The research project that culminated in the 2006 publication of Fortifying Pakistan began
in 2004, when I was a new researcher at the United States Institute of
Peace (USIP). My boss, Paul Stares, (now at the Council on Foreign
Relations) hired me to initiate a South Asia research program. This
project was not an easy sell. Most of Washington had long decided that
Pakistan was our most allegiant ally in the war on terrorism. That
attitude endured until the Obama administration came into office.
Simply
put: It was blasphemous to suggest, in 2004, that then-president
Musharraf was playing a both sides with Washington. The Bush
administration could not countenance such a possibility, or even
consider the plausibility of it, given that its attention and resources
were focused on Iraq.
Historians
will judge the American Pakistan policy with confusion and contempt.
They will logically ask why the Americans continued to treat Pakistan as
a partner when it undermined so many salient American interests in the
region. They will ask why the American tax payer continued to aid and
arm Pakistan, even though it was responsible for the deaths of thousands
of Americans and NATO allies in Afghanistan and the deaths of tens of
thousands of Afghan allies, in and out of uniform. They will ask why the
US government was unable or unwilling to see that Pakistan was not a
problematic ally, but rather, a hostile state that cynically manipulated
and exploited an impotent and incompetent America.
For
years, I hoped that American policy makers would begin appreciating
these facts, and change course, rather than wait for our sons and
daughters to write this scathing history long after such revelations
ceased to matter.
With
the US military presence in Afghanistan winding town, there is still
time to hold Pakistan to account and begin treating it like the hostile
state it is, rather than as the challenging ally so many policy makers
delude themselves into believing. This will require courage and
leadership across the political spectrum. Unfortunately, such qualities
seem chronically lacking in the contemporary American landscape.