After reading the below article and doing research, discuss what role the fall of the British Empire had on the issues in the Afghanistan, Pakistan and India region today. Specifically address decisions or actions taken during and after the British Empire and their direct effect on current events within the region.
Pakistan Replays the 'Great Game'
Mr. Husain Haqqani
Far Eastern Economic Review, October, 2005
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=17642
For over two years, Abdul Latif Hakimi regularly telephoned Pakistani and Western reporters and described himself as the spokesman for Afghanistan’s Taliban. He claimed responsibility on behalf of the Taliban for several terrorist attacks. In June, when a MH-47 helicopter was shot down during an antiguerrilla mission in Afghanistan’s Kunar province bordering Pakistan, killing all 16 U.S. troops on board, Hakimi reported the incident to the media before U.S. or Afghan officials. Hakimi’s claims were often exaggerated or even totally fabricated. But no one doubted that he was based in Pakistan and that he spoke on behalf of the Taliban.
Hakimi’s telephone press conferences and interviews, conducted on satellite and cell phones, offered an embellished version of an emerging ground reality. After being toppled from power in the aftermath of 9/11, the Taliban have reconstituted themselves in part of the Afghan countryside as an insurgent force, especially in provinces dominated by the Pashtun ethnic group along the Pakistan-Afghan border.
Since the beginning of 2005, casualties in Afghanistan have been rising. Some 84 American soldiers and 1,400 Afghans have been killed this year, more than any year since the arrival of U.S. forces in 2001. The Taliban insurgency is weak and not yet as threatening as the challenge in Iraq. But Afghan insurgents are clearly getting arms, money and training. Through propaganda of the type waged by Hakimi, the Taliban are also recruiting new members.
When Pakistani authorities announced on Oct. 4 that Hakimi had been arrested in the southwestern city of Quetta, just across the border from the Taliban’s traditional support base of Kandahar, officials in Afghanistan were not impressed. Why had it taken the Pakistanis so long to silence Hakimi when he operated freely in Pakistan for over two years, they asked. What about other Taliban leaders who roam the streets of Quetta and other Pakistani cities and towns quite openly?
Pakistan’s decision to arrest the Taliban spokesman was attributed to relentless U.S. pressure. Days before Hakimi’s arrest, U.S. officials reportedly raised the issue of the Taliban operating freely in Pakistan during meetings with President Pervez Musharraf in New York.
U.S. officials are usually restrained in publicly criticizing Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the war against terrorism, for fear of embarrassing the country’s pro-U.S. military strong man, Gen. Musharraf. But last summer U.S. ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad questioned Pakistan’s commitment to eliminating the Taliban in an interview just before leaving Afghanistan for his new assignment in Iraq. Ambassador Khalilzad wondered why Pakistan’s security services could not find Hakimi and another deputy to Taliban leader Mullah Omar, Akhtar Usmani, when they were readily available to the media and occasionally gave interviews to Pakistani television channels.
U.S. and Afghan officials realize that it will be difficult to bring lasting peace to Afghanistan if the Taliban and other enemies of President Hamid Karzai’s government continue to find sanctuary in Pakistan. Notwithstanding the high profile arrest of the Taliban spokesman, there is no evidence that Pakistan is about to sever all links with the Taliban or to give up its dreams of a client state in Afghanistan.
During the war against the Soviets, Pakistan’s military leader General Zia ul-Haq had adopted a policy that would bleed the Soviets without goading then into direct confrontation with Pakistan. Pakistani intelligence officers used the metaphor “the water must not get too hot” to describe that policy.
It seems that Pakistan is pursuing a similar policy in relation to Afghanistan today. By allowing the Taliban to regroup and mount insurgent attacks across the border, Pakistan’s hopes to make it clear to Afghan leaders such as Mr. Karzai that they cannot stabilize their country without Pakistan’s help. At the same time, Pakistan does not want the situation to reach the point of inviting U.S. reprisals.
Ties between Pakistan and the Taliban date back to the founding of the movement in 1994. Then, the Taliban—Pashtun students of madrassas, or Islamic seminaries—rose to end the bitter civil war that had ravaged Afghanistan for almost two years after the collapse of a pro-Communist government. Pakistan had fueled the civil war as well, trying to promote the cause of its client Islamist leaders, especially Gulbeddin Hekmatyar, who earned notoriety by raining rockets on Kabul in a bid to wrest control of Afghanistan’s capital.
Pakistan’s role, with U.S. help, as the staging ground for the guerrilla war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan between 1979 and 1988 is widely known. What is less well known is Pakistan’s historic concern with extending its influence into Afghanistan long before the arrival of Soviet troops in Afghanistan. Pakistan’s attitude toward Afghanistan was formed largely by historic developments of the 19th century when Britain and Russia competed for influence in Central Asia in the “Great Game” of espionage and proxy wars.
Concerns about security against Russia pushed the frontier of British India westward and the British lost precious lives in their effort to directly control Afghanistan. Recognizing Afghanistan as a buffer between the British and Russian empires saved both from having to confront each other militarily. By accepting a neutral and independent Afghan Kingdom the British sought to pass on the burden of subduing some of the tribes the imperialists considered lawless to a local monarch, albeit with British economic and military assistance.
Afghanistan’s frontier with British India was drawn by a British civil servant, Sir Mortimer Durand, in 1893 and agreed upon by representatives of both governments. The border, named the Durand Line, intentionally divided Pashtun tribes living in the area, to prevent them from becoming a nuisance for the Raj. On their side of the frontier, the British created autonomous tribal agencies, controlled by British political officers with the help of tribal chieftains whose loyalty was ensured through regular subsidies. The British used force to put down sporadic uprisings in the tribal areas but generally left the tribes alone in return for stability along the frontier.
Adjacent to the autonomous tribal agencies were the “settled” Pashtuns living in towns and villages under direct British rule. Here, too, the Pashtuns were divided between the Northwest Frontier province and Baluchistan. Although Muslim, the Pashtuns generally sided with the cause of anti-British Indian nationalism and were late, and reluctant, in embracing the Muslim separatism of the All India Muslim League’s campaign for Pakistan. When the majority of British India’s Muslims voted for the creation of Pakistan, the Pashtuns elected leaders who emphasized ethnic pride over a religious national identity.
After Pakistan’s independence from Britain in 1947, Pakistani leaders assumed that Pakistan would inherit the functions of India’s British government in guiding Afghan policy. But soon after Pakistan’s independence, Afghanistan voted against Pakistan’s admission to the United Nations, arguing that Afghanistan’s treaties with British India relating to Afghan borders were no longer valid because a new country was being created where none existed at the time of these treaties. Afghanistan demanded the creation of a Pashtun state, “Pashtunistan,” which would link the Pashtun tribes living in Afghanistan with those in the nwfp and Baluchistan. There were also ambiguous demands for a Baluch state “linking Baluch areas in Pakistan and Iran with a small strip of adjacent Baluch territory in Afghanistan.”
From Pakistan’s perspective, this amounted to demanding the greater part of Pakistan’s territory and was clearly unacceptable. The Afghan demand failed to generate international backing, and Afghanistan did not have the military means to force Pakistan’s hand.
Although India publicly did not support the Afghan claim, Pakistan’s early leaders could not separate the Afghan questioning of Pakistani borders from their perception of an Indian grand design against Pakistan. They wanted to limit Indian influence in Afghanistan to prevent Pakistan from being “crushed by a sort of pincer movement” involving Afghanistan stirring the ethnic cauldron in Pakistan and India stepping in to undo the partition of the subcontinent. Pakistan’s response was a forward policy of encouraging Afghan Islamists that would subordinate ethnic nationalism to Islamic religious sentiment.
Pakistan’s concern about the lack of depth in Pakistan’s land defenses led to the Pakistani generals’ strategic belief about the fusion of the defense of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Pakistan’s complicated role in Afghanistan beginning well before the Soviet invasion of 1979 and through the rise and fall of the Taliban can best be understood in light of this desire.
Pakistan’s position as the principal foreign player in Afghanistan following the Soviet withdrawal changed with the arrival of American and NATO forces in the aftermath of Al-Qaeda’s terrorist attacks in the United States on Sept. 11, 2001. Pakistan has recognized that changed situation, deferring a great deal to American concerns. But it has clearly not abandoned its long-term national objective of ensuring that the government in Kabul is subordinate to Pakistan’s regional agenda.
Pakistan provided crucial logistics and vital intelligence support when the U.S. went to war to topple the Taliban from power. Initially, Pakistan had hoped for a role for some Pakistani clients in the new government in Kabul and had floated the idea of “moderate Taliban” joining the future Afghan government. Although Taliban leaders were completely excluded from the interim government formed in 2001, they have been allowed by President Karzai to participate in parliamentary elections upon renouncing violence.
But Mr. Karzai and other Afghan nationalists remain unwilling to accept Pakistan’s vision of Afghanistan as a subordinate state. Afghanistan maintains close ties with India and expects to pursue an independent foreign policy. Although Pakistan is engaged in a peace process with India, its generals remain fearful of Indian domination. India’s size coupled with its economic and military might make its ascendancy inevitable, but that does not deter Pakistan from pursuing options of low intensity and subconventional warfare for greater regional influence. The decision to continue to back or tolerate the Taliban is part of Pakistan’s grand design for positioning itself as a major player in a contemporary version of the Great Game.
Pakistan will crack down on the Taliban, and give up the option of supporting Islamist insurgents in Indian-controlled Kashmir, only when it finds the cost of positioning itself as a major regional power unbearable. The U.S. could help Pakistan realize the dangers of persisting with its traditional policies by refusing to publicly pretend that it is unaware of Pakistan’s regional double-dealing. An American-brokered accord between Pakistan and Afghanistan to end the latent dispute over the Durand Line, coupled with international guarantees to end Pakistan’s meddling in Afghanistan, might be the minimum requirements for durable peace in the region where the 9/11 plot to attack the U.S. was hatched.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
During and after WWI the British Empire had control of India. With control of India the British used India man power to gain control of the Afghanistan, Pakistan region. After gaining control of the region, the British made changes that would help benefit them. However when Pakistan got its independence from the Britain in 1947, Pakistan started making decision of their own. Much like the United States did and like the Pakistan we made decision that would benefit us not Britain. When Pakistan gained its independence from the British Empire, the empire stated losing control of the region. When the Russians and British were competing for influence in Central Asia, the British started loss control of India and that reflected on Afghanistan. When the Russian went into Afghanistan in 1979 the British lost all control, and from 1979 to 1988 Russian fought for control, but later pulled out. So for many years the Region was under control of many other governments and didn’t get a change to lead them self. From looking at our own history once a government starts leading for them self. Mistakes will be made and those mistakes will be like, the butterfly effect in time.
ReplyDeleteWCN
The fall of the British empire had a negative effect on not only Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India but the whole region. IE left the above mentioned vulnerable, unorganized, unstable, uneducated concerning the rest of the civilized world, and more importantly "unfinished business"; meaning the Uk had started to impliment Government and organization and did not complete the mission. thus leading to the problems of today. The pre-WWI tug of war between the British and Russia left an open door to Afghanistan. Pakistan and India were and still are concerned over who has more influence over the region. The British concerns of Russia advancing thru Central Asia led to Anglo-Afgan wars. These wars cost the British losses in military lives, repect, and inspired the unruly tribes that one day they will rule on their own. The British not making the decision to gain FULL control of Afghanistan during the 19th century in fear of not engaging Russia in a full scale war left that part of the region unstable. We, today are left with finishing what the UK started. That is "stabalizing the region, balancing of power and restore world peace".
ReplyDeleteSL
The British government used the area between Afghanistan and India as a buffer to slow the influence from the Russians. The creation of the Durand Line created several rings of protection that would slow a invasion from the Russians if one would happen. The British government kept the Durand line agreement going by subsides paid to the tribal elders.
ReplyDeleteThe British Empire's influence on the region of India was always a brittle one. The larger more influential religious power the Hindu's wanted more control of there country. In the early 1900's Allen Hume a Englishman helped the Indian people form the Indian National Congress. In this Congress the Muslims did not have any say against the larger Hindu power base. This angered the Muslim contingent which leaded to them leaving the Congress and forming the Muslim League. Both parties started pressuring the British Government for independence.
In 1915 Mohandas Gandhi arrived in India and started spreading the idea of a independent Indian state done though peaceful protesting he learned while in England and South Africa. Gandhi's pressure on the British Government helped create a independent law making body in India but the British Government had the final say on every law. The people of India where not satisfied (Muslim or Hindu).
At the start of World War II the British Government automaticly entered the India country on the side of the Allies. This angered the Indian Congress and the Hindu congregation left. After the War, Lord Mountbatten created a independent Muslim state and gave India its independence as well. This created a rush of people from both countries to run across the borders in fear of reprisal from the extremists from both religions. In turn the country of Afghanistan did not reconize the new country of Pakistan because it did not exist at the time of the Durant Agreement.
The power vacuum that was left after the exit of the British left several border squabbles especially in Kashmer to this day.
When the communist Russians invaded Afghanistan the American government invested Billions in the Pakistani using them a a outlet to arms into Afghanistan which gave the Pakistanis a ticket into Afghanistan because of there location. Pakistan continues to help Afghanistan when they feel the need to by arresting terrorists when the time is just right so that the world sees that they support the war on terrorism. This gives the world a feeling that Pakistan is a leading ally even though they help for there own interest.
JEJ for above comment.
ReplyDeleteSL
ReplyDeleteI agree fully with your analyze on pre- wwI tug of war with Afghanistan. Since the British and Russia were having a tug of war this left a lot of work not done. With two other governments wanting control of one meant that nothing would get done in Afghanistan. When the British pull out of Indian, they lost power and influence in the area. Afghanistan, Pakistan lost control, Indian however did a better job on keeping control since they had a good running government before British rule.
WCN
JEJ
ReplyDeleteI like your analyze in the British use the Durand Line as a buffer between Russians and Afghanistan. In my opinion the US did the same thing, but instead of using manpower they used money. By investing large among of money into the area, would keep the Russians busy with Afghanistan and not with the US.
WCN
WCN
ReplyDeleteAs you stated, I would agree that ALL CONTROL had been lost once Russia tried to control/dictate the "then present" and future of Afghanistan. This open the door for Pakistan to esblish itself as a power in that region, while India was moving forward as well.
SL
JEJ
ReplyDeleteI agree with your comment of Pakistan "when they feel the need" to intervene. Pakistan would love nothing more than Afghanistan to fail so they can strip as much as possible from what is left. We all can probably agree that Pakistan benefited from the US backing "financially and technology".
SL
The region that is today known as Afghanistan was long torn by cultural and tribal rivalries. The British Empire was just looking for an advancement. They were greedy and sought only for their own expansion. They left a world of chaos that now has caused even more trouble today. " The border, named the Durand Line, intentionally divided Pashtun tribes living in the area, to prevent them from becoming a nuisance for the Raj. On their side of the frontier, the British created autonomous tribal agencies, controlled by British political officers with the help of tribal chieftains whose loyalty was ensured through regular subsidies. The British used force to put down sporadic uprisings in the tribal areas but generally left the tribes alone in return for stability along the frontier.Concerns about security against Russia pushed the frontier of British India westward and the British lost precious lives in their effort to directly control Afghanistan. Recognizing Afghanistan as a buffer between the British and Russian empires saved both from having to confront each other militarily. I went on to do further research and found a article on the daily news they stated that "Pakistan has harbored, trained, and protected Al Qaeda. The Taliban were created in Pakistan. Pakistan has fostered Islamist militants and a Jihadi culture for decades, for use as a proxy army against India in Kashmir. The country has radicalized her population by framing the Kashmir conflict in global Islamic Jihad context."
ReplyDeleteNS
When the British Empire left the region, stability in government and rule was not there leaving a vacuum of many trying to gain control. This is seen when Pakistan convinced Afgan Islamists to Islamic religious sentiment over the ethnic nationalism influenced by the Indian government. This way of thinking can be seen today in Islamic extremist such as the Al-Qaeda and Taliban. The belief that religion is over a governments way. Today Pakistan is playing both sides of the fence ever so gently. Giving U.S. intelligence against terrorist cells finding refuge yet they don't go out of their way to arrest those who are in Pakistan.
ReplyDeleteMRJ
SL
ReplyDeleteI agree with your comment. It seems that the US is in the same situation as before with British and Russia while they were in Afghanistan.
MRJ
WCN
ReplyDeleteI agree that there will be a butterfly affect with all in the Afghan/Pakistan region until some sort of stability of great magnitude is established.
MRJ
I agree, history is repeating itself. There needs to be a solution inorder to stop those that are crossing boundaries. It is true they do believe that religion rules over governement. And it's only causing more chaos and violence.
ReplyDeleteNS
I think that this was a great point that was brought up in an above comment "We, today are left with finishing what the UK started. That is "stabalizing the region, balancing of power and restore world peace." I agree because we today are trying to do that and more. It takes time and persistence. And it takes a long fight to the end.
ReplyDeleteNS
It’s obvious that Pakistan is still playing the “Great Game” as Mr. Haqqani alluded to in this article. If you look back at the history of the region as this article did, you can certainly say that the British had some influence in creating the borders and the hostility between the countries segregated by them. Starting in 1893 with the Durand Line, the British influenced the formation of borders in the region that eventually lead to the creation of Pakistan. The Pashtuns in the region out of anti-British sentiment bonded with their fellow India Muslims to eventually declare independence of Pakistan from Britain in 1947. Without this common hatred towards the British, maybe the Islamic country of Pakistan would have taken a different form. Regardless, the British at the time saw Afghanistan as a buffer between itself and the Russian empire and it used the tribes in what is now Pakistan to influence affairs in Afghanistan to keep its buffer area somewhat stable and under its control. The problem today is that Pakistan still sees itself as the influential big brother to Afghanistan. Today, Pakistan has a national security interest in Afghanistan and tries to influence the politics and government of Afghanistan. Pakistan knows its greatest threat is India to its East, and it can’t afford to have another enemy on its West in Afghanistan. Our nation is now paying the price for these sequences of events. Pakistan wouldn’t mind seeing a moderate Muslim Taliban government in charge in Afghanistan; it would be considered an ally against its struggle with India. Yet at the same time, Pakistan is pretending helping Americans to fight war on terrorism which they really aren’t.
ReplyDeleteBL
On 14 August Pakistan celebrates the 60th anniversary of independence from the United Kingdom. On the following day, so does India. Both states shared administration, territory and cultures for more than 100 years, under the governance of the British Empire. But with the advent of independence, they decided to divide the Indian subcontinent into two states: one Muslim and one Hindu. With de-colonisation the modern Commonwealth was born.
ReplyDeleteSixty years later, economic indicators do not leave Musharraf’s government in too difficult a situation, since he has managed to reduce inflation substantially and reach high GDP growth rates. In this way, political instability and a lack of security are the main points that distinguish the two countries on this anniversary.
Without the British, neighbouring relations over these last few decades have been more than tense. The two countries have faced three wars, two of which over the disputed territory of Kashmir. This confrontation has provoked an escalation that has lead both nations to develop nuclear arms, something which has involved them in international sanctions for almost three decades. These sanctions have seriously damaged their economies, which have only been seen to be improving in the last few years, when they began to collaborate in the war on terror.
AL
NS
ReplyDeleteI agree with the advancement of Great Briton into the middle east it placed the local tribesman under the thumb of the crown because they did not know any better that they where being ruled. The British where very intelligent into the way they handled business, they conquer you but then put locals in control while having a viceroy control him. Every example of a country claiming independence from the crown was when a local was educated in the English school system and returned to his country with the tools to refute colonialism.
JEJ
AL,
ReplyDeletePakistan has improved its economy over the last couple of years but how have they done it. The floods this year showed that its infrastructure is very fragile and it could not evacuate its own people. You have to wonder if more manufacturing jobs have been created or has the Pakistani government siphoned so much money from the British and Americans that naturally the economy has improved.
JEJ
AL,
ReplyDeleteI think you are absolutely right about political instability and a lack of security being the main points that distinguish the two countries. Pakistan is a developing country and its economy is the world’s 27th largest economy based on its purchasing power. However, the country remained impoverished due to internal political disturbances and negligible foreign investment since its independence. According to economywatch.com,From the year 2001 to 2007, Islamabad raised the development spending and as a result, the country’s poverty level reduced by 10%. Also, the economy grew between 2004-07 due to rise in GDP from 5 to 8%. However, the year 2007 witnessed a lot of political and economic instability that lead to depreciation of Pakistani rupee (Pakistan’s money). India, on the other hand, has the world’s largest democracy and a fairly stable government. India does have some internal security concerns, but nothing like the troubles Pakistan faces with the Taliban and other lawless tribes living near the Afghanistan border. Let's not forgot that India and Pakistan bitterly hate each other, and they focus their security on the external threat from each other.
BL