1971-05-13
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An emissary of the Pakistani military regime is in the  United States seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in  aid to stave off his country's financial collapse. President Nixon should consider most carefully before  giving any help to the Pakistani central government. As  far as we can see, its sole distinction was its brutal if  not genocidal attack on the Bengali people of East  Pakistan.
Certainly Mr. Nixon ought to withhold any aid until he  is sure it will not be hogged by West Pakistan, as is so  often the case, but will be shared with the suffering  masses in the east. So far the Pakistani government has  been so callous that it has not replied to several United  Nations offers of food and medicine for the starving  Bengalis.
The current political and financial crisis in Pakistan  is a good opportunity for the United States to re-examine  its relations with that country.
During the last 20 years, Washington has invested more  than $4.5 billion in economic aid on Pakistan. And we  lead an 11-nation consortium that has been pumping $450  million a year into the country to keep it afloat. This Western aid has not, incidentally prevented the  Pakistani rulers from aligning their foreign policy with  Communist China's.
In addition, the United States has given "anti- Communist" Pakistan more than $1 billion in arms. This  has been done in the framework of the Central Treaty  Organization, one of our more ludicrous alliances. Pakistan has used those arms to fight the 1966 war with  India, a democratic country with which America has normal  relations. More recently, it used them savagely to  suppress the East Pakistani movement for political  autonomy.
Before deciding where America's "Interests" lie in the  aid mater. Mr. Nixon should ask a few moral questions,  including:
Do we believe in self-determination? if so, should we  help 60 million West Pakistanis dominate 73 million  residents of East Pakistan, which is 1,000 miles away?
Should we be blind to the racist aspects of the light- skinned, martial Punjabis of the west lording it over the  darker Bengalis?
Can we really be anti-colonial and Ignore West  Pakistan's "Internal-colonial" exploitation of East  Pakistan?
Is it right to give financial aid to Karachi when this  releases other funds for the purchase elsewhere of arms  that may be used to slaughter the Bengalis?
Finally, in an America that traditionally sympathizes  with political prisoners, why is there no compassion for  Sheik Mujibur Rahman?
His offense was to win an honest election that  established him overwhelmingly as leader of the Bengali  people. If there were democracy or justice in Pakistan,  he would be prime minister. As it is, he is a prisoner in  a Pakistani military dungeon-if indeed he has not been  murdered.