U.S. Assistance to Pakistan: The Think Tanks Have Spoken

EDITOR’S NOTE: Despite increasing tension between U.S.-Pakistani relations, the Wilson Center report recommends continued civilian assistance to the South Asian country. The Center for Global Development welcomes the proposals, especially since some are similar to what CGD recommended in its July report. Milan Vaishnav highlights three such points in this blog post.

Yesterday, a working group convened by the Woodrow Wilson Center released a report on U.S. civilian assistance to Pakistan.  The report entitled, “Aiding Without Abetting: Making U.S. Civilian Assistance to Pakistan Work for Both Sides,” comes on the heels of numerous reports on the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, notably CGD’s own report on this subject.

The Wilson Center report comes at (yet another) low point in U.S.-Pakistani relations.  Last weekend, NATO warplanes conducted a cross-border attack in Pakistan that claimed the lives of 24 Pakistan servicemen.  While the facts surrounding the incident are muddy, Pakistani government officials are seething.  As retribution, the Pakistanis announced they would boycott next week’s international conference on Afghanistan in Bonn and cancel a high-level military delegation scheduled to visit America this week.

The Wilson Center report recommends that, in spite of the difficulties in the bilateral relationship, the United States should continue its program of civilian assistance to the Pakistani government.  However, it issues a strong warning that “substantial mid-course changes” are needed if assistance authorized under the Kerry-Lugar-Berman (KLB) Act is to achieve a meaningful impact.

We welcome the Wilson Center’s report as it echoes several of the key recommendations the CGD study group made in its report issued in July.  We want to highlight three in particular:

We hope that the Wilson Center study will provide another useful injection to those in the Administration and on Capitol Hill who want to strengthen the U.S. development approach in Pakistan.  Here at CGD, we are busily working on evaluating the Administration’s response to the recommendations contained in our own study group report.  Stay tuned to these pages for our findings.

Republished with permission from the Center for Global Development. View original article.