Pak-US Relations A Historical Review, Munawar Hussain Footnotes Corrected

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Pak-US Relations: An Historical

Overview

Munawar Hussain∗

Abstract
Global powers shape politics of the world for their self
interests. United States is the most influential power in the
world today, therefore, US foreign policy and its relations
with other nations, especially with Pakistan in the South and
West Asia is a prominent theme of international politics. This
study helps to understand the nature of US relationship with
Pakistan i.e. a cyclical pattern of cooperation and
estrangement. This also enables us to understand the
internal and external forces, which determine the cyclical
pattern of relationship between the two countries during
cold-war, post cold-war and post 9/11 2001 relations and
expected future path of interaction.
Introduction
Historically Pak-US relationship has never been consistent.
It went through many ups and downs in different periods. It
was because of convergence and divergence of national
interests that kept on switching both nations from friendship
to friction. The dominant perception in Pakistan has been,
US gained more during the times of convergence of
interests, but periods of divergence outweighed the former.
Although, Pakistan earned the title of ‘most allied ally’ of US
in 1950s, 1980s and after the September 11, 2001, however,

∗ Lecturer, Area Study Centre, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.


62 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

it is also the most sanctioned country in the world. By


depending on US for military and economic assistance
Pakistan gained less as it was not given the required support
by US when needed the most.1
The relationship between US and Pakistan developed
from some diplomatic exchanges in 1940s to close
relationship in 1950s. This was the time when both nations
entered into a Client-Patron relationship that was based on a
clear asymmetry of military and economic power. Pakistan
was completely dependent on US for defense against
threats emanating from India, and Afghanistan.2 Therefore,
Pakistan was bound to serve the security interests of US in
the region and could not exercise its autonomy in pursuance
of its interests while interacting with US, especially during
wars with India.
With this backdrop, the study will trace the evolution of
US-Pakistan relations and elements of inconsistency as a
glaring feature of the relationship. It answers how Pakistan,
as a weak nation, pursued its security and economic
interests once it became significant for US policies for the
region and beyond? This study starts with pre-partition
period and also discusses variation in the relationship during
cold war era, post cold-war period and expected future path
of relationship.
Pre-Partition of Sub-Continent
Pak-US relations are as old as Pakistan itself. The roots of
these relations can be found in the pre-partition period.
Initially the then American administration was against the
idea of a divided India. The reason behind this opposition
was the civil war in China, where the US supported
nationalists against the communist elements. Washington

1 Lecture of Dr. Tahir Amin at Department of International Relations, Quaid-i-


Azam University in September 2009. In 1971 war with India, US did not
support Pakistan as it was expected due to “SEATO” and “CENTO”.
2 Syed Hussain Shaheed Soherwordi, “Pakistan-US Relations during the War
on Terror: Converging Alliances, Diverging Objectives for a Changed
Patron-Client Bond”, in Pakistan’s Foreign Policy, ed., Ijaz Khan (Peshawar:
University of Peshawar, 2010), 132.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 63

wanted to avoid yet another major area of turmoil in Asia.


Therefore, Americans were not ready to bear with the idea of
a separate Muslim state. A veteran US Diplomat, William
Phillips, writes in his memoirs: “The more I studied Mr.
Jinnah’s Pakistan, the less it appealed to me as the answer
to India’s communal problem, since to break India into two
separate nations would weaken both and might open
Pakistan, at least, to the designs of ambitious neighbours.”3
US media was also hostile towards Pakistan Movement.
For instance, The Times gave caption, “His (Jinnah’s)
Moslem tiger wants to eat the Hindu cow.” The Times
commented on the rise of Jinnah as “a story of love of
country and lust for power, a story that twists and turns like a
bullock track in the hills.”4
Some Pakistani scholars harbour the view that the US
changed its policy once Pakistan came into existence. The
US President, Harry S. Truman and Secretary of State,
George C. Marshall warmly welcomed the birth of Pakistan.
The United States was the first country that extended
diplomatic recognition and sent an official delegation to
attend the formal ceremonies. US also supported Pakistan’s
application for membership to the United Nations.5
However, certain evidences go in opposition to this
argument of the US support for creation of Pakistan. The fact
is that the US was not happy over the division of the sub-
continent. First, the agreement on June 10, 1947 reached
between Congress, League and the British government was
welcomed by the then US government on the basis of an
assumption that it would end civil disorder in India and avoid
further bloodshed. However, the State Department did not
refer to the decision of the creation of Pakistan in its press
release on June 10, 1947. This shows that the US
government was unwilling to accept this new fact

3 Dennis Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000: Disenchanted


Allies (Washington DC.: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2001), 7.
4 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 9.
5 Rais Ahmed Khan, ed., Forty Years of Pakistan United States Relations
(Karachi: Royal Book Company, 1990), 16.
64 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

(Pakistan).6 The statement commented only, “The future


constitutional pattern is a matter to be determined by [the]
Indian people themselves and whatever that pattern may be
the US government looks forward to continuance of [the]
friendliest relations with Indians of all communities and
creeds.”7
Secondly, on July 2, 1947, when Quaid-i-Azam was
anxious about the recognition of the new state by the
international community, he asked the US Embassy officer in
Delhi, Howard Donovan about US Diplomatic representation.
The diplomat responded that he was not authorized to
discuss such issues. Thirdly, even after recognition and
establishment of American Embassy in Pakistan, on the
request of Quaid-i-Azam and Mount Batten, Kux writes, “the
US attitude towards the creation of Pakistan was
unenthusiastic”.8
The Early Period
In the early years, the relations between the two countries
were not cordial because of four important reasons. First, the
US had its global interests and its foreign policy had a global
reach. It was the early phase of Cold War and the US was
engaged in the containment of Communism. Therefore,
priority was given to China and Japan and it had no major
foreign policy concerns in South Asia. US policy makers
were also of the opinion that Britain would play predominant
role in South Asia.9
The second reason was a natural desire of Pakistan to
cultivate brotherly relations with the Muslim countries. In this
connection, Quaid-i-Azam frequently criticized western policy
towards Palestine opposed the creation of Israel in 1948.10
Thirdly, Pakistan also wished to keep itself out of the big

6 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 14.


7 State Department Press Release, June 10, 1947, cited in Kux, The United
States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 14.
8 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 15.
9 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 16.
10 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 20.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 65

powers’ conflict. The then Prime Minister, Liaquat Ali Khan,


announced immediately after the emergence of Pakistan that
the country would not be party to any conflict of ideologies
between the nations.11 Six months later, Quaid-i-Azam
Muhammad Ali Jinnah affirmed, “Our foreign policy is one of
friendliness and goodwill towards all nations of the world”.12
Fourthly, in the early days of emergence, Pakistan had
to face numerous tribulations, such as, deprivation of
economic and military assets, war on Kashmir with India,
influx of refugees, 1000 miles long hostile Indian territory
between East and West Pakistan, threat from North West
Frontier because of Durand Line issue, and the scarcity of
funds to meet the expenses of the government. These
problems made Pakistan fix its priorities to the internal or
regional issues, rather than paying attention to global
conflicts of super powers.
It was a time when Pakistan needed economic and
military aid so as to overcome the critical security situation it
had been plunged into. Pakistan made request of economic
aid to US. However, the request of $2 billion military and
economic assistance, met a cold response from US and a
meagre amount of $10 million was offered from its relief
fund.13 Instead of giving military aid, on March 11, 1948, for
the first time US imposed embargo on the export of military
hardware to both the countries under the plea of Pakistan-
India tension on Kashmir issue.14
Cold War and Revisited US Policy
The Chinese revolution in 1949 alarmed US and compelled it
to reconsider its Asian policy. The Times of London wrote,
“In many ways it was greater in its cumulative effect than the
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, for then Russia was alone and

11 S. M. Burke, Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: An Historical Analysis (London:


University Press, Ely House, 1973), 147.
12 Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Speeches as Governor General of
Pakistan 1947-1948, 65, cited in Burke, Pakistan’s Foreign Policy.
13 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 21.
14 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 21.
66 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

weak, whereas the mass of China is now added to Russia


and China is grown strong”.15 Moreover, this alarming
situation was multiplied when China entered into thirty years
friendship alliance and mutual assistance with the Soviet
Union.
This development in the region improved the position of
Pakistan in the eyes of American policy makers because of
its geo-strategic location, being at the doorsteps of the
former USSR and China. Of course, Pakistan could help US
to keep a vigilant eye over Russia and China. William
Campbell comments, “The most significant aspect of
Pakistan’s geo-strategic value for the US was its strategic
and geographical position and Pakistan is one of the “rim-
land” nation that ring communist core in Asia”.16
The significance of Pakistan may also be assessed from
the fact that the then Joint Chief of Staff Committee on
March 4, 1949 wrote that most of South Asia had little value
to US, except the countries in the vicinity of the USSR
(Afghanistan and Pakistan). “These offer the possibility of
ideological and intelligence penetration of the USSR”
because people of Soviet Central Asia have closer ties with
the people of South Asia. The committee report also
illuminated the need of Pakistan “for air operation against
central USSR and as a staging area for forces engaged in
the defense or recapture of Middle East oil areas”.17
Therefore, on March 29, 1949 the US administration decided
to lift embargo on the sale of arms to India and Pakistan.
Though, India was the first preference of US because of
its size and population, but despite every effort by US, India
showed her commitment for neutrality in the global conflict
between two blocs and decided to establish closer
relationship with China. The only remaining option was to

15 London Times, May 17, 1954, cited in Khan, ed., Forty Years of Pakistan-
United States Relations (Karachi: Royal Book Company, 1990), 21.
16 Ghulam Mustafa Chaudhary, “The Dynamics of Small Power – Great Power
Interactions,” Pakistan Journal of American Studies 7 (March 1989): 27.
17 Khan, ed., Forty Years of Pakistan-United States Relation, 22.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 67

win cooperation from Pakistan; therefore, US extended an


invitation to Pakistan.
The then leadership of Pakistan was conscious to
commit alliance with the West without a security guarantee
not only against the Soviet Union but also vis-à-vis India.18
The third external challenge that influenced Pakistan’s
foreign policy was a threat from Afghanistan because it
refused to accept the North West Frontier Province (NWFP;
now KP―Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) as a part of Pakistan and
voted against Pakistan’s admission to the UN and kept
reiterating its position on various other occasions.19
Under such precarious conditions, the then Prime
Minster Liaquat Ali Khan visited the United States in May,
1950.20 Instead of Cold War orientation, the Prime Minister’s
trip was of a goodwill salesman.21 He did stress in his
speeches that Pakistan and the United States share many
common values such as democracy, freedom, equality and
right of private ownership. On trip, Pakistan was given anti-
tank and anti-personnel mines for Pakistan Army.22
The overall relations were not as warm as they would be
in the coming years. An evidence of this low profile
relationship was the Korean War in 1950-51, in which
Pakistan refused to send troops, and only extended political
support to the UN cause. However, in February 1951, under
Four Point Program, the US sanctioned economic
assistance of $600,000 to Pakistan.
Period of Eisenhower
In 1953, Eisenhower assumed power and announced his
doctrine of ‘Massive Retaliation’ that led US Administration
to establish the new “Northern Tier of Defense” as an early

18 Hassan Askari Rizvi, Pakistan and the Geo-strategic Environment (New


York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993), 10, 15.
19 A. Z. Hilali, “Determinants and Goals of Pakistan’s Foreign Policy,” Pakistan
Defence Review 3 (December 1991): 27.
20 Quoted in Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 32.
21 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 35.
22 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 35.
68 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

goal of the administration. Basically, the aim of Eisenhower


administration was to reduce US involvement in other Korea-
type operations, and build up instead the indigenous fighting
capability of countries such as Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and
Iraq―the frontline states. The administration realized that
Pakistan could be more helpful in establishing favourable
relationship with the Muslim World. Therefore, the new
administration showed great affinity for Pakistan than India.23
In order to strengthen US relations with Pakistan, in
December 1953, the then Vice President of US, Richard
Nixon, visited Pakistan. On that occasion, he stated, “In the
years to come the US will be proud of stand by Pakistan in
industrial development and also against any danger to its
security.”24
Initially the relationship between Pakistan and US was
not a sort of friendship but a patron-client relationship. One,
it was the time when Pakistan was fully dependent on US for
defense against India and Afghanistan. Second, during cold
war period Pakistan was a crucial military factor for US in
South Asia. Third, the Patron-Client nature of relationship
between Pakistan and US was well-known arrangement to
other nations around the world.
Patron-Client relationship established when Pakistan
signed Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement with US in
May 1954. Pakistan was initially reluctant to join, but agreed
after the Turks and the Iraqis had convinced Ayub Khan that
membership would entail no new security obligation. This
agreement was signed for building friendly cooperation in the
economic, technical, and defense fields. By this time,
Pakistan joined another defense alliance with US, which was
known as South East Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) in
September 1954. Thus, Pattern-client relationship formally
established. The main objective of this alliance was to block

23 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000.


24 Noor A. Hussain and Leo E. Rose, eds., Pakistan-US Relations: Social,
Political and Economic Factors (Berkely: Institute of East Indian Asian
Studies University of California, 1988), 54.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 69

the advancement of Communism in Asia.25 Pakistan became


the most allied ally of United States in Asia. It provided US
with the facility to establish surveillance and communication
post near Peshawar.
In return, US provided nearly $17.5 million military and
$60 million economic aid to Pakistan that strengthened its ill-
equipped armed forces enabling them to effectively cope up
with the Indian threat. Although, both the countries had
different motives for entering into the security relationship,
but the alliance proved satisfactory to both in the short run.
The Period of Kennedy
After honeymoon period of relationship, the fluctuation
started in Pak-US relations. Actually, in 1960 there was a
new turn in the international politics. The U-2 incident of May
1960, and the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962,
compelled both US and Soviet Union to realize the intensity
of the rivalry. Both adversaries endeavoured to achieve
rapprochement to diminish the looming danger of war. The
Kennedy administration regarded China as a greater threat
to the free world than the Soviet Union.
It was also the time when US administration tried to
reduce the rent, it paid for the Peshawar base and
decreased military assistance program. Pakistan joined the
alliance system in order to have advantage over its
adversary, India. On the other hand, during the Sino-Indian
conflict 1962, US and Britain decided to give $120 million
military assistance to India. This development under the
Kennedy administration decreased the alliance co-relation
with aid. The new administration took less interest in
Pakistan, and instead of military hardware, it extended only
verbal assurances of American assistance.26
American military aid to India changed the balance of
power in the sub-continent. Pakistan believed that American
military aid to India would not be used against China but

25 Shirin Tahir Kheli, The United States and Pakistan: The Evolution of an
Influence Relationship (New York: Praeger Publishers 1982), 5.
26 Henry Kissinger, The White House Years (London: Weidenfeld, 1979), 846.
70 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

against Pakistan. During the Sino-Indian conflict, US urged


Pakistan not to take advantage of India’s troubles; and
pledged to facilitate the solution of Kashmir problem.
However, it failed to get any breakthrough in solving the
Kashmir issue. Ayub Khan began to assess the cost-benefit
ratio of Pakistan’s alliance with US, and consequently
established relations with China and the Soviet Union.
US selfish approach led Pakistan to move closer to
China. On March 2, 1963, Pakistan signed a boundary
agreement with China. US, which was already pursuing the
policy of containing China, was not, of course, in line with
Pakistan’s new approach. In retaliation, the US State
Department announced suspension of promised $4.3 million
aid to Pakistan.27
During the Pak-India war of 1965, US imposed
embargoes on both Pakistan and India. Pakistan suffered
more as a result of this situation than India did, because the
later was already receiving arms from the Soviet Union. At
this stage, China helped Pakistan.28
Shift in the US Policy
At the end of 1965 War, US policy towards Pakistan entered
into a period of neglect. There were several reasons for this
shift in US policy. Firstly, the decision makers of US decided
that Indo-Pak conflict had diverted both the countries from
genuine regional accord, and the American arms were being
wasted. Secondly, it was a time when détente between two
global powers was growing. The anti-Soviet passions were
dying down and US was engaged in crucial dialogue on the
control of nuclear weapons. During this period the strategic
and political interests of Pakistan and US failed to coincide
with each other.29
Though Americans terminated their military program for
Pakistan in 1967 but they still used Pakistani land for spying

27 The Times, July 14, 1965.


28 The Times, July 14, 1965.
29 Iftikhar Malik, “Pak-US Security Relations: Testing Bilateralism.” Asian
Survey,” 30, no. 3, (March 1990): 15.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 71

purposes. They used to monitor the Soviet Union from a


base situated in Peshawar through spy planes. In 1968,
Pakistan sent a notice to US to close its monitoring base at
Peshawar, after the expiry of ten (10) years lease period.
The Period of Nixon
In 1971, Henry Kissinger made a secret trip to China via
Islamabad that paved the way for the Sino-US détente. It
reduced US security concerns in South Asia and improved
Pakistan’s relations with US. At the same time, India and the
Soviet Union signed the treaty of friendship and cooperation.
India intervened in East Pakistan in 1971 that prompted the
third Indo-Pak War, resulting in the dismemberment of
Pakistan. During this war Pakistan invoked security pact of
1959 for support against the Indian aggression, but US
turned down the request on the ground that it did not
consider India as a Communist State.
The dismemberment of Pakistan in 1971 led US
recognize India as the preeminent power in South Asia.
Pakistan too re-oriented its foreign policy and evolved good
relationship with the ‘Third World’ countries by articulating
their grievances against their former colonizers. Pakistan
also stressed in its ties with the Muslim World under Pan-
Islamism. The links with the Islamic states were designed to
compensate for the loss of support from Washington.
The event of 1971, practically made Pakistan’s
membership in SEATO absurd and, thus it joined Non-
Alignment Movement. It continued its membership in
CENTO, more in respect to its ties with Iran and Turkey,
than because of its relationship with US.30
In 1974, India tested its nuclear device that aroused a
sense of insecurity in Pakistan. The then Prime Minister of
Pakistan, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, visited America in 1975, to get
the 1965 arms embargo lifted. Bhutto successfully managed
to get lifted the arms embargo; however, US ignored Indian
nuclear test and also gave assistance to India that raised

30 Khan, ed., Forty Years of Pakistan-United States Relations, 51.


72 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

concerns in Pakistan. Pakistan signed an agreement with


France on March 18, 1976 to buy a nuclear fuel
reprocessing plant in its quest to offset India’s conventional
and non-conventional military superiority. US reacted sharply
against this contract under the policy of non-proliferation. US
indirectly threatened Pakistan to make it an example for
others.31
It is concluded that, firstly, what fits in the interest of
global powers, is that they pursue their own vested interests,
without even taking care of friendly states interest. Secondly,
it was a situation where Pakistan as a client became as an
‘Estranged Client’. Though, both the nations, as patron and a
client, maintained a cooperative relationship. Nevertheless,
Pakistan as a client asserted relatively more freedom and
opposed the patron in certain cases like Pakistan’s nuclear
program. However, their constant concern remains to
maintain at least working relationship between them.32
The Period of Jimmy Carter
In 1979, President Jimmy Carter took office in the US. He
emphasized on nuclear non-proliferation. Therefore, the
Carter administration not only forced Pakistan, not to acquire
nuclear capability, but also pressurized France for the
suspension of its agreement with Pakistan on sale of nuclear
processing plant. In this period the discontinuation of
economic aid also put Pak-US relations at the lowest ebb.33
Further, in pursuance of non-proliferation towards
Pakistan, US Congress passed Symington Amendment to
the Foreign Assistance Act. Responding to Pakistan’s
charges of discriminatory treatment under Symington
Amendment, Senator Glen stated that Pakistan happened to

31 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 222.


32 Christopher P. Carney, “International Patron-Client Relationship: A
Conceptual Framework,” Studies in Comparative International
Developments 24, no. 2 (Summer 1989): 45-46.
33 Carney, “International Patron-Client Relationship”.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 73

be the first one on which a decision needed to be taken; the


next one was to be India.34
Moreover, in 1979, a mob under mistaken belief that
America was behind the attack on the Great Mosque in
Makkah burnt down American embassy in Islamabad in
which some of the embassy members died. In the wake of
this incident, the US relations with Pakistan became “about
as bad as with any country in the world, except perhaps
Albania or North Korea.”35
New Intensity between the two Global powers
The December 1979 Soviet military intervention in
Afghanistan and the Islamic revolution in Iran caused
marked changes in US foreign policy towards Pakistan.
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan created for Pakistan a
two-front security situation i.e. East and West. Along with
external threat, Pakistan had to face internal political
instability as its two provinces, NWFP (Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa) and Balochistan had common border with
Afghanistan. This whole stretch of common border was
particularly vulnerable to foreign subversion, especially when
the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. Due to these
unfavourable regional conditions, US needed Pakistan as a
front line state because of its geo-strategic importance. US
President Carter called Zia and told that US wanted to
rebuild bilateral security agreement of 1959 with Pakistan to
strengthen its security against communist aggression.
On January 21, 1980, President Carter pleaded for
necessary aid to Pakistan in his message to Congress: “I am
asking Congress, as the first order of the business, to pass
an economic and military aid package designed to assist
Pakistan defend itself.”36
The US government offered Pakistan $400 million
economic and military assistance. President of Pakistan

34 Kheli, The United States and Pakistan, 135.


35 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 245.
36 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 245.
74 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

Gen. Zia-ul-Haq termed that offer as peanuts. He said,


“Pakistan will not barter its security for $400 millionQ the
assistance must be commensurate with the size of the
threat”.37
The Reagan Administration
After the completion of Carter’s term, President Ronald
Reagan took office in 1981. The Reagan administration had
three major objectives in South Asia:
1. To contain Soviet Union
2. To lessen Indian dependence on the Soviet Union
3. Nuclear non-proliferation
President Reagan tried to cultivate closer ties with
Pakistan. The new administration adopted more sympathetic
attitude towards Pakistan than the previous one. US signed
an agreement of $3.2 billion assistance for Pakistan in 1981,
which was extended over a period of six years (1981-87).
The average US military aid was more than $1.74 billion.38 In
the spring of 1986, another package of $4.2 billion for the
period 1988-93 was sanctioned. This aid package included
the sale of sophisticated aircraft like F-16.
US revived its relations with Pakistan, primarily to find an
ally in Southwest Asia for protection of its strategic interests
in the Gulf and Middle East.
As far as Pakistan’s security interests were concerned, it
obtained sophisticated weapons from US, which
strengthened its defense capability. Secondly, Pakistan’s
policy makers felt confident that they enjoyed support of a
super power. Thirdly, US connection enabled Pakistan to
overcome its economic problems and bear the burden of
Afghan refugees.
Despite the priority of the Afghan War in US policies, the
nuclear issue remained as important as it was. The
statement by nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan that

37 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 245, 249.


38 M. Raziullah Azmi, “Pak-US Relations: Retrospect and Prospect”, Pakistan
Journal of American Studies, 10, no. 1 (Spring 1992): 15-17.
Pak-Us Relations: A Historical Overview 75

“Pakistan had succeeded in enriching Uranium to weapons


grade” stimulated the American anxiety. As the
Congressional apprehensions mounted, US President
Ronald Reagan wrote a letter on September 12, 1984 to
president Zia, “I must reiterate my deep concern that the
nuclear issue may undermine all that we are trying to
achieve and the considerable progress we have made so
far.”39
A group in the US Senate, led by Larry Pressler, showed
their concern about the transfer of weapons of mass
destruction from South Asia to other volatile regions.
Consequently, in 1985, the US Congress passed Pressler
Amendment to Foreign Assistance Act 1961. This
amendment required presidential certification for any
assistance to Pakistan that it did not possess a nuclear
device. Due to the Afghan War, the Reagan and Bush
administrations provided required certification to the
Congress from 1985 to 1989.
After the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan in
1989, US achieved its major objective, the containment of
communism. This transformed the world system from
bipolarity to a transitional period. Under the new international
system US enjoyed the status of a sole super power and
Pakistan ceased to be a frontline state. Pakistan’s
cooperation was no longer required; rather, it was seen as a
source of regional instability and a nuclear troublemaker. It
was in this backdrop, that in September 1990, President
George W. Bush refused to certify that Pakistan did not
possess a nuclear device. As a result all economic and
military aid to Pakistan, negotiated in 1987, under a four-
year package worth $4 billion was cut off, and the delivery of
military hardware including 28 F-16s, was stopped, though
Pakistan had already paid for them.40

39 Kux, The United States and Pakistan 1947-2000, 276.


40 Azmi, “Pak-US Relations: Retrospect and Prospect, 5.
76 Pakistan Journal of History and Culture, Vol. XXXVII, No. 2 (2016)

Conclusion
After reviewing the relationship between Pakistan and the
US during different phases one reaches the conclusion that
relations between them have always been marked by
convergence and divergence of national interests, resulting
in a cycle of friendship and friction. The US gained more
during the times of convergence of interests but periods of
divergence outweighed the former. Although, Pakistan
earned the title of ‘most allied ally’ of US, it is also the most
sanctioned country in the world. By making complete
dependence on US, Pakistan gained less as it was not given
the required support by the US when needed. The US left
Pakistan high and dry not only during the 1965 War but also
during the 1971 War, which led to the disintegration of the
country. In fact, US later imposed severe penalties,
embargoes and sanctions on Pakistan. This unholy practice
of sanctions was repeated in 1979 owing to nuclear related
suspicions and again in 1990 after the successful
culmination of Afghan War in which Pakistan played a key
role in defeating erstwhile USSR.
Moreover, it is also observed that the Patron-Client
relationship that started in 1950s with the admission of
Pakistan in SEATO and CENTO transformed from
dependent client to an ‘Estranged Client’. Despite this, both
the nations maintained a cooperative relationship like
Pakistan army served American interests in Somalia under
the umbrella of UN. Nevertheless, Pakistan as a client
asserted comparatively more freedom and opposed the
patron in certain cases like Taliban in Afghanistan, Kashmir
issue and nuclear program. This paved the way for further
transformation in patron-client relationship between US and
Pakistan in years to come especially under the Trump
Administration in the context of the growing India-US and
Pakistan-China strategic alliances.

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