Pakistani State and Military
(Rukkaiya Dastgir, Rawalpindi)
What if Pakistan were the
world’s sole superpower? Would it be any different from the United States today?
Would it treat the less powerful in the same way as Pakistani's currently expect
to be treated by the US? Would Pakistan stand up for freedom and justice?
However, improbable such a scenario might be. These hypothetical questions allow
us to think more clearly about power, morality and the behaviour of states. For
Pakistan, having a more coherent perspective on the world and how it works is
imperative now more than ever. The country has been at loggerheads with the most
powerful state in the world. That power is now at the beginning of its decline.
What lies ahead is a world order in which America will be one of many great
powers. Pakistan, neighbouring to two states that will undoubtedly be big
players in the emerging global system, is struggling to find a meaningful place
among this transition. A rational, structured way of viewing the world is
necessary for finding that place. Unfortunately, the discourse in Pakistan is
disproportionately grievance-oriented. It centers self-servingly on how things
ought to be, without much consideration of the responsibilities of Pakistan
toward shaping that ideal reality. An exaggerated sense of sorrow makes it
difficult to see how things really are. It blurs the other side of the image,
the side that shows that in many instances, Pakistan is the sinner. In certain
relationships, Pakistan has the upper hand. For example: Pakistan’s behavior
towards Afghanistan reflects its complaints about how the US treats it. By no
mere coincidence, Pakistan is as disliked in Afghanistan as the US is disliked
in Pakistan. So, how would Pakistan behave if it were the world’s sole
superpower? Based on its track record today, which includes a heavy-handed
uprising in Baluchistan and the use of insurgents to install a favorable
government in Afghanistan, it would be difficult to see Pakistan being a sign of
light unto the world. Most probably, Pakistan, with a political culture that
decidedly lacks control and values, would fail to meet the expectations it has
set for others, including the US. Concerns about Pakistan’s foreign policy might
be dismissed as irrelevant as if ethics should govern the actions of only the
absolutely strong.
Pakistan has an opportunity and a responsibility to help solve the Afghan
problem, to bring an end to the misery of Afghans suffering under decades of
war. International politics need not be a zero-sum game. In Afghanistan,
Pakistan can find a way to win but that victory cannot be of its alone.