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It
was 10 a.m on September 12 , 2001, a day after the devastating terrorist
attacks on New York's World Trade Center and Pentagon headquarters
in Washington, when Lt. General Mahmood Ahmed, the then ISI chief,
arrived at the State Department for an emergency meeting with the
US Deputy Secretary of State, Richard Armitage. The General, who
was on an official visit to Washington, was to leave for home, but
was left stranded, as all airports had been closed.
"General, we require your country's full support
and cooperation," Armitage told Pakistan's spy master and member
of the triumvirate that ruled the country. "We want to know
whether you are with us or not, in our fight against terror,"
he added. The meeting was adjourned for the next day after the General
had assured the Armitage of Pakistan's full support. "We will
tell you tomorrow what you are required to do," Armitage said
as they left the room.
Meanwhile, at 1:30 p.m, Colin Powell spoke to President Musharraf
on the phone. "The American people would not understand if
Pakistan did not cooperate in this fight with the United States,"
Powell said candidly, as one general to another. President Musharraf
promised to cooperate fully with the United States.
It was 12 p.m on September 13, when General Mahmood returned to
the State Department for the second meeting. "This is not negotiable,"
said Armitage, as he handed over a single sheet of paper with seven
demands which Bush administration wanted him to accept. The general,
who was known for his hard-line pro-Taliban position, glanced through
the paper for a few seconds and replied: "They are all acceptable
to us." The swift response took Armitage by surprise. "These
are very powerful words, General. Do you not want to discuss with
your President?" he asked. "I know the president's mind,"
replied General Mahmood. A visibly elated Armitage asked General
Mahmood to meet with George Tenet, the CIA chief at his headquarters
at Langley. "He is waiting for you," said Armitage.
Islamabad's support was important for the United States. Its geographical
proximity and its vast intelligence information on Afghanistan were
seen as crucial for any military action against the Taliban and
Al-Qaeda. Pakistan was one of the two countries - the other was
Saudi Arabia - which had formally recognised the conservative Afghan
Islamic government. The American demands, to which General Mahmood
acceded to, in next to no time, required Pakistan to abandon its
support for the Taliban regime and provide logistical support to
the American forces. The list of demands included:
1) Stop Al-Qaeda operations on the Pakistani border, intercept arms
shipments through Pakistan and all logistical support for bin Laden
2) Blanket over-flights and landing rights for US planes.
3) Access to Pakistan's naval bases, airbases and borders.
4) Immediate intelligence and immigration information.
5) Curb all domestic expression of support for terrorism against
the United States, its friends and allies.
6) Cut off fuel supply to the Taliban and stop Pakistani volunteers
going into Afghanistan to join the Taliban.
7) For Pakistan to break diplomatic relations with the Taliban and
assist the US to destroy bin Laden and his Al-Qaeda network.
Interestingly, a few days earlier, General Mahmood in his talks
with the CIA chief, had defended Mullah Omar describing him as a
pious humanitarian, not a man of violence. Pakistan's patronage
of the conservative Taliban regime, which had provided a base for
bin Laden and thousands of other militants from different nationalities,
had strained Pakistan's relations, not only with the United States,
but also with neighbouring countries. It is clearly apparent that
the post-September turnaround was forced on the military regime,
and was not the result of a considered policy review. Just a few
months before surrendering to America's arm-twisting, the military
authorities were vehemently defending their support for the Taliban
regime which, according to them, provided Pakistan "strategic
depth." It was the same General Mahmood who tried to convince
the American administration about the Taliban when Thomas Pickering,
deputy Secretary of State in the Clinton administration, warned
Pakistan against the consequences of being "in bed with the
Taliban."
Astonishingly, within a course of a week, the military government
took an about-turn to become a lynchpin in the US-led military operation
in Afghanistan which ousted the Taliban regime. Pakistan was back
as the US's strategic partner in the region and was now involved
in a new war against terrorism. Indubitably, the military government
did not have any option, but the unconditional and the quick about
turn surprised even the American authorities.
Events following September 11, during the week in Washington and
Islamabad provide an interesting insight into the adhoc and arbitrary
decisionmaking process in Pakistan on crucial national security
and foreign policy issues. Like the policy to support the Taliban
regime, the decision to surrender the country's sovereignty was
also taken just by a few generals. There were no consultations at
any level when President Musharraf abandoned support for the oppressive
and reactionary regime in Afghanistan and gave the American forces
complete access into Pakistani territory. It was all done in the
best national interest, he later declared. However, the military
leader had offered the same argument when they got Pakistan into
a messy situation by supporting the Taliban. The Pro-Taliban policy
had not only isolated Pakistan, but also encouraged Islamic extremism
within the country, creating a huge domestic problem.
President Musharraf was addressing a meeting of local nazims on
the evening of September 11, when he was interrupted by an urgent
call from Major General Rashid Quereshi, who informed him about
the terrorist attack on America. "I realised the gravity of
the whole issue of this terrorist attack, " "President
Musharraf said. The next day he flew to Islamabad where he went
into consultations with his military commanders and members of the
National Security Council.
On the evening of September 12, he received a phone call from General
Mahmood in Washington who briefed him about his meeting with Armitage.
"He did tell me the gravity of the situation, and the shock
and anger that is being expressed by all in the US government and
also the shock of the nation," said President Musharraf. Later,
US Ambassador, Wendy Chamberlain met with him and conveyed a formal
message from the American leaders for cooperation. The President
assured her of Pakistan's full support.
There was no consultation with political leaders on the paradigm
shift in the strategic discourse of the nation. President Musharraf
took his handpicked cabinet into confidence, almost three days after
his ISI chief had already consented to the US demands. His line
was that Pakistan itself was a victim of terrorism and the Taliban
government were providing refuge to the religious extremists involved
in sectarian killings in Pakistan. "We had given a long list
of the terrorists who we wanted to be handed over to us. At least
they should have turned over the terrorists to us." He told
the ministers that the decision to cooperate with the United States
was necessary to safeguard Pakistan's nuclear assets and its Kashmir
policy.
General Musharraf was concerned about the possible reaction from
right-wing Islamic groups and the domestic fallout of his policy
shift. He expressed his concern to the American ambassador during
his long meeting with her on September 15, "I did express to
her, our major concerns. I kept telling everyone and I told Wendy
also that this is our cooperation against terrorism. You must understand
the domestic fall-out. These decisions are not very easy and we
need understanding from the United States and also support from
them, so that I can take the nation along with me in our fight against
terrorism."
General Musharraf did not find it hard to convince his cabinet,
but it was not so simple when it came to his corps commanders and
members of his military junta. At least seven senior officers including
Lt General Mahmood, who had earlier, in Washington, signed on the
dotted line, showed reservations on the decision to pull out support
for the Taliban regime. Lt General Aziz, corps commander Lahore,
Lt General Jamshed Gulzar, corps commander Rawalpindi, Lt General
Mushtaq, corps commander Quetta, and Lt. General Usmani, deputy
chief of army staff, were among those who expressed their strong
reservations over the shift in Pakistan's policy on the Taliban.
Lt General Aziz and Lt. General Gulzar had both served in the ISI
and were closely linked with propping up the Taliban government.
The US authorities had also accused Lt General Gulzar, as deputy
director of the ISI, of having close links with bin Laden.
With Lt . General Mahmood in charge of the powerful ISI, it was
not easy to effectively implement the new policy on Afghanistan.
In a last bid attempt to prevent a US attack on Afghanistan, President
Musharraf, in the third week of September, dispatched the ISI chief
to Kandahar to persuade Mullah Omar to hand over bin Laden to the
United States. The General met with the Taliban leader without any
aide for several hours and later informed the President that he
was hopeful that Mullah Omar would cooperate. In September, President
Musharraf sent three missions to Mullah Omar, two of them led by
General Mahmood. He also sent a delegation of religious scholars
to persuade the Taliban leader . The main point he conveyed was
to surrender Osama bin Laden for the sake of peace in Afghanistan.
"I was constantly conveying a message that they must understand
realities and prevent the suffering of the people of Afghanistan
by surrendering Osama bin Laden. And I was also trying to drill
home to him that he shouldn't make people of Afghanistan suffer
for a person who's not even an Afghan, but someone who's come from
outside."
In an interview Musharraf said: "General Mahmood, on one occasion,
did manage a breakthrough. He said, 'We sat separately, without
the interference of anybody, and Mullah Omar seemed to show a little
bit of flexibility. Unfortunately, however, he did not agree on
the issue of surrendering Osama bin Laden. The maximum that he agreed
to was to form a court, an Islamic religious scholar's court, to
try him. He would not agree to more than that.'" Some highly
placed sources believe that General Mahmood may have been playing
a double game. President Musharraf was also not very happy with
Mahmood's arrogant style, and for not consulting him before agreeing
to Armitage's seven-point demand. "Though the President would
have given his consent, he did not like being bypassed," maintains
a senior official.
President Musharraf acted swiftly and replaced the hard-line General
Mahmood with General Mohammed Ehsan, a former Military Intelligence
chief (MI), and corps commander Peshawar, who was known for his
anti-Taliban views, as the new ISI chief. Through a series of purges
at the top level, General Musharraf consolidated his position with
the new commanders backing him fully on the new policy on Afghanistan.
Interestingly, President Musharraf informed the American ambassador
about General Mahmood's retirement on October 6, a day before the
decision was made public. "Yes, I did tell her, I did surprise
her," he said in an interview.
The shift in Pakistan's Afghan policy and the decision to support
the United States brought huge economic and political dividends
to President Musharraf's government. From a pariah state, Pakistan
became the centre of focus of the international community. Never
before have so many head of states travelled to Pakistan as they
did, in the few weeks after September 11. Pakistan was, once more,
the US's strategic partner. According to senior American sources,
the US-led coalition could not have achieved its swift success in
Afghanistan without the ISI's intelligence support. The agency,
which had been deeply involved with the Taliban from its inception,
guided the American forces in ousting its own creation. The military
government did not ask for any economic aid from the United States
in return for its military cooperation. President Musharraf said
he was avoiding it because he thought it was quite unbecoming at
that time to be talking of economics. "I made it a point not
to be talking on these issues, but yes, an indication of cooperation
and assistance to Pakistan, understanding our internal problems,
that was there."
Later, however, Pakistan extracted some significant economic aid
and concessions from the US and other western countries, that included
a one-billion-dollar loan write-off, 600 million dollars in budgetary
support and debt rescheduling. Importantly, the military government
did not face any public backlash on its support of the United States.
The pro-Taliban political parties failed to mobilise public support
for the conservative regime which fell only a month after the US
and its coalition forces started their military operation.
Today, 18 months down the road, Pakistan's relations with the USA
are still on shaky ground. Fresh strains have emerged in the wake
of American insistence that Pakistan has not done enough to contain
terrorist groups within the country or stopped infiltration accross
the Line of Control. Pakistan's alleged weapons collaboration with
North Korea has also caused misgivings. There is growing apprehension
in Pakistan that it could well be the next US target after Iraq.
Though Pakistan faces a serious internal threat from the forces
of Islamic militancy, the government has failed to realise the gravity
of the situation.
The question is, will the government consider the national interest
and reshape its policy or will it wait to be arm-twisted by the
powers-that-be, once again?
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