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Posts Tagged ‘Terrorism’

Joint action declaration: now Pakistan to own US actions

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

By Anjum Rasheed

American Senator John Kerry came to Pakistan, talked to the Pakistani leaders, resolved a serious crisis, eased tensions between the two countries, restored the mutual relations to normality, and went back to his homeland in a week’s time. The main reason behind this crisis, tension and standoff was a resolution, passed by the parliament against the US special forces’ covert operation in Abbottabad on May 2, in which the al-Qaeda chief, Osama bin Laden, was killed. The resolution had warned that all supplies to the US-led Nato forces in Afghanistan through Pakistan would be stopped if the United States carried out another Abbottabad-like attack or continued the drone strikes in Pakistan. However, it seems the John Kerry visit has rendered at least this part of the consensus resolution ineffective. John Kerry also assured Pakistan that his country had no plans to attack the atomic and strategic weapons of its ally in the war on terror. The sources, well aware of the developments, revealed that the Obama administration would take some legal and formal steps in the next a few days that would show that there was no danger to the atomic and strategic assets of Pakistan from the US.

In a joint statement, the Pakistani leadership and Senator John Kerry announced that Islamabad and Washington would make a joint move in the future if any credible information is received about the presence of a high-value target in Pakistan. This sentence, it is believed, is going to work wonders as far as changing the public opinion is concerned. Now, we will have to accept the responsibility for all future drone strikes, warplanes’ bombardment and the armed forces offensive against the militants in Pakistan. Now it would really be very difficult for the Pakistani leaders to issue statements against the drone strikes and condemn such actions.

Earlier, these leaders used to issue statements against the drone and other US attacks to pacify the public sentiments, despite their covert consent to such attacks. And now this face-saving facility would not be available to these leaders. By signing the joint declaration, Pakistan’s civilian and military leadership has forsaken their right to develop a public opinion of their choice. It is feared the new development would create various difficulties for the Pakistani leadership to tackle the issues, arising out of the war against terrorism in the region.

On the other hand, there is a great possibility of a total change in the public opinion in Pakistan if our leadership adopts an uncompromising and bold stance on providing complete support to the US in the war on terror, and making this war its own war against the terrorists.

However, an utterance in the joint declaration, that “the US and Pakistan will launch a joint action against any high-value targets in future” is not very clear and still needs explanation as far as its manifestations are concerned. Pakistan’s former foreign minister Sartaj Aziz says this sentence does not permit the US forces at all to launch a direct offensive in Pakistani territories. It means that the US would only provide information and credible intelligence and the Pakistani forces would carry out action on the ground. The other option would be that Pakistan would provide information and intelligence to the US forces, who would launch drone strikes to kill the militants. And if the US wanted to launch any drone strikes inside Pakistan, it would inform Islamabad in advance.

There is another interpretation also. Former ambassador and an expert on foreign affairs Khalid Mehmood finds the sentence very clear. This sentence means “No more lies”, the analyst believes. The people would be told about all developments very clearly, as we are entering the decisive phase of the war against terrorism, adds Khalid Mehmood. Hopefully, the minute details of this sentence would be finalized between the US and Pakistan, and there would remain minimum confusion over the issue.

Originally appeared in “The News” Pakistan.

Daniel Pearl case and Lashkar e Jhangvi

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

By Mary Phillips-Sandy

American journalist Daniel Pearl was beheaded by alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, but more than a dozen Pakistani militants believed to have been involved in Pearl’s 2002 kidnapping and slaying have not been captured.

That’s the conclusion of a report released today by the Pearl Project, an investigative journalism project at Georgetown University.

Mohammed, who is being held in Guantanamo Bay awaiting trial on terrorism charges, has not been charged in Pearl’s death. According to the new report, Pakistan’s government considers the Pearl case closed and the United States is no longer pursuing an investigation.

The report notes that Pearl’s kidnapping and killing was the first known instance of collaboration among al-Qaida operatives and Pakistani militants. Of the 27 men said to be involved in Pearl’s death, 14 remain at large, among them many members of a notorious militant group called Lashkar-e-Janghvi.

Surge Desk has five facts on the group that the U.S. declared a terrorist organization in 2003.

1. It’s named for a slain Sunni cleric
Lashkar-e-Janghvi, or LeJ, was founded in 1996 by a splinter group of Sunni extremists who had been affiliated with a group called Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan. SSP was founded by a cleric named Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, who was killed by a Shia bomb in 1990. After his death, members of the splinter group claimed that SSP had moved too far from Jhangvi’s sectarian ideals.

2. It has close ties to other militants and terrorist groups
LeJ retains ties with SSP, and both groups are linked to the Taliban militia. Members of LeJ have reportedly trained alongside the Taliban and members of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen in Pakistani training camps.

3. Its co-founder, Riaz Basra, was one of Pakistan’s most wanted men
Riaz Basra was killed in a gunfight with Pakistani police in 2002. He was said to be responsible for at least 100 killings.

4. Its members are thought to have been involved in Benazir Bhutto’s assassination
Pakistan’s Interior Ministry said the suicide bomber who attacked Benazir Bhutto’s motorcade and rally was a member of LeJ.

5. Its funding comes from multiple sources
Authorities say LeJ receives most of its funding from wealthy patrons in Pakistan, particularly its largest city, Karachi. But sources in Saudi Arabia have also funneled money to fund LeJ’s activities.

US pledges support for Zardari govt

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

President Asif Ali Zardari and President Barack Obama met Friday morning at the White House to discuss the stressed relations between the two countries, as well as economic reform and security issues. The meeting was also attended by the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the US National Security Advisor and Counter-terrorism Advisor.

The top leaders wanted to catch up on how the situation had developed since they last met, said Pakistan’s Ambassador to US, Husain Haqqani in a briefing after the meeting. He emphasized that the meeting went smoothly and the American president assured his support to President Zardari. He said the two leaders talked about the US-Pakistan (more…)

CIA came close to al-Zawahiri

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

Officials say the United States targeted, and missed, Al Qaeda second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri three times since 9/11, more frequently than had previously been acknowledged.

According to a news report carried by CNN yesterday, CIA missed the chance to nab al-Zawahri in 2003, 2004 and then later in 2006. The secret information provided to the agency and shared with the Pakistani intelligence was initiated from the Northern tribal areas of Pakistan.

The very first intelligence report about al-Zawahri came out in 2003, when he was believed to be in Peshawar and was meeting with Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the alleged 9/11 mastermind. Khalid was tipped off the (more…)

Muslims at the crossroads

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

by Bilal Qureshi

There we go again. Earlier today, law enforcement authorities arrested yet another terrorist in the making – a naturalized American of Pakistani origin, Farooque Ahmed, for trying to help coordinate bombing of Washington’s Metro System, also known as the subway system. Once again, fortunately, this nut’s plot was never a serious threat, but for his part, Farooque Ahmed did everything in his power to hurt, harm and devastate whatever he could.

Shame on him and shame on everyone who knowingly supported his sickening plot to target innocent civilians. Really, shame on them.

Given what Muslims in general, but in this case, Pakistanis in particular have tried to do to attack America to date; it truly is amazing that so far, the Americans have been superbly generous, amazingly tolerant and insanely forgiving towards Muslims within the United States. But can this relaxed attitude towards Muslims continue, given repeated attempts to harm America? Only time will tell, but common sense points towards justified anger emerging within this country in the very near future, if Muslims, and Pakistanis (not all Pakistanis) don’t give up their violent and wicked dreams of attacking America.

I personally have had the misfortune to come across people who didn’t believe that Al-Qaeeda existed, or worse, that Osama and his cronies are behind any effort, including the horrific tragedy of 9/11, to harm America, but naively, I dismissed them as loonies. However, it seems that it is a mistake, in fact, a horrible blunder to not take anyone seriously who speaks of Osama admiringly and who believes that every foiled terrorist attack is actually a ‘conspiracy concocted by the CIA’.

I suspect that this misguided man Farooque Ahmed will too justify his behavior by complaining that Muslims are being attacked for their religion, and that there is a conspiracy against Islam. And, even though he was living in America, he still got plenty of material not only on the Internet, but also in the mosques that he and his family visited. And, it makes me really sad, because Farooque had every opportunity to study in detail that Muslims are hurting because of their own failures and their misfortunes have nothing to do with America, honestly. Worse yet, he could have helped his Muslim brother and sisters by dispelling this notion of ‘Muslims are being attacked for being Muslims’ but instead, he opted to go down the wrong path, and now, thankfully, he is in custody, and fortunately, his vicious dreams will never materialize.

However, for me, his arrest is not the end of the struggle to beat hate mongers, because for me, it represents just one chapter that came to light and I believe that there are many more people within the United State who think and agree with the ideology that inspired Farooque Ahmed to engage in terrorist activities.

I believe that it is time for Muslims, and of course, Pakistanis in American to seriously entertain the notion that political Islam is not the way to move forward. Muslims and Pakistanis must decide whether they are loyal to America or not and if not, believe me, nobody wants to keep them in the United States forcefully. These people, whether it is Faisal Shazad and Farooque Ahmed and numerous others like them to move to another country that welcomes their ideology of hate.

In America, we reject this appalling idea of carrying out revolting attacks in the name of religious fight.

Thankfully, in America, there is no room for religious hate and we all, regardless of our background, support the efforts to defeat nihilists.

The Ballot Box: The terrorist next door

Friday, October 8th, 2010

This week, a young nondescript Pakistani-born naturalized-American citizen named Faizal Shahzad was sentenced to life in prison for attempting to commit mass murder in Times Square this spring.

Faizal Shahzad is no Aafia Siddiqui. He did not attend a prestigious American university. He doesn’t have an advanced degree. He didn’t marry into a family that is the equivalent of terrorist royalty. When he arrived to begin his studies in the US he was just another South Asian guy with a cheesy wardrobe and a fondness for booze and girls — the Pakistani equivalent of The Situation. After his pitiful failed attempt to blow up his SUV, he confessed his deeds to police. No Dr. Aafia-like intrigues, no dramatic shootouts with American soldiers or law enforcement, no offer of help from the Pakistani government, and, most interestingly, dead silence from the Pakistani press and blogosphere about the case. Not even the bizarre exchange between Shahzad and the judge at his sentencing, surely one of the most colorful colloquys in recent legal memory, drew much attention (Shahzad’s transformation from fist-pumping party dude to jihadi-wannabe was nicely sketched out in a recent New York Times piece).

So why is Faisal Shahzad so damaging to Pakistan? Because he has tapped into the West’s worst nightmare: the sleeper agent. Unlike the 9/11 hijackers, Shahzad was not a temporary visitor. He married in the US, obtained a green card, found a job, bought a house, started a family and was granted US citizenship. As his anger mounted and his sense of victimhood became more pronounced, he continued with the naturalization process, absurdly claiming he wanted to be a US citizen so he could obtain a job in the Middle East. He could have packed up his righteous anger along with his family and headed home at any time. But he didn’t.

A vague terror threat in Europe with alleged Pakistani roots is one thing. Being afraid of your neighbor, a man who may have offered to mow your lawn or help you carry your groceries is quite another, particularly when you discover the despite the outward trappings of middle class comfort the guy next door wants to carry out homicidal fantasies.

Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani has his work cut out for him. Most Americans have never heard of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui. Many of those who have probably think of her as that crazy burqa-clad woman railing on in a courtroom. But Faisal Shahzad? Wasn’t he the hip young guy with the bluetooth in his ear wearing cool sunglasses? Will Faisal Shahzad, so adept at hiding his militancy and rage, become synonymous with Pakistan in the eyes of the average American?

Aafia Siddiqui gets 86-year sentence

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

By Dan Murphy -Boston

Aafia Siddiqui, a US-educated Pakistani neuroscientist whose lawyers argued is mentally unstable, was sentenced to 86 years in prison in a New York district court for trying to shoot American soldiers in an Afghanistan police station two years ago.

The saga of Ms. Siddiqui, a former student at Brandeis University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has been closely followed in her home country, where she is widely viewed as innocent.

At the time of her conviction in February on two counts of attempted murder, thousands of protesters took to the streets of Islamabad. Hundreds of Pakistanis have been killed in US drone strikes in the lawless border areas near Afghanistan this year, and the public perception of the United States has turned sharply negative.

The reaction to her sentencing today was more muted, thought it came late in the day Pakistan time.

The events leading to her conviction took place in 2008, when she had been detained near the Afghanistan city of Ghazni. During an attempt to interrogate her by US soldiers, she grabbed an American rifle and opened fire. She hit no one, and was shot and wounded as she attempted to flee.

US authorities said she was found with bomb-making instructions and a list of prominent New York city sites, which they said appeared to be a target list.

But Siddiqui had been on US authorities’ radars long before her detention. The FBI issued an alert saying it was seeking Siddiqui, then living in the US, for questioning because of ties to a man alleged to be an Al Qaeda agent planning attacks in the US. She disappeared around that time, and precisely what happened in the five years before her detention in Ghazni is unclear.

She has variously said that she was kidnapped and held secretly by the US during that time, that she’d been kidnapped and held by Pakistan, and that she was a secret agent for the Pakistani intelligence services. US court filings say she told FBI agents that she’d married Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew of Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, the man who carried out most of the planning for the 9/11 attacks and who is in US custody in Guantánamo Bay.

She was originally declared to be mentally fit to go on trial, though that decision was overturned last year, with some prison psychiatrists arguing that she was faking the symptoms of mental illness.

Richard Berman, the sentencing judge, was unswayed by the defense’s request for leniency on the basis of mental illness. Siddiqui herself remained calm in court, and called for peace after her sentencing.

”Don’t get angry,” she said, according to Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper. ”Forgive Judge Berman.”

The anarchic republic of Pakistan

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

by Ahmed Rashid

THERE IS perhaps no other political-military elite in the world whose aspirations for great-power regional status, whose desire to overextend and outmatch itself with meager resources, so outstrips reality as that of Pakistan. If it did not have such dire consequences for 170 million Pakistanis and nearly 2 billion people living in South Asia, this magical thinking would be amusing.

This is a country that sadly appears on every failing-state list and still wants to increase its arsenal from around 60 atomic weapons to well over 100 by buying two new nuclear reactors from China. This is a country isolated and friendless in its own region, facing unprecedented homegrown terrorism from extremists its army once trained, yet it pursues a “forward policy” in Afghanistan to ensure a pro-Pakistan government in Kabul as soon as the Americans leave.

For a state whose economy is on the skids and dependent on the IMF for massive bailouts, whose elite refuse to pay taxes, whose army drains an estimated 20 percent of the country’s annual budget, Pakistan continues to insist that peace with India is impossible for decades to come. For a country that was founded as a modern democracy for Muslims and non-Muslims alike and claims to be the bastion of moderate Islam, it has the worst discriminatory laws against minorities in the Muslim world and is being ripped apart through sectarian and extremist violence by radical groups who want to establish a new Islamic emirate in South Asia.

Pakistan’s military-intelligence establishment, or “deep state” as it is called, has lost over 2,300 soldiers battling these terrorists—the majority in the last 15 months after much U.S. cajoling to go after at least the Pakistani (if not the Afghan) Taliban. Despite these losses and considerable low morale in the armed forces, it still follows a pick-and-choose policy toward extremists, refusing to fight those who will confront India on its behalf as well as those Taliban who kill Western and Afghan soldiers in the war next-door. An army that has received nearly $12 billion in direct military aid from the United States since 2001, and has favored-nation status from NATO, still keeps the leaders of the Afghan Taliban in safe refuge. Pakistan’s civilians, politicians and intellectuals are helpless; they cannot make the deep state see sense as long as the West continues its duplicitous policies of propping up the military-intelligence establishment in opposition to popular society while demanding that the Pakistani civilian government wrest back control of the country.

Now there is a serious and deadly overlap—Pakistan’s extremists are determined to topple the political system and the deep state. The army is not oblivious to this reality, but it seems unwilling or unable to tackle the real issues at hand. “This is nothing but a creeping coup d’état by the forces of darkness, a coup that will spare no one,” wrote analyst Kamran Shafi in the Dawn newspaper this summer. “It is them against everyone else—an Islamic Emirate of Pakistan is the goal,” he added.

The deep state is failing its own people, who are in turn becoming more traumatized by the incessant violence, the lack of justice or security, and the perennial economic crisis. This only leads the civilian government to be even more inept, inconsequential and incapable of improving governance.

THE MOTHER of all insurgencies is taking place in the seven tribal agencies of Bajaur, Mohmand, Khyber, Orakzai, Kurram, and North and South Waziristan in the northwest-frontier region where the Pakistani Pashtun tribes—under the nomenclature of the Pakistani Taliban—are at war with the state. Amnesty International recently said that 4 million Pakistanis in this and adjoining regions are living under Taliban rule. Every time the army claims to have cleared one agency, the Taliban rebound in another with a vengeance.

Also operating from these northern bases are a dozen groups from Kashmir, Karachi and Punjab which were once trained by the military’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to fight in Indian Kashmir. They have now turned against their former handlers. The Pashtun Taliban have joined with their more sophisticated, better educated urban comrades to plan horrific acts of terrorism in Pakistani cities. Together they want to overthrow the state and establish an extremist Islamic system.

The Pakistani Taliban do not just kill police and soldiers in their barracks or even innocent civilians in mosques. On June 8 they launched a brazen attack on a convoy of trucks carrying NATO war materials for troops in Afghanistan in heavily populated northern Punjab—torching 50 vehicles. There is now talk of the Taliban shutting down Karachi port, where 80 percent of NATO supplies arrive. The public fear is that the army is losing control of the country as the extremists become ever stronger, ever more daring and ever more capable.

If local tribesmen even attempt collaboration with the state, deadly reprisals ensue. In the supposedly “Taliban-free” Mohmand Agency, people received U.S.-donated foodstuffs on July 8. The next day, while tribal elders gathered to discuss helping the army combat the Taliban, two suicide bombings killed over 100 people and wounded another 115.

Since 2004, the area has been hemorrhaging people. Out of a total population of 3.5 million, more than 1 million have fled the tribal agencies while another half a million left during the recent fighting only to become internally displaced refugees in nearby towns.

Amid the Pakistani Taliban, vicious Sunni sectarian groups prosper, galvanizing hatred of all minorities, Muslim and non-Muslim alike. The Ahmadi sect follows the teachings of a nineteenth-century religious reformer, promoting a peaceful variant of Islam. And yet in the 1970s, the Pakistani government declared the Ahmadis a non-Muslim minority and many Pakistanis today view them as heretics to Islam. On May 28 in Lahore, upwards of nine gunmen and suicide bombers blasted their way into two mosques and killed 90 Ahmadis, wounding another 110. The other minority groups, whether they be Shia, Christian, Hindu or Sikh, have lived in even greater fear since.

The Christian community, which makes up less than 2 percent of the population, is already a target. In July 2009, eight Christians were burned alive in the small Punjab town of Gojra, and in riots that followed an entire Christian neighborhood was scorched. The 17 militants arrested for these crimes were not brought to trial, and the police, facing local pressure, later let them go. A year later, riots erupted again in Faisalabad, Punjab, after two Christians were killed while being held in police custody. Since then, any Christians who can have been seeking political asylum abroad in droves.

An even-worse fate has befallen Shia Muslims. Prominent Shia technocrats—politicians, doctors, architects, bureaucrats and judges—have been singled out for assassination in all major cities, while in December 2009, 43 Shias were massacred by Sunni extremists in Karachi.

Thus the Pakistani Taliban have a two-pronged offensive: the first is to politically undermine the state and its organs through terror; the second is to commit sectarian violence against all those they believe are not true Muslims. This intolerance has developed deep roots in Pakistan over the past three decades, and it has now been boosted by the jihadist policies of al-Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban. The government’s inability to deal with sectarian threats has led to some Muslim groups arming themselves and taking the law into their own hands. This only leads to further loss of control by the state.

AS ISLAMIC extremist violence spreads, the very fabric of the country is falling apart. Mapping how widespread and varied the violence is gives but a hint of the disaster facing Pakistani society. Growing poverty, inflation and unemployment have led to an unprecedented increase in suicides—sometimes of entire families. One hundred ninety-one people killed themselves in the first six months of this year; at more than one death a day, it is one of the highest rates in the world. And when 113 of those happen in the country’s richest province (Punjab), it is obvious not a single Pakistani is surviving this unscathed—no matter how seemingly privileged. Violence against women is also on the rise; 8,500 violent incidents took place last year. One thousand four hundred of those were murders. Another 680 were suicides.

Freedom of information is quickly coming to a halt. Journalists receive regular threats if they do not report the statements of extremist groups, while extremist literature, newspapers and pamphlets continue to flood the market with no attempts by the state to stop them. And now leading electronics markets in major cities have been repeatedly bombed and shop owners warned to stop selling computers and TVs. Rather than combat the threat, the government has succumbed, closing down Facebook for three weeks starting in May and announcing that major web sites like Google and Yahoo will be censored for “anti-Islamic material.” This is shuttering a vibrant society and slowly turning a country that long strived for democratic openness into a closed state held hostage by radical Islam.

Meanwhile, the lack of services is creating its own anarchy. In Karachi, with a population of 18 million, violence is so endemic and its perpetrators so diverse that it is difficult to summarize. What we do know is that beyond Islamic extremism, the city is in the grip of heavily armed mafias and criminal gangs, who kill over control of water supplies, public transport, land deals and the drug trade. Car theft is rampant. The most lucrative business is kidnapping for ransom. The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reports that there were 260 targeted killings in Karachi in the first six months of this year, compared to 156 last year. Eight hundred eighty-nine murders were reported in the same period. Because the city is the melting pot of the country, much of the violence is between ethnic groups who live in virtual ghettoes and compete for the scarce resources of the city.

Ethnic violence is translated into interparty political assassinations. The Muhajir-dominated Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) which rules Karachi is made up of Urdu-speaking migrants from India. They are in a bloody war with an MQM offshoot and in intense rivalry with the largest Pashtun secular political group (the Awami National Party) as well as with the majority Sindhi population. The Muhajirs blame the Pashtuns for introducing the Taliban to Karachi, and ethnic killings are multiplying; party workers of all groups are being targeted.

There is another civil war going on in Baluchistan Province between Baluch separatists and the army. A province long deprived of development, political freedom and revenue, this is the fifth insurgency by the Baluch tribes against the army since Pakistan’s founding. The ISI maintains that Indian agents based in Afghanistan and the Arabian Gulf states are arming and funding the Baluch. The insurgents launch ambushes and assassinations, and lay land mines every day. They have begun killing prominent non-Baluch who long ago settled in the province. School teachers, university professors and officials have proven the easiest targets—and this in a province that professes a literacy rate of only 37 percent (20 percent for women) compared to the national average of 54 percent. This summer Interior Minister Rehman Malik said that four separatist Baluch “armies” funded by India had forced 100,000 people to migrate from the province. Baluch militants killed 252 non-Baluch settlers from January to June of this year, also assassinating 13 army officers. The army in turn has brutalized Baluch society and several thousand young Baluch are said to be missing, presumed in prison and being tortured. The army’s insistence that the entire Baluch problem is caused by India and that the Baluch have no grievances of their own simply leads to further escalation of violence and further alienation of the population. The province erupted in days of riots and strikes after prominent Baluch nationalist leader Habib Jalib was gunned down in Quetta in mid-July.

The local justice system in Pakistan is in dire straits. Policemen, judges and lawyers are frequently intimidated by terrorist groups. Evidence is rarely collected against the arrested perpetrators of attacks, and either the police or judges release the suspects. If not, the terrorists are quite capable of freeing their own by force from jails, courthouses and hospitals. After the Ahmadi killings, terrorists attacked a hospital where one of their arrested comrades was being treated under heavy police guard. In June, terrorists attacked a Karachi courthouse, freeing four members of their group undergoing trial for the earlier massacre of 43 Shias in the city.

It is now a cliché to describe how a worsening economy and the lack of education and job opportunities have helped spawn Islamic extremism in Pakistan and elsewhere. Yet it is a trope worth repeating.

PAKISTAN’S GEOPOLITICAL assertiveness in the midst of all this chaos is a result of the military’s overwhelming power. It may be losing its hold on vast amounts of territory to the extremists, but it is taking control of Pakistan’s national security and foreign policy away from the government. As the country is now led by weak and widely considered to be incompetent and corrupt civilian rule with President Asif Ali Zardari, the husband of slain leader Benazir Bhutto, at the helm, the armed forces have found it relatively easy to carry out their own programs.

Following its election, the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) sought to reform the policies of the Musharraf era. This included improving relations with India, Iran and Afghanistan and ending Pakistan’s regional isolation. They failed.

Zardari’s overtures regarding India were rebuffed, not only by New Delhi, but also by the Pakistan army—such civilian initiatives are considered an encroachment on military territory. And the November 2008 massacre in Mumbai by Pakistani extremists paralyzed engagement with India for nearly two years. India accuses the ISI of having a direct role in the massacre, which Pakistan denies. Yet Lashkar-e-Taiba, the militant group behind the massacre, has not been curbed.

The situation in Afghanistan isn’t much better. Although Zardari improved personal relations with President Hamid Karzai, it had little impact on the army’s posture—an anti-Karzai, anti-ruling-government strategy. Only recently has the army decided that with a U.S. troop withdrawal starting next year, Karzai and the Afghan Taliban need to be brought together. The Afghan Taliban leadership has had sanctuary and support from the military since its retreat into Pakistan in 2001. Though former-President George W. Bush never attempted to tackle this conundrum, President Barack Obama has privately acknowledged what must be done, trying hard to bring Kabul and Islamabad together. Certainly, any recent success can’t be chalked up to the civilian leadership in Pakistan. The army says it wants to see a stable and peaceful Afghanistan after the U.S. withdrawal, and to that end it is trying to promote talks between Karzai and the various factions of the Taliban. However, many Afghans remain suspicious of an army that wants an Afghanistan free of Indian influence.

Zardari and the PPP no longer make any moves that oppose the army’s foreign-policy aims. And over the past two years, a strident judiciary, at times backed by the military, has whittled away at the president’s power, trying repeatedly to undermine Zardari or force him to resign by resurrecting old corruption charges against him and by asserting its influence over the constitution—which is in fact Parliament’s prerogative. This judicial collision with parts of the government has further stymied the country’s reputation and put off aid donors and investors. It is destroying Pakistan’s democratic character. Making matters worse, the all-powerful General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has just received a three-year extension to his term as army chief. It was a move that stunned the country. Many Pakistanis concluded that this further reduced the power of civilian authority.

Political instability is precisely what Pakistan does not need. The country requires a sustained period of democracy under civilian governance—even if it is a bad, poorly functioning democracy. If Zardari is unpopular or ineffective, then he should be removed in the next election, not through a judicial or military coup.

FOR DECADES, a cyclical pattern of military rule followed by its collapse and replacement by elected but weak civilian governments has occurred. In time, they too fall—often with a prod from the ISI—and the military returns. Repeated military rule has resulted in the decline of political parties, the exile or execution of civilian leaders, their lack of experience or knowledge when they do come to power, and the unwillingness of young professionals to get involved in politics. The political class has seen no new blood for a generation.

The PPP suffers from all these problems and more. However, it remains the only national party in Pakistan, for it has support in all the provinces—Baluchistan, Sindh, Punjab and the former North-West Frontier (now called Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa). Every other party, including the Pakistan Muslim League–N (the main opposition group), has degenerated. They are now nothing more than regional organizations representing local ethnicities or territories. Only the political alliance the PPP has forged in Parliament can claim to forward a national agenda; it includes regional parties belonging to all ethnic groups. If the government had the total support of the military and the judiciary, there would be a chance of greater stability and better policy options.

Despite the severe problems it faces, the PPP has accrued some political successes in which lie hope for the future. After much delay and procrastination, Parliament passed the Eighteenth Amendment to the constitution in April 2010 that incorporates over 100 changes to the 1973 version of the document, virtually restoring it to its original form and doing away with authoritarian amendments made by successive military dictators.

From having a de facto presidential form of government under military rule, Pakistan has now reverted back to having a parliamentary form of government with the elected PPP Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani as the chief executive. The amendment also introduces a new judicial commission to choose judges for the higher courts (justified surely, but it has unsurprisingly angered the judiciary and further prolonged the conflict between it and the PPP).

The amendment also grants an unprecedented degree of autonomy to the four provinces, increases decentralization, and brings many social subjects such as health care and education under provincial control for the first time. This has long been the demand of the three smaller provinces which have felt deprived by the concentration of wealth and power in Punjab. Now the government is giving an additional 10 percent of the federal tax take to the provinces under a new National Finance Commission Award. And Punjab made a rare sacrifice by giving part of its share to the poorer provinces. Over 70 percent of federal taxes now revert back to Baluchistan, Sindh, Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa. For the first time there is relative peace between the center and the periphery.

In an effort to continue these steps toward stability, the PPP has moved to give greater autonomy to the northern areas abutting China. This is especially remarkable because they are part of the territory involved in the Kashmir dispute between Islamabad and New Delhi. Because of the areas’ proximity to India, Pakistan has exercised control over the region, which has never had self-government. That is now changing.

What is still missing is a plan to bring the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)—the seven tribal agencies—into the mainstream of governance. Currently this territory has considerable autonomy from Islamabad; the government of the former North-West Frontier Province has no jurisdiction over FATA. Instead, the area is ruled by the president and laws drafted by the British during the Raj. This has led to a power vacuum that has produced a terrorist safe haven. Even though the army claims to have a counterterrorism strategy for the area, it is a plan that cannot work until the army is willing to accept a political agenda that brings FATA under the central government’s control.

DESPITE THE incompetence of the government, the groundwork is now being laid for a genuine democratic dispensation through provincial autonomy, decentralization and the rebuilding of democratic institutions—theoretically making it more difficult for the army to seize power again.

If these steps are matched with equivalent advances in restoring economic stability, reviving local and foreign investment, combating terrorism and Islamic extremism on a nationwide basis, and modernizing the judicial and police systems, Pakistan has a far brighter future than is currently portrayed.

For now, a staggering foreign debt of $54 billion is crippling the country. An estimated growth rate of 4.1 percent for 2009–10 (a negligible improvement from last year’s 1.3 percent) means Pakistan is likely stuck in this financial quagmire. An energy crisis that leads to 14 hours a day of electricity cuts has crippled industry, farming and exports.

The irresponsible handling of the economy is only deepening the crisis. This year’s $38 billion budget has seen a 30 percent increase in military expenditures from last year. This clearly leaves little money for health and education. With 28 percent of the funds reserved for servicing foreign debt, nearly 60 percent of the budget is taken up by that and defense. The entire development pool of $9.2 billion is provided by foreign donors.

Pakistan needs financial aid desperately. Europe is extremely hostile to further bailouts of the country because it is well aware that the military is still spending more money arming itself against India than it is spending to fight the Taliban. On a recent trip to the European Union in Brussels, Prime Minister Gilani was sharply taken to task for his failure to provide good governance and greater transparency on how aid dollars are being utilized.

It is to the credit of the current U.S. administration that it sees and understands that progress is being made, and is providing both financial aid and political support to deepen these changes. For the first time, under the Kerry-Lugar bill, there is U.S. aid that is specifically earmarked for civilian rebuilding rather than military spending.

However, no real change is possible without a change taking place in the army’s obsessive mind-set regarding India, its determination to define and control national security, and its pursuit of an aggressive forward policy in the region rather than first fixing things at home.

It is insufficient for the army to merely acknowledge that its past pursuit of foreign-policy goals through extremist proxies has proven so destructive; it is also necessary for the army to agree to a civilian-led peace process with India. Civilians must have a greater say in what constitutes national security. Until that happens, the army’s focus on the threat from New Delhi prevents it from truly acknowledging the problems it faces from extremism at home.

The army’s track record shows that it cannot offer political or economic solutions for Pakistan. Indeed, the history of military regimes here shows that they only deepen economic and political problems, widen the social, ethnic and class divide, and alienate the country from international investment and aid.

Today there is much greater awareness among the Pakistani people that extremism poses a severe threat to the country and their livelihoods. There is also a much greater acceptance that ultimately civilian rule is better than military or mullah dictatorship. What is still lacking in the war against extremism, however, is a consistent and powerful message from both the government and the army that they will combat all terrorists—not just those who threaten their security. Pakistan’s selective approach to extremism has to end before it can defeat the problem and move on to become what its founders originally intended it to be.

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This article originally appeared in The National Interest

Banning the banned organizations

Monday, July 12th, 2010

By Amir Rana

The Punjab government has once again banned 17 militant organisations, which have repeatedly resurfaced under new names, after four previous bans — in 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2008. The latest ban has been ordered following the carnage in the July 1st bombings at the shrine of Hazrat Data Ganj Bakhsh in Lahore. The previous bans came into effect amid a spike in sectarian killings in Pakistan, the 9/11 terror attacks in the US, an upsurge of Taliban activity in Pakistan’s tribal areas and the November 2008 terrorist attacks in the Indian financial capital of Mumbai. However, these successive bans have made little impact on the militant organisations’ ability to operate. Banning the banned organisations seems little more than a device to deflect international and domestic criticism after the government once again came under pressure to take meaningful action against the militants.

Following earlier bans, the banned organisations resumed their activities once the pressure eased on them. The courts freed their leaders and their publications — an important tool in promoting radicalisation and generating resources in the garb of charities — resurfaced.

Most banned organisations have many covers for their operations. The first response of the banned organisations is to start operating under a new name. Changed names of charities also mask their links with militant organisations. The proscribed Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) militant group is now active as Tehreek-e-Khuddam-ul-Islam, while collecting funds and campaigning as Al Rehmat Trust, the charity wing of the organisation. Similarly, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (Let) renamed itself as Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and is carrying out its activities as Tehreek-e-Hurmat-e-Rasool, while Idara Khidmat-e-Khalq oversees the group’s charitable projects and funds collection.

Who does the government seek to ban now, and how? The question gains added significance since the government has also been found to be allocating funds to the charities of banned organisations, as has been the case with JuD’s charity wing, to which the Punjab government allocated funds in its 2010 budget.

The new official list of banned organisations has counted several militant organisations operating under changed names as different organisations. Jaish-e-Mohammad and Tehreek-e-Khuddam-ul-Islam are different names for the same organisation. The same is the case with Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan and Tehreek-e-Jafaria Pakistan, which had changed their names to Millat-e-Islamia and Islami Tehreek respectively to continue operating despite previous bans. The new official list of proscribed outfits counts them as separate organisations. Many of the banned organisations wear political hats as well. Tehreek-e-Jafaria has remained part of the right-wing Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) and Sipah-e-Sahaba was an ally of the Pervez Musharraf-led PML-Q government. Both organisations remain involved in promoting sectarian hatred, intolerance and extremism.

Furthermore, the militant landscape of Pakistan has become considerably more complex than it was when the first ban was ordered. Banning a few organisations is unlikely to serve the purpose anymore. The groups involved in terrorist activities across Pakistan are largely splinter groups of banned organisations, in addition to a few new groups that have emerged recently. The banned organisations, which were once strategic assets of the state, have nurtured the narrative of destruction. Although their emphasis was initially on ridding the people of Kashmir, Afghanistan or elsewhere in the world of tyrannical rule, review of their literature and objective statements lays bare their sectarian motives and ambitions for achieving an ultra-orthodox theocracy in Pakistan.

However, realisation of those ambitions was the ‘secondary agenda’ of militant organisations, once they had achieved their objectives in Kashmir and Afghanistan. The splinter groups, however, have taken those secondary agendas, prioritised them and started pursuing them through violent means, which has, throughout, been the militants’ singular means to pursue their objectives. These splinters have cut off ties with the banned parent organisations, declaring them puppets of official agencies, and have developed coordination with the Taliban and al Qaeda militants based largely in the lawless tribal areas bordering Afghanistan.

In this context, nothing suggests that the latest ban will achieve anything more than the previous bans.

A coherent counter-terrorism or counter-militancy policy and the requisite vigilance by government agencies continues to remain absent, causing the security situation to deteriorate, accumulating in the loss of human lives, economic downturn and destruction of the socio-cultural fabric of society. In the absence of a comprehensive long-term strategy, the government is mainly relying on a ‘fire-fighting’ approach, by confining its actions to banning organisations, suspending police officers and convening conferences of scholars after major terrorist attacks. Even this fire-fighting approach lacks commitment and implementation has been far from impressive, until recently. The chances of success of a counter-terrorism strategy have further been minimised as the federal and Punjab’s provincial governments have tried to exploit terrorist attacks for political point scoring and seeking to shift the blame on one another rather than making coordinated efforts to curb extremism and terrorism.

Pakistan today faces a growing threat of urban terrorism, which requires better coordination among intelligence agencies and effective policing by a well-trained and appropriately equipped police force. But that remains little more than a dream. The militants clearly have an advantage as they are often better trained, almost always better equipped and are usually more motivated than the police force. Rather than improved training for the police, standards have recently deteriorated; for example, the duration of the training programme for police constables has been reduced from nine months to six in Punjab due to lack of resources. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police faces a similar dilemma as, despite being on the frontline of the Taliban militancy, it lacks proper training and equipment, even though the government has made numerous promises to improve standards.

A one-size-fits-all security approach will not work in Pakistan any more simply because the security challenges in the tribal areas and parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are inherently different from those in Punjab and urban Sindh. The tribal areas are in the throes of an extremist militancy, which has local and regional context, and the militants have resorted to violent terrorism as a tactic against the security forces. In mainland Pakistan, however, terrorism has its roots in the ideological, political and sectarian narratives developed by the religious parties, militant groups and, at times, by the state itself. The disparate nature of threats calls for an equally diverse approach to counter them. Many of the banned militant organisations are not involved in violence in Pakistan. Concentrating on banned organisations alone rather than their splinters, over which the parent outfits have no control, misses a trick and could trigger the emergence of further splinters among these organisations, complicating the counter-terrorism effort even more. The need to adopt more refined and threat-specific approaches is pivotal to the counter-terrorism effort. At the same time, an alternative narrative is vital to refute the banned militant organisations and radical political parties.

Pakistan wants combat copters

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

By Eli Lake – The Washington Times

Pakistan is seeking advanced U.S. attack helicopters and other weapons as part of a comprehensive arms package to bolster preparations for what its military is calling a “silent surge” of more than 100,000 troops into the mountain lairs of al Qaeda’s senior leadership in the country’s Northwest Frontier Province. “I have been ambassador here for two years, and all I have to show for it is eight secondhand Mi-17 transport helicopters for a war that requires helicopters to root out al Qaeda and the Taliban,” Pakistan’s ambassador to Washington, Husain Haqqani, said in an interview with The Washington Times.

The ambassador said, “Military operations would have been (more…)



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