Pakistan Should Stop Looking to Leverage the Taliban
Trading its influence over the militants for relief from painful reforms will cost the country’s economy.
Militants massacred 132 schoolchildren in 2014.
Photographer: A Majeed/AFP/Getty Images
Pakistan’s founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, was convinced his fledgling nation’s most valuable asset was its location. In an interview a month after independence in 1947, Margaret Bourke-White of Life magazine painted a vivid picture of Jinnah’s expectations: “‘Pakistan is the pivot of the world, as we are placed’ — he revolved his long forefinger in bony circles — ‘at the frontier on which the future position of the world revolves.’”
In 1947, the world was just entering a cold war. Bourke-White explained that Pakistanis expected the United States to pay handsomely for a strategically located ally’s development — and to fund its military as well.
