Pakistan after Trump: Great Power Responsibility in a Multi-Polar World

Pakistan after Trump: Great Power Responsibility in a Multi-Polar World

Author
Saloni Kapur
Publisher
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Language
English
Year
2021
Page
337
ISBN
1527565173,9781527565173
File Type
pdf
File Size
6.8 MiB

Product Description
Since 9/11, the international narrative on Pakistan has painted a picture of a country that is a safe haven for terrorists and a state sponsor of terrorism that plays a double game as it pretends to fight militant Islamist extremists while nurturing them in its backyard. This discourse came to prominence in January 2018 when US President Donald Trump famously tweeted that his country had foolishly provided military aid to Pakistan since 2001, in return for which Pakistan had given safe haven to the terrorists [they] hunt in Afghanistan. This book questions this dominant narrative by showing how the great powersthe United States, the United Kingdom, China, India, Saudi Arabia, and Iranhave directly caused the emergence of a militant ecosystem in Pakistan. Drawing on interviews with journalists, diplomats, academics, military officers, and government officials, it argues that it is Pakistanis who have borne the brunt of terrorist violence, especially since 9/11. The book uses the English School of International Relations concept of great power responsibility to explore how powerful states could help fight militancy in Pakistan holistically. It highlights the Pakistani militarys effort to rehabilitate young militants, and posits that international society must support not only hard counterterrorism through military aid, but also soft counterterrorism such as rehabilitation to address the root causes of radicalisation. With the Trump administrations suspension of military aid to Pakistan, this timely book offers guidance for policymakers in both the West and Asia on how best to approach Pakistans security quagmire.
About the Author
Saloni Kapur is Assistant Professor of International Studies at FLAME University, India. She works at the intersection of critical security studies, international relations theory, and South Asian studies. She is the co-editor of Securitisation in the Non-West (2019), and has contributed to numerous scholarly journals, academic blogs, and newspapers. She is a Fellow of the Richardson Institute, UK, and has previously worked at the London and Delhi offices of International SOS-Control Risks and at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in Vienna. She holds a PhD in International Relations from Lancaster University, UK, an MA in International Relations from the University of Warwick, UK, and a BA in Economics from the University of Pune, India.

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