US-Pakistan Relations

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Bilateral Defense Cooperation Agreement
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CIA Chief
CIA Official
CIA's Effort
CIA’s Effort
Clinton's Approach
Clinton's Foreign Policy
clintons
Clinton’s Approach
Clinton’s Foreign Policy
Davis Monthan Air Force Base
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Hamid Gul
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Khawaja Nazimuddin
Maleeha Lodhi
Mukti Bahini
nuclear
Pakistan's Afghan Policy
Pakistan's Military Establishment
Pakistan's Nuclear Program
Pakistani Military Establishment
pakistans
Pakistan’s Afghan Policy
Pakistan’s Military Establishment
Pakistan’s Nuclear Program
policy
Policy Makers Space
postCold War
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Pressler Amendment
Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
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Robin Raphel

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138952676
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jul 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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US foreign policy-making from the end of the Cold War to after 2001 is crucial to understanding the years of strong US engagement with Pakistan that would follow 9/11. This book explains Pakistan’s strategic choices in the 1990s by examining the role of the United States in the shaping of Islamabad’s security goals.

Drawing upon a diverse range of oral history interviews as well as available written sources, the book explains the American contribution to Pakistani security objectives during the presidency of Bill Clinton (1993-2001). The author investigates and explains the dynamics which drove Islamabad’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, its support for the Taliban and its approach towards the indigenous uprising in Indian Kashmir. She argues that Clinton’s foreign policy contributed to the hardening of Islamabad’s security perspectives, creating space for the Pakistani military establishment to pursue its regional security goals. The book also discusses the argument that US-Pakistan relations during this period were driven by a Cold War mindset, causing a fissure between US global and Pakistan’s regional security goals. The Pakistani military and civilian leadership utilized these divergent and convergent trends to protect Islamabad’s India-centric strategic interests.

The book addresses a gap in the relevant literature and moves beyond the available mono-causal explanations often distorted by a mixture of intellectual obfuscation and political rhetoric. It adds a Pakistani perspective and is a valuable contribution to the study of US-Pakistan relations.

Talat Farooq is a Research Associate in the Institute of Conflict, Cooperation and Security in the School of Government and Society at the University of Birmingham, UK.

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