svenkat wrote:You were trying to suggest that the murder of US Ambassador was the final straw for hawks like Brezizinski.
...You very definetely suggested that the West and Americans were innocent bysstanders who were pulled in by rhetoric and an assasination.I will leave it at that. America plays a cold game to protect its interests,based on its morality,world view and perceived self interests.
Actually, no. Please read my two posts together, and Ramana's post before it. I was talking about both Carter specifically, and his administration as a whole which was elected in part on a commitment to easing Cold War tensions. It actually didn't have many hawks, nor was it well disposed to Pakistan.
- Carter had a huge political investment in detente; Brzezinski was pretty much on the sidelines until Carter came to believe the Soviets were taking him for a fool somewhere in the middle of his first term. He came to believe the same thing about revolutionary government in Iran as well after its proxies took the US embassy hostage and negotiations went nowhere.
- People *are* emotionally affected when a colleague is killed, and they do blame people. US diplomats on the ground had pleaded with the Afghan interior ministry not to attempt a rescue since they doubted their ability to succeed; they agreed but carried out the operation anyway, apparantly on the advice of their KGB advisors. Dubs was well known and liked within the State Department, and his death did have an effect, especially when taken together with the erosion of the civility of detente era interaction between the Soviets and Americans. When the Afghan communists took power in 1978 the Carter administration did not cut off aid (administered by the State Dept.) to Afghanistan, or treat it as a hostile state in the spirit of detente. That changed immediately after the Dubs affair. The Afghan Communist state was treated as hostile from that point on.
Although policy over the long term is more structural, emotions can and do affect analysis and policy at critical junctures.
There was cold war logic,nothing less
The breakdown of detente is something I've already pinpointed as the source of mutual suspicion, but this suspicion has a reality-distorting effect that can dangerously skew sensible calculations of what national interests really are.
Do you *really* think that getting involved in Afghanistan served EITHER superpower's interests? Or did they both let paranoia get the better of them? Is paranoia not an emotion?
The reality was that local players like Iran, Pakistan and the various Afghan factions were pursuing their own agendas, while the superpowers only saw each other.
What made the Americans get involved in 1979? The idea that the Soviets had built anti-American government. What got the Soviets deeply involved in Afghanistan? The idea that the Americans had used Iran and the ultra-left Khalq to build an anti-Soviet government. They were both completely wrong, and yet completely convinced at the top.
Surely the Americans must have tried to find those who were behind the murder.
You mean who was behind the kidnapping; you would be surprised. Never mind the kidnapping, torture and murder of William Buckley, the CIA Chief of Staff in Beirut. Many signs pointed to Hezb'allah acting on Iranian orders but instead the USG chose to pursue the Iran-Contra deal.The Americans have never found or named who actually ordered the destruction of their embassy in Beirut in 1982, or the USAF barracks in Dhahran in 1995.
The Americans had virtually no intelligence assets in Afghanistan at the time - that's how much of a backwater it was, and relations with Pakistan were difficult.
The Khalq faction of the Afghan communist government claimed that the group that carried out the kidnapping was the Tajik Setam-i-Milli, and they blamed not the Pakistanis, but the Parcham faction of the Party who they claimed were allied with the group. The Parchamis were the faction closer to Moscow.
India faces collateral damage and has faced collateral damage from Paki delusions which has tacitly been supported by West all along
The Carter administration had a *very* poor relationship with Pakistan, one that was borderline hostile, even after Ambassador Dubs killing in February. Nuclear sanctions were imposed on April 1979.
So hostile in fact that there was an NY Times story on 12 August 1979 that reported that the Carter administration was considering military options against Kahuta. The Pakistanis took it seriously enough to deploy Crotale SAMs to the site.
So blaming the Soviets certainly did not automatically and instantly translate in to cooperation with Pakistan in Afghanistan.
This is not a question of 'glossing over' anything - instead I think everyone ought to really look at events to understand just how weird the US-Pakistani relationship has been since Bhutto and Zia, and the specific ways it interacted with the larger Cold War.
You will feign ignorance assuming a pretentious neutrality.So,it is not this one post...Because this is BRF and unless the moderators restrain me,I have every right to call your weasel stuff which ignores the Wests perfidy(in our view),glosses over the real motives of TSPA and its benefactors.
Oh yes, I can see there's no chance of me pulling the wool over your eyes! Well its a dashed good thing there's so many people here to expose me for what I *really* am!
I do love the people who are convinced that there are no such things as honest differences of opinion on the forum, or that decision-makers always know exactly what they are doing with god-like clarity, or that the West is always the most important actor anywhere, or that they're always thinking of India when they do things. How simple the world ought to be! And how frustrating must it be when reality plays to a different script!
p.s. I'd love to know what I glossed over about the Pakistanis