|
|
Will There
Always Be a Pakistan?
As another 30,000 U.S. troops get
set to deploy to war, most everyone in the White House and the
Pentagon knows that the success of their mission won’t only be
determined in Afghanistan. The most important battle is in fact
next door in Pakistan, a country that, even more than Afghanistan,
risks not just failure but utter collapse. The nuclear neighbor
has become a haven for Taliban and al Qaeda fighters, and its
powerful military has been reluctant to take them on. Even when it
has, its clumsy, heavy-handed tactics have displaced hundreds of
thousands of civilians. All the while, the elected government of
President Asif Ali Zardari has only grown weaker.
But here’s the really bad news. Pakistan’s military -- the
lynchpin keeping the chaotic whole together -- isn’t getting
stronger. It’s threatening to fracture from within. And today’s
fractures may well turn into tomorrow’s chaos. Back in the
mid-19th century, the British set out to create a secular,
professional Indian army that would neutralize warring ethnic
groups and tribes. Pakistan was part of India then, and its army
remained secular after the partition in 1947. Officer clubs served
liquor. Religion and ethnicity were not proper subjects of
discussion. Muslim society was something that existed outside the
military. Pakistan’s generals looked to standardized testing and
merit-based promotion, drawing on modernity, not Islam, as a model
for their professional army.
When Gen. Muhammed Zia ul-Haq overthrew Prime Minister Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto in 1977, he had other ideas. Zia assumed the presidency
in 1978 while still chief of staff of the Army -- a position from
which he encouraged greater religiosity in Pakistan’s armed forces
as part of his broader Islamization of the state. Suddenly,
military leaders were keeping tabs on which sects of Islam their
soldiers belonged to. Members of radical Deoband and Wahhabi sects
infused the military education system. Drinking at military clubs
was forbidden, with a predictably chilling effect on camaraderie.
Prayers once thought optional were strongly encouraged.
Some of this was merely a product of the times; Zia’s opposition
to the Soviet invasion in Afghanistan, for instance, was largely
predicated on the religious fervor of the Afghan resistance. But
Zia’s Islamizing policies within the Army were more deliberate.
Whether motivated by piety or political calculation, he reopened
the fissures within the contemporary Pakistani military that
British colonial policy had never wholly succeeded in papering
over. Indeed, when Zia died in a 1988 plane crash, the
Islamization of the military and its most powerful spy agency, the
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), continued. By the time Pervez
Musharraf tried to return the military to its more secular roots
as Army chief of staff, the trend was already too strong to
reverse.
In 1999, Musharraf removed from power Nawaz Sharif, who had been
re-elected to a second term as prime minister. His coup reinforced
Pakistan’s history as a military-run state, and 10 years later,
the risk of a coup still looms. Meanwhile, the wave of officers
who were recruited during Zia’s Islamizing years is moving into
the leadership ranks. The youngest of them are now field-grade
officers. Signs are emerging that this is far from a unified
military, with widening splits between secular and religious
officers as well as problems among different Islamic sects. With
official encouragement, for example, some Sunni officers have
decided to grow out their beards, while Shiite officers are
markedly absent from Sunni-led prayers.
In Pakistan, all this means more than just a troubled fighting
force. The Army is rightly seen as the country’s strongest
institution -- the glue that holds the state together. Though not
officially in power, the military has a strong hold over the
civilian government and retains de facto veto power over much that
gets done. If infighting weakens or shatters the military’s
cohesion, the implications for the future of the state itself are
dire.
First, such events would be great news to Islamists looking to get
their hands on nuclear weapons. Pakistan’s nukes are even more
likely to see action if a military officer seized power and
invaded Indian-held Kashmir, the territory that both Islamabad and
New Delhi claim as their own. Such aggression might lead to a
nuclear exchange with India, the country’s long-time rival and
fellow nuclear state. The fallout, both literal and political,
would be felt deep into Central Asia; indeed much of the region
would be destabilized. India’s economic progress would be set back
significantly, perhaps by decades, and the nuclear threshold will
have been crossed.
A less apocalyptic (though still very bad) outcome would be for
Pakistan’s paranoia about India to reach fever pitch. Islamabad
has long suspected that the rise of the Northern Alliance, the
mostly Tajik and Uzbek coalition that helped eject the Taliban
from Kabul, or another anti-Islamabad political group in
Afghanistan could be a boost to New Delhi. (India is playing a
nasty game of ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend,’ the Pakistani
leadership reckons.) Pakistan is already backing a host of violent
groups in Afghanistan, and further meddling could destabilize the
surrounding Central Asian states.
Or, there is the prospect of ethnic, sectarian, and geographic
implosion. Pakistan’s sense of nationhood is tenuous at best. In
the military, Punjabis predominate in the enlisted ranks while
Pashtuns and Mujahirs fill most officer posts. The few Sindhis and
Baluchis who are national leaders (such as President Zardari, a
Sindhi) are the exception rather than the rule. The North-West
Frontier Province and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, the
regions along the border with Afghanistan, resemble the worst
drug-infested, gang-ridden parts of American cities -- except that
the Pakistani authorities have largely abandoned any pretense at
control. It’s a nebulous group of ungoverned spaces held together
by a center that itself is now fragmenting. When that gives way,
it could launch the kind of tribal bloodletting and ethnic or
religious strife that strategic forecasts and white papers around
the world routinely posit.
Meanwhile, the Army itself is under attack. Punjab-based jihadi
groups, often referred to as the Punjabi Taliban, recently claimed
responsibility for attacking the Army’s general headquarters in
Rawalpindi, Pakistan’s equivalent of the Pentagon. Jihadi groups
operating out of Punjab have traditionally focused on Kashmir and
sectarian issues, so their willingness to target the center of
Pakistan’s political gravity -- as well as its most important
source of military leadership -- is unsettling.
In their coldest light, these attacks show the intensification and
turning-inward of the struggle for the very character of the
Pakistani state. The divisions pulling Pakistan apart at the seams
are the same ones reflected in the military -- and neither set
shows promising signs of resolution.
Pakistanis understand these dangers. When Benazir Bhutto, the
former prime minister, was assassinated in Rawalpindi two years
ago, rioters in Sindh chanted Pakistan na khappay, or “Pakistan no
longer exists.” Zardari, her husband, tried to quiet the crowd,
telling them Pakistan khappay -- “Pakistan does exist.” He was
right. For the moment. |
|
|
|
|