Bush administration had embarked on a serious effort to reconfigure its relations with India and Pakistan. He took the opportunity to lecture Pakistani leaders on their reckless policies and even refused to shake the hand of General Musharraf, the country’s fourth military dictator. President Bill Clinton visited the subcontinent in 2000, he spent several days in India, but in contrast, only a few hours in Pakistan. While Pakistan narrowly escaped designation as a state sponsor of terrorism, it did in fact support a vast fleet of Islamist militants waging a terror campaign throughout India, particularly in Indian-administered Kashmir, and it was providing key military, political, diplomatic, and other support to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.1 When then U.S. Department of State had even considered placing Pakistan on its list of countries that support terrorism. It was encumbered by layers of sanctions meant to punish it for, inter alia, nuclear and missile proliferation, its May 1998 nuclear tests (conducted almost immediately after those of India), and the 1999 bloodless coup in which Chief of Army Staff Pervez Musharraf overthrew the democratically elected government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Pakistan on 9/11: From Pariah to Paladin On September 10, 2001, Pakistan was virtually a pariah state. Introduction: Pakistan’s Enduring Challenges C. List of Contributors 297 Index 303 Acknowledgments 311 Violent Nonstate Actors in the Afghanistan-Pakistan Relationship: Historical Context and Future Prospects 278 Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Tara Vassefi Friends of Last Resort: Pakistan’s Relations with China and Saudi Arabia 256 Aparna PandeĬhapter 11. Partner or Enemy? The Sources of Attitudes Toward the United States in Pakistan 227 Karl Kaltenthaler and William J. America and Pakistan After 2014: Toward Strategic Breathing Space 205 Paul StanilandĬhapter 9.
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Pakistan’s Self-Inflicted Economic Crises 178 Feisal KhanĬhapter 8. New Media in Naya Pakistan: Technologies of Transformation or Control? 156 Huma YusufĬhapter 7. Democracy on the Leash in Pakistan 131 C. DOMESTIC POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ISSUESĬhapter 5. The Safety and Security of the Pakistani Nuclear Arsenal 98 Christopher Clary The Future of the American Drone Program in PakistanĬhapter 4. A Cooperative Jihad? The Religious Logic of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and the Limits of Pan-Sunni Cooperation in Pakistan 55 Joshua T. Pakistani Militancy in the Shadow of the U.S. Introduction: Pakistan’s Enduring Challenges 1 C. United States-Military relations-Pakistan. Pakistan-Military relations-United States. Military assistance, American-Pakistan-21st century. Religious militants-Pakistan-21st century. Political stability-Pakistan-21st century. Pakistan-Economic conditions-21st century. Pakistan-Politics and government-21st century. Published by University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Pakistan’s Enduring Challenges / edited by C. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher. U N I V E R S I T Y O F P E N N S Y LVA N I A P R E S S PHIL A DELPHI AĬopyright 2015 University of Pennsylvania Press All rights reserved. Violent Nonstate Actors in the Afghanistan-Pakistan Relationship: Historical Context and Future Prospects-Daveed Gartenstein-Ross and Tara VassefiList of ContributorsIndexAcknowledgments Citation preview Friends of Last Resort: Pakistan's Relations with China and Saudi Arabia-Aparna PandeChapter 11.
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Partner or Enemy? The Sources of Attitudes Toward the United States in Pakistan-Karl Kaltenthaler and William J. America and Pakistan After 2014: Toward Strategic Breathing Space-Paul StanilandChapter 9. Pakistan's Self-Inflicted Economic Crises-Feisal KhanPART III. New Media in Naya Pakistan: Technologies of Transformation or Control?-Huma YusufChapter 7.
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DOMESTIC POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ISSUESChapter 5. The Safety and Security of the Pakistani Nuclear Arsenal-Christopher ClaryPART II. The Future of the American Drone Program in Pakistan-Sarah J. A Cooperative Jihad? The Religious Logic of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and the Limits of Pan-Sunni Cooperation in Pakistan-Joshua T. Introduction: Pakistan's Challenges Beyond 2014-C.