At a panel discussion during the Aspen Security Forum last week, the Pakistani envoy to the United States Ms. Sherry Rehman traded barbs with two key figures of the US administration’s Pak-Afghan policy. President Barack Obama's special adviser on Afghanistan and Pakistan Gen (Ret.) Douglas Lute, the former US ambassador to Afghanistan Gen (Ret.) Karl Eikenberry and the current Afghan ambassador the US Eklil Hakimi participated in the session moderated by Steve Kroft, the host of CBS News’ "60 Minutes". The Pakistani embassy in Washington, D.C. circulated the program video just as what the media called the “zingers” let loose by the Pakistani Ambassador made headlines in the US and Pakistani press.
The NATO has already rejected some claims made by the Pakistani Ambassador such as her assertion that Pakistan shared information on cross-border infiltration with the NATO/ISAF some 52 times. She also boasted that Pakistan helped the US apprehend 250 top-tier al-Qaeda leaders before closing her remarks with a rather undiplomatic put down to the Generals Lute and Eikenberry, saying “ We don’t welcome or sanctuary foreign fighters on our soil … There is no question now of hedging bets … This is a new Pakistan. Catch up, gentlemen!”
The Pakistani Ambassador did not care to explain what had those 250 al-Qaeda leaders been doing in Pakistan in the first place. Not one, not two, not ten but 250 of them, and of course the mama hornet, no less, all caught in Pakistan. She lamented about the US having walked away from the region after the demise of Soviet Union, leaving Pakistan to clean up the mess. It is not conceivable that the whole al-Qaeda brass had been lounging in Pakistan without the knowledge and/or support of its omnipresent intelligence agencies and the latter’s Punjabi jihadist protégés. It was apparently lost on the Ambassador that while the world appreciates the Pakistani effort in handing over the terrorists it certainly does not see it as a favour to the US and the global community.
After all, the US may have walked away from Afghanistan but it sure as heck did not ask Pakistan to babysit this whole regiment of terrorist ringleaders. Unlike her predecessor Husain Haqqani, Ms Rehman’s views are perceived to reflect the Pakistani security establishment’s thought process. She did appear to be playing to the gallery in Pakistan with either little concern about, or handle on, the US sensitivities on many issues, including Osama bin Laden’s days in Pakistan. The Ambassador’s approach to the OBL issue was surprising cavalier. As she was busy defending Dr. Shakil Afridi’s arrest under the draconian Frontier Crimes Regulation as a “constitutional” move, elsewhere at the meeting the chief of the US Special Operations Command, General Bill McRaven was fielding questions about the Navy SEALs raid to squat the mama hornet, within a mile of Pakistan’s premier military academy. Pakistan and the US perceptions could not be farther apart.
Even the rather reticent Afghan envoy, Mr. Hakimi did not mince any words about how his country felt about the ever-patronizing and intrusive Pakistan. With the US Senate and Congress recently approving the bill to declare the Jalaluddin Haqqani network as a terrorist outfit, the US and Afghan views are even more aligned than before, as the upcoming US-Pak spook summit will show. Contrarily, even as she claimed that Pakistan has given up policy of seeing strategic depth, the Pakistani Ambassador’s call for “more inclusive”— read more Taliban and Haqqani network— dispensation in the post-2014 Afghanistan appeared to echo the Pakistani security establishment’s dream project of having these groups at the head of the table in Kabul.
Unfortunately, the fact is that nothing is farther than truth than ‘this is a new Pakistan’ line. Pakistan remains a country where the India-oriented Punjabi jihadists rule the roost and religious minorities continue to be hounded and eliminated physically. Just as the Pakistani Ambassador was making her tall claims via video link to the audience in the resort town of Aspen in the Rocky Mountains, a video featuring another kind of mountain was circulated on the Internet. The 16 minute-long clip is a speech delivered on June 19, 2012 at Kabirwala, Punjab by the leader of the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Jhangavi (LeJ), Malik Muhammad Ishaq, who is introduced therein as the jabl-e-istiqamat— the mountain of perseverance. Any one who has any illusions about the “new Pakistan” or how the 250 top al-Qaeda leaders were able to hang out in the ‘old’ Pakistan must watch Ishaq’s venomous tirade: