Asia

Pakistan

  • India
    RAW: India’s External Intelligence Agency
    India’s primary espionage agency and Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) have long been at odds in a long-standing battle for influence.
  • Pakistan
    Economic Challenges Add to Pakistan’s Woes
    Daniel Markey, a former State Department specialist on South Asia, says Pakistan "is going through another series of really tough times" brought on by the economic downturn that has hit the country, and by the continuing problems fighting the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
  • Pakistan
    The Capital Interview: ’Fighting Terrorism is Pakistan’s Own War’
    Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington, says his government views the war against al-Qaeda and the Taliban as a national priority in spite of the doubts of some American officials. He also takes issue with the notion that Pakistan is close to bankruptcy.
  • Congresses and Parliaments
    Pakistan's Tribal Areas
  • United States
    Riedel: U.S. Needs to Tread Carefully in Pakistan
    Bruce Riedel, a former high-ranking CIA and Pentagon official, says the United States faces a very frustrating situation in Pakistan, and that the recent U.S. cross-border attacks from Afghanistan into Pakistan is risky given the anti-Americanism in Pakistan.
  • Religion
    U.S. Should Pay Greater Attention to Pakistani-Indian Rift Over Kashmir
    Howard B. Schaffer, a former top State Department official on South Asia, says Washington should seek to prevent tensions in Kashmir from complicating U.S. security interests in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
  • Pakistan
    Pakistan’s Institutions and Civil Society
    A look into Pakistan’s institutions, civil society, and the various players less known.
  • Pakistan
    Husain: Next U.S. President Must Cope with Splintered Pakistani Leadership
    Irfan Husain, a columnist for Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, says the next U.S. president faces the challenge of trying to coax reforms from a splintered Pakistani leadership.
  • Pakistan
    A Conversation with Syed Yousuf Raza Gillani
    On his first visit to the United States as Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, please join Syed Yousuf Raza Gillani for a discussion focusing on Pakistan’s future stability, democracy, and prosperity.This meeting is cosponsored with the Middle East Institute.
  • Pakistan
    Securing Pakistan's Tribal Belt
    Overview Pakistan constitutes one of the most important and difficult challenges facing U.S. foreign policy. What is at stake is considerable by any measure. Pakistan is the world's second-most-populous Muslim-majority country, with nearly 170 million people. It shares borders with Afghanistan, where U.S. and allied forces are struggling to promote stability amid a continuing insurgency, and India, with which it has fought a series of conflicts. Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and history of abetting proliferation put it in a position to dilute global efforts to stem the spread of nuclear materials and weapons. And it is host to local extremist groups, the Taliban, and global terrorist organizations, most notably al-Qaeda. The relationship between the United States and Pakistan has long been characterized by cooperation and recrimination alike. Pakistan is a strategic friend of the United States, but one that often appears unable or unwilling to address a number of vexing security concerns. Political disarray has further hampered Islamabad's capacity for strong and united action. The result in Washington is often frustration mixed with uncertainty about what to do about it. Few dimensions of dealing with Pakistan are the source of as much frustration as the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, the subject of this Council Special Report commissioned by the Center for Preventive Action. Daniel Markey analyzes the unique challenges of this region, which has long been largely outside Pakistani government control. He argues that the United States must work with Islamabad to confront security threats and improve governance and economic opportunity in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), something that could reduce militancy. The report lays out a cooperative, incentives-based strategy for the United States that would aim to increase the capacity of the Pakistani government and its security institutions, foster political and economic reform, and build confidence in the bilateral relationship. At the same time, the report outlines alternatives to be considered should this positive approach fail to advance U.S. interests. These alternatives, be they coercive sanctions to induce Pakistan to act or unilateral U.S. action against security threats, could bring some short-term progress in dealing with significant threats--but at the cost of bringing about a more hostile Pakistan that would cease to be a partner of any sort. There is no way to escape either the difficulties or the dilemmas. Securing Pakistan's Tribal Belt is a thorough and knowledgeable examination of a critical set of issues involving Pakistan, the United States, and much more. The report offers detailed and wide-ranging recommendations for a country and a region that has long challenged U.S. leaders and that is sure to be a priority of the next U.S. administration as well.
  • Defense and Security
    U.S-Pakistan Military Cooperation
    Pakistan is key to success in U.S.-led  counterterrorism efforts, with its tribal areas serving as terrorist havens. But covert U.S. military actions inside Pakistan put the future of the U.S.-Pakistan military alliance in jeopardy.
  • Pakistan
    Pakistan and United States: Two Different Priorities
    South Asia expert Teresita Schaffer says Washington and Islamabad have different priorities in the fight against militancy.