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Why the U.S. Is Not Winning “Hearts and Minds” in Pakistan
As the media coverage of more recent world events overshadows that of Pakistan's unprecedented flooding in August 2010, the crisis is far from over. An estimated 1.4 million internally displaced people remain in refugee camps and informal settlements. The UN World Health Organization reports that acute respiratory infections are on the upswing in northern Pakistan, while concerns persist over malaria and cholera near the Indus Valley. Relief workers are working tirelessly to provide food, medicine, and potable water but funds are drying up quickly. The Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN) recently called for a generous and swift international response to the $2 billion appeal for aid for Pakistan flood victims, which was just 34 percent funded. Besides tending to the immediate needs of displaced people, Pakistan is also struggling to rebuild its infrastructure. The floods damaged an estimated 5 million homes, submerged 5,000 miles of roads, and washed away 7,000 schools and 400 health facilities that will take years to rebuild. The World Bank and Asian Development Bank recently announced that the floods caused an estimated $9.7 billion in damage across the country.
As Pakistan struggles to remain afloat, American foreign policy certainly isn’t helping. Traveling from the southern tip of Karachi to the northern tip of Kohistan, I recently spoke with countless internally displaced Pakistanis about the epic floods, their government’s response to the tragedy, and America’s involvement in their country. Pakistanis consistently told me the U.S. cannot win their “hearts and minds” through a schizophrenic policy of distributing food with one hand, and arming drones with the other. Many said they are infuriated that CIA drones carried out 21 strikes in September — the highest number since the clandestine operation began six years ago — just a month after their country experienced the worst natural disaster in its recent history. “In the U.S., almost ten years ago, you experienced 9/11 but, here in Pakistan, almost every day we are experiencing 9/11,” said Hassan Ali Khan who works with a local grassroots nonprofit, Omar Asghar Khan Development Foundation (OAKDF). Pakistanis such as Khan told me the drones are not only seen as unjust, but also as an act of American cowardliness (the pilotless planes are maneuvered with a joystick thousands of miles away) and imperial arrogance (nobody provides any justification, recourse, or reparations to the victims of the drone attacks). A recent public opinion poll sponsored by the New America Foundation and conducted in Pakistan’s ethnic Pashtun tribal areas in July confirms that U.S. drone strikes are deeply unpopular and likely to become even more unpopular.
True, the U.S. military is also trying to show its softer side by spending an estimated $216.5 million on flood aid and dispatching some 26 helicopters to evacuate trapped villagers throughout the rugged mountains and the Indus valley. From a strategic standpoint, the Americans hope their humanitarian cargo will change what another recent poll revealed: about 60 percent of Pakistanis view Americans as the enemy. However, America’s decision to drop food parcels from helicopters is not likely to wash away its history of propping up Pakistan’s dictators and deploying unmanned drones. Over and over again, Pakistanis told me that America’s foreign policy breeds resentment, fails to address the causes of extremism, and simply creates more anti-American militants. Mumtaz Tanoli of OAKDF says terrorism is rooted in the growing divide between the haves and have-nots. “The people are impatient with unemployment, poverty, injustice, and inequality,” he says. “The growing disparities, poverty and desperation are the roots of terrorism . . . Here, the opportunities are only for those with money or inroads in society and the rest feel poor and frustrated.” Tanoli left his job as a translator for USAID to work with OAKDF — a decision that cost him the coveted opportunity to obtain a U.S. green card and also slashed his salary by 90 percent. He says his decision was partly based on the sadness and uneasiness he felt while watching his USAID colleagues live opulently and wastefully. “The Americans were buying fancy waterbeds, but the locals had nothing,” he said. “How can you win people to your side that way?” Tanoli adds that the drones are only heightening sympathy for groups that fashion themselves as righteous underdogs standing up to American imperialism.
In a story that has received almost no attention in the United States, the U.S. military has infuriated the Pakistani public by allegedly breaching the Indus River and flooding a Pakistani village in order to protect a strategic airstrip used to launch unmanned drone attacks. Two prominent Pakistanis, Feryal Ali Gauhar — a human rights activist — and Ali Sethi — an author — have independently drawn attention to such reports. Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali similarly alleged that the Indus river embankments in upper Sindh was covertly breached to save the US-run Shahbaz Airbase at the expense of heavily populated Jaffarabad and adjoining districts. “I believe there was American pressure on the authorities to safeguard the Shahbaz airbase,” he told Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper. Many Pakistanis also believe that U.S. forces supervising an airbase in the Jacobabad district of Sindh province denied permission for the airstrip to be used to deliver much-needed relief to submerged areas where 700,000 people were trapped. And according to the Guardian, U.S. soldiers in Chinook helicopters are generating additional ill-will during relief missions by donning helmets with patches that commemorate their fellow soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, wars that are regarded as morally offensive in Pakistan as in much of the world.
Overall, the U.S. quest for the “hearts and minds” of Pakistanis seems like a dismal failure. Pakistan’s own government hasn’t fared much better; recent polls show that Pakistanis’ disapproval of President Zardari is at an all time high given his abysmally slow response in the days following the torrential rains. Some pundits have referred to the Great Flood of 2010 as “Zardari’s Hurricane Katrina,” especially after he was photographed lounging at his 16th century Norman chateau as 20% of his country was sinking. As the Pakistani commentator Tariq Ali notes, Pakistan’s ruling elite have failed to construct a social infrastructure for its people over the last 60 years and this failure has fostered widespread frustration. According to the UN Development Program’s 2009 Human Development Index, over a third of Pakistanis live in poverty, a situation comparable to Rwanda.
The hard hit northern regions of Pakistan are likely to provide fertile ground for rogue groups eager to exploit the flood tragedy to gain new sympathizers. These groups will probably make considerable inroads into society since the Pakistani government is seen as a lame duck and the U.S. is regarded as a foreign aggressor. However, as Rashida Dohad of OAKDF notes, rural Pakistanis are rational actors, not marionettes of extremist groups. “The people are vulnerable and desperate but they realize that [extremists] who help them still have an agenda,” she says. Instead of forcing rural Pakistanis to choose between lives of poverty or allegiances with intolerant groups, OAKDF offers an avenue for reengaging in the political process and demanding that their government meets people’s basic human rights. The organization is asking the tough but important questions in wake of the flood: Will the Pakistani government subsidize food now that prices have skyrocketed? Will political leaders vote to levy a flood-relief tax on the wealthy to help rebuild the demolished homes of the poor? Will Pakistanis insist their government stops marching in step with the neoliberal dictates of the IMF and incurring more debilitating debt? Will political leaders actually invest in Pakistan's infrastructure and reject bribes to rebuild bridges with sand rather than cement? Will the international community drop Pakistan’s debt, especially in light of Oxfam’s recent observation that the country is spending twice as much paying off debt than it receives in flood aid? Will the U.S. reevaluate its foreign policy and follow China’s example of investing in the country’s infrastructure? Will ordinary Pakistani and American citizens collaborate to build a robust peace movement that addresses questions of both economic and political justice – a movement that will force their governments to invest less in militaries and more in people?
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56 Comments so far
Show AllTo "win hearts and minds" one must have both oneself in the first place. Failure is assured.
Well said. When I read the headline I asked myself, "Is this a trick question?".
USA = planetary sopranos
Is someone trying to change the mental status quo of what our policies stand for?
I guess the 'compassionate conservatives' are trying to make a comeback.
ur dumb or young which is pretty mcuh the same, remember ur post in 20 years & if ur not young, ur just stupid, cant help that
Wow, did most people who commented on this article really miss the overt sarcasm in the title?! I'd imagine on a progressive newswire there would be more outrage over the revelation in paragraph 4 that the U.S. military has infuriated the Pakistani public by allegedly breaching the Indus River and flooding a Pakistani village in order to protect a strategic airstrip used to launch unmanned drone attacks. That's what should be starting a real discussion here . . . there should be a huge outcry over this revelation and a demand for an independent inquiry.
The usa is the evil empire..
Yes... Yes, I do believe you're right. I remember the USSR, I was quite surprised that that state collapsed without much of a fight. They really did go gently into the night; for an empire anyhow. Especially as an 'evil empire'...
The usa will not go down in such a manner. Should the elite fear the total collapse of their wealth and power, I have no doubt that there will be more than drones falling on those whom they believe 'responsible' for their end. Of course, they'll not target themselves whom are most to blame, they'll target the usual suspects.
One of the first promises Barack Obama made after he announced his candidacy for the presidency was that he would NOT hesitate to use the military to strike within Pakistan.
This promise was made at about the same time as his promise to INCREASE the Pentagon budget.
Both of these promises were made Unnecessarily.
Both of these promises were understatements.
Both of these promises were largely ignored by the desperate people who preferred to imagine that Obama was a peacemaker.
Both of these promises were the foundation of his candidacy and his actions following these promises during his campaign only highlighted how much of a right-wing fraud ("Hope" and "Change") he and the democrats were and are.
People who supported his candidacy refused to listen when these promises (and other corruptions) were pointed out.
The worst thing about this is that Obama is merely the front-man. These policies are supported by the majority of people in this corrupt pseudo-bipartisan nation.
If you are concerned about the "Tea Party" and you do not see that the tea party speaks for the majority of democrats as well as the majority of republicans, then you are exactly where the controllers of empire want you to be.
Enjoy the fruits of your illusions!
How can hearts and minds be won when those who bear the hearts and the minds are being slaughtered by the U.S. and their NATO servants?
Ayuh. I was wondering how one 'wins' red mist.
file this under "DUH!" category.
Oh, I dunno. It's probably an amazing revelation for those who believe that "they hate us for our freedoms" -- assuming any of them are actually capable of reading any revelation at all, that is.
My aha moment has been the discovery of "sociopaths". Google sociopath and you will see that the behavior of our leaders concerning Afpak is classic sociopathic action. From that stand point, we have mentally sick leaders. However, this sort of action has been around since the days of manifest destiny. American Indians know this in their guts. It sort of ties into the saying that a good Indian is a dead Indian.
Duh, I have no idea why they don't love the Empire.
It is rather strange in a way, isn't it? Some empires do seem to inspire at least a certain amount of devotion, even amongst some of their subjects in the farflung outposts. The current one seems to inspire almost nothing but unalloyed hatred everywhere it casts its shadow.
No conclusions. Just my meandering thought of the day.
Michael Herr's trenchant book "Dispatches" memorializes a US soldier's disgust at the cruelly absurd Vietnam War "strategy" of "Bomb 'em and feed 'em, bomb 'em and feed 'em...".
It would seem that the current generation of the Amerikan Imperium's best and brightest politicians and military brass suffer from a case of acute collective arrested development.
I second that.
Yes indeed, just like the British imperialists over a century ago, the parallels are striking. But now with a merkan accent.
Obedient Servant
"It would seem that the current generation of the Amerikan Imperium's best and brightest politicians suffer from a case of acute collective arrested development."
None of them were there.
Cognitive dissonancers R US
Maybe if we quit our indicriminate killing of innocent civilians, we may begin with the hearts and minds stuff. The US never learns anything. I guess since Vietnamese are not getting even for losing 2 million innocent civilians, the cowards in the military figure they can keep on killing. The military needs it's comeupance.
Another catalog of gross, eye-popping American stupidity and arrogance.
The "winning hearts and minds" happens after all unwilling to kneel in abject subjugation have been exterminated.
could it be the drones perhaps?
surely they must realize they're being bombed for their own good.
An article addressing the US foreign policy which does not contain the words 'genocide', 'mass murder', 'ethnic cleansing', 'illegal invasion' 'economic blackmail and extortion' is a waste of cyberspace.
These are the essence of the US policy and if you want to be taken seriously you must address them. They are the direct reason the US is hated around the globe. Would you like to try again, Ms. Deena Guzder.
The U.S. quest for the “hearts and minds” is 'designed' to be a dismal failure. Their intention is to cause as much hatred, anger and disbelief among the defenseless civilian populations as possible, just so they can have an extra excuse to stay and fight the 'insurgency'.
The US policy's is just as much about winning 'hearts & minds' as Obama is about 'change'
A most painful truth clearly stated!
It is a totally bogus notion that the majority of people in the United States of Global Domination give a damn about the "hearts and minds" of people in a muslim nation half-way around the world.
It is equally bogus to assume that the majority of these people would even give a damn about the "hearts and minds" of their fellow citizens.
The Pentagon-al Disney-fied delusions which are held up as some sort of proof of superiority clearly reveal that the majority of citizens in this nation would rather cling to deadly illusions of superiority than to see the reality of their own indifference to murderous atrocities and their arrogant consumption.
Perhaps the destruction of life as we know it is the inevitable destiny of this species. I simultaneously believe that things do not have to be this way, but also think that it is highly unlikely that this beastly species is capable of change.
Are we a global disease?
I think you nailed it and no obvious cure apparent anywhere on the horizon that doesn't threaten results at least as bad as the disease itself in human terms.
The planet itself will undoubtedly recover (minus some of its cumulative resources) in due course, but its speciation appears likely to be radically altered.
You are pretty much just wrong about the American people. I'd also suggest you look at a few other countries before consigning us sole responsibility for everything. Its been fashionable for years, but its never been true.
Where would you put Mao's destruction of 76 million prople in the order of murderous atrocities? See what I mean?
Whats bogus is to claim a singularity in arrogant assumptions or deadly illusions.
Bah! In reality, the "American people" have very little to do with it except insofar as they provide some semblance of "democratic" legitimization for the global aspirations of USA Incoporated and its partners in crime.
Well my friend, we are about to find out in this election in less than two weeks. If the democrats are not slaughtered, you are correct and dinner's on me.
The periodic circus performances of the political charade have even less to do with it.
As for the rapidly descending standards of comparison (from 'shining beacon' to possibly better than some other mass murderers) mentioned in your previous posting, the less said the better.
It wasn't a comparison, it was an example of the danger of being singular in thinking and facts.
This election is different. (I think) But we will all know for sure soon.
Be well.
No one is talking about the "American People." The focus is on the total illegality and BLOWBACK engendered because of the use of DRONES by the CIA against alleged enemies in territory "controlled" by Pakistan. Mao? Give it a rest!
see below while I rest. October 21st, 2010 3:58 pm Last paragraph.
Yes. In terms of scale, Mao's China, Stalin's USSR, and Hitler's Germany may surpass a singular event (Vietnam & Indo-China, Central America, etc.) committed by the US.
But you ignore time! Mao, Stalin and Hitler died long ago. Their successors did not continue their policies (at least not to the same violent extent).
The same can not be said of the US. The policies of violent subjugation continue, regardless of who is president, their political stripe or, at least now, their race.
One could argue that Mao's actions, as well as Hitler's and Stalin's ran COUNTER to the cultures they hailed from. Can the same be said of the US? If the policies of subjugation continue for centuries, is it not possible that such subjugation has infiltrated (at worst) and is now part of the American political culture?
Orphée Noir
I was simply saying that you cannot view America's actions while ignoring everyone else.
(at least not to the same violent extent) While true, they continued them none the less. Violent suppression is commonplace in many countries that I know of, human rights violations are also widespread and commonplace around the world.
"If the policies of subjugation continue for centuries, is it not possible that such subjugation has infiltrated (at worst) and is now part of the American political culture?"
If they did...of course. I would say in fact that attempted subjugation is part of our political culture now. Who is trying to subjugate who seems to be a bone of contention.
I would not excuse our stupidity or mistakes, but we are SO not alone in them its not funny. Our mistakes are over reported like the drone attacks and our success like the Chilean miners is under reported.
Mightymite says:
Where would you put Mao's destruction of 76 million prople in the order of murderous atrocities?
Somewhere below the reduction of the native Amrican population of 60 million when we arrived to about 70,000 at the end of the 19th century when viewed as a percentage of the total population. And the Phillipines? And Vietnam (about 4 million)?
But you are right about one thing. The other countries might have behaved similarly given the same opportunities and power. SO? That makes it all right? It is preferable for you to be the perpetrator of an atrocity than the victim? You have some fascinating morals.
No wonder the earth is being destroyed by humans. As long as people can point to the other guy and claim that "he does it too", then they can merrily kill and trash to their hearts content. Sometimes I feel there are way to many people, like you, who have lost the ability or capacity to feel guilt.
[I'm was always astonished as to why the Brits simply didn't send some deranged soul to cap his ass in the post WWI 1920's when MKG really started up his program, until I read those stats. Now it's crystal clear.]
They did think of doing it, I am quite sure, the reason they wouldn't have done that isn't due to the lack of troops. They knew that killing Gandhi would have turned him into a martyr for all the anti-colonialists. And that's the very last thing you want to do.
That actually might explain why the usa isn't hunting bin forgotten as much as you might expect. If he dies without getting caught, he doesn't get the title of a martyr. But if you put him on trial (assuming you catch him and actually give him any sort of 'fair' trial, before killing him) then he's certain to become a perpetual thorn in the drive for an American Empire.
We are not winning hearts and minds in Pakistan because they are not our friends in the first place. In the second place we have no business there on either side of the border. Let them find their own way.
Which way will you win Hearts and Minds? By launching a rocket from a drone or getting a bunch of Chilean miners out of a collapsed mine?
I think its the latter, I think the Chileans like us much more than the Pakistani do.
Addition...I just ran across this which helps explain why the Pakistani are even more upset these day's.
"This year alone, we have conducted more than twice as many air strikes inside Pakistan as in the eight years from 2001 through 2008. Indeed, in just the first two years of the Obama administration, we have killed more than 1,000 suspected terrorists, civilians, inside Pakistan -- or more than double the number taken out by airstrikes during the entire Bush administration.
Yes, I am certain that the tiny little bit of help we gave to some miners more than offset any lingering resentment they may have over the whole coup think that brought that Pinochet guy to power.
(note: sarcasm)
" In the second place we have no business there ". Wrong mightymite! Americas business is the war business! The war profiteers, like Blackwater and others are making billions off of Iraq, Pakistan, and Afghanistan and whether we belong there or not, their business could not be better there.
What's the point of even commenting?
We have one party in this nation and it loves its warmongering and empire.
Thank you Democrats. your violent Hollywood friends and Liberal Entertainers & "Thinkers", that, instead of giving us an alternative to GWB, just gave us a black one instead.
I sincerely hope the upcoming election will be the bloodiest one in history for your lessor-of-evil party. Yeah, yeah, I can hear it now: uh, but whutabout da republikaans?
So what? We can't do any worse when it comes to murder and general criminality. They're both the same.
While you have a good point about "Thank you Democrats. your violent Hollywood friends and Liberal Entertainers & "Thinkers", that, instead of giving us an alternative to GWB, just gave us a black one instead."....in regard to "They're both the same." Only true if the same people are returned to office once again and the pressure goes away.
Which of the challengers to the incumbents are you so optimistic about? None of the Tea Party-Republicans seem to present any new vision other than shrinking social programs while maintaining or increasing military budgets. And that rhetorical position isn't really new.
Do you really think that the "new" breed of Republican presents any new foreign policy ideas that won't be conveniently forgotten? I find paleoconservative isolationist ideas appealing on some level, but don't see these ideas convincingly reflected in Palin, Paladino, O'Donnell, Miller, et al.
Or is it rather some sort of dialectic that sparks your enthusiasm? I think the Tea Party types will just roll over and go back to sleep when their "team" (aka white Republicans) take the fore. Just like Democratic supporters are blissfully snoozing now. Tea party "radicalism" will not be sustained past the next swing of the pendulum.
But let's check back in a few years. I'd love to be wrong.
PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE: If you're going to vote for any Republicrats, READ THEIR VOTING RECORDS FIRST!
Jeevee, at last someone who has it right. I hope everyone reads this and sees it's smart.
Awfully difficult to win hearts and minds when you are killing more civilians than so-called "terrusts." Awfully difficult to win hearts and minds when for every single "terrust" you kill - illegally, I might add, since assassination is against US and international law, and no official war has ever been declared by the US Congress under the Constitution - you create fifty more "terrusts" for every civilian (oops, I'm sorry, I mean "collateral damage") you kill.
But that is the entire point, people. The U.S. has never wanted to wipe out "terror." They WANT to create more terrorists, with every predator hellfire missile they send into a wedding party or civilian-occupied house. The more terrorists they create, the more $$ we have to pump into the MIC, year after year. That's the entire POINT. No war=no $. And in America, the "land of the free and home of the brave," $$ is what it's all about.
Gotta keep wasting those poor sand-niggers, or the rich don't get richer.
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross."
Wow, did most of the 46 people who commented on this article really miss the overt sarcasm in the title?! I'd imagine on a progressive newswire there would be more outrage over the revelation in paragraph 4 that the U.S. military has infuriated the Pakistani public by allegedly breaching the Indus River and flooding a Pakistani village in order to protect a strategic airstrip used to launch unmanned drone attacks. That's what should be starting a real discussion here . . . there should be a huge outcry over this revelation and a demand for an independent inquiry.
This election won't be any different. The mass class of US slaves will kneel before the boss class.
US: thirty million genocidal freaks in charge of 300 million compliant dolts.
ur all idiots but i appreciate the laughs