Why the Pakistani army is bolstering opposition to its most important alliance?



By Steve
Inskeep



Best Defense guest columnist



A few years ago, two friends took me out for a boat ride in
the waters off Karachi.  We worked our way around a coastal peninsula,
all of which was controlled by a single real estate developer. That developer
was the Pakistani army.



A row of McMansions lined the water. Several upscale
apartment towers clustered together, near a club that advertised "six-star"
facilities, and a golf course equipped with stadium lights so that players
could avoid the heat of the day and play in the evening in the ocean breeze.
And most of the land was still awaiting development.



This stretch of prime real estate, roughly the size of
midtown Manhattan,
was just one of many sections of property throughout the city to be developed
by the local Defence Housing Authority. It's so closely linked with the army
that the commander of V Corps, which is headquartered in Karachi, is also the president of the housing authority. This would be the
rough equivalent of, say, placing the current commander of the U.S. Army troops
at Fort Hood, Texas
in charge of downtown development in Houston.



That peninsula illustrates the way that Pakistan's army
has taken many of the country's prime economic opportunities for itself.
Military involvement in economic activity started in understandable ways -- for
example, soldiers had a chance to obtain plots of land upon retirement,
following a practice with precedents back to ancient Roman times -- but has grown
until the military operates factories and construction companies as well as
developing real estate in partnership with multinational corporations. When the
army, in the face of protests, allowed free elections and surrendered control
of the president's office in 2008, it held onto its economic power, just as it
maintained its grip on foreign policy.



The military has, in other words, kept many privileges that
it would be unlikely to have in a fully democratic state. And when I try to
understand the disturbing news from Pakistan in recent months, the
army's privileges come to mind.



The army, one of the world's largest with well over half a
million troops, maintains its pre-eminence less through violence than through
public opinion. It remains the nation's most trusted institution, and also
influences a great deal of the media coverage that Pakistanis consume. But this
past spring, after the U.S.
raid that killed Osama bin Laden, the army's prestige was tarnished. The army
faced rare public criticism -- if not for somehow allowing bin Laden to hide near
a military academy, then at least for allowing U.S. Navy Seals to fly in and out
undetected. Nawaz Sharif, a former prime minister who was the army's darling
long ago, repeatedly criticized the army and demanded inquiries.  Some of the pressure even came from within
the army itself: Najam Sethi, a distinguished Pakistani journalist, spoke of
unrest among junior army officers.[[BREAK]]



This is the backdrop for Pakistan's harsh responses to one
incident after another in recent months. When U.S.
Admiral Mike Mullen criticized Pakistan's
links with militant groups, Pakistani generals responded as if war was
imminent. A bizarre incident involving an unsigned memo to U.S. officials was
blown up into a national scandal. And when NATO forces killed 24 Pakistani
troops while apparently trying to target the Taliban, Pakistan
rejected all explanations, refused to join an investigation, and cut off NATO
supply routes. Even analysts who are sympathetic with the army have been
baffled by its escalation of tensions.



Pakistan,
of course, has many valid reasons to complain about the United States. People were deeply
suspicious when Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor, was accused of killing two
Pakistanis in Lahore
early this year. The bin Laden raid was a shock and a humiliation. And the
tragic killing of two dozen Pakistani soldiers demands investigation. It's
important to know what happened in that cross-border strike in November. But
the Pakistani response to that strike fanned the flames. When a Pakistani
general publicly said it was "impossible" for the raid to have been a mistake,
he engaged in hyperbole. When I have met Pakistani officers, especially at
senior levels, I have found them to be smart, tough, and experienced, having
lost thousands of troops in recent years. They surely understand the fog of war.



Why respond so harshly? There may be many reasons, not least
of which is the competition between the U.S.
and Pakistan to shape the
future in Afghanistan.
But it's hard to miss the domestic political
effects for Pakistan.
All of this fall's emotional incidents have worked to the army's advantage,
marginalizing the army's critics and creating awkward situations that the
U.S.-allied civilian government must help to clean up. (President Asif Ali
Zardari is now in a Dubai hospital, but whenever
he may return to Pakistan
he will he will have to answer questions about the mysterious memo affair).
It's a time-honored process, of course, for a country's rulers to unify the
populace by focusing attention on an external enemy. The only novelty here is
that Pakistan's chosen enemy
is also Pakistan's
principal ally.



In domestic politics, at least, the army has little to lose
by playing to anti-American sentiment, which has been present in the country
for many years. The flip side is also true: the army could lose a great deal if
the generals are tagged before their people as lackeys of America.



Of course, both countries still seem to need each other. So
this is a delicate game, and maybe a dangerous one. The army is bolstering
public opposition to its own most important alliance.



Steve Inskeep is host of NPR's Morning Edition and author of
Instant
City: Life and Death in Karachi
, the story of the growth and struggles
of one of the world's largest cities.



 

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Published on December 13, 2011 03:01
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