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CARNEGIE
ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE: PAKISTAN - MORE EFFECTIVE
COUNTERTERRORISM:
25/01/08
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / - 25
January 2007 -- The
United States must shift its counterterrorism policy towards Pakistan away
from a reciprocal approach—requiring Islamabad to perform desirable actions
to receive support—towards one encouraging Pakistan to enact effective
counterterrorism policies, not for an immediate payoff, but to strengthen
institutionalized trust with the U.S. over time, according to a new report
from the Carnegie Endowment.
In Pakistan
and the War on Terror: Conflicted Goals, Compromised Performance,
Carnegie Senior Associate Ashley J. Tellis points to growing dissatisfaction in
the United States with the Musharraf regime’s commitment to counterterrorism
operations, given the influx of U.S. aid. But while Pakistan’s performance in
the “war on terror” has fallen short of expectations, Islamabad’s
inability to defeat terrorist groups cannot simply be explained by neglect or
lack of motivation. U.S. policy makers must take into account the specific and
complex counterterrorism challenges facing Pakistan and move away from their
current unsustainable policies.
Tellis
will present the findings of his paper at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI)
in London this Friday, January 25th from 4:45 to 6:00 p.m. In the immediate
follow up to President Pervez Musharraf’s keynote speech at RUSI, Tellis and
Carnegie Visiting Scholar Frederic Grare will provide first-hand commentary on
Pakistan’s political environment, the February elections, relations with the
United States, and greater regional implications, including the campaign in
Afghanistan. For more information, please contact Yolanda Fernandez Ruiz at yfernandez@ceip.org,
+32 2 735 56 50.
Tellis
recommends nine strategies for more effective U.S. counterterrorism policies
towards Pakistan:
-
Speak
clearly and forcefully to Musharraf in private about U.S. frustrations with
Pakistan’s counterterrorism performance to outline the prospective
consequences inaction will have on the U.S.-Pakistan relationship.
-
Continue
to encourage Pakistan’s border control efforts, but prioritize the
targeting of Taliban leadership operating in Pakistan as part of the current
counterterrorism concept of operations.
-
Restructure
the intelligence relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan to allow both
the CIA and coalition forces in Afghanistan to acquire greater insight into
existing terrorist networks inside Pakistan.
-
Continue
to assist Pakistan with technology and training to prosecute small-unit
counterterrorism operations more effectively.
-
Reform
accounting practices to ensure effective oversight and auditing of coalition
funds disbursed to Pakistan for counterterrorism operations.
-
The
reestablishment of stable democratic order is essential to stop Pakistan’s
spiraling descent into extremism and disorder. The United States must
integrate the ongoing political transition in Pakistan, including a return
to democracy and rule of law, into the larger war on terrorism.
-
Commit
to long-term assistance for the Karzai government in Afghanistan to address
the vacuum of governance, particularly with regards to security, economic
development, and narcotics production.
-
Commit
more manpower and material contributions to help NATO live up to its
security obligations in Afghanistan.
-
Accelerate
the raising of the Afghan National Army (ANA) as a hedge against the
possible failure of NATO to restructure the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) to effectively fight and win the war in Afghanistan.
“The
Bush administration ought to persist with its current emphasis on the
noncoercive engagement of Pakistan at least so long as there is a reasonable
hope that the transformation of Pakistan into a moderate Muslim state is not a
lost cause, that the Musharraf regime can be persuaded to expand its
counterterrorism operations to those groups that have thus far remained beyond
reach, and that the United States will have sufficient opportunity to switch to
an alternative strategy before the present attempt at engagement is judged to
have failed irremediably.”
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., Pakistan,
Counterterrorism
~~~~~
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