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Saleem H. Ali

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Why Pakistanis Don't Trust America

Posted: 02/21/2012 12:38 pm

In mid-February, Californian Congressman Dana Rohrabacher announced his desire to nominate Pakistani doctor, Shakil Afridi, for the Congressional Gold Medal -- the highest civilian honor bestowed by our legislature. The deed which merits this accolade is his supposed assistance to the CIA in finding Osama bin Laden in Pakistan last year. Dr. Afridi is now languishing in a Pakistani prison under indefinite detention on charges of treason. Congressman's Rohrabacher's efforts to stand by the man who risked his life for this mission, and perhaps for monetary rewards and relocation to the United States, are understandable. Most Pakistani-Americans, including myself, are certainly relieved that a maniac like Osama bin Laden is no longer able to plan further acts of terrorism.

However, what is missing from this narrative is the method that was used by the CIA to glean the information about bin Laden's whereabouts. A fake hepatitis vaccination campaign was carried out by Dr. Afridi at the behest of the CIA to go door-to-door and ascertain who was residing in particular homes. If actual vaccine was administered, one might even consider the operation to have derivative health benefits. However, Dr. Afridi's mission from the CIA was not to incidentally deliver immunity but rather to collect blood samples from the children residing in the bin Laden compound for DNA confirmation of the culprit.

There are conflicting reports about whether or not Afridi's nurse was actually able to get the blood samples. U.S. officials can claim that this strategy was pursued to ensure they hit the correct target and to minimize collateral damage. Yet, most accounts of the bin Laden raid suggest that the decision to attack was largely based on tracking bin Laden's courier rather than any biological proof of his family's residence there.

So consider the episode from the perspective of a Pakistani. The trust that the public usually gives medical professionals on public health campaigns is being used as subterfuge to gather biological intelligence. There was complete disregard for the negative impact this action would have on the perception of future health campaigns in a country which is already paranoid about conspiracy theories regarding vaccination. Polio and other rare and obsolescent infectious diseases are making a rude comeback in the country because of such fears of vaccination. According to the World Health Organization in 2011, Pakistan led the world's tally in polio cases with 83, followed by Nigeria, which had 23 cases, and Afghanistan, with 12. Out of the children diagnosed, 50 had vaccination offered to them but their parents refused due to conspiratorial fears.

When actions like the CIA's fake vaccine campaign vindicate conspiratorial beliefs, one begins to see why even educated Pakistanis have begun to deeply distrust the United States.There were further revelations of U.S. complicity in co-opting humanitarian goals in Pakistan for "security objectives" in a recently published book by Marc Ambinder on U.S. Intelligence (The Command). During the devastating Kashmir earthquake of 2005 in which 90,000 people were killed, Arbinder notes that: "Using valid U.S. passports and posing as construction and aid workers, dozens of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operatives and contractors flooded in without the requisite background checks from the country's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency."

All these revelations are taking place in the backdrop of episodes such as the arrest and release of U.S. contractor Raymond Davis by Pakistani authorities. In an attempted robbery Davis shot two of his alleged assailants and then a U.S. consulate car which came to rescue him ran over and killed two random pedestrians in Lahore. There was absolutely no accountability from U.S. authorities for this case, particularly regarding the pedestrians killed by the consular car. Senator Kerry in negotiating the release had a very conciliatory tone and assured the Pakistani public that there would be U.S. accountability and a "criminal investigation." Yet no such investigation has been undertaken and Davis returned home safely. The only other news regarding him was an arrest several months later for a road range incident in Colorado!

The very basis of trust between nations is assistance in times of need. When trust between nations is violated during such times of humanitarian urgency, a great disservice is done to the principles and ideals which we as Americans are so proud to preach to the world. Such acts also make it subsequently more difficult to have genuine travel for citizen diplomacy since visa regimes get even more rigid and insurmountable. The willingness of the U.S. government to discount the impact of intelligence operations on long-term humanitarian goals is deeply disturbing. At the end of the day, we will only find collective security in South Asia and the United States when both Americans and Pakistanis feel that their lives are equally precious.

 

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08:20 PM on 02/26/2012
I respect your point of view but the way I see it is that Pakistanis can more the distrust us Americans without us paying them to do it. I don't blame the ISI from hiding Bin Laden. They want to get paid too, but the jig is up dude. It's time to cut the Afghanis and Pakistanis off the gravy train homes.
03:06 AM on 02/26/2012
Both countries are missing one important opportunity to create new avenues for building a common understanding and sense of purpose: the power of ordinary citizens. To read more about Pakistan from a unique perspective, visit www.pakistanexaminer.com
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
08:35 AM on 02/22/2012
Article would be better titled "why nobody (including its own citizens) trusts the American government"
04:34 AM on 02/22/2012
So, the Pakistani government (read: ISI) had no idea where Bin Ladin was "hiding." And they're angry with this fellow because he undermined their public health efforts. What a crock. It's pretty clear that the ISI pretty much runs the show there, that they were complicit in hiding Bin Laden, and they're now looking for a scapegoat for their embarrasment. The US spends billions to buy "loyalty" from a country that doesn't seem to know the meaning of the word.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
08:36 AM on 02/22/2012
Well thats what happens when you try to buy loyalty instead of earning it.
03:09 PM on 02/24/2012
Agreed. But in fact, we shouldn't put ourselves in position to need it, whether bought or earned.
10:37 PM on 02/21/2012
Spy vs Spy.Its the people to people which matters,sorry to say that both governments lack the trust and rightly so.CIA & ISI........!! debatable ofcourse...but can be revived through dialogue.I am a proud Pakistani and i want peace and prosperity to all and definately peace in the region
06:06 PM on 02/21/2012
Thank you Saleem for writing a very balanced and informative article: Why Pakistanis Don't Trust America. I remember the time in sixties, when I used to go to American library in Rawalpindi - Pakistan to read and lend books, which Pakistani libraries and even my college did not have. USA for us was a beacon of peace, democracy and a lot of good in the world. Most youngsters in Pakistan at that time wanted to go to USA to work, study and even visit. It was a dreamland.
Today, because of its arrogance, selfish foreign policies and disregards for other nations, especially in the Islamic world has totally diminished that good name.
Even I who has lived and studied in USA and have been a great admirer of its values, find it hard to say something positive about it. Sadly, it is not the Islamic world only, where USA is so unpopular because of its stupid policies but many of my friends from all parts of the globe and people I meet during my foreign travels, have more and less the same opinion. This is a tragedy, USA should work on if it wishes to be admired again.
05:28 PM on 02/21/2012
While I don't doubt the validity of any of this article's content I think the corresponding "Why American's don't trust Pakistanis" article could easily fill volumes. The salient difference being the US is providing billions in foreign aid to Pakistan while elements of their extremist regime actively work to undemine our interests in the region.

The much greater breach of trust and or confidence is the Pakistani failure to alert anyone to Bin Laden's presence there for the better part of a decade. Yet we hear only recriminations without the slightest hint of an apology from the Pakistani government and citizens.
02:53 PM on 02/21/2012
For me photographs of the Zardari/Bhutto palace in Dubai are all I need to convince me of the intractable corruption of Pakistan.
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Saleem H. Ali
04:10 PM on 02/21/2012
Greetings. But this article is not about mistrust around corruption! It's about basic humanitarian trust
04:27 PM on 02/21/2012
Pakistan is a gangster state...
jhNY
Mercy.
01:24 PM on 02/21/2012
There is, so far as I am aware, little reason for either nation to trust, though each has its uses for, the other.
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Saleem H. Ali
03:42 PM on 02/22/2012
"Trust deficit" is a term used in diplomacy. Here I am referring to trust between citizens. Hence title "Pakistanis" rather than "Pakistan."