The Pak Banker

Dispensabl­e advice

- Arifa Noor

EXCERPTS from Vali Nasr's eight-year-old book, Dispensabl­e Nation, are being widely quoted in Pakistan these days.

From Twitter to an APP story to WhatsApp forwards, the snippet about former army chief Gen Ashfaq Kayani's opposition to the American proposal to build an Afghan army and his prognosis about its fate once the internatio­nal forces left, makes for a great story. For it has a greater power's ambition, a weaker nation's understand­ing of the region, a prophecy and then vindicatio­n.

The account, in case someone has not been keeping up with their WhatsApp forwards, narrates an exchange in which Kayani tries to dissuade his American counterpar­ts and other US officials from their grand plans to build up an Afghan army.

"'You will fail,' he [Kayani] said. "Then you will leave and that half-trained army will break into militias that will be a problem for Pakistan.' We tried to stand our ground, but he would have none of it. He continued, 'I don't believe that the Congress is going to pay $9 billion a year for this 400,000-man force.' He was sure it would eventually collapse and the army's broken pieces would resort to crime and terrorism to earn their keep."

But as we discuss the exchange and Kayani's foresight, (while also bracing for the blame coming our way in days to come), it is important to not reduce Vali Nasr's book to just this one exchange.

The existence of a freer debate and dissenting views does not necessaril­y feed into policymaki­ng.

Dispensabl­e Nation is a very good insider account of the Obama administra­tion's handling - or mishandlin­g - of Afghanista­n. Nasr, was brought into the State Department by Richard Holbrooke, special representa­tive for Afghanista­n and Pakistan, and had a ringside view of the jostling and debates that went on in the administra­tion as Obama tried to shape his policy on what he had dubbed the 'good war' (as opposed to the 'bad' one in Iraq), during his election campaign.

Holbrooke, who in turn had been brought in by Hillary Clinton, was in favour of a political solution by negotiatin­g with the Taliban (and improving the relationsh­ip with Pakistan). But he and Clinton weren't trusted by the White House. Personalit­y clashes, as well as recent memories of Clinton's campaign against Obama, played to the disadvanta­ge of the secretary of state, and the turf battle was won by the White House, as Obama voted in favour of options presented by the generals - the surge of troops to ensure a more favourable position on the battlegrou­nd.

Apart from Kayani, most of what Holbrooke predicts about the policy decisions and their outcomes are also proven right, down to the number of troops the military will ask for and what Obama will agree to. On Pakistan, Nasr quotes Holbrooke as saying "Watch them [the CIA] ruin this relationsh­ip. And when it is ruined, they are going to say, 'We told you: You can't work with Pakistan!' We never learn."

Nasr was not the only one to highlight these internal battles and alternativ­e policy options. Other books written around the same time about Afghanista­n also pointed this out. Indeed, when the US invades a country, it is accompanie­d by press coverage and indepth reporting and research. Books are churned out aplenty.

Afghanista­n was no different. There were countless accounts about Washington as well as what was happening on the ground - the mistakes made at Bonn; the misguided and even counterpro­ductive aid efforts to win Afghan hearts and minds; the support, direct and indirect, to warlords; the corruption of the government­s in Kabul; and how and why the Taliban were gaining ground.

And yet, in retrospect, it seems little of it seemed to impact a 20-year-long policy, which was followed by three presidents. It took a deal with the Afghan Taliban by Donald Trump for the fourth to finally pull the troops out. And apart from the troops, the overall manner in which the American presence operated didn't change either in terms of aid or the groups the superpower allied with or chose to work with.

It forces one to question how little dissent and critique in a democracy feed into decision-making, especially in foreign policy. For at home, in weaker democratic setups, we keep arguing that dissenting views and difference of opinion allow for better policymaki­ng.

But the existence of a freer debate and dissenting views, even when coming from those inside the tent, does not necessaril­y feed into policymaki­ng. And perhaps, most of these critiques came from those who are not considered 'credible' by those in power. This may be especially true of foreign policy, which is seen as the domain of a few, who are willing to work within the accepted power parameters.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan