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President Hillary Clinton or President Donald Trump both will have to deal with issues of terrorism,
security and civil-military disequilibrium in Pakistan as well as its complex relationships with China,
India and Afghanistan. How will the new US administration respond? Images on Sunday explores what
will likely happen
On November 8, two days from today, the United States of America will elect a new president. Former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is leading the race but this has been an unpredictable election year. Despite
being almost written off, businessman Donald Trump has against all expectations improved his position
during the last week of the campaign. Most political pundits still agree that Clinton will eventually triumph,
but this is a closer race than many of them had predicted even last month.
This long-drawn-out presidential campaign has been unusual also in the sense that foreign policy has received
far less attention during the electioneering cycle than ever before. Yes, China and Russia have been broadly
cited as threats, and how to deal with the so-called Islamic State and terrorism were briefly debated. But this
was mostly in terms of posturing about which of the candidates would be a tougher president.
On the other hand, the policies of the presidential candidates with respect to South Asia were not raised at all.
While the feat of capturing and killing Osama bin Laden was cited of course, Pakistan was not mentioned even
once. This was probably a first for Pakistan at least in the last 16 years.
So, what will the change of guard in America mean for Pakistan?
Pakistan fatigue
On key policy issues, there is bipartisan consensus in the US, but the new administration will of course review
foreign policy and reconfigure levers of US global engagement. It is unlikely, however, that there will be a
major shift in USs Pakistan policy. The new administration is not likely to disengage with Pakistan. But US
policy will, in all probability, be tougher and more conditional than before.
The best way to define the broader American view on Pakistan is Washingtons growing fatigue in dealing with
a long-standing ally and frenemy at times.
Pakistans decades-old relationship with the US entered a new phase in the post 9/11 context, and evolved into
a close partnership under Gen Pervez Musharraf. But that moment of bilateral partnership was transient. The
two sides soon realised the limits of their engagement and divergence on how they envisioned a post-Nato
Afghanistan.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump during the first presidential debate Reuters
During President Obamas current term, the relationship showed clear signs of exhaustion and distrust. There
are growing voices in Washington D.C. especially in Congress that Pakistan is not a reliable partner
and has harmed US interests. Pakistan has its own narrative that highlights the cost it has borne of allying
with the US over the past 15 years in particular.
US policy circles, aided by sections of the media, continue to highlight Pakistans allegedly duplicitous role in
its continued support to the Haqqani faction of the Afghan Taliban. The Haqqani network is seen as a group
responsible for the deaths of American troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistan, meanwhile, points out the failures of US policy in the region and Americas inability to achieve
stability despite 15 years of occupation. Peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban, with
Pakistans facilitation, were initiated in 2015 but also failed.
Other events that would precede the arrival of a new president in the White House include a bill by two US
lawmakers in Congress to declare Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism. This bill, drafted by Republican
Congressman Ted Poe, Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Terrorism, and Republican Congressman
Dana Rohrabacher, has very little chance of being adopted. However, it signals the fact that Congress takes a
different view from the executive branch which appreciates the limits and complexities involved in managing
the Pak-US relationship.
Will Pakistan be abandoned like in 1990 when the Soviet troops pulled out of Afghanistan? Moeed Yusuf,
Associate Vice President of the Asia Centre at the United States Institute of Peace, does not think so. The
result of the US election is much less likely to matter for [Americas] Pakistan policy, he says. On Pakistan,
the trajectory is likely to remain the same to keep Pakistan as a partner in the region despite the challenges.
Daniel Markey, author of No Exit from Pakistan: Americas Tortured Relationship with Islamabad, and a
senior research professor at Johns Hopkins University confirms this view. Pakistan is still very important to
the US, and a new administration would want to deepen engagement if it had a reasonable expectation that
doing so would advance US goals.
But the US military and economic assistance to Pakistan since 2011 has declined in recent years. The payments
of the Coalition Support Fund (CSF) has also witnessed delays and increased scrutiny. This trajectory will not
change with the new administration.
At the moment, theres a lot of scepticism and frustration with Pakistan, says Markey. So basic trends
favour reduced engagement in the near term, no matter who wins in November. The spending of greater
resources and the focusing of greater attention on Pakistan seems unlikely. The early years of the Obama
administration, when you had Kerry-Lugar-Berman Act and other top-level initiatives that marked a highpoint
in US efforts in Pakistan, and with the surge in Afghanistan as well, those days are over.
William B. Milam, a senior policy scholar at Woodrow Wilson Center and former US Ambassador to Pakistan,
adds a note of warning. Most of what happens to the bilateral relationship depends on Pakistan rather than the
United States, he says. Nothing is going to change if Pakistan continues to fiddle around with the Haqqanis.
Geopolitics and its compulsions dont change with the change in administration, points out Dr Rabia Akhtar,
Director of the Centre for Security, Strategy and Policy Research, University of Lahore.
Similarly, the Ballistic Missile Defence Programme is viewed as a destabilising development, as it can
embolden India to go for preemptive attacks against Pakistan. The new Indo-US partnership may have a strong
economic component but for Pakistan it is the widening asymmetry in military capability that is the real
concern.
Markey holds that Pakistan is understandably worried about US-India strategic cooperation, even though the
US government has long argued that closer ties with India do not come at Pakistans expense, and vice versa.
Yusuf thinks that the tilt is becoming clear and that it is something Pakistan would need to deal with in the
future. The next administration is likely to cement the US-India relationship further.
The US tilt towards India is a clear outcome of the growing power of China. China has not only successfully
challenged Obamas Pivot to Asia policy, it also owns at least 30 per cent of US foreign debt, which
continues to give it leverage over the US.
US relations with India are driven, of course, by economic motives as well. With an Indian government under
Modi eager to open doors and woo foreign investors, US businesses are backing this shift and see opportunities
in the large Indian market as well as opportunities for cheaper manufacturing. The Pakistan establishments
zero-sum manner of looking at the world would require adjustment since, whoever wins the November
election, the Indian and American partnership will continue to grow.
US leaders and policymakers are increasingly likely to see the region with a perspective informed by closer
working relationships with their Indian counterparts, says Markey. Although this need not necessarily harm
Pakistan, American sympathies for instance, on the issue of terrorist attacks in India and American
interests, such as US trade and investment in Indias growing market, will undoubtedly make it harder for
Pakistan to influence the policy debate in the United States, especially when it comes to pressing its case
against India.
In clearer terms, what Markey is saying is that economic interests will influence policy shifts.
In an interview given to the Hindustan Times, Trump had expressed his love for India but had refused to take
sides. In fact, had he offered his mediation services to the two countries. However, like most of his off-the-cuff
remarks during the presidential campaign, not much weight can be ascribed to this as an indicator of his policy
directions.
US-India ties should not be a cause of concern to Pakistan, cautions Dr Akhtar. India and Pakistans threat
perceptions follow different trajectories.
tensions. The next US administration would not want to lose its influence over Islamabad but the India factor
might result in just that.
Markey confirms that the United States is not opposed to the increased Chinese presence in Pakistan,
especially on the commercial and economic front. To the contrary, US policymakers would very much like
China to help stabilise and grow Pakistans economy because they see that economic stability as a way to
reduce security threats. By extension, the United States does not perceive Chinas role in Pakistani
infrastructure development as inherently threatening either.
However, this puts Washington a bit at odds with New Delhi, where Indians tend to be more wary about
Chinas role inside Pakistan. According to Markey, Washington does have at least two questions about
intensifying China-Pakistan relations.
First, US officials wonder whether the commercial deals underway will promote a broader set of Pakistani
economic reforms in ways that would benefit its people and also promote FDI [Foreign Direct Investment]
from non-Chinese sources, including the United States, says Markey.
At present, the Chinese deals with Pakistan lack sufficient transparency to judge.
Second, the United States will have mixed feelings about Chinas presence in Gwadar, as over the long run it
clearly opens the door to a growing Chinese naval presence in the Arabian Sea, adds Markey.
Milam adds that Chinas record in Africa suggests that it does not always deliver on what all it promises.
While the US welcomes Chinese support to Pakistan, he cautions Pakistan should remember that Chinese
self-interest is paramount in the growing economic relationship with Pakistan.
Of course, one can say the exact same thing about the US relationship with Pakistan as well.
In the context of a brewing global geopolitical competition between China and the United States, the extension
of Beijings reach will create new complexity in its relations with Washington.
Yusuf, however, is more optimistic. The US and China need to proactively find ways to complement each
other and their assistance to Pakistan, he says. It could work well to stabilise both Pakistan and
Afghanistan.
Pakistan will have to play a delicate balancing act with the new US administration. The indications, however,
are to the contrary. Pakistans military and civilian leaders promoting CPEC as some sort of a bulwark against
an Indian threat and a replacement for ties with the United States will only complicate matters. This is why
Pakistans diplomatic lens needs to be readjusted it should maximise leverage with both allies instead of
viewing diplomatic relationships as a zero-sum game.
In the post-9/11 world, the USs war on terror has provided a convenient framework for many countries,
including India and Pakistan, to brand insurgencies as terrorism. India has leveraged the global discourse while
Pakistan has been slow to appreciate the outlived utility of supporting militancy in Kashmir.
It is quite clear that when it comes to Kashmir, the next US administration is neither going to intervene nor will
it support Pakistans stance on the support to militant networks. Hafiz Saeed, head of Jamaatud Dawa, has a 10
million dollar bounty on his head and his organisation has been designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation
by the US government. Pakistan has banked on Chinese support thus far but that too is not expected to last
indefinitely.
We might see fewer funds for counter-terrorism with the new administration pushing Pakistan to act against
outfits that launch attacks inside India, says Dr Akhtar. There could be conditions that make the release of
critical funds linked to Pakistan publicly accepting and acknowledging their existence and ultimately
dismantling terror networks.
President Clinton
Huma Abedin who is tipped to be Hillary Clintons chief of staff has Pakistani roots AP
What to expect in US-Pak relations if Hillary is elected president
Hillary Clinton has plenty of experience of engaging with Pakistan. And not only through her husband,
President Bill Clintons engagement with prime ministers Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto and Gen Pervez
Musharraf. During her visits to the country as Secretary of State in one public appearance she was also
dubbed Pakistans mother-in-law she was seen as a tough negotiator but also as someone who was
redrawing the parameters of bilateral relations by focusing on the civilian government.
Clintons memoir, Hard Choices, also recounts her meetings with Benazir Bhutto and later, her husband,
president Asif Ali Zardari. It was under her supervision that the largest civilian assistance package to Pakistan
the Kerry-Lugar-Berman Act was approved. It is a separate matter that the conditions of the bill were
dismissed by Pakistans establishment and its allies in the media as a hit on the national security goals and
sovereignty of the country.
Her famous statement in 2011 that Pakistan could not keep snakes in its backyard and expect them only to
bite [its] neighbours has become a benchmark for foreign policy objectives in South Asia. Yet, Clinton is also
aware of the complexities and nuances of the difficult relationship.
Daniel Markey, a senior research professor at Johns Hopkins University, thinks that that the bilateral
relationship has reached a stage in which she [Clinton] would be clearer about our policy differences. So
theres a good chance that she would sound tougher.
Whether the new administration is likely to change course on assistance programming or expanding the fight
against the Taliban in ways that would reinforce that tougher message is unclear for now. Markey thinks that
the approach would be clearer when Clinton, if elected, names individuals to various jobs within her new
national security team.
But theres a good chance her administration would veer into a tougher stance, says Markey, partly as a
means to improve US bargaining leverage with both Pakistan and the Taliban by signalling a long-term US
commitment to bolstering the Kabul government.
Clinton has a record of direct and tough parleys with Pakistans military during her stint as US Secretary of
State. Many in Pakistan think, however, that the country would receive a fair hearing from President Clinton,
given her personal engagement with the country.
Clintons top aide, Huma Abedin is of South Asian origin with a Pakistani mother and an Indian father. Some
are tipping her to be Clintons chief of staff in the new administration. As Clintons trusted adviser, she will
provide the necessary insights into the region as she did while serving as her deputy chief of staff at the State
Department.
Clintons top priorities would likely be to work towards a safe US exit from Afghanistan and to ensure that
Pakistan leverages its influence on Afghan Taliban to make that happen. Peace talks with Afghan Taliban are
likely to be revived.
Markey, however, thinks that an immediate or radical policy change will not be on the cards as a Clinton
administration would have a lot of other challenges right out of the gate, and top officials would likely prefer
to spend some time maybe six to nine months in reviewing Afghanistan and Pakistan policy before
pressing any big changes.
Most experts, however, agree that if there is a regional crisis that forces Washington to pay closer attention,
such as an Indo-Pakistani conflict or a more serious breakdown in Afghanistan, then an immediate policy
change may come.
While the US has historically worked with the military, Markey holds that a Clinton administration would
also wish to maintain engagement with Pakistans civilians, although it might also want to rethink past patterns
of assistance and other programming in Pakistan.
The new US administration will recognise the value in bolstering Pakistans fragile democracy but, at the end
of the day, it is the military that can advance US national security interests. This will, as before, tilt the scales
toward security-focused institutions and thereby deepen the civil-military disequilibrium in Pakistan.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, November 6th, 2016