Order Code IB94041
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Pakistan-U.S. Relations
Updated September 14, 2001
Barbara Leitch LePoer
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Context of the Relationship
Historical Background
U.S. 1990 Aid Cut-off
Pakistan-India Rivalry
The China Factor
Pakistan Political Setting
Background
Pakistan-U.S. Relations and Bilateral Issues
Security
Nuclear Weapons and Missile Proliferation
U.S. Nonproliferation Efforts
Congressional Action
Pakistan-U.S. Military Cooperation
Democratization and Human Rights
Democratization Efforts
Human Rights Problems
Economic Issues
Economic Reforms and Market Opening
Trade and Trade Issues
Narcotics
Terrorism
CHRONOLOGY


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Pakistan-U.S. Relations
SUMMARY
The major areas of U.S. concern in Paki-
goals in order for sanctions to be lifted.
stan include: nuclear weapons and missile
proliferation; regional stability; democratiza-
The nuclear issue aside, U.S. interests
tion and human rights; and economic reform
strongly support a stable, democratic, econom-
and development. An ongoing Pakistan-India
ically thriving Pakistan that would serve as a
nuclear arms race, fueled by rivalry over Kash-
model for the volatile and/or newly independ-
mir, continues to be the focus of U.S.
ent countries of West and Central Asia. Al-
nonproliferation efforts in South Asia and a
though ruled by military regimes for about half
major issue in U.S. relations with both coun-
of its existence, Pakistan had democratic
tries. This attention intensified following
governments1988-99 as a result of national
nuclear tests by both India and Pakistan in
elections in 1988, 1990, 1993, and 1997.
May 1998. South Asia is viewed by some
Between 1988 and 1999, Benazir Bhutto,
experts as one of the most likely prospects for
leader of the Pakistan People’s Party, and
use of such weapons. India has developed
Nawaz Sharif, leader of the Pakistan Muslim
short- and intermediate-range missiles, and
League, each served twice as prime minister.
Pakistan has acquired short-range missiles
Neither leader served a full term, being dis-
from China and medium-range missiles from
missed by the president under constitutional
North Korea. India and Pakistan have fought
provisions that have been used to dismiss four
three wars since 1947.
governments since 1985.


The Pakistan-U.S. relationship, which
In October 1999, the government of
dates from the mid-1950s, began as a security
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was overturned
arrangement based on U.S. concern over
in a bloodless coup led by Chief of Army Staff
Soviet expansion and Pakistan’s fear of neigh-
Pervez Musharraf, who suspended the
boring India. Cooperation reached its high
parliament and declared himself chief
point during the 1979-89 Soviet occupation of
executive. The United States has strongly
Afghanistan. U.S.-Pakistan ties have weak-
urged the Pakistan military government to
ened since then. In October 1990, U.S. aid
restore the country to civilian democratic rule.
and arms sales to Pakistan were suspended
General Musharraf has pledged to honor a
when President Bush could not certify to
Pakistan Supreme Court ruling ordering
Congress, as required under Section 620E(e)
parliamentary elections to be held by late
of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) (the
2002. Musharraf also has promised to address
so-called “Pressler amendment”), that Pakistan
Pakistan’s many pressing and longstanding
does not possess a nuclear explosive device.
problems, including the beleaguered economy,
Both Congress and the Bush Administration
corruption, terrorism, and poor governance. In
consider good relations with Pakistan as key to
June 2001, General Musharraf assumed the
U.S. interests in both South and Southwest
post of president.
Asia. Some economic sanctions on India and
Pakistan resulting from their May 1998 nuclear
Congress and the Administration continue
tests have been waived. In a series of talks
to be concerned about narcotics and terrorist
since the tests, U.S. officials have urged both
activity in Pakistan, as well as human rights
countries to meet certain nonproliferation
abuses, particularly of women, children, and
minorities.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
On September 11, Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf condemned the
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington as “most brutal and horrible” and said “the
world must unite to fight against terrorism in all its forms.” Two days later – under strong
U.S. diplomatic pressure – Musharraf offered President Bush “our unstinted cooperation
in the fight against terrorism.” Pakistan is the principal backer of Afghanistan’s ruling
Taliban, who have long harbored exiled Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, a prime suspect
in the terrorist attacks. Pakistan officials reportedly fear that military strikes on
Afghanistan would destabilize Pakistan, where there is strong support for the Taliban.

The Bush Administration reportedly plans to start working with Congress in September
to lift sanctions placed on India following its 1998 nuclear tests, according to U.S. state and
defense department officials. The officials were less definite on efforts to lift sanctions on
Pakistan, noting that, since the 1999 military coup, Pakistan has also been under democracy
sanctions. Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage noted, however, Pakistan’s long
history as a U.S. ally and concerns about developments in neighboring Afghanistan, saying:
“The United States is not interested in Pakistan becoming more under the influence of
Afghanistan. There has to be a way out for Pakistan. We’re going to play an effective
role.” (Jane Perlez, “U.S. ready to end sanctions on India to build alliance,” New York
Times, August 27, 2001, p. A1). (See also new CRS Report RS20995, India and Pakistan:
Current U.S. Economic Sanctions, by Dianne E. Rennack).

On August 14, 2001, President Musharraf announced that local elections had been
completed and that elections to provincial assemblies and the parliament will be held in
October 2002. On August 29, an International Monetary Fund team cleared release of the
final installment of a $596 million standby loan to Pakistan and confirmed “Pakistan’s solid
macroeconomic performance, including lower inflation, a strengthening of the balance of
payments, and reduction of fiscal imbalances.”

Summit talks in Agra, India, in July between President Musharraf and Indian Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee failed to produce a joint communique, reportedly as a result
of pressure from hardliners on both sides. Major stumbling blocks were India’s refusal to
acknowledge the “centrality of Kashmir” to future talks and Pakistan’s objection to
references to “cross-border terrorism.” Prime Minister Vajpayee accepted an invitation
to visit Pakistan for further talks. According to Indian government reports, more than 2,000
people have died since January 2001 as a result of the fighting in Jammu
and Kashmir state,
including 618 civilians, 1,133 militants, and 228 security forces. On August 30, Amnesty
International reported that it believed 1,100 people had disappeared in Kashmir since the
revolt began in 1990. A little-known militant group, Lashkar-e-Jabbar, issued an edict to
all Kashmiri women that after September 1, they must wear a burqa – a gown that covers
them from head to foot with only a small square of netting to see through, similar to what
the Taliban government in Afghanistan has forced women to wear – “or be dealt with
sternly.” Kashmiri women traditionally have not worn the burqa. The Lashkar-e-Jabbar
reportedly claimed credit for recently throwing acid on the faces of several women teachers
and students not wearing burqas in Srinagar. The major militant groups deny that they

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support the edict. Most women and girls in Srinagar reportedly are fearful of going out
without being veiled.

BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Context of the Relationship
Historical Background
The long and checkered U.S.-Pakistan relationship has its roots in the Cold War and
South Asia regional politics of the 1950s. U.S. concern about Soviet expansion and
Pakistan’s desire for security assistance against a perceived threat from India prompted the
two countries to negotiate a mutual defense assistance agreement in May 1954. By late 1955,
Pakistan had further aligned itself with the West by joining two regional defense pacts, the
South East Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) and the Baghdad Pact (later Central Treaty
Organization, CENTO). As a result of these alliances and a 1959 U.S.-Pakistan cooperation
agreement, Pakistan received more than $700 million in military grant aid in 1955-65. U.S.
economic aid to Pakistan between 1951 and 1982 totaled more than $5 billion.
Differing expectations of the security relationship have long bedeviled ties. During the
Indo-Pakistani wars of 1965 and 1971, the United States suspended military assistance to
both sides, resulting in a cooling of the U.S.-Pakistan relationship. In the mid-1970s, new
strains arose over Pakistan’s apparent efforts to respond to India’s 1974 underground test of
a nuclear device by seeking its own capability to build a nuclear bomb. Although limited U.S.
military aid to Islamabad was resumed in 1975, it was suspended again by the Carter
Administration in April 1979, under Section 669 of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA),
because of Pakistan’s secret construction of a uranium enrichment facility.
Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, Pakistan was again
viewed as a frontline state against Soviet expansionism. An offer to Pakistan of $400 million
in economic and security aid by the Carter Administration in early 1980 was turned down by
President Zia-ul Haq as “peanuts.” In September 1981, however, the Reagan Administration,
negotiated a $3.2 billion, 5-year economic and military aid package with Pakistan. Congress
facilitated the resumption of aid in December by adding Section 620E to the FAA, giving the
President authority to waive Section 669 for 6 years in the case of Pakistan, on grounds of
national interest. Pakistan became a funnel for arms supplies to the Afghan resistance, as well
as a camp for three million Afghan refugees.
Despite the renewal of U.S. aid and close security ties, many in Congress remained
concerned about Pakistan’s nuclear program, based, in part, on evidence of U.S. export
control violations that suggested a crash program to acquire a nuclear weapons capability.
In 1985, Section 620E(e) (the so-called Pressler amendment) was added to the FAA,
requiring the President to certify to Congress that Pakistan does not possess a nuclear
explosive device during the fiscal year for which aid is to be provided. The Pressler
amendment represented a compromise between those in Congress who thought that aid to
Pakistan should be cut off because of evidence that it was continuing to develop its nuclear
option and those who favored continued support for Pakistan’s role in opposing Soviet
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occupation of Afghanistan. A $4 billion, 6-year aid package for Pakistan was signed in 1986.
U.S. 1990 Aid Cut-off. With the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, beginning in
May 1988, however, Pakistan’s nuclear activities again came under close U.S. scrutiny. In
October 1990, President Bush suspended aid to Pakistan because he was unable to make the
necessary certification to Congress. Under the provisions of the Pressler amendment, most
economic and all military aid to Pakistan was stopped and deliveries of major military
equipment suspended. Narcotics assistance of $3-5 million annually, administered by the
State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics Matters, was exempted from the aid
cutoff. In 1992, Congress partially relaxed the scope of the aid cutoff to allow for P.L.480
food assistance and continuing support for nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). P.L. 480
food aid totaled about $5 million in both FY1997 and FY1998. The Foreign Operations
Appropriations Act for FY1996 included an amendment introduced by Senator Hank Brown
that allowed a one-time release to Pakistan of $368 million in military hardware ordered
before the 1990 aid cutoff.
One of the most serious results of the aid cutoff for Pakistan was the nondelivery of
some 71 F-16 fighter aircraft ordered in 1989. A search was made for a third country buyer
in order to reimburse Pakistan $658 million it had paid for 28 of the fighter planes. Deeply
frustrated by the nondelivery of its planes and the nonrefund of its money, the Pakistan
government reportedly considered going to court over the matter. In December 1998, the
United States agreed to pay Pakistan $324.6 million from the Judgment Fund of the U.S.
Treasury – a fund used to settle legal disputes that involve the U.S. government – as well as
provide Pakistan with $140 million in goods, including agricultural commodities.
Pakistan-India Rivalry
Three wars – in 1947-48, 1965, and 1971 – and a constant state of military preparedness
on both sides of the border have marked the half-century of bitter rivalry between India and
Pakistan. The acrimonious nature of the partition of British India into two successor states
in 1947 and the continuing dispute over Kashmir have been major sources of tension. Both
Pakistan and India have built large defense establishments – including ballistic missile
programs and nuclear weapons capability – at the cost of economic and social development.
The Kashmir problem is rooted in claims by both countries to the former princely state,
divided by a military line of control, since 1948, into the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir
and Pakistan-controlled (Free) Kashmir. India blames Pakistan for supporting a separatist
rebellion raging in the Muslim-dominated Kashmir Valley that has claimed 30,000 lives since
1990. Pakistan admits only to lending moral and political support to the rebellion, while
accusing India of creating dissension in Pakistan’s Sindh province. (For further discussion,
see pp. 9-10.)
The China Factor. India and China fought a brief border war in 1962, and relations
between the two remained tense for three decades, each deploying troops along a line of
control that serves as the boundary. In September 1993, China and India signed an agreement
to reduce troops and maintain peace along the line of control dividing their forces. Despite
this thaw in relations, the India-China boundary has yet to be settled, and India remains
suspicious of China’s military might. India-China relations suffered a setback as a result of
statements by Indian government officials that its May 1998 nuclear tests were prompted in
large part by the China threat.
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Pakistan and China, on the other hand, have enjoyed a close and mutually beneficial
relationship over the same three decades. Pakistan served as a link between Beijing and
Washington in 1971, as well as a bridge to the Muslim world for China in the 1980s. China’s
continuing role as a major arms supplier for Pakistan began in the 1960s, and included helping
to build a number of arms factories in Pakistan, as well as supplying arms. In September
1990, China agreed to supply Pakistan with components for M-11 surface-to-surface missiles,
which brought warnings from the United States. Although it is not a member of the Missile
Technology Control Regime (MTCR), China agreed to abide by the restrictions of the
MTCR, which bans the transfer of missiles with a range of more than 300 kilometers and a
payload of more than 500 kilograms. In August 1993, the United States determined that
China had transferred to Pakistan prohibited missile technology and imposed trade sanctions
on one Pakistan and 11 Chinese entities (government ministries and aerospace companies) for
two years. A July 1995 Washington Post report quoted unnamed U.S. officials as saying that
the U.S. intelligence community had evidence that China had given Pakistan complete M-11
ballistic missiles. In February 1996, the U.S. press reported on leaked U.S. intelligence
reports alleging that China sold ring magnets to Pakistan, in 1995, that could be used in
enriching uranium for nuclear weapons. Pakistan denied the reports.
On November 21, 2000, the United States imposed 2-year sanctions on the Pakistan
Ministry of Defense and Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Organization, as
well as Iranian entities, as a result of past Chinese assistance to Pakistani and Iranian missile
programs. At the same time, sanctions on China were waived as a result of an agreement by
China not to assist other countries in ballistic missile development and to strengthen its export
control system. The new sanctions, according to a U.S. State Department spokesman, will
have limited impact given preexisting sanctions, but “do send a strong signal that the United
States opposes these countries’ missile programs.”(For background and updates on China-
Pakistan technology transfer, see CRS Issue Brief IB92056, Chinese Proliferation of
Weapons of Mass Destruction: Current Policy Issues
.)
Pakistan Political Setting
On October 12, 1999, the Pakistan army under Chief of Army Staff General Pervez
Musharraf carried out a bloodless coup that deposed then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and
put him under house arrest, a few hours after Sharif had announced the replacement of the
army chief. The coup reportedly followed several weeks of rumors of a power struggle
between Sharif and Musharraf. Subsequently, Sharif appeared to have resolved his dispute
with Musharraf, but then fired him without prior notice while the general was on a visit to Sri
Lanka. On October 14, General Musharraf suspended the constitution and the parliament
and named himself chief executive. In an October 18 televised address to the nation,
Musharraf pledged to: eventually restore civilian rule; reform corrupt government
institutions; revive the nation’s economy; reduce troops on the Indian border; use restraint
in nuclear weapons policy; and promote a moderate form of Islam. Nawaz Sharif and six
other defendants were charged with attempted murder and kidnaping for denying landing
access to the plane returning General Musharraf and 200 other passengers from Sri Lanka to
Karachi on October 12. The United States urged the Pakistan military government to provide
a transparent, fair, and impartial trial of the former prime minister and to set a timetable for
the restoration of democracy.
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In April 2000, Nawaz Sharif was convicted of hijacking and terrorism and sentenced to
life imprisonment. Sharif’s six co-defendants, including his brother, were acquitted of all
charges. Appeals were filed. On May 12, the Pakistan Supreme Court upheld the legality of
the October coup led by General Musharraf. While ruling that widespread corruption and
economic mismanagement under the Sharif government justified the coup, the court gave the
military government until October 12, 2002, to accomplish economic and political reform and
ordered parliamentary elections to be held no more than 90 days thereafter. On May 25,
General Musharraf stated in a press conference that he would honor the Supreme Court
timetable. In August he announced details of a controversial plan to return the country to
democracy, beginning with local council elections in 2001. Most political parties opposed the
plan, which called for the local elections to be held on a non-party basis and one-third of the
council seats to be reserved for women.
In a surprise move on December 10, 2000, the Pakistan military government pardoned
Nawaz Sharif of his prison sentence and allowed him to go into exile in Saudi Arabia, along
with 17 members of his family. Sharif was disqualified from public office for 21 years and
required to forfeit about $9 million in property. In early 2001, Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim
League (PML) and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
joined with smaller parties to form an Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy. In late
April and early May, the military government arrested hundreds of political workers in
Karachi to block a May Day rally in support of the restoration of democratic rule.
In June 2001, General Musharraf dismissed the former president, Rafiq Tarar, and
assumed the presidential post himself, while retaining his own positions as chief executive and
chief of army staff. Pakistan’s national and provincial legislatures – suspended following the
October 1999 military coup – were dissolved. President Musharraf stated his commitment
to hold national elections in October 2002, as directed by the Pakistan Supreme Court, and
to restore the country to civilian rule. Musharraf gave as his rationale for assuming the
presidency national interests of political stability and the continuity and sustainability of
economic reforms. According to observers, the timing of the move may have been dictated
by a perceived need to clarify General Musharraf’s political role prior to upcoming talks with
India. New Delhi gave immediate recognition of Musharraf as president.
Leaders of Pakistan’s various political parties criticized General Musharraf’s action,
calling it unconstitutional. On June 20, U.S. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher
expressed the U.S. reaction to the development: “We are very concerned and very
disappointed that Pakistan takes another turn away from democracy rather than, as we had
hoped, a step toward democracy.” Boucher also noted that “U.S. sanctions imposed because
of the [1999] military coup cannot be lifted until the President determines that a
democratically elected government has taken office.”
Background. Military regimes have ruled Pakistan for half of its 54 years, interspersed
with periods of generally weak civilian governance. After 1988, Pakistan had democratically
elected governments, and the army appeared to have moved from its traditional role of power
wielder or kingmaker toward one of power broker or referee. During the past decade,
Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif each served twice as prime minister. Bhutto was elected
prime minister in October 1988, following the death of military ruler Mohammad Zia-ul Haq
in a plane crash. General Zia had led a coup in 1977 deposing Bhutto’s father, Prime Minister
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who was later executed. Despite the restoration of democratic process
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to Pakistan in 1988, the succeeding years were marred by political instability, economic
problems, and ethnic and sectarian violence. In August 1990, President Ishaq Khan dismissed
Bhutto for alleged corruption and inability to maintain law and order. The president’s power
to dismiss the prime minister derived from Eighth Amendment provisions of the Pakistan
constitution, which dated from the era of Zia’s presidency.
Elections held in October 1990 brought to power Nawaz Sharif, who also was ousted,
in 1993, under the Eighth Amendment provisions. The 1993 elections returned Bhutto and
the PPP to power. The new Bhutto government faced serious economic problems, including
drought-induced power shortages and crop failures, as well as increasing ethnic and religious
turmoil, particularly in Sindh Province. According to some observers, the Bhutto
government’s performance also was hampered by the reemergence of Bhutto’s husband, Asif
Ali Zardari, in a decisionmaking role. Zardari’s role in the previous Bhutto government was
believed to have been a factor in her dismissal. He served two years in jail on corruption
charges, but subsequently was acquitted. In November 1996, President Farooq Leghari
dismissed the Bhutto government for “corruption, nepotism, and violation of rules in the
administration of the affairs of the Government” and scheduled new elections for February
1997. Zardari was placed under detention by the interim government, where he currently
remains.
Nawaz Sharif’s PML won a landslide victory in the February 1997 parliamentary
elections, which, despite low voter turnout, international observers judged to be generally free
and fair. Sharif moved quickly to consolidate his power by curtailing the powers of the
President and the judiciary. In April 1997, the Parliament passed the Thirteenth Amendment
to the constitution, which deleted the President’s former Eighth Amendment powers to
dismiss the government and to appoint armed forces chiefs and provincial governors. The
new amendment was passed unanimously by both houses of parliament and signed by
President Leghari.
In November 1997, President Leghari was drawn into a dispute between Prime Minister
Sharif and Supreme Court Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah over the appointment of judges. In
the ensuing power struggle and constitutional crisis, Leghari resigned as president, and Shah
was replaced as chief justice. Sharif chose Mohammad Rafiq Tarar to succeed Leghari as
president. As a result of these developments and the PML control of the Parliament, Nawaz
Sharif emerged as one of Pakistan’s strongest elected leaders since independence. His critics
accused him of further consolidating his power by intimidating the opposition and the press.
In April 1999, a two-judge Ehtesab (accountability) Bench of the Lahore High Court
convicted former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and her husband of corruption and sentenced
them to 5 years in prison, fined them $8.6 million, and disqualified them from holding public
office. Bhutto was out of the country at the time. In commenting on the conviction, the
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan noted: “...the selective manner in which ehtesab has
been conducted by the executive smacks of political vindictiveness.” In April 2001, the
Pakistan Supreme Court ruled that former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s 1999 conviction
for corruption was biased and ordered a retrial.
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Pakistan-U.S. Relations and Bilateral Issues
U.S. policy interests in Pakistan encompass a wide range of issues, including nuclear
weapons and missile proliferation; South Asian regional stability; democratization and human
rights; economic reform and market opening; and efforts to counter terrorism and narcotics.
These concerns have been affected by several developments in recent years, including 1) the
cutoff of U.S. aid to Pakistan in 1990 and 1998 over the nuclear issue; 2) India and Pakistan’s
worsening relationship over Kashmir since 1990, and their continuing nuclear standoff; and
3) Pakistan’s see-saw attempts to develop a stable democratic government and strong
economy in the post-Cold War era.
On March 25, 2000, President Clinton visited Pakistan as part of a one-week trip to
South Asia, which included a one-day visit to Bangladesh and the majority of the time spent
visiting India. In Islamabad, the President met with Chief Executive Gen. Pervez Musharraf
and urged the military leadership to develop a timetable and a roadmap for restoring
democracy and to use its influence with the Taliban government of Afghanistan to close down
terrorist training camps in that country. Gen. Musharraf reportedly agreed to take up the
issue of terrorist training camps with the Taliban. He announced that local elections will be
held before August 2001, but gave no timetable for national elections. During an address to
the Indian parliament and a televised address to the Pakistani people, President Clinton urged
both countries to reconsider their nuclear programs, create a proper climate for peace, and
restart dialogue on Kashmir and other bilateral issues. (See also CRS Report RS20508,
President Clinton’s South Asia Trip.)
Security
Nuclear Weapons and Missile Proliferation. On May 11 and 13, 1998, India
conducted a total of five underground nuclear tests, breaking a 24-year self-imposed
moratorium on nuclear testing. Despite U.S. and world efforts to dissuade it, Pakistan
followed, claiming five tests on May 28, 1998, and an additional test on May 30. The
unannounced tests created a global storm of criticism, as well as a serious setback for two
decades of U.S. nuclear nonproliferation efforts in South Asia. (See also CRS Report 98-
570, India-Pakistan Nuclear Tests and U.S. Response and CRS Report RL30623, Nuclear
Weapons and Ballistic Missile Proliferation in India and Pakistan: Issues for Congress
.)
On May 13, 1998, President Clinton imposed economic and military sanctions on India,
mandated by section 102 of the Arms Export Control Act (AECA), and applied the same
sanctions to Pakistan on May 30. Humanitarian assistance, food, or other agricultural
commodities are excepted from sanctions under the law. In November1998, the U.S.
Department of Commerce published a list of more than 300 Indian and Pakistani government
agencies and companies suspected of working on nuclear, missile, and other weapons
programs. Any U.S. exports to these entities will require a Commerce Department license,
and most license requests reportedly will be denied. On the one hand, Pakistan is less affected
than India by the sanctions, since most U.S. assistance to Pakistan has been cut off since
1990. On the other hand, Pakistan’s much smaller – and currently weaker – economy is
more vulnerable to the effects of the sanctions.
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U.S. policy analysts consider the continuing arms race between India and Pakistan as
posing perhaps the most likely prospect for the future use of nuclear weapons. India
conducted its first, and only, previous nuclear test in May 1974, following which it maintained
ambiguity about the status of its nuclear program. Pakistan probably gained a nuclear
weapons capability sometime in the 1980s. India is believed to have enough plutonium for
75 or more nuclear weapons. Pakistan may have enough enriched uranium for 25 nuclear
weapons. Both countries have aircraft capable of delivering weapons. India has short-range
missiles (Prithvi) and is developing an intermediate-range ballistic missile (Agni) with enough
payload to carry a nuclear warhead. Pakistan reportedly has acquired technology for short-
range missiles from China (Hatf) and medium-range missiles from North Korea (Ghauri),
capable of carrying small nuclear warheads.
Proliferation in South Asia is part of a chain of rivalries — India seeking to achieve
deterrence against China, and Pakistan seeking to gain an “equalizer” against a larger and
conventionally stronger India. India began its nuclear program in the mid-1960s, after its
1962 defeat in a short border war with China and China’s first nuclear test in 1964. Despite
a 1993 Sino-Indian troop reduction agreement and some easing of tensions, both nations
continue to deploy forces along their border. Pakistan’s nuclear program was prompted by
India’s 1974 nuclear test and by Pakistan’s defeat by India in the 1971 war and consequent
loss of East Pakistan, now independent Bangladesh.
U.S. Nonproliferation Efforts. Neither India nor Pakistan are signatories of the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) or the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).
India has consistently rejected both treaties as discriminatory, calling instead for a global
nuclear disarmament regime. Pakistan traditionally has maintained that it will sign the NPT
and CTBT only when India does so. Aside from security concerns, the governments of both
countries are faced with the prestige factor attached to their nuclear programs and the
domestic unpopularity of giving them up.
U.S. efforts to mobilize international pressure following the South Asian nuclear tests
resulted in strong resolutions by the U.N. Security Council and the Group of Eight (G-8)
urging India and Pakistan to sign the CTBT. In the aftermath of the 1998 nuclear tests,
Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott began a series of meetings with high-level Indian
and Pakistani officials. In a November 12,1998 speech at the Brookings Institution, Talbott
outlined U.S. goals in imposing the sanctions. He stated the continuing U.S. commitment to
the long-range goal of universal adherence to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT),
saying: “We do not, and will not, concede, even by implication, that India and Pakistan have
established themselves as nuclear weapons states under the NPT.” He noted, however, the
U.S. recognition that progress toward that goal “must be based on India’s and Pakistan’s
conceptions of their own national interests.” The steps outlined by Talbott that the United
States is urging India and Pakistan to take to avoid “a destabilizing nuclear and missile
competition” and their current status, follow:
Halt further nuclear testing and sign and ratify the CTBT. Both India and
Pakistan are currently under self-imposed moratoriums on nuclear testing. In speeches before
the September 1998 meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, the prime ministers of both
countries announced their intention to sign the CTBT before September 1999. Japan – the
largest bilateral aid donor for both countries – has made resumption of its aid programs
contingent on signing the CTBT and assurances not to transfer nuclear technology or material
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to any other country. Both countries apparently believe, however, that the U.S. failure to
ratify the CTBT in 1999 has given them some breathing space.
Halt fissile material production; cooperate in Fissile Material Control
Treaty (FMCT) negotiations. Both India and Pakistan agreed in July 1998 to participate
in negotiations on the FMCT. In late 1998, India indicated its unwillingness to halt fissile
material production prior to a FMCT. Pakistan, with a somewhat smaller estimated stockpile
than India’s, would probably be even more reluctant.
Refrain from deploying or testing ballistic missiles. The United States has
urged India and Pakistan – with little success – to adopt a package of constraints on
development, flight testing, and storage of missiles, and basing of nuclear-capable aircraft.
On April 11, 1999, India tested its intermediate-range Agni II missile, firing it a reported
distance of 1,250 miles. On April 14-15, Pakistan countered by test firing its Ghauri II and
Shaheen missiles with a reported range of 1,250 and 375 miles, respectively. U.S. officials
expressed regret over the South Asian missile testing and noted that it could cause a delay in
efforts to lift nuclear sanctions against India and Pakistan. In other international reaction,
Japan and Russia also expressed serious concern over the missile tests and the possibility of
further escalation of tensions in the region. On January 17, 2001, India again successfully
test-fired its Agni II missile.
Maintain and formalize restraints on sharing sensitive goods and
technologies with other countries. Both India and Pakistan are believed to have good
records on nonproliferation of sensitive technologies. In December 1998, the Indian
government announced tightening of controls to prevent the export of sensitive technologies.
In March 1999, the Pakistan government reportedly issued a statutory regulatory order to
control the export of nuclear technology. Both Pakistan and India have held several rounds
of expert-level talks with U.S. officials on export controls since the May 1998 nuclear tests.

Reduce bilateral tensions, including Kashmir. Beginning in 1990 – with the
increasing friction between India and Pakistan over Kashmir – the United States strongly
encouraged both governments to institute confidence-building measures in order to reduce
tensions. Measures agreed to so far include: agreement on advance notice of military
movements; establishment of a military commander “hotline”; an exchange of lists of nuclear
installations and facilities; agreement not to attack each other’s nuclear facilities; a joint ban
on use and production of chemical weapons; and measures to prevent air space violations.
Following their 1998 nuclear tests, India and Pakistan began a new round of high-level talks
on major bilateral issues including Kashmir; the Siachen Glacier military standoff; the Sir
Creek maritime boundary dispute; the Wuller Barrage/Tulbul Navigation Project dispute over
sharing of the Jhelum River waters; terrorism and drug trafficking; economic and commercial
cooperation; and promotion of friendly exchanges in various fields. In February 1999, Prime
Minister Vajpayee took an historic bus ride to Pakistan to hold talks with then Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif. The two leaders signed the Lahore Declaration in which they agreed to
intensify efforts to resolve all issues, including Jammu and Kashmir and to take a number of
steps to reduce tensions between their countries.
The prospects for India-Pakistan detente suffered a severe setback in May-July 1999,
when the two countries teetered on the brink of their fourth war, once again in Kashmir. In
the worst fighting since 1971, Indian soldiers sought to dislodge some 700 Pakistan-
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supported infiltrators who were occupying fortified positions along mountain ridges
overlooking a supply route on the Indian side of the line of control (LOC) near Kargil.
Following a meeting on July 4, between then Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and
President Clinton in Washington, the infiltrators withdrew across the LOC. (See CRS Report
RS20277, Recent Developments in Kashmir and U.S. Concerns.)
Tensions between India and Pakistan remained extremely high in the wake of the Kargil
conflict, which cost more than 1,100 lives. Cross-border firing and shelling – one barometer
of bilateral relations – continued at high levels. In August 1999, an Indian jet fighter shot
down a Pakistani naval aircraft flying near the southwestern end of the border between the
two countries, killing all 16 people aboard. India claimed the plane was shot down over
Indian territory after refusing to obey radio calls to land, while Pakistan claimed the plane was
shot down over its own territory. The October 1999 military coup in Pakistan slowed further
any progress on India-Pakistan detente. India accused Pakistan of being behind the December
1999 hijacking of an Indian Airlines plane on a flight between Kathmandu and New Delhi.
The plane was flown to Kandahar, Afghanistan, where it remained until the crisis ended on
December 31, the release of more than 150 passengers and crew members in return for the
release of three Muslim militants being held in Indian jails. India claimed the hijackers and
the released prisoners were mostly Pakistanis sympathetic to the Kashmiri separatist
movement in India’s Jammu and Kashmir state. Throughout 2000, cross-border firing and
shelling continued at high levels. India accused Pakistan of sending a flood of militants into
Kashmir and increasingly targeting isolated police posts and civilians. Pakistan also accused
India of cross-border raids by Indian soldiers. According to Indian government sources,
more than 5,000 militants, security forces, and civilians were killed in Jammu and Kashmir
state in 1999-2000.
The United States has strongly urged India and Pakistan to create the proper climate for
peace, respect the LOC, reject violence, and return to the Lahore peace process. Recent
events suggest that that advice is being heeded. In 2000, General Musharraf made several
offers to hold talks with India, “anytime, anywhere.” New Delhi rejected these offers, stating
that they weren’t accompanied by a cessation of “cross-border terrorism.” In November
2000, however, India announced a unilateral halt to its military operations in Kashmir during
the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. In December, the Pakistan government announced that
its forces deployed along the LOC in Kashmir would observe maximum restraint and that
some of its troops would be pulled back from the LOC. Indian army officials noted that
clashes between Indian and Pakistani forces along the LOC had virtually stopped since the
cease-fire began and that there had been a definite reduction of infiltration of militants from
Pakistan. In February, Prime Minister Vajpayee extended the cease-fire until the end of May
2001. Kashmir’s main militant groups, however, rejected the cease-fire as a fraud and
continued to carry out attacks on military personnel and government installations. As security
forces conducted counter operations, deaths of Kashmiri civilians, militants, and Indian
security forces continued to rise.
On May 23, 2001, the Indian government announced that it was ending its unilateral
cease-fire in Kashmir but that Prime Minister Vajpayee would invite Pakistan military ruler
General (now President) Pervez Musharraf to New Delhi for talks. In his May 29 acceptance
of the invitation, General Musharraf noted that he was willing to discuss all outstanding issues
but that resolving the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, in accordance with the wishes of the
Kashmiri people, should be the main focus of the discussions.
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Congressional Action. In October 1998, Congress gave the President authority to
waive for one year some economic sanctions on India and Pakistan under the India-Pakistan
Relief Act of 1998 (popularly referred to as the Brownback amendment), which was signed
into law as part of the Omnibus Appropriations Act. In November 1998, President Clinton
restored some non-military aid programs in India and lifted restrictions on the activities of
U.S. banks in India and Pakistan.
In 1999, a number of bills were proposed to address the sanctions issue. In October,
Congress passed H.R. 2561, the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2000, and it was
signed by the President as P.L. 106-79 on October 29. Title IX of the act gives the President
authority to waive sanctions applied against India and Pakistan in response to the nuclear
tests. In a presidential determination on India and Pakistan issued on October 27, 1999, the
President waived economic sanctions on India. As a result of Pakistan’s October 1999
military coup, which triggered sanctions under Section 508 of the annual foreign assistance
appropriations act, sanctions were waived relating only for assistance for food and other
agricultural commodity purchases and for U.S. bank loans or credits. The Foreign Operations
Export Financing and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001, however, provided an
exception under which Pakistan can be provided U.S. foreign assistance funding for basic
education programs (P.L. 106-429; sec.597). The U.S. Agency for International
Development request for FY2002 includes $7 million for programs to strengthen civil society
and reform public education in Pakistan. Currently, other U.S. assistance to Pakistan is
limited mainly to Afghan refugee and counter-narcotics assistance.
Pakistan-U.S. Military Cooperation. The U.S. and Pakistan militaries have enjoyed
a close working relationship for several decades. Although military assistance is barred under
the aid cutoff, some communication and cooperation has continued. Pakistan has been a
leading country in supporting U.N. peacekeeping efforts with troops and observers. Some
5,000 Pakistani troops were stationed in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates as part
of the U.S.-led Persian Gulf War efforts in 1990. Pakistani troops played an important role
in the U.S.-led humanitarian operations in Somalia from 1992 to 1994. In April 2001, there
were 1,320 Pakistani troops and observers participating in U.N. peacekeeping efforts in East
Timor, Kosovo, Bosnia, Congo, Sierra Leone, and other countries.
Democratization and Human Rights
Democratization Efforts. The United States considers the October 1999 Pakistan
military coup to be a serious setback to the country’s efforts to return to the democratic
election process beginning in 1988. National elections, judged by domestic and international
observers to be generally free and fair, were held in 1988, 1990, 1993, and 1997. Key to this
development was the apparent willingness of the Pakistan military to step back and allow the
evolution of a democratic polity. During several political crises in the 1990s, various chiefs
of army staff (COAS) brokered settlements under which new elections were held. In October
1998, COAS Gen. Jehangir Karamat resigned, in an apparent disagreement with Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif, and was replaced as COAS by General Pervez Musharraf.
Despite the stepping back of the military, Pakistan democracy between 1988 and 1999
was marred by wide-scale corruption, volatile mass-based politics, and a continuing lack of
symmetry between the development of the military and civilian bureaucracies and political
institutions. The politics of confrontation between parties and leaders flourished at the
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expense of effective government; frequent walkouts and boycotts of the national and
provincial assemblies often led to paralysis and instability. The major political parties lacked
grassroots organization and failed to be responsive to the electorate. The overwhelming
parliamentary victory of the PML in the February 1997 elections – based on low voter turnout
– led to the concentration of power in the hands of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
Human Rights Problems. The U.S. State Department, in its Pakistan Country
Report on Human Rights Practices for 2000 (issued February 2001), noted that, although
Pakistan’s human rights record remained poor under the military government, there were
improvements in some areas, including freedom of the press. Citizens continue to be denied
the right to choose or change their government peacefully since the October 1999 coup. In
May 2000, however, General Musharraf promised to abide by a Supreme Court ruling that
national elections will be held no later than 90 days after October 12, 2002. The State
Department report cited continuing problems of police abuse, religious discrimination, and
child labor. Security forces were cited for committing extrajudicial killings (although fewer
than in 1999), using arbitrary arrest and detention, torturing and abusing prisoners and
detainees, and raping women. Political and religious groups also engaged in killings and
persecution of their rivals and ethnic and religious minorities. Politically motivated violence
and a deteriorating law and order situation reportedly continued to be a serious problem in
2000, although less so following the October 1999 coup. In 1998-2000, an estimated 300
people were killed as a result of sectarian violence, mainly between Sunni and Shia extremist
groups.
In recent years, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and Amnesty International
have issued reports critical of abuses of the rights of women and minorities. According to the
reports, rape is a serious problem, particularly rape of minors and gang rape. The State
Department human rights report also noted a high rate of abuse of female prisoners –
including rape and torture – by male police officers. Women also suffer discrimination in
education, employment, and legal rights. The adult literacy rate for men in Pakistan is about
50% and for women about 24%. Religious minorities – mainly Christians, Hindus, and
Ahmadi Muslims – reportedly are subjected to discriminatory laws and social intolerance.
A 1974 amendment to the Pakistan constitution declared Ahmadis to be a non-Muslim
minority because they do not accept Muhammad as the last prophet. The Zia government,
in 1984, made it illegal for an Ahmadi to call himself a Muslim or use Muslim terminology.
Blasphemy laws, instituted under the Zia regime and strengthened in 1991, carry a mandatory
death penalty for blaspheming the Prophet or his family. Blasphemy charges reportedly are
usually brought as a result of personal or religious vendettas. A reported 35 Ahmadis have
been charged with blasphemy since October1999. Four Christians charged with the crime
were murdered in 1993.
Economic Issues
Economic Reforms and Market Opening. Pakistan’s current military government
inherited an economy in recession. A decade of political instability left a legacy of soaring
foreign debt, declining production and growth rates, failed economic reform policies, and
pervasive corruption. Foreign debt totals more than $32 billion; foreign reserves are less than
$1.5 billion (about 6 weeks of imports); gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate (usually
averaging 5-6%) reportedly has slipped to 3%; and both agricultural and industrial growth
have dropped since 1998.
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Over the long term, analysts believe Pakistan’s resources and comparatively
well-developed entrepreneurial skills hold promise for more rapid economic growth and
development. This is particularly true for Pakistan’s textile industry, which accounts for 60%
of Pakistan’s exports. Analysts point to the pressing need to broaden the country’s tax base
in order to provide increased revenue for investment in improved infrastructure, health, and
education, all prerequisites for economic development. Less than 1% of Pakistanis currently
pay income taxes. Agricultural income has not been taxed in the past, largely because of the
domination of parliament and the provincial assemblies by wealthy landlords.
Successive Bhutto and Sharif governments made agreements with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), promising austerity, deficit reduction, and improved tax collection
in return for loans and credits. The promised reforms, however, fell victim to political
instability and a host of other problems, including floods, drought, crop viruses, strikes, a
bloated and inefficient bureaucracy, widespread tax evasion, weak infrastructure, and a
swollen defense budget. The Musharraf government has had some success in putting
economic reforms back on track, including expanding collection of income and sales taxes,
trade liberalization, and improving transparency. In November 2000, the IMF voted (with
the United States abstaining) to give Pakistan a $596 million standby loan, $324 million of
which has been released in two payments. Further payments are dependent on Pakistan
instituting economic reforms, including widening the tax base, improving fiscal controls, and
increasing spending on poverty reduction projects. In January 2001, the Paris Club of
creditor nations agreed to reschedule $1.7 billion in repayments on Pakistan’s foreign debt
of $32 billion.
Trade and Trade Issues. In 2000, U.S. exports to Pakistan totaled $453 million and
imports from Pakistan totaled $2.2 billion. The United States has been strongly supportive
of Pakistan’s economic reform efforts, begun under the first Nawaz Sharif government in
1991. According to the report for 2000 of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR), however,
a number of trade barriers remain. Some items are either restricted or banned from
importation for reasons related to religion, national security, luxury consumption, or
protection of local industries. U.S. companies have complained repeatedly about violations
of their intellectual property rights in the areas of patents and copyrights. Pakistan’s patent
law currently protects only processes, not products, from infringement. A 1992 Pakistan
copyright law that provides coverage for such works as computer software and videos is
being enforced but has resulted in a backlog of cases in the court system. The International
Intellectual Property Alliance estimated trade losses of $137 million in 2000, as a result of
pirated films, sound recordings, computer programs, and books.
Narcotics
In recent years, the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region has supplied a reported
20%-40% of heroin consumed in the United States and 70% of that consumed in Europe.
The region is second only to Southeast Asia’s Golden Triangle as a source of the world’s
heroin. Opium grown in Afghanistan and Pakistan is processed into heroin in more than 100
illegal laboratories in the border region. Although much of the heroin is smuggled by land and
sea routes to Europe and the United States, a substantial portion is consumed by Pakistan’s
rapidly growing domestic market. The Pakistan government estimates the 4 million drug
addicts in the country include 1.5 million addicted to heroin. According to some experts,
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Pakistan’s drug economy amounts to as much as $20 billion. Drug money reportedly is used
to buy influence throughout Pakistan’s economic and political systems.
Pakistan’s counter-narcotics efforts are hampered by a number of factors, including lack
of government commitment; scarcity of funds; poor infrastructure in drug-producing regions;
government wariness of provoking unrest in tribal areas; and corruption among police,
government officials, and local politicians. U.S. counter-narcotics aid to Pakistan,
administered by the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law
Enforcement Affairs, totaled $3.5 million in FY2001, with $3.5 million requested for FY2002.
The major counter-narcotics efforts engaged in by the Pakistan government, some of which
receive U.S. or U.N. support, include: improved law enforcement; reduction of demand;
opium crop destruction and crop substitution; and outreach programs that include supplying
roads, irrigation, drinking water, and schools to remote tribal areas.
In March 2001, President Bush submitted to Congress his annual list of major illicit drug
producing and transiting countries eligible to receive U.S. foreign aid and other economic and
trade benefits. Pakistan was among the countries certified as having cooperated fully with the
United States in counter-narcotics efforts, or to have taken adequate steps on their own.
According to the report, Pakistan almost achieved its goal of eliminating opium production
by reducing the poppy crop to a record low of 500 hectares, down from 8,000 hectares in
1992. Pakistan, however, faces major challenges as a transit country, despite reduced
production of opium in Afghanistan. Cooperation with the United States on counter-
narcotics efforts was described as excellent, including arrests, extradition, and poppy
eradication.
Terrorism
In testifying before the House International Relations Committee in July 2000, U.S.
Coordinator for Counterterrorism Michael A. Sheehan stated that “Pakistan has a mixed
record on terrorism.” Although it has cooperated with the United States and other countries
on the arrest and extradition of terrorists, “Pakistan has tolerated terrorists living and moving
freely within its territory.” He further noted that although Pakistan is itself a victim of
terrorism, it “bears some responsibility for the current growth of terrorism in South Asia.
That we are allies makes it all the more important that we cooperate to rid the area of
terrorism.” In early 2001, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation began offering anti-
terrorism training courses for Pakistan police officers in the United States.
According to the U.S. State Department report on global terrorism for 2000, there was
continuing terrorist-related violence in Pakistan as a result of domestic conflicts between
sectarian and political groups. Much of the violence in Punjab province reportedly related to
rivalry between the extremist Sunni militant group Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan and their Shiite
counterpart, Sipah-i-Muhammad Pakistan. In Sindh province – and particularly in Karachi
– violence and terrorist incidents related to struggles between the government and the
Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) political party, which represents Urdu-speaking
Muslims, and their descendants, who migrated from India at the time of Partition in 1947.
Domestic violence reportedly lessened significantly following the October military coup.
In February 1995, Pakistan and U.S. officials cooperated closely in apprehending in
Islamabad the suspected mastermind of the New York World Trade Center bombing, who
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was quickly extradited to the United States. In a possibly related incident, two Americans on
their way to work at the U.S. consulate in Karachi were shot and killed in March 1995. On
November 12, 1997, four American employees of Union Texas Petroleum Co. and their
Pakistani driver were killed in a terrorist attack in Karachi. Some observers have speculated
that the killings may be linked to the November 10 conviction of Pakistani Mir Aimal Kansi
(or Kasi) for the murder of two CIA employees in 1993.
According to the global terrorism report for 2000, Pakistan’s military government
continued to support the Kashmir insurgency, including allowing Kashmiri militant groups
to raise funds and recruit new cadre in Pakistan. Several of these groups reportedly were
responsible for attacks on civilians in India’s Jammu and Kashmir state. There have been
allegations that four Western tourists, including American Donald Hutchings, kidnaped in
1995, may have been killed by militants associated with a Pakistan-based group, Harakat
ul-Mujahidin (HUM). Since October 1997, the HUM has been on the U.S. State
Department’s list of foreign terrorist organizations. Many of the charges against Pakistan
appear to stem from the presence of several thousand Islamic fundamentalists from various
countries who went to Pakistan to participate in the Afghanistan war and who remained in
the Peshawar area. Many religious schools suspected to be fronts for terrorist training
activities reportedly receive funding from Iran and Saudi Arabia. The 2000 report also noted
U.S. concern for Pakistan’s continued support for the Taliban’s military operations in
Afghanistan. According to credible reports, Pakistan supplied the Taliban with materiel, food,
funding, and technical assistance, as well as allowing large numbers of Pakistani nationals to
cross into Afghanistan to fight for the Taliban.
CHRONOLOGY
03/25/00
During a visit to Islamabad, President Clinton met with Chief Executive Gen.
Pervez Musharraf and urged the military leadership to develop a timetable and
a roadmap for restoring democracy.
10/12/99
The Pakistan Army under Chief of Army Staff General Pervez Musharraf
deposed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in a bloodless coup a few hours after
the Prime Minister had announced the army chief’s replacement.
07/04/99
Following a meeting in Washington, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and
President Clinton issued a joint statement in which they agreed that “concrete
steps will be taken for the restoration of the Line of Control, in accordance
with the Simla Agreement.” They further agreed that “the dialogue begun in
Lahore in February [1999] provides the best forum for resolving all issues
dividing India and Pakistan, including Kashmir.” President Clinton promised
to “take a personal interest in encouraging an expeditious resumption and
intensification of those bilateral efforts.”
12/02/98
President Clinton and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif held talks in the White
House, during which they reached an agreement on the longstanding F-16
fighter plane issue.
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05/28/98
Pakistan announced that it had carried out five underground nuclear tests. A
sixth test was carried out on May 30. On May 30, President Clinton imposed
economic and military sanctions on Pakistan, as mandated by section 102 of
the Arms Export Control Act.
04/06/95
Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto began a 10-day official visit to the
United States, during which she met with President Clinton, Members of
Congress, Congressional committees, and U.S. business leaders.
07/14/93
Pakistan was removed from the informal terrorist watch list because the State
Department had determined that Pakistan had implemented “a policy of
ending official support for terrorists in India.”
01/09/93
The United States warned Pakistan that it was the subject of “active
continuing review” for possible inclusion on the State Department’s list of
terrorist states for its alleged support of terrorist activities in the Indian states
of Punjab and Kashmir.
10/01/90
Pakistan became ineligible for new U.S. assistance when President Bush failed
to certify under Section 620E(e) (the “Pressler Amendment”) that Pakistan
did not possess a nuclear device.
05/15/88
Soviet forces began withdrawing from Afghanistan.
10/18/86
President Reagan signed a foreign aid bill that included a 6-year, $4 billion
package of economic and military aid for Pakistan.
08/08/85
The “Pressler Amendment” (Section 620E(e) of the Foreign Assistance Act)
was signed into law, requiring the President to certify to Congress that
Pakistan does not possess a nuclear explosive device during the fiscal year for
which U.S. aid is to be provided.
09/05/81
The United States and Pakistan announced agreement on a 6-year, $3.2 billion
package of economic and military aid.
12/27/79
Soviet forces invaded Afghanistan.
04/06/79
The Carter Administration invoked Section 669 of the Foreign Assistance Act
to suspend U.S. aid to Pakistan because of its acquisition of unsafeguarded
uranium enrichment technology.
03/05/59
A U.S.-Pakistan bilateral agreement on military cooperation was signed.
09/08/54
The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was established under a
collective defense treaty signed in Manila by the United States, Pakistan,
Australia, France, Great Britain, New Zealand, Thailand, and the Philippines.
05/19/54
The United States and Pakistan signed a Mutual Assistance Defense
Agreement.
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