




With crises piling up in Pakistan, Time too inquires into America’s role. It notes the repeated mismatch between policies neatly made in Washington and the reality on the Pakistani street. Also, it emphasises the US’s explicit support to military rulers: “Ironically, American support for military dictators has been in the pursuit of US interests not in Pakistan but in neighbouing countries — to balance Soviet influence in India or to defeat Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan. But the US has rarely kept its eye on the ball. In the 1980s, Washington aided the regime of General Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, using Pakistan as a fulcrum to help pry the Soviet army out of Afghanistan. The policy succeeded — but when victory was assured, the US lost interest, while thousands of young Muslim extremists who had been armed to combat the communists turned their weapons against Pakistan and the US. With perverse timing, Washington deserted the elected but unstable governments that followed Zia and imposed economic and military sanctions on Pakistan for its effort to develop nuclear weapons. ‘That’s where we began to lose Pakistan,’ says (General) Zinni. Since 9/11, the US has cozied up to Pakistan once more. More than $10 billion in US aid has flowed into Pakistan since 2001, most of it intended to fund the fights against al-Qaeda and remnants of the Taliban. But US officials acknowledge that much of the cash has been diverted to defence programs aimed at India, itself now a US ally.”
... contd.


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