taibe and the ISI.
How soon do we have to turn on a dime or face yet more denigration of
America’s international profile? On May 10, Rajiv Chandrasekaran
reported in The Washington Post that the Obama administration was
“seeking to use the killing of Osama bin Laden to accelerate a
negotiated settlement with the Taliban and hasten the end of the
Afghanistan war.” A negotiated settlement with the Taliban!
The clock is ticking, and America’s ability to influence events in the
country exists only to the extent that we are there. Once out of
the region, the US will be powerless to stop Islamist or Chinese
expansion to the detriment of our interests—unless we have an ally in
place that shares them.
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