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With Us or Against Us

Page 30

by Tony Judt


  European countries across the Atlantic.1Accordingly, the attitudes of

  Pakistanis toward the United States have been influenced essentially and

  almost exclusively by foreign policy considerations.

  From the 1980s onward, the question of whether the United States

  was for or against Pakistan has been generally recast in broad religious

  terms. People now posed the question of whether the United States

  was for or against Islam. This question was underlined by the public

  consensus that Pakistan as a premier Islamic country was inextricably

  linked with the destiny of the Muslim world. As an increasing number

  of inter-state and intra-state conflicts involved Muslims as underdogs

  in one or the other part of the world, the public in Pakistan grew

  restive and reared suspicions of the United States in its capacity as the

  architect of the post–Cold War world. Therefore, we need to discuss

  various shades of anti-Americanism in Pakistan in the context of regional

  and global changes.

  There have been various examples of sustained patterns of collective

  prejudice operating in Pakistan against various individual countries as

  well as idea-systems identified with them, respectively. Foremost among

  them is anti-communism. Pakistan inherited a foreign policy perspec-

  tive from British India, which was rooted in the suspicion of the Soviet

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  Anti-Americanism in Pakistan

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  Union as a country searching for a warm water port in Southern Asia.2

  From the perceived Soviet support of successive Afghan regimes,

  along with their Pakhtun irredentism, up to the Soviet incursion into

  Afghanistan in 1979 and beyond, Pakistan remained steadfastly anti-

  communist and anti-Soviet Union for most of the period after inde-

  pendence. Moscow’s occupation of the classic Islamic lands of Central

  Asia for over a century provided a base line for an ideational sanction

  against the USSR and its “atheist” philosophy of communism. As the

  Red Army withdrew from Afghanistan after the 1988 Geneva Accord,

  followed by the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the end of

  the Cold War, Pakistan tried to adjust itself to the new realities in the

  form of the emergent Central Asian Republics. However, the inter-

  state relations between the regional powers including Russia, China,

  India, Pakistan, and Iran and their conflicting or overlapping interests

  in Afghanistan, held back a real advance of Islamabad’s relations with

  Moscow. The lurking anti-Russian suspicions in Pakistan will perhaps

  continue to keep the country away from any real breakthrough in its

  relations with the polar bear in the near future.

  A similar historical legacy, though younger in age, operates in the

  field of Indo-Pakistan relations. Anti-Indianism is a legacy of the parti-

  tion in 1947. There is a widespread suspicion about India not accepting

  partition and, therefore, the moral legitimacy of Pakistan as an inde-

  pendent Muslim state. Also, India is widely understood as an aggressor

  in Kashmir, east Pakistan, and Siachin. Common perceptions about a

  bellicose India next door have generally shaped Pakistani attitudes

  toward secularism being the latter’s state “ideology.” On this side of

  the Indo-Pakistan border, secularism is perceived to be a ploy to under-

  mine Muslim nationalism in British India as reflected by the Two-Nation

  Theory. Pakistanis hold what they consider the bogus and fraudulent

  secularism responsible for regular discrimination against the Muslim

  minority in the context of contemporary Indian politics.3

  The third example of a persistent negative feeling among Pakistanis

  is anti-Zionism. This was born out of the creation of Israel in 1948.

  Even since the first wave of emigration of Palestinians at the hands of

  Israel after its birth, the latter has been the target of Muslim hatred in

  Pakistan as elsewhere for seeking to wipe the whole Palestinian nation

  off the map of the world. The profile of two Palestinian Intifadas is

  rooted in the scenes of Israeli tanks shooting stone-throwing young

  Palestinians, raising their houses, building Jewish settlements on the

  occupied lands, and denying basic human rights to Palestinians. Not

  surprisingly, the state and society in Pakistan carry an anti-Zionist

  feeling, which is intense, permanent, and uncompromising.4

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  M ohammad Waseem

  Pakistan’s perceptions about the United States are different in both

  content and style. First, there is no negative historical legacy of the

  United States. If at all, there is a memory of a fleeting moment in

  history close to partition when the United States pressed imperialist

  powers for decolonization. Nor was the United States remembered as

  an occupier of Muslim lands, as opposed to the Soviet Union. Its

  occupation of Afghanistan, by proxy, and Iraq, more directly, in the

  new millennium was to come later. Similarly, there was no legacy of

  war with America in Pakistan, whereas the latter had been in a persist-

  ent combat position vis-à-vis India. Indeed, there had been no direct

  war of any Muslim country with the United States up to the 1993 Gulf

  War against Iraq, which was professedly fought for a Muslim (Kuwaiti)

  cause. It is clear from these observations that anti-Americanism has

  had no historical and cultural roots in Pakistan. Therefore, it never

  acquired the status of an ideology unlike anti-Russian, anti-Indian, and

  anti-Zionist perspectives.5

  This, however, does not mean that there was no opposition to the

  American involvement in the political, economic, and strategic matters

  of Pakistan, either directly on a country-to-country basis or indirectly

  as part of the U.S. policy about the region as a whole. There is a long

  history of anti-Americanism in Pakistan, which needs to be under-

  stood in its proper context. The following sections outline three major

  categories of critical attitudes toward America in Pakistan:

  ● anti-Americanism: a friendship/betrayal model;

  ● anti-Americanism: a world of Islam perspective;

  ● anti-Americanism: an imperialist model.

  As far as the critical attitudes of the elite toward the United States are

  concerned, these have been generally issue-specific, such as the U.S.

  sanctions against Pakistan’s nuclear tests. For understanding this line

  of anti-Americanism, we need to analyze the more stable and consistent

  pattern of pro-Americanism among the ruling elite, which provided

  the context for emergence of a periodically negative attitude leading

  to a sense of betrayal of American friendship.

  Friendship–Betrayal Model

  The major source of Pakistani perceptions about the United States,

  both positive and negative, lies in the way the latter addressed Islamabad’s

  security concerns vis-à-vis India.6 The ruling elite in the country has

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  Anti-Americanism in Pakistan

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  remained steadfastly committed to American friendship as a potential

  equalizer in the context of the superior military power of India vis-à-vis
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  Pakistan. A secondary interest in Islamabad, which was indeed the first

  priority for Washington in the regional context, was the Soviet threat

  from the north. Whenever the two perspectives of Washington and

  Islamabad differed in terms of a joint commitment of diplomatic or

  strategic resources to one or the other or both, it led to exposure of

  Pakistan to what it considered a security threat, and hence to mistrust of

  Washington. This so-called official model of anti-Americanism is charac-

  terized by a sense of betrayal in the friendship with the United States.

  The American tilt in favor of India in the post-1962 NEFA war

  situation led to the first major disillusionment with Washington in

  Pakistan, which had become used to enjoying American support in

  and outside UN in its conflicts with India. This led to what can be

  considered the most important policy initiative in Pakistan’s history,

  namely turning to China, after the initial, and in the end even more

  consequential, initiative of turning West in the 1950s. The Pakistani

  establishment was shaken out of complacency because it had already

  started considering the American support as an immutable fact of life.

  A sense of betrayal of American friendship opened Pakistani diplo-

  macy to wider options in the East. It found China a willing partner in

  the new relationship, in the aftermath of the latter’s partial estrange-

  ment from the Soviet Union in 1959, and more recently the American

  tilt toward Delhi in an expedient mode of diplomacy.

  The downslide in Pakistan-U.S. relations continued up to the 1965

  Indo-Pakistan War, which led to the American embargo on supply of

  weapons to both countries. Islamabad felt deeply stung because it had

  virtually put all eggs in the American basket, as opposed to India,

  which had diversified its sources of arms supply over the years. The

  withdrawal of American strategic support was followed by a gradual

  decline of Washington’s economic assistance. The sense of frustration

  with the United States led to Ayub Khan’s description of the national

  destiny in terms of “friends not masters.”7 A series of events that were

  characterized by a sense of displeasure with Washington followed.

  During the 1971 Indo-Pakistan War, the promised arrival of the U.S.

  naval fleet “Enterprise” in the Bay of Bengal turned out to be a nonen-

  terprise and, therefore, a bleeding wound in the U.S.-Pakistan

  relationship within an hour of the latter’s defeat in Dhaka. Under

  Z.A. Bhutto, Pakistan received a stern warning from Henry Kissinger

  against harboring nuclear ambitions. The country remained under

  the U.S. embargo from 1976 to 1981. The civil and military establish-

  ment and the articulate public, in general, became fiercely critical

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  M ohammad Waseem

  of what they considered the American discriminatory acts against

  Pakistan.

  The Soviet incursion into Afghanistan finally opened up a new

  chapter in the history of Pakistan-U.S. relations as it led to a close

  strategic alliance between the two countries, almost fulfilling the orig-

  inal purpose of Pakistan’s entry into the U.S.-led military alliances,

  CENTO and SEATO. There was an obvious overlap in the aims and

  objectives of the two countries as they got deeply engaged in the

  Afghan conflict. For the United States, it was the presence of the Red

  Army in Afghanistan, which remained a critical factor in its decision to

  build up a resistance movement against Kabul in the first place. It did

  so despite its deep suspicions about Pakistan’s nuclear program. In

  this context, the U.S. withdrawal of support for Afghan mujahideen

  after the signing of the 1988 Geneva Accord and departure of the Red

  Army from Kabul in 1989 was bound to create misgivings among

  Pakistanis. The presidential noncertification of Pakistan’s nuclear

  weapons program for the next decade, as per the Pressler Amendment,

  kept Pakistanis tense and, therefore, committed to the idea of the

  United States as a nondependable ally.

  Toward the end of the 1990s, Pakistan came under heavy U.S.

  sanctions after deciding to launch nuclear tests on May 28, 1998 as a

  response to the Indian nuclear tests of May 11. These were followed

  by the “democracy sanctions” after the 1999 military coup. Among

  various hiccups on the way, the nondelivery of F-16 fighter planes

  for which Pakistan had already paid and then the non-reimbursement

  of the payment for several years created deep misgivings in Islamabad.

  It looked as if the 1996 Brown Amendment only temporarily put

  a halt to the decline of Pakistan–American relations. It was only after

  the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon that the

  two countries rediscovered each other, much the same way as they did

  in the 1950s and 1980s. The post-9/11 resumption of the U.S. inter-

  est in Pakistan as a partner in its war against terrorism has enkindled a

  new spirit of friendship between the two countries. In the year

  2002–2003, the cycle of friendship–betrayal moves along, and efforts

  are afoot on the part of President Musharraf to keep Washington tied

  down to the region.

  The periodical and recurrent gap in the Pakistan–American friendship

  can be defined in terms of an overlap in the objectives of the two coun-

  tries: for Pakistan, strong ties with an external “equalizer” vis-à-vis its

  much stronger adversary next door is the first principle of foreign policy.

  For the United States, disappointment with India’s unwillingness to join

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  Anti-Americanism in Pakistan

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  its Cold War against the Soviet Union was the prime reason to align

  with Pakistan in the first place. The United States never supported any

  of Pakistan’s wars with India, be it the 1965 War or the 1971 War, or

  Siachin in 1984 or Kargil in 1999. But the United States joined

  Pakistan’s war effort in support of Mujahideen fighting the Soviet

  forces in Afghanistan from 1981 to 1989. Not surprisingly, a sense of

  betrayal on the part of the ruling elite in Islamabad set in throughout

  the 1990s as the United States withdrew from its active presence in

  the region, leaving Pakistan to deal with millions of Afghan refugees

  on its soil.8

  Washington and Islamabad experienced not only periodical shifts in

  the patterns of their strategic alliance, thus leading to anti-Americanism

  of the variety of friendship–betrayal syndrome in Pakistan, but also

  a consistent pattern of their willingness to understand each other’s

  exclusive commitments. For example, Pakistan and the United States

  voted frequently on opposite sides of the UN resolutions about vari-

  ous contentious issues. These included Arab–Israel wars, apartheid

  in South Africa, specific human rights issues, NPT, and CTBT. The

  official and nonofficial responses to the American stance on some of

  these issues ranged from outright criticism of Washington to allega-

  tions of anti-Islamic discrimination. The U.S. support for Israel and the

  U.S. nuc
lear nonproliferation regime in general elicited strong anti-U.S.

  reactions from the elite as well as the public in Pakistan.

  It is not surprising that the sense of betrayal at the hands of the

  United States often led to active consideration of rival–friendship

  patterns. Enthusiasm for friendship with China is proverbial in Pakistan.

  The political leadership, military elite, public intelligentsia, as well as

  Islamic groups have all shown great admiration for the Chinese friend-

  ship, which is described as permanent and unflinching. Similarly, Pakistan

  crucially and pronouncedly befriended Sukarno’s Indonesia during

  and after the 1965 War as well as Kaddafi’s Libya during and after

  the 1971 War. However, after the dawn of the era of Petrodollar in

  the post-1973 Arab–Israel war period, millions of Pakistani workers

  migrated to Saudi Arabia. There followed a vast networking of Islamic

  organizations, banking operations, media activities, and economic

  cooperation between the two countries. Saudi Arabia reportedly helped

  Pakistan through its financial crisis in the aftermath of the 1998 nuclear

  tests. In the hour of the perceived betrayal by the United States,

  Pakistan has continued to invoke its “real” and lasting friendship with

  both China and Saudi Arabia. However, the fact that Pakistan’s

  foreign policy is inherently India-centered has put a constraint on the

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  M ohammad Waseem

  strategic impact of Pak–Saudi and Pak–China relations. Neither China

  nor Saudi Arabia could fulfill Pakistan’s perceived security require-

  ments and the need for diplomatic support in world forums. In the

  year 2002–2003, Pakistan continued to cooperate with the United

  States for a joint operation against terrorism. However, in the long

  run, the elite in Islamabad can be expected to revert to its old position

  of considering Washington as nondependable ally when the latter

  withdraws from active alignment with Pakistan in the region. Its fears

  about the Indian and Israeli lobbies in Washington achieving exactly

  that has generally kept Islamabad on its toes.

  The World of Islam Perspective

  If India was the crucial factor in Islamabad’s quest for an external

 

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