Holbrooke’s Dayton II?
The veteran diplomat convenes a 'trilateral meeting' between Pakistan, Afghanistan and America.
In his heyday as a negotiator in the 1990s, Richard Holbrooke was known as "the bulldozer." When Bosnia's civil war looked intractable, Holbrooke brought all the parties to Dayton, Ohio, where he essentially locked them up until they arrived at a deal. Later, as United Nations ambassador, Holbrooke managed to patch things up between two groups almost as hostile to each other as the former Yugoslav factions were: Republicans in Washington and U.N. bureaucrats in New York. In each case, stagecraft was a big part of his strategy: orchestrating grand meetings that would force hostile factions to talk at length in the same room.
Now Holbrooke seems keen on applying a similar tactic to one of the most intractable feuds of the present day: between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Next week, acting on a suggestion from Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Holbrooke and the Defense Department are convening a four-day trilateral meeting between Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United States in which senior foreign ministry and intelligence officials will come to Washington for direct negotiations. Conceived as part of a 60-day policy review announced last week by the White House, the convocation« is a distinctly Holbrookian attempt to find common ground in the never-ending struggle over how to contain the resurgent Taliban in both countries. "There's never been anything like this since 2001," said one diplomatic official (not Holbrooke) privy to the discussions. Holbrooke did not immediately return a call asking for comment, but the gathering was confirmed by State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid.
The talks come as relations between Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai and the Obama administration appear to be fraying. Meanwhile diplomatic sources friendly to Pakistan suggest that cooperation between Islamabad and Washington, especially on intelligence sharing, is deepening. Even so, Washington is not pleased by an alleged peace deal between the government of Pakistan's Northwest Frontier province and Islamic militants in the Swat Valley of Pakistan, a key battleground.
Critics have called the pact a cave-in, allowing a bloodied Pakistani army to retreat, but some Pakistani officials say the deal fits in with a U.S.-orchestrated counterinsurgency campaign. "There are two different groups [in Swat]," says one official. "One is Taliban. The other is a Swat indigenous movement that's been there since 1969. We are getting one on board to isolate other." Or as Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S., put it in an op-ed piece in USA Today on Thursday: "We are attempting to drive a wedge between Al Qaeda and the militant Taliban on the one hand, and Swat's indigenous movement that seeks to restore traditional [Sharia] law in the district." Afghan officials say their country has been increasingly overtaken by Taliban forces because of the large safe haven across the border in Pakistan.
Even so, according to a senior diplomatic official in Washington, cooperation between Pakistani intelligence and the CIA has increased dramatically since last September, resulting in much more accurate intel on the location of Al Qaeda figures and much greater success in strikes from the air. The ISI, Pakistan's intelligence service, cites a list that shows that most of the top 20 "high value targets" among Al Qaeda and militant figures have been taken out in the past six months. The improved communication resulted from a rapprochement within the Pakistani government between President Asif Ali Zardari and Army Chief Ashfaq Kayani, who jointly decided that Al Qaeda had to be removed as a threat, and an understanding with U.S. military and intelligence officials. The U.S. and Pakistan came to this understanding as a way of resolving the bitter disputes earlier last year over intrusive U.S. operations on the ground and the killing of too many civilians from the air, the diplomatic official said. The ISI agreed to provide better intelligence and assistance on the ground in exchange for more precise U.S. strikes from the air and a pledge not to send U.S. forces across the border again. At the same time, according to the official, they agreed not to make this public because it would compromise Zardari, whose ratings have been dropping, and Kayani.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is expected to open the Washington meeting upon her return from Asia on Sunday. But Holbrooke, reflecting his status as a U.S. "special representative" tasked to coordinate U.S. policy between different agencies, including State, will likely oversee the talks along with his Department of Defense counterpart. It's a long way from talks to takeaways, but keep an eye out for Holbrooke headlines.
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Michael Hirsh covers international affairs for NEWSWEEK reporting on a range of topics from Homeland Security to postwar Iraq. He co-authored the November 3, 2003 cover story, "Bush's $87 Billion Mess," about the Iraq reconstruction plan. The issue was one of three that won the 2004 National Magazine Award for General Excellence.
Hirsh writes a column on Newsweek.com entitled "The World from Washington" focusing on foreign policy issues and serves as Washington Web Editor for Newsweek. He also edited NEWSWEEK's "Issues 2007" special issue, which explores all facets and issues of globalization.
Hirsh was the magazine's Foreign Editor from January 2001 to January 2002, and helped guide Newsweek's award-winning coverage of the September 11 attacks and the war on terror. Before that he was a Senior Editor/Chief Diplomatic Correspondent in the Washington bureau, writing about foreign affairs and international economics. Hirsh was also managing editor for the Newsweek International special issue "ISSUES 2001," the second in a series of three annual reviews of the global economy in the new century.
From September 1998 to December 1999, as Diplomatic Correspondent, Hirsh covered foreign policy, the State Department and the Treasury. He moved to the Washington D.C. bureau in May 1997, previously serving as a senior editor of Newsweek International, covering the same beat.
Prior to joining NEWSWEEK in October 1994 as a New York-based senior writer, Hirsh served as the Tokyo-based Asia Bureau Chief for Institutional Investor from 1992 to 1994. Previously, he was a correspondent for the Associated Press in Tokyo and a National Editor in New York.
Hirsh was co-winner of the 2002 Ed Cunningham Award for best magazine reporting from abroad for Newsweek's terror coverage and contributed to the team of Newsweek reporters who earned the magazine the prestigious 2002 National Magazine Award for General Excellence, also for the magazine's coverage of the war on terror. Hirsh also won a Deadline Club Award in 1997 for investigative reporting on his expose of the IRS's abusive practices, and was one of five finalists for a 1994 Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism for his article, "China's Financial Revolutionaries." It profiled the new generation of mainland Chinese businessmen who are striving to build a capitalist financial system from scratch. Hirsh is the author of the nonfiction book "At War with Ourselves" (Oxford University Press, 2003) which explores America's foreign policy and its global role.
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