Marxism
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[Marxism] B-H L in the L.A. Times
Pakistan's Chips in a Shady Game
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-levy13may13,0,4714339.story
Pakistan's Chips in a Shady Game
By Bernard-Henri Levy
LA Times
May 13, 2005
Let's recap: The Pakistani special forces squad arrested Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed,
Al Qaeda's third in command, on March 1, 2003, a few hours before informing the
Americans that Pakistan would not back a resolution in favor of the war in Iraq.
They arrested Yasser Jazeeri, another key Al Qaeda operative, in March 2003,
a few months before Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf visited Camp David,
where he was promised foreign aid to the unprecedented tune of $3 billion.
In March 2002, they collared Abu Zubeida, Al Qaeda operations chief,
and they did this during a big U.S. congressional debate on the question of
foreign aid to Pakistan,
as well as on delivering the F-16 fighter jets that had been held back by the
Pentagon because of Pakistan's
nuclear ambitions. (The delivery of the jets was even more hotly debated
because it was at the top
of the list of demands made by Daniel Pearl's kidnappers.)
Months later, on Sept. 11, the Pakistanis chose the first anniversary of the
destruction of the
twin towers in Manhattan to announce the arrest of Ramzi Binalshib - one of
the conceivers and
coordinators of the 9/11 attacks - in a residential neighborhood in Karachi
where he had been living almost openly.
And now it's Abu Faraj Farj, also known as Abu Faraj Libbi, another high Al
Qaeda commander.
He was captured under mysterious circumstances, but at a time charged with
meaning.
It is the moment, according to the Pakistani media, when the Americans have
decided to make delivery of the F-16s
contingent on American agents getting the right to interrogate Abdul Qadeer
Khan,
father of the Islamist bomb and godfather of a whole network of nuclear
weapons trafficking that involves Iran,
North Korea and, perhaps, Al Qaeda's laboratories near Kandahar, Afghanistan.
But Musharraf stubbornly continues to deny the U.S. the right to take over the
investigation into what is
becoming the most enormous nuclear terrorism affair of this era. Pakistan
instead hands over another Al Qaeda operative.
So, we can look at the timing in these instances several ways.
In each case, we can find a reason for this series of coincidences between
the lightning-raid operations of the Pakistani armed forces and the political
needs of the U.S. president.
Still, I can't get it out of my mind that we have, even more than coincidences,
a recurrence, or a law, or even something that looks a lot like a test of
strength between the two countries.
It is as if the Pakistani powers that be have had, ever since Al Qaeda's
retreat from Afghanistan
and their withdrawal into Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi, a precise idea of
where the chiefs of Al Qaeda could be found.
It is as if Pakistan's formidable intelligence service, the ISI, had not only
localized but kept these public
enemies of the U.S. - and theoretically of Pakistan - under observation, handy
for periodic culling.
It is as if these people were bargaining chips, with the Pakistanis drawing
from their reserves of terrorists
and cashing them in one by one, depending on the needs of their relationship
with the great American "friend."
Optimists will be delighted to learn that there is a country where people know
a little
about the hiding places of Osama bin Laden's lieutenants, as well as about Bin
Laden himself, perhaps.
Pessimists, however, will remember that before giving asylum to the Taliban,
the Pakistanis invented them,
ruled Afghanistan through them and, in the space of 20 years, contributed no
fewer than 200,000 recruits
to the international jihad - and pessimists will be worried about this fresh
indication of Pakistani double-dealing.
For my part, I know where I stand. Having had the chance, during my
investigations into journalist Daniel Pearl's
murder, to observe close up the nature of the ties between the ISI and a number
of Islamist groups, such as the
Jaish-e-Muhammad and the Lashkar-e-Taiba, linked to the "sacred" cause of
Kashmir,
I don't have many illusions as to the sincerity of the Islamabad leaders when
they present themselves as the best students in the anti-terrorist class.
I just hope that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice doesn't have any more
illusions than I have,
and that when she thanks the Pakistanis for "the difficult work they've done,"
she knows that she's
trifling with us, and she knows what she's doing. I hope that when, in order to
break the "axis of evil,"
the Americans ally themselves with one of the regimes that has at its disposal
both weapons of mass destruction
and the ideology capable of putting them into action, they are fully aware that
they're playing with fire.
And that they're playing the craziest, most paradoxical and - if they're not
careful - most dangerous diplomatic poker game in contemporary history.
Bernard-Henri Levy's most recent book is "War, Evil and the End of History"
(Melville House, 2004).
This article was translated from French by Charlotte Mandell.
_______________________________________________
Marxism mailing list
Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism
- Thread context:
- [Marxism] Protests against abuse of Islam at Guantanamo spread in Pakistan, too,
Fred Feldman Fri 13 May 2005, 14:26 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: The Schiavo case and the facts (was: Judge...),
davidquarter Fri 13 May 2005, 13:42 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: N. Korea's Asia trade boom a problem for US,
Brian Shannon Fri 13 May 2005, 13:41 GMT
- [Marxism] Galloway to face US hearing,
Jscotlive Fri 13 May 2005, 11:12 GMT
- [Marxism] B-H L in the L.A. Times,
Clinton Fernandes Fri 13 May 2005, 08:52 GMT
- [Marxism] "Celtic Tiger" vandalism,
James Daly Fri 13 May 2005, 08:01 GMT
- [Marxism] Iraq cops to US troops: It's all because you're here,
Fred Feldman Fri 13 May 2005, 07:27 GMT
- [Marxism] Despite backing of new Iraq govt, US failing to crush Iraq's Sunnis,
Fred Feldman Fri 13 May 2005, 07:13 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]