Order Code IB94041
Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Pakistan-U.S. Relations
Updated June 4, 2002
Amit Gupta
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Historical Background
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
Trade and Trade Issues
Narcotics
Terrorism


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Pakistan-U.S. Relations
SUMMARY
The major areas of U.S. concern in Paki-
ity to waive, for two years, sanctions imposed
stan include: nuclear nonproliferation;
on Pakistan following its 1999 military coup.
counter-terrorism; regional stability; democra-
tization and human rights; and economic
Both Congress and the Administration
reform and development. An ongoing Paki-
consider a stable, democratic, economically
stan-India nuclear arms race, fueled by rivalry
thriving Pakistan as key to U.S. interests in
over Kashmir, continues to be the focus of
South, Central, and West Asia. Although
U.S. nonproliferation efforts in South Asia
ruled by military regimes for half of its exis-
and a major issue in U.S. relations with both
tence, from 1988-99, Pakistan had democratic
countries. This attention intensified following
governments as a result of national elections
nuclear tests by both India and Pakistan in
in 1988, 1990, 1993, and 1997. Between 1988
May 1998. South Asia is viewed by some
and 1999, Benazir Bhutto, leader of the Paki-
observers as a likely prospect for use of such
stan People’s Party, and Nawaz Sharif, leader
weapons. India has developed short- and
of the Pakistan Muslim League, each served
intermediate-range missiles, and Pakistan has
twice as prime minister. Neither leader served
acquired short-range missiles from China and
a full term, being dismissed by the president
medium-range missiles from North Korea.
under constitutional provisions that have been
India and Pakistan have fought three wars
used to dismiss four governments since 1985.
since 1947.


In October 1999, the government of
U.S.-Pakistan cooperation began in the
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was overturned
mid-1950s as a security arrangement based on
in a bloodless coup led by Chief of Army Staff
U.S. concern over Soviet expansion and Paki-
Pervez Musharraf, who suspended the
stan’s fear of neighboring India. Cooperation
parliament and declared himself chief
reached its high point during the 1979-89
executive. In June 2001, General Musharraf
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
assumed the post of president. The United
U.S.-Pakistan ties weakened following the
States has strongly urged the Pakistan military
October 1990 cutoff of U.S. aid and arms
government to restore the country to civilian
sales, which were suspended by President
democratic rule. President Musharraf has
Bush under Section 620E(e) of the Foreign
pledged to honor a Pakistan Supreme Court
Assistance Act (FAA) (the so-called “Pressler
ruling ordering parliamentary elections to be
amendment”). Further U.S. sanctions were
held by late 2002. The Musharraf government
imposed on Pakistan (and India) as a result of
has begun to address Pakistan’s many pressing
their 1998 nuclear tests. The see-saw
and longstanding problems, including the
Pakistan-U.S. relationship has been on the
beleaguered economy, corruption, terrorism,
upswing following Pakistan’s enlistment as a
and poor governance. Pakistan will receive
frontline state in the U.S.-led war on terrorism
well over one billion dollars in U.S. assistance
resulting from the September 2001 attacks on
and several billion dollars from international
New York and Washington. Nuclear sanc-
organizations to help strengthen the country as
tions on Pakistan and India have been waived;
a key member of the U.S.-led anti-terrorism
Congress also has given the President author-
coalition.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Pakistan and India moved closer to war even as the war against terrorism continued
in the western part of Pakistan and terrorist attacks occurred in Pakistan itself.
In May a car bomb killed 14 people in Karachi including 12 French military
contractors who were working on a submarine project. Some Pakistani officials blamed
India for the attack while French defense officials suggested that the attack was planned by
Al Qaeda.

As war tensions escalated various foreign governments, including the United States,
urged restraint and asked Pakistan’s president, General Pervez Musharraf, to stop Kashmiri
militants from crossing the border into India.

President Musharraf was faced with opposition from both left-wing and right-wing
groups within the country. Left wing and centrist groups were rallying against the general’s
April 30th referendum that allowed him an additional five years in power. Right wing groups
were upset with the general’s position on Afghanistan, his crackdown on Islamic groups
within the country, and with the General’s handling of the Kashmir crisis. When the
general called for a national unity meeting representatives of the two major parties refused
the invitation to participate.

BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
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. Limited U.S. military
aid was resumed in 1975, but it was suspended again by the Carter Administration in April
1979 because of Pakistan’s secret construction of a uranium enrichment facility.
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Following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, Pakistan was again
viewed as a frontline state against Soviet expansionism. In 1980, the Carter Administration
offered Pakistan $400 million in economic and security aid, but it was turned down. In
September 1981, the Reagan Administration, negotiated a $3.2 billion, 5-year economic and
military aid package with Pakistan. 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
occupation of Afghanistan. A $4 billion, 6-year aid package for Pakistan was signed in 1986.
With the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, beginning in May 1988, Pakistan’s
nuclear activities again came under close U.S. scrutiny. In October 1990, President Bush
suspended aid to Pakistan. 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 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).
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. 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.)
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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.
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. In September 2001, the U.S. State Department again imposed 2-year
sanctions on a PRC company and Pakistan’s National Development Complex. The PRC
company reportedly delivered 12 shipments of components for Pakistan’s Shaheen missiles
in early 2001. (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 April 30, 2002, Pakistanis went to the polls in a national referendum to extend
President Musharraf’s term by five years. The referendum question was, “For the survival
of the local government system, establishment of democracy, continuity of reforms, end to
sectarianism and extremism, and to fulfill the vision of Quaid-e-Azam [Great leader – i.e.
Pakistan’s late founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah], would you like to elect President General
Pervez Musharraf as president of Pakistan for five years?” The president won 98% of the
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vote from a 50% voter turnout. The Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy, a coalition
of political parties that are opposed to the election, say that turnout was closer to 5%.
The referendum arguably gives President Musharraf a national mandate to carry on his
political and economic reforms and to reassure international public opinion that he is abiding
by democratic ideals.
The opposition groups denounced the referendum as fraudulent and urged Pakistanis
to boycott the poll. Their fear reportedly is that Musharraf will now attempt to rework the
constitution to weaken the role of the Prime Minister and the political parties. In a post-
October governmental structure likely to be instituted by Musharraf, the Prime Minister is
not to have control over Pakistan’s National Security Council – an institution that is to be
dominated by the President and the military. The Prime Minister would be invited to certain
meetings – for example on nuclear issues – but her or his vote would not be binding. The
current National Security Council has a wide range of authority and advises the president on
issues relating to national security, sovereignty, Islamic ideology, and the integrity and
solidarity of the country.
There is also concern about the legitimacy of the October 2002 elections. President
Musharraf has refused to allow Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, the leaders of the two
major parties (the Pakistan People’s Party and the Muslim League, respectively), to
participate in the elections. Instead Musharraf has argued that if either leader were to return
to Pakistan they would have to face trial for the crimes they had committed. Senior
government sources have also stated that Pakistan’s political parties will face crucial reforms
under the Political Parties Act, which could see a purge of their senior leaders. To replace
them, President Musharraf plans to groom a new generation of political leaders under his
patronage. “The new parliament will be Musharraf’s team, and they will act together for the
betterment of the country,” said a top government official, in an interview with Asia Times.
At the same time there has there has been an easing of pressure on Islamic
fundamentalist groups in Pakistan. The head of the pro-Taliban Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam,
Maulana Fazlur Rahman was released from prison while the head of the banned terrorist
organization, Jaish-e-Mohammad, Maulana Masood Azhar, was released from prison and
placed under house arrest. On Pakistan’s national day, the Jamaat-i-Islami was allowed to
hold a public gathering in Rawalpindi, the seat of the army’s General Headquarters. Leaders
and activists of the moderate and secular Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy were
arrested in Lahore when they tried to exercise their right of association.
Changes have also taken place in Pakistan’s Kashmir policy. In an effort to assuage
international concerns, President Musharraf has moved away from direct support of the
banned Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba groups. Instead, it is expected that he will
call for the people of Kashmir to determine their own future without the support of the
Pakistan-based Islamic jihadi network. Musharraf recently installed Sardar Abdul Qayyum
as chairman the National Kashmir Committee, and he has been at odds with the jihadi forces.
However, a recent meeting in Azad Kashmir reflects Pakistan’s changing Kashmir policy.
The meeting was attended by the All-Parties Hurriyat Conference (an umbrella organization
of 23 separatist groups), Sardar Abdul Qayyum, leading Kashmiri intellectuals, and three
Pakistani brigadiers. The meeting concluded that the policies of Kashmir fighters should
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represent Kashmiri interests rather than those of Pakistan. This would tend to keep the
movement indigenous and increase its credibility.
The April 30 referendum has been dismissed by Pakistan’s major political parties as
meaningless and has reportedly widened the divide between them and the President.
President Musharraf called for a meeting of all political groups within the country to forge
national unity in response to India’s military moves. Opposition groups boycotted the
meeting and instead, reportedly, have demanded that President Musharraf step down and
hand over power to an independent caretaker. The opposition parties are concerned that the
President might use the crisis with India to consolidate his position. For the first time in
Pakistan’s history, with war looming, the opposition has not shown solidarity with the
government. In fact some of President Musharraf’s critics blame him for creating the current
impasse with India because of the steps he took as the army chief during the Kargil crisis in
1999.
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 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
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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. As the result of a power struggle in November, Sharif replaced the
Supreme Court Chief Justice, Leghari resigned , and Sharif chose Mohammad Rafiq Tarar
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.
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, 1998, and 1999 over nuclear and
democracy issues; 2) India and Pakistan’s worsening relationship over Kashmir since 1990,
and their continuing nuclear standoff; 3) Pakistan’s see-saw attempts to develop a stable
democratic government and strong economy in the post-Cold War era; and, most recently,
4) the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, on New York and Washington.
The Bush Administration has identified exiled Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, who
had long been harbored by the Taliban government in Afghanistan, as the prime suspect in
the terrorist attacks on the United States. On September 13, President Musharraf – under
strong U.S. diplomatic pressure – offered President Bush “our unstinted cooperation in the
fight against terrorism.” Because of its proximity to Afghanistan and former close ties with
the Taliban, Pakistan is considered key to U.S.-led efforts to root out terrorism in the region.
The Taliban and bin Laden enjoy strong support among a substantial percentage of the
Pakistan population, who share not only conservative Islamic views but also ethnic and
cultural ties with Afghanistan. A major issue facing the Administration is how to make use
of Pakistan’s support — including for military operations in Afghanistan — without
seriously destabilizing an already fragile state that has nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.
In an effort to shore up the Musharraf government, most sanctions relating to Pakistan’s
(and India’s) 1998 nuclear tests and Pakistan’s 1999 military coup were waived in September
and October. On October 29, 2001, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said that
Pakistan will receive well over one billion dollars in U.S. assistance and several billion
dollars from international organizations to help strengthen Pakistan as a key member of the
U.S.-led anti-terrorism coalition. Direct assistance programs will include aid for health,
education, food, democracy promotion, child labor elimination, counter-narcotics, border
security and law enforcement, as well as trade preference benefits. The United States also
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will support grant, loan, and debt rescheduling programs for Pakistan by the various
international financial institutions, including the World Bank, International Monetary Fund,
and Asian Development Bank. In addition, Pakistan has received promises of substantial aid,
debt relief, and trade concessions from Japan and the European Union in recognition of its
support for the international anti-terrorism coalition. Japan, which is Pakistan’s largest
bilateral aid donor, announced on October 26, 2001, that it was suspending sanctions
imposed on Pakistan and India following their 1998 nuclear tests.
On November 10, 2001, President Bush met with President Musharraf in New York,
where both addressed the U.N. General Assembly. According to the White House, the two
leaders discussed the anti-terrorism campaign, regional security issues, economic
cooperation, human rights, the October 2002 Pakistani elections, and ways to strengthen the
U.S.-Pakistan relationship. President Bush hosted a dinner for President Musharraf that
evening.
Security
Nuclear Weapons and Missile Proliferation. Since the September 2001 terrorist
attacks on the United States, U.S. and Pakistan officials have held talks on improving
security and installing new safeguards on Pakistan’s nuclear weapons and nuclear power
plants. Fears that Pakistan could become destabilized by the U.S. anti-terrorism war efforts
in Afghanistan have heightened U.S. nuclear proliferation concerns in South Asia. 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 required a Commerce Department license, and
most license requests reportedly were denied. On the one hand, Pakistan was less affected
than India by the sanctions, since most U.S. assistance to Pakistan had been cut off since
1990. On the other hand, Pakistan’s much smaller – and currently weaker – economy was
more vulnerable to the effects of the sanctions.
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
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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 (Shaheen) from China and medium-range missiles
(Ghauri) from North Korea, 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. Following the 1998 tests, the United States set
forth five steps India and Pakistan need to take in order to avoid a destabilizing nuclear and
missile competition. They include the following:
Halt further nuclear testing and sign and ratify the CTBT. U.S. and
international pressure after the 1998 nuclear tests produced resolutions by the U.N. Security
Council and the Group of Eight (G-8) urging India and Pakistan to sign the CTBT. Japan
– the largest bilateral aid donor for both countries – made resumption of its aid programs
contingent on signing the CTBT and assurances not to transfer nuclear technology or material
to any other country. In October 2001, however, Japan suspended sanctions against both
countries in recognition of their support for the U.S.-led war on terrorism. Although both
India and Pakistan currently observe self-imposed moratoria on nuclear testing, they continue
to resist signing the CTBT – a position made more tenable by U.S. failure to ratify the treaty
in 1999.
Halt fissile material production; cooperate in FMCT negotiations. Both
India and Pakistan have agreed to participate in negotiations on the fissile material control
Treaty. Both countries, however, have expressed unwillingness to halt fissile material
production at this stage in the development of their nuclear weapons programs.
Refrain from deploying or testing missiles or nuclear weapons. The United
States has urged India and Pakistan – with little success – to adopt 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 firing its Ghauri II and
Shaheen missiles with reported ranges of 1,250 and 375 miles, respectively. Most recently,
India tested a longer version of its short-range Prithvi missile in December 2001.
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In August 1999, India’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government released a draft report
by the National Security Advisory Board (NSAB) on India’s nuclear doctrine. The report,
although retaining India’s no-first-use policy, called for creation of a “credible nuclear
deterrence and adequate retaliatory capability should deterrence fail.” It proposed nuclear
weapons “based on a triad of aircraft, mobile land-based missiles and sea-based assets....”
The United States and other countries criticized the document as destabilizing, noting that,
if adopted, the proposed policy would ratchet up nuclear arms racing in the region.
Maintain and formalize restraints on sharing sensitive goods and
technologies with other countries. Both India and Pakistan apparently have good
records on nonproliferation of sensitive technologies and have issued regulatory orders on
export controls. Since May 1998, both countries have continued to hold expert-level talks
with U.S. officials on export controls. U.S. concern was raised in late 2001 by disclosures
that two retired Pakistani nuclear scientists had briefed bin Laden and other al Qaeda officials
on several occasions. The war in Afghanistan also heightened fears of instability in Pakistan
that could lead to Islamabad’s nuclear assets being compromised in the event of a radical
Islamist military coup. This has resulted in renewed U.S. policy debate on transfers of
nuclear weapons safeguards technologies to Pakistan and/or India. India also continues to
press for ending of export controls on dual-use technologies that it needs for its civilian
nuclear and space programs, which has raised further U.S. policy debates on export controls
and technology transfer.
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.
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-
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. 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 human rights violations in Kashmir. According to Indian government sources, more
than 5,000 militants, security forces, and civilians were killed in Jammu and Kashmir state
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in 1999-2000. The United States strongly urged India and Pakistan to create the proper
climate for peace, respect the LOC, reject violence, and return to the Lahore peace process.
In November 2000, 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.
In May 2001, the Indian government announced that it was ending its unilateral cease-
fire in Kashmir but that Prime Minister Vajpayee would invite President Musharraf to India
for talks. The July summit talks in Agra between Musharraf and 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.” Since the Agra talks,
tensions have continued to rise. 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. According to Amnesty
International, more than 1,100 people have disappeared in Kashmir since the revolt began
in 1990.
On October 16-17, 2001, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell visited Pakistan and India
in an effort, in part, to calm seriously escalating tensions over Kashmir. India responded to
an October 1 terrorist attack by the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Muhammad, which killed 38
people in Kashmir, by resuming heavy firing across the line of control that divides the
disputed territory. Cross-border firing between India and Pakistan had been largely
suspended since November 2000. Powell urged both countries to seek a peaceful resolution
of the Kashmir dispute. On October 29, the chief of the U.N. Military Observers Group in
India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) accused both countries of playing “political games” on the
issue of Kashmir. In reportedly the first instance of a public statement by the UNMOGIP in
50 years, Maj. Gen. Hermann K. Loidolt stated further: “My assessment is that the situation
will become more tense in the time coming, not only along the LOC [Line of Control] but
also in the whole of Jammu and Kashmir state.”
An attack against the Indian parliament on December 13, 2001, thought to have been
carried out by Pakistan-based Islamic militants, left 14 dead and brought India and Pakistan
to the brink of war. India blamed the suicide attack on two militant groups that Indian
leaders believe were sponsored by Pakistan: Jaish-e-Muhammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba.
These two groups allegedly have been fighting from bases in Pakistan to end Indian rule in
part of the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir. Following the attack, Indian Prime
Minister Vajpayee stated “We do not want war, but war is being thrust on us, and we will
have to face it.” Pakistani leaders, in return, accused India of ratcheting up tensions between
the two countries and said that Pakistan would make India pay “a heavy price for any
misadventure.” In the weeks following the attack on the Indian parliament, both India and
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Pakistan have, in a “tit-for-tat” fashion, issued threats, conducted military maneuvers and
repositioned missile batteries along their border, and levied sanctions against each other.
The events of May seemed to be pushing India and Pakistan to escalate the standoff on
their border to a full-scale military conflict. The attack by Kashmiri militants on the army
base in Kaluchak, Jammu was viewed as a serious provocation by the Indian government and
it intensified war plans. In response the Pakistani government began to reassign troops from
the Afghanistan border to the eastern border with India. It also recalled all Pakistani troops
engaged in international peacekeeping operations.
Pakistan tested three ballistic missiles, the intermediate range Ghauri and the short-
range Ghaznavi and Abdali, from May 25-28, 2002, to send a message to India that it would
not hesitate to use nuclear weapons in a forthcoming conflict. Pakistan’s representative to
the United Nations also made it clear that in the event of a conflict the country had not ruled
out the first use of nuclear weapons. President Musharraf added that Pakistan would not start
a war, but it would respond forcefully to aggression and carry out “offensive defense” – take
the war into Indian territory. The thinking in Pakistan, reportedly, is that should a conflict
take place, India’s Muslim minority would rise in rebellion – particularly in the state of
Kashmir. This would complicate Indian warfighting efforts.
Congressional Action. Through a series of legislative measures, Congress has
incrementally lifted sanctions on Pakistan and India resulting from their 1998 nuclear tests.
In October 1999, 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 Pakistan and India in
response to the nuclear tests. In a presidential determination on Pakistan and India issued
on October 27, 1999, the President waived economic sanctions on India. Pakistan, however,
remained under sanctions triggered under Section 508 of the annual foreign assistance
appropriations act as a result of the October 1999 coup. The Foreign Operations Export
Financing and Related Appropriations Agencies Act, 2001, provided an exception under
which Pakistan could be provided U.S. foreign assistance funding for basic education
programs (P.L. 106-429; Section 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.
After the terrorist attack on the United States on September 11, 2001, and in recognition
of Pakistan’s cooperation with the U.S.-led coalition being assembled, policymakers
searched for new means of providing assistance to Pakistan. President Bush’s issuance of
a final determination on September 22, 2001, removed remaining sanctions on Pakistan and
India resulting from their 1998 nuclear test, finding that denying export licences and
assistance was not in the national security interests of the United States. Also, on October
27, President Bush signed into law S. 1465 (P.L. 107-57), which gives the President two-year
waiver authority to lift sanctions on foreign assistance imposed on Pakistan following the
1999 military coup if he determines that such a waiver would facilitate the transition to
democratic rule in Pakistan and is important to U.S. efforts to combat international terrorism.
The law not only gives the president authority to waive sanctions related to democracy but
to waive sanctions imposed on Pakistan for its debt servicing arrearage to the United States
under the terms of the Foreign Operations Appropriations Act. At the end of 1999,
Pakistan’s international debt was $30.7 billion, of which $2.38 billion was owed to the
United States. P.L. 107-57 allowed for an agreement of Pakistan to reschedule $379 million
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of its debt to the United States thereby enabling it to cancel its arrearage. After President
Musharraf’s visit to Washington D.C. in February 2002, President Bush wrote a letter to
Congress stating that he had ordered $220 million in emergency funds that had been given
to the Defense Department for warfighting and to the State Department for security upgrades,
be reallocated to Pakistan “for costs incurred in aiding U.S. military forces in Operation
Enduring Freedom.”
For FY2003, the Bush Administration has proposed increased funding for Pakistan that
includes $50.0 million for development assistance (up from an estimated $15.0 million in
2001), $200.0 million in the Economic Support Fund (up from $9.5 million in 2001), $1.0
million for International Military Education and Training (same as 2001), $50.0 million for
Foreign Military Financing (up from zero in 2001), and $4.0 million for International
Narcotics Control (up from $2.5 million in 2001). (For details, see CRS Report RS20995,
India and Pakistan: Current U.S. Economic Sanctions, by Dianne E. Rennack.)
Pakistan-U.S. Military Cooperation. The close U.S.- Pakistan military ties of the
Cold War era – which had dwindled since the 1990 aid cutoff – are in the process of being
restored as a result of Pakistan’s role in the U.S. anti-terrorism operations in Afghanistan.
Pakistan also 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 November 2001, there were 5,500 Pakistani troops and observers participating in
U.N. peacekeeping efforts in Sierra Leone, East Timor, Kosovo, Congo, 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. Pakistan
democracy between 1988 and 1999, however, 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 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.
Human Rights Problems. The U.S. State Department, in its Pakistan Country
Report on Human Rights Practices for 2001 (issued March 4, 2002), 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. The government bureaucracy
continued to function but was “monitored” by the military. The judiciary continued to be
subject to the executive branch but in May 2000, President 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 and for using arbitrary arrest and detention, torturing and abusing
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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 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. Discrimination against women is widespread, and
traditional constraints – cultural, legal, and spousal – have kept women in a subordinate
position in society. 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.
Economic Issues
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.
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 January 2001, the Paris Club of creditor
nations agreed to reschedule $1.7 billion in repayments on Pakistan’s foreign debt of $32
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billion. 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.”
Meetings between Pakistani government officials and representatives of the IMF, the
World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank have been successful, as the financial
institutions reportedly have been pleased with the progress made in stabilizing and reforming
the Pakistani economy. The Pakistani government has stabilized the country’s external debt
at $38 billion and the country’s hard currency reserves reached $5.28 billion by April 2002
— an increase of nearly $4 billion since October 1999. At the same time the IMF and the
World Bank urged the Pakistani government to cut defense expenditures from the current
3.5% GDP to 3.3% of GDP by 2003-2004. The World Bank said that if regional tensions
subsided and the Kashmir dispute was resolved, this would provide a further fiscal cushion
for a peace dividend. A new arms race with India, however, could be fiscally disastrous.
On the positive side, Pakistan’s economic reforms and a more prudent fiscal policy have
reduced the fiscal deficit from 7% of GDP to about 5.2% of GDP. Foreign remittances have
exceeded $1.6 billion — $772 million more than in 2000. Exports exceeded $9 billion for
the first time in seven years, and inflation, at 3%, was the lowest in three decades. Interest
on public debt together with defense spending, however, consume 70% of total revenues,
thus squeezing out development expenditure, including social spending.
In the view of the International Financial Institutions — the World Bank, the IMF, and
the Asian Development Bank – the major risk to economic reforms and to future investment
was the possibility that there might be a break in the continuity of policy after the October
2002 elections for the national and provincial assemblies. President Pervez Musharraf’s
victory in the April 30, 2002 referendum is expected to boost investor and international
financial institution confidence that the economic and political reforms will stay the course.
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
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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, 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
After the September 11 attacks on the United States, Pakistan pledged and has provided
support for the anti-terror coalition effort. According to the U.S. State Department report on
global terrorism for 2001, Pakistan has afforded the United States unprecedented levels of
cooperation by allowing the U.S. military to use bases within the country, helping to identify
and detain extremists, and tightening the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
In December 2001, President Musharraf announced a proposal to bring Pakistan’s
madrassas (religious schools) – some of which have served as breeding grounds for
extremists – into the mainstream educational system. Pakistan also began sweeping police
reforms, upgraded its immigration control system, and began work on new anti-terrorist
finance laws. Musharraf also began cracking down on “anti-Pakistan” extremists and, by
January 2002, authorities had arrested more than 2,000, although many have subsequently
been released.
In May 2002, a bomb blast in Karachi killed 14 people (including 12 French military
contractors) and raised fears that terrorist groups would complicate the law and order
situation within the country. The blast was attributed to various groups including Indian
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intelligence and members of the Al Qaeda. In the war on terror, Pakistani troops, for the first
time since independence, operated in tribal areas of the country – an area that they
traditionally stayed out of for fear of antagonizing the local population. By late May,
however, President Musharraf was beginning to pull some troops from the region to help
strengthen the eastern border with India.
At the same time, the Pakistani government has been under pressure from various
nations to terminate the infiltration of insurgents from Pakistani Kashmir into Indian
Kashmir. As India increased its preparations for war – following the attack in the Kaluchak
region of Jammu – the United States, Britain, and Russia called upon Pakistan to stop
militants from crossing into Indian Kashmir. President Bush challenged President Musharraf
to show results in stopping militants from carrying out terrorist acts in Indian Kashmir.
While expressing concern about Pakistan’s missile tests the president made it clear that
preventing terrorism was a higher priority. He said, “ I am more concerned about making
sure. . . .that President Musharraf show results in terms of stopping people from crossing the
border.” He added, “Stopping terrorism. That is more important that the missile testing.”
President Musharraf for his part, in an interview to the Washington Post countered, “... .there
is nothing happening across the Line of Control. And I’ve also said that Pakistan is a part
of the coalition to fight terrorism. And we will ensure that terrorism does not go from
Pakistan anywhere outside into the world.” Critics have charged, however, that President
Musharraf has eased up on militants in the country by releasing some of the people he had
jailed after September 11 in his promised crackdown on Islamic militants.
President Musharraf asked the international community to credit Pakistan for having
the courage to send troops into the tribal areas to capture suspected Al Qaeda operatives. He
pointed out that Pakistani troops were the first troops to have moved into the area in over a
century. The President continued that there were three elements of terror that the world was
concerned with: Al Qaeda, Kashmiri militants, and the growing Sunni sectarian terrorism in
Pakistan. He also pointed out that the Indian goal was to destabilize Pakistan, “. . . their aim
is to destabilize me, my government, and Pakistan. Destabilize us economically, and
politically and diplomatically. That is what they want to achieve.”
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