Foreign Policy Blogs

PAKISTAN/US: 'Obama's Muslim Heritage Will Help'

KARACHI, Nov 6 (IPS) – The most watched polls ever in the world had
their share of attention in Pakistan, complete with news updates, TV
talk shows, call-ins from Pakistanis living in the United States and
speeches by President-elect Barack Hussein Obama.

Chatter in tea-stalls and living-rooms continues to be dominated by
the U.S. presidential elections. The constant barrage of information
streaming in from dozens of television channels in multiple languages
has ensured that `’even an illiterate person has been educated about
these elections,” said Abdul Jabbar, a driver.

“This is the first time that someone with a dark skin has come into a
position of such power. Everyone is happy about it,” Jabbar added.

Repairmen gathered by a broken elevator in an upmarket Karachi
apartment building on the evening of Nov 4 seemed elated. “He will be
the first Black President of the US,” said one, indicating newspaper
items to his colleagues as they squatted on the floor over cups of
sweet, milky tea.

Electric light from the broken elevator's open shaft illuminated the
Urdu daily `Aaj Kal’ that he held open. They looked at a picture of
Obama superimposed over an image of the White House. A repairman
poked his head out of the elevator shaft to take a look. “I think
this will be good for Pakistan,” he said.

Many Pakistanis hope Obama's Muslim heritage will make him more
understanding of their culture, even though the President-elect has
consciously distanced himself from this heritage, even dropping the
use of his middle name Hussein.

As a student in Lahore told a television reporter, explaining why
Obama's election has given hope after eight years. “He has some cells
of Muslim blood”.

Another student disagreed, saying that while Obama may be good for
the U.S. , “it doesn't make much difference to Pakistan”.

There has been interest here about Obama's `Pakistan connection’,
stemming from a college friend whom he mentions in his
memoir, `Dreams from my Father’. He is also reported to have
travelled to Pakistan in 1980 (when his mother Ann Dunham worked here
with a micro-credit finance project ) and in 1981 to visit a college
friend.

“Pakistanis grudgingly share the global excitement of Mr. Obama's
victory,” contends Islamabad-based political analyst Nasim
Zehra, “Grudgingly, because many have not forgotten his campaign
rhetoric of possibly attacking Pakistani territory to combat
terrorism.”

Former newspaper editor and ambassador to Washington Maleeha Lodhi,
currently a Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, told a television
anchor that such rhetoric may perhaps have been an attempt to “act
and sound tough on Afghanistan and Pakistan” since Obama had opposed
the war in Iraq.

However, as Zehra points out, Pakistanis, who have a greater
understanding of the complexity of the terrorism problem and bear the
high costs of this violence, “found Obama's resolve to attack their
territory both aggressive and naïve.” As many as 3,000 military and
paramilitary and many more thousands of civilians have been killed
over the last five years as the `war on terror’ has escalated.

“This notwithstanding, Pakistanis at the same time hope for and
expect Obama, as president, to be more patient, wiser and more
multilateralist in the conduct of US foreign policy. There is also
expectation in Pakistan that behind his combative electioneering
rhetoric exists a more informed outlook that will determine America's
choices,” says Zehra.

Many considered Obama's victory speech both sober and thoughtful. He
also indicated his willingness to reach out and dialogue rather than
use force. As he said in Chicago on the night of Nov. 4, ‘'the true
strength of our nation comes not from the might of our arms or the
scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals:
democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope”.

Obama's priorities were also indicated by his positive references to
the working poor, to women, the importance of building schools and
creating jobs, and the acknowledgement that “we cannot have a
thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers”.

The U.S. elections also reinforce the importance of the electoral
process, a lesson that many consider necessary for Pakistan to learn,
given that its democratic process has constantly been interrupted by
governments being toppled under a constitutional amendment introduced
by a military dictator, or by military rule itself.

Asked by a Pakistani reporter if the U.S. stood at a “moral
crossroads” given the policies of the past eight years and the change
that has been promised, a commentator responded with words that have
consonance here: “That's why we have elections. That is the beauty of
the democratic process. People were not happy with the previous
policies, and the people have spoken.”

Americans of Pakistani origin participated enthusiastically in the
Obama campaign. They included Omar Ali, a medical doctor in Illinois,
who observed that the campaign “mobilised more people than any U.S.
campaign in history, and they were friendly, enthusiastic, fair-
minded and diverse…Whites, Indians, Pakistanis, Christians,
Muslims, people of every group… America at its best.”

“I think he is very smart and his campaign was probably the best run
campaign in history, so I have no doubt he will be competent and will
pick good people and get them to do good work,” added Ali in a
message sent to an e-mail list.

“Having said all that, I know he will be President of the United
States, not some new socialist international revolutionary soviet…
so I expect that the first people to jump OFF the bandwagon will be
those on the far left. Others will no doubt follow,” Ali added.

 By Beena Sarwar

 

Author

Bilal Qureshi

Bilal Qureshi is a resident of Washington, DC, so it is only natural that he is tremendously interested in politics. He is also fascinated by the relationship between Pakistan, the country of his birth, and the United States of America, his adopted homeland. Therefore, he makes every effort to read major newspapers in Pakistan and what is being said about Washington, while staying fully alert to the analysis and the news being reported in the American press about Pakistan. After finishing graduate school, he started using his free time to write to various papers in Pakistan in an effort to clarify whatever misconceptions he noticed in the press, especially about the United States. This pastime became a passion after his letters were published in Vanity Fair and The New Yorker and his writing became more frequent and longer. Now, he is here, writing a blog about Pakistan managed by Foreign Policy Association.

Areas of Focus:
Taliban; US-Pakistan Relations; Culture and Society

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