Environment may make Pakistan more bellicose towards India: US report
August 24th, 2010 - 1:44 pm ICT by IANS
By Arun Kumar
Washington, Aug 24 (IANS) Environmental factors - like the present floods - could further weaken an already weak Pakistani state and add impetus to a return to military rule or a more bellicose posture towards India, warns a new US Congressional report.
“Environmental stresses, when combined with the other socio-economic and political stresses on Pakistan, have the potential to further weaken an already weak Pakistani state,” says the background report prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) for US lawmakers.
“Such a scenario would make it more difficult to achieve the US goal of neutralising anti-Western terrorists in Pakistan,” says the report on “Security and the Environment in Pakistan.”
“Some analysts argue that disagreements over water could also exacerbate existing tensions between India and Pakistan,” the report says identifying it as an issue that may be of increasing concern given the importance of this region to US interests for many reasons.
Examining the potentially destabilising effect of environmental factors combined with Pakistan’s limited economic development, the report warns that “these factors could contribute to Pakistan’s decline as a fully functioning state, creating new, or expanding existing, largely ungoverned areas.”
“The creation, or expansion, of ungoverned areas, or areas of limited control by the government of Pakistan, is viewed as not in US strategic interests given the recent history of such areas being used by the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and other terrorist groups as a base for operations against US interests in the region,” it says.
“Environmental factors could also expand the ranks of the dispossessed in Pakistan, which could lead to greater recruitment for radical Islamist groups operating in Pakistan or Afghanistan,” the report says warning: “Larger numbers of dispossessed people in Pakistan could also destabilise the current political regime.”
“This could add pressure on the Pakistani political system and possibly add impetus to a return to military rule or a more bellicose posture towards India,” CRS says describing it as an issue that has added “significant importance to regional security and American interests in Afghanistan.”
The potential for environmental factors to stoke conflict between the nuclear armed India and Pakistan is also a concern, it says noting “These two historical enemies have repeatedly fought across their international frontier and have yet to resolve their territorial dispute over Kashmir.”
“Further, a longstanding dispute over cross-border water resource sharing between India and Pakistan has resurfaced, possibly exacerbating existing tensions between the two states,” the report says, but suggests “Should the two countries wish, however, this dispute also offers a renewed opportunity for cooperation, as has been seen in past negotiations.”
Pakistan experienced what have been described as the worst floods in the country’s history. These floods reportedly killed over 1,100 people and devastated large parts of the Swat Valley where the Pakistan government is seeking to reassert its control after displacing Islamist militants.
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
- Osama killing may not derail India-Pakistan dialogue: US experts - May 10, 2011
- What US report says of 'heir-apparent' Rahul Gandhi - Sep 14, 2011
- US report showers praise on Narendra Modi - Sep 15, 2011
- Congress refuses to react to US report on Modi - Sep 14, 2011
- Safe militant havens in Pakistan slow Afghan war: US report - Nov 24, 2010
- Dawood's D-Company in cahoots with LeT, Al Qaeda : US report - Jan 06, 2010
- US concerned over LeT's expanding horizons - Feb 17, 2011
- Pakistan given $30 bn aid by US since 1948 - Jun 11, 2011
- No war with China in near future, says IAF officer - Feb 03, 2012
- US runs out of patience with Pak's toothless military campaign against terrorists - Oct 06, 2010
- India readying for limited conflict with China: US (Second Lead) - Feb 01, 2012
- US report does not explicitly predict Rahul-Modi contest - Sep 16, 2011
- India, Pakistan must talk to avoid conflict: Clinton - Dec 15, 2009
- Mumbai attacks bared LeT's global ambitions: US report - Aug 06, 2010
- Al Qaeda core leadership living in Pakistan: US report - Feb 09, 2010
Tags: arun kumar, background report, bellicose, congressional report, congressional research service, congressional research service crs, disagreements, environmental factors, environmental stresses, floods, government of pakistan, impetus, india and pakistan, islamist groups, limited control, military rule, political regime, posture, recent history, terrorist groups