PTBC banner       ProudToBeCanadian

It's a question.

The latest from our COLUMNIST SECTION:

.....
(click here to see more!)

NOTE: PTBC is once again welcoming reader comments in both the "J-Log" blog section, and in the Columnist section, at least for a while. Logging in makes it easier to comment. Please participate! Thanks.

PTBC Columnist Team

Columnists -- with bite! We feature conservative-friendly writers from Canada and the U.S. who help clarify the difference between liberals and conservatives. All have personally agreed to be a part of our team here at PTBC.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Salim Mansur

Salim Mansur

  posted on Saturday, October 24, 2009
Bio | Salim Mansur Archives | Printer-Friendly Version

Waziristan means much to West

For most Canadians, and Westerners in general, Waziristan means very little. It is a place so remote that it bears no reference to the their daily concerns.

But the Pakistan military’s offensive begun last week in South Waziristan to flush out Taliban warriors and allies in their ranks from the Middle East and Central Asia, should bring people in the West to pay closer attention to such distant places and what happens there.

Waziristan is remote, its people destitute and backward by any measure of human development index. It is mostly inaccessible surrounded by high mountains of the Hindu Kush, and it straddles the borderlands of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The area through history has provided sanctuary to those fleeing the long arms of law, and since 9/11 given refuge to al-Qaida-Taliban members including Osama bin Laden and his number two, Ayman Al-Zawahiri.

Through the past eight years Pakistan’s military has hesitated to breach the sanctuary, and hunt and kill the masterminds of global jihad.

Apart from the fact that the military is not trained sufficiently in counter-insurgency warfare, the fear has been the spill over of an effective Waziristan campaign might bring Taliban to wage an indiscriminate campaign of suicide bombings and firefights in the urban centres of the country.

Resilience

This ground offensive, and its uncertain results, will test the resilience of Pakistani civil society.

Either it will hold against the coming assault such as has been seen already in the rising carnage of suicide bombings—neither the capital Islamabad nor the military headquarters in Rawalpindi are safe—or implode.

It is the latter that is of both immediate and long-lasting concern. The political leaders in the West have frankly failed to educate their citizens why the success of their military-civil mission in Afghanistan, and support for Pakistan, is critical for security at home.

If Pakistan implodes with a widening civil war given the weakness of its political institutions, the brazen corruption of its leaders—the current civilian president, Asif Zardari, was widely mocked as a 10% man during the time his late wife, Benazir Bhutto, held office as prime minister—and the military compromised with its past history of support for Taliban and other Islamist-terrorist organizations, then the world will enter the hellish reality of not knowing whether the nuclear arsenal of a failed state is safe from falling into the hands of al-Qaida and its surrogates.

Waziristan may likely enter the ranks of other remote places that in their own time proved to be consequential to the West.

Remote places

We all now know of places such as Falluja and Ramadi from the recent Iraq war, or Yenan in the deep interior of China from where Mao Zedong launched his communist campaign to seize the country, or Dien Bien Phu in distant Vietnam where the French colonial army was routed by the Viet Minh under the command of General Vo Nguyen Giap.

The stakes for West’s security since 9/11 have grown even as the people in Canada and elsewhere have become tired of the conflict that sent their military to distant Afghanistan.

What occurs in Waziristan, and after, however, should shake us out of our stupor.

...............................

©2005-08 - Salim Mansur, BA, MA, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Western Ontario.  He is also a columnist at Canada’s Sun Media.  His column appears here with Salim Mansur’s express permission by special arrangement with him.


Posted on 10/24/09 at 12:24 PM
• Please vote with your dollars to help ensure the continued availability of this site.
• If you think this site is of no value, then don't pay anything for it, and it will fade into the sunset. That's capitalism at work.
Email this article to a Friend Spread the word! Email this to a friend | • Printer-Friendly | • Permalink
• Category: Salim Mansur +
ASK Favicon Blogosphere News Favicon del.icio.us Favicon Digg Favicon Facebook Favicon Fark Favicon Google Favicon LinkedIn Favicon Live Favicon Netscape Favicon NewsVine Favicon Reddit Favicon Slashdot Favicon StumbleUpon Favicon Technorati Favicon TwitThis Favicon Upnews Favicon Wikio Favicon YahooMyWeb Favicon



COMMENTS

Comments do not necessarily reflect or in any way represent the opinion of the main blog entry writer or owner of this site, and claims to the contrary are spurious. Distasteful, abusive, hateful, or annoying remarks will likely be deleted; but since this is a relatively open forum, bad comments may accidentally remain on this site. The fact that a comment remains does not indicate an endorsement of the views.


    There are no comments for this entry yet. Please make one even if it's just to say you agree!

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.