REPORT
REPORT
Participants
The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 was the catalyst that altered the
dynamics of Pakistan and the United States. With the Cold War heating up, the
US militarily and economically supported Pakistan considering its geography
and willingness to support the anti-Soviet cause. Pakistan was in need of aid too
and the US bolstered their relations by signing a reconstruction aid package of
3.2 billion dollars against an affirmation to the US of 1.5 billion dollars as
military aid. The aid was a step further encouraging US-Pak relations as well as
enhancing Pakistan's defence.
Pakistan was able to become an important ally to the us and supporting role to
mujahideen during the Soviet Afghan war, which enabled Pakistan to acquire F-
16s and M1 Abrams tanks and many more states of the art equipment.
Defense cooperation during the 1990s was also important in Pakistan and China
bilateral relations. During the 1980s, China emerged as the main arms supplier to
Pakistan who, in turn, became of the principal suppliers of military equipment to
frontline venues like the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia, including advanced
fighter jets, tanks and other weaponry. The two nations also teamed up on defense
industrialization, with China helping Pakistan build its own defense industry. Part
of this reason was to share the suspicion of Indian advances in military conditions
and how India needed to keep that balance of strength in the region.
The relationship between Pakistan and China had transitioned into a close and
strategic war alliance as the 20th century was coming to its close. The two
countries had also established a working relationship ranging from economic,
defense, and diplomatic. Although interests and a common view for regional
stability and prosperity were expected to propel this alliance to grow in the 21
century, but finally it did.
Pakistan and The OIC
The post Cold War period in Pakistan’s relationship with the Organization of
Islamic Cooperation witnessed plenty of changes especially after 1980s. Following
the Soviets pullout from Afghanistan in 1989, Pakistan was in the forefront of
efforts for Islamic unity in the hope of gaining international support for the Afghan
mujahideen. The establishment of OIC (1969) as an important forum was a means
for Pakistan to articulate what were its concerns and interests. In line with fixing
this shortcoming, Pakistan actively participated in OIC discussions and used the
forum to draw attention to the Afghan situation, and to obtain support for the
Muslim community.
Pakistan kept a positive engagement with the OIC, which it used to speak for its
priorities and principles in the 1990’s. Notwithstanding Pakistan, the OIC
remained staunch on Palestine and Kashmir as well as Afghanistan, with Pakistan
being a much needed voice in support of OIC's mission to promote Islamic
solidarity. In this context significant achievement was the Islamabad Declaration of
1993, whereby the OIC reconfirmed its will to strengthen Islamic cooperation and
solidarity.
Pakistan also carried forward cultural exchanges, people to people exchange and
economic partnership among member states through its OIC involvement. Internal
politics and ideological leanings also played a role in shaping Pakistan's dynamics
with the OIC. Under Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who took office in 1990, the
administration put a lot of emphasis into the development of Islamic principles and
unity. This ideological commitment allowed Pakistan to support the OIC because
the government wished to use the organization to progress its Rajna ideology of a
more cohesive Islamic community. Islamabad's support of the OIC stance on
Kashmir enormously helped keep Islamabad's ally relationship intact. Pakistan's
foreign policy towards the OIC had come to be a central aspect of it's foreign
policy by the time the 20th century approached its end.
Geneva Accords on Afghanistan
The Agreement on the Settlement of the Situation Relating to Afghanistan
(Abbreviated as the Geneva Accords, their official names, after all), were a
set of international agreements that were signed on 14 April 1988 in Geneva,
Switzerland. From 1979, the Soviet-Afghan war had raged on, and the
Accords put a significant stop to it. Afghanistan and Pakistan negotiated the
agreements and the Soviet Union and the United States were guarantors.
These Accords were supposed to bring a close to the conflict, and to create a
schedule for the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
The signing of the Geneva Accords had not resolved the situation in
Afghanistan. The Soviet withdrawal was completed February 15, 1989, but
the country sank into a bitter civil was, with mujahideen factions fighting for
power. In 1992 the government established by the Soviet Union collapsed
under President Mohammad Najibullah. Well intentioned though, the Geneva
Accords would not achieve lasting peace in Afghanistan.
Afghan history viewed the Geneva Accords as the start of the end of Soviet
involvement in the country. Yet, the Archords’ failure to achieve the lasting
and secure peace in Afghanistan is a lesson that we should not be easy with
the war conflict resolution.
Post-withdrawal problem
The beginning of new era of instability and chaos in the region kicked off
when the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989. When the Soviet
troops left, the Afghan mujahideen (the people fighting the Soviet
occupation), turned on each other and started shooting off their guns, leading
Afghanistan into a barbaric civil war. As the Soviets withdrew, a warlords
and factions rushed to fill the power vacuum and vie for control of a country,
not for the first or last time. As a result of that, another decade lurched by
with intense fighting, destruction and human suffering.
During the post withdrawal period, the Taliban would rise in Afghanistan,
marked consequences for the region and beyond. Once a force for stability
when they emerged in the early 1990s, the Taliban were first viewed as
bringing order and security to a war torn country. But they soon revealed
themselves as a repressive ideology and their extremism led onto a path of
widespread human rights abuses and supporting on suit terrorist organizations
such as al-Qaeda.
Insurgency in Kashmir
A moment that was key to Kashmir in the region's history was the start, in
1989, of the insurgency. Afghanistan was already being rocked by the Soviet
invasion in 1979 which had spawned similar Islamic movements throughout
the region. Rampant militancy in Kashmir had been fed for decades by
political discontent and human rights abuses. In Jammu Kashmir Liberation
Front (JKLF) had begun armed struggle against the Indian rule.
To improve its image by moving the insurgency into Pakistani territory soon
made Kashmir a major flashpoint in India’s relations with Pakistan. The
region teetered on the brink of war as cross border shelling and skirmishes
became common place. Both sides have been warned by the international
community, including the United States, to show restraint.
By the turn of the century, Kashmir had paid an enormous price for the
insurgency. Middle of war, thousands of civilians, militants, and security
personnel were killed and economy at shambles. All of these had led up to
less than successful efforts by the Indian government to restore normalcy,
including holding elections.
9-11 & Fight against terrorism`
The World Trade Center attacks by 9/11 were a watershed in the global battle
against terror. Yet as far back as the 1980s, various Islamist militant groups
started appearing after the Soviet-Afghan War. Osama bin Laden began to
organize and plan attacks against Western targets as groups like Al-Qaeda
began to organize.
In the 1990s it became clear what a threat these groups were. The first major
attacks blamed on al-Qaeda were the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and
the 1998 embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. However, the
international community took all these warnings slowly in face of which the
threat of Islamist militancy still grew.
Things changed after the 9/11 attacks. The attacks were of the greatest scale
and audacity and the world and international opinion was galvanized against
terrorism. The US led war on terror, after the attacks, was designed to destroy
al-Qaeda and all of its affiliates, and bring down the global terrorist network.
During the continuing fight against terrorism, Pakistan became a key partner
of the US and other members of the international community. Pakistan had its
own experience, particularly in the early 1990s, of how militancy could be
tackled. But the country's fraught engagement with Islamist groups and the
obstreperous militancy of its own establishment would become obstacles to
the struggle against terrorism.
Muslim world and Pakistan
These were transformational years for the Muslim world, years marked by
great geopolitical shifts, the emergence of Islamism as a mass phenomenon,
all in the 1980s. Muslim opinion all over the world was galvanized into
action by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, many perceiving the
Afghan conflict as a battle against communist occupation. Also, Pakistan on
its throat was long border with Afghanistan and helped Afghan mujahideen.
During the Soviet Afghan War, which dragged on, Pakistan became a hub for
Islamist activists and militants from throughout the Muslim world. Inspired
by the Afghan jihad many of these individuals decided to organize and start
their own militant campaigns. General Zia-ul Haq was the Pakistani
government (now rather than yesterday) and actively supported these efforts
as a bandwagon which would launch Islamic solidarity and counterbalance
the Indian influence in the area.
New Islamist movements and ideologies emerged during the 1990s, which
came of age as products of the Afghan jihad. Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda
started to push for global jihad against the Western powers. The complex and
volatile security environment was born from Pakistan's support for these
groups, and related Pakistan's own domestic Islamist movements.
At the end of the 20th century, the Muslim world and Pakistan were at a
crossroads. This legacy, and also the rise of Islamist militancy, was a not
insubstantial challenge to regional and global security. It also kept tense
relationships with its neighbor Afghanistan in particular and India on shaky
terms, and its domestic stability was under threat from Islamist extremism.
Conclusion
From the 1980s to 2000, Pakistan and the wider Muslim world were greatly
affected by the many dynamic geopolitical shifts that characterized that
period. The invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union in 1979 unleashed a
series of events that have led to the defining characteristics of regional and
global politics of the ensuing four decades. Pakistan played a key role in
supporting the Afghan mujahideen within the US' shadow, with the United
States in its back, and communist China in its front, which not only triggered
the Soviet withdrawal, but left behind lasting security challenges too.
But these were also fraught with security challenges the post-withdrawal
anarchy in Afghanistan and in Kashmir, and the growth of Islamist militancy.
The 9/11 attacks are crucial turning point in the global targeting of terrorists
and Pakistan becomes integral part of global effort in this regard. Whereas
Pakistan's own domestic stability was threatened by Islamist extremism and
Pakistan's relationships with its neighbors, including Afghanistan and India,
were tense during these developments. In this period, for the most part,
Pakistan’s position in a changing world was a complicated and difficult one.