South Asia Terrorism Portal
Tactical Adjustments in the Terrorist Enterprise Ajai Sahni Editor, SAIR; Executive Director, Institute for Conflict Management
Sources had earlier indicated repeated sightings of the Taliban's 'fugitive' leader, Mullah Omar, in Quetta, and confirmation eventually came from Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai, who indicated that Omar had been seen praying at the Salim Plaza mosque in the border city, and accused Pakistan of deliberately 'turning a blind eye' to terrorism in the border region of Afghanistan. President Karzai added further that Quetta had emerged as a 'stronghold of terrorists' and that 'recruitment is being carried out in connivance with local authorities'. This was not the first such accusation by the Afghan President regarding Pakistan's role in the resurgence of violence in Afghanistan. Earlier, in what one prominent Pakistani commentator described as 'a brazen display of bonhomie with the khakis' (the Pakistan Army), Masood Azhar, the Chief of the banned terrorist organization, the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), subsequently renamed the Khaddam-ul-Islam (KuI), and banned again under this appellation, was reported to have been provided a platform in a grand mosque in the 'very heart of Lahore's military cantonment' to preach his 'doctrine of jihad'. Meanwhile, President and General Pervez Musharraf continues with his declarations of support to the 'global war against terror" and the ritual of periodically 'banning' terrorist organizations. Six such groups had been banned on November 15 and November 20: Jamiat-ul-Ansar, Hizb-ut-Tahreer, Jamaat-ul-Furqan, Islami Tehreek-e-Pakistan, Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan and Khuddam-ul-Islam. Interestingly, every one of these were renamed groups, formed from those that had been banned in 2002. Another seven were to be banned "after Id-ul-Fitr" (November 26): Harkatul Jihad-ul-Islami (HJI), Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen-al-Aalmi (JMA), Tehrik-ul-Mujahideen Pakistan (TMP), Ahl-e-Hadith Youth Force (AYF), Tehrik Difa-e-Sahaba, Jamiat Ishaat Touhed-wal-Sunnah, Almi Tanzeem-e-Ahl-e-Sunnat (ATAS). While offices have been ceremonially sealed, empty bank accounts 'frozen', and a few token arrests made among the dispensable rank and file of the groups already banned, the top leadership of most groups (the exceptions are sectarian groups guilty of terrorist attacks within Pakistan, as against the 'more acceptable' groups who direct their malevolence outward, against India, Afghanistan, or the West in general) continues to be 'untraceable' even while addressing large public gatherings in prominent mosques located in cantonment areas. There have been repeated reports of Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) and Army officers helping the Taliban - Al Qaeda resurgence, as well as supporting terrorist groups operating in the Indian State of Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), though such elements are being described as 'renegades.' Further afield, Pakistani terrorist groups linked to the Al Qaeda, particularly the Lashkar-e-Toiba (now the Jamaat-ud-Dawa) and the Jaish-e-Mohammad/Khaddam-ul-Islam, are reported to have been assigned pivotal roles in coordinating and executing the Al Qaeda's terrorist campaign in Iraq. President Musharraf, however, continues to reaffirm his commitment to the US led 'global war against terrorism', and Pakistani Forces have on several occasions engaged with Taliban and Al Qaeda remnants along the country's Northern borders, arresting and killing many fighters, and handing over key figures to US Forces. A group of junior Pakistan Army officers has also been arrested for its 'links with religious extremists'. Musharraf has welcomed India's recent 'peace initiatives', and many read signs of a thaw in various 'confidence building measures', including Pakistan's most recent announcement of the resumption of commercial overflights with India. Needless to add, Musharraf has been eloquent in his declarations on the need for peace for the development of the South Asian region, and Pakistan's quest for 'good relations' with all its neighbours. Where, precisely, does the truth lie in all this? The first element that needs to be factored in is a degree of complexity that excludes the reductionism of a categorical assessment on where the present Pakistani regime stands with regard to terrorism. The nearest credible generalization is that Pakistan does not appear to have abandoned its strategic commitment to the use of terror to secure its perceived geopolitical goals, and these goals remain tied closely to Pakistan's perception of itself as an 'Islamic power', and the proximity of its dominant or governing ideology to extremist political Islam. At the same time, external circumstances and pressures have forced it into a succession of tactical withdrawals and rationalizations on key goals, alliances and operations. Managing the consequent contradictions between the tactical and the strategic is creating enormous tensions that have impacted adversely on Pakistan's internal situation. In Baluchistan alone, for instance, within the first eleven months of the present year, at least 55 terrorist attacks, including a number of rocket attacks on the critical Sui pipeline and other gas installations (Baluchistan accounts for over 60% of Pakistan's total natural gas output), and on the Frontier Corps' troops and establishments, in which some 77 persons have been killed. This has provoked a degree of disquiet in the highest echelons of the state in Pakistan, particularly given Baluchistan's history of separatist unrest (a five-year long revolt in the early 1970s was brutally suppressed by the Army, and the province has always been restive against what it perceives as 'Punjabi exploitation'). At the same time, however, as the US led campaign in Afghanistan unravels, the operational space for terrorism in that country has expanded once again; once again, to be occupied by Pakistan's agencies and proxies. This fact is crucial to understanding the dynamic series of adjustments and adaptations that are currently occurring in Pakistan's use of terror, as well as in determining the degree to which the country's leadership remains committed in its engagement with the instrumentalities of terrorism. However, far from wearing out US patience on Pakistan's continued subversive role in Afghanistan, there is evidence that a demoralized US is increasingly inclining to 'franchise out' much of Southern Afghanistan to Pakistani proxies on the argument that, since Karzai's Forces remain ineffectual in the areas, since the small NATO Force (a strength of just 5,500) can barely manage Kabul, and since the 10,000-odd US Forces are committed essentially to 'smoking out' Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda, at least some measure of 'control' can be exercised through Pakistan. This is the dangerous slippery slope on which Pakistan had secured hegemony over Kabul in the early 1990s, and hopes to do so again, keeping the incentives for the sponsorship of terrorism high. The result is a revived and increasingly brazen Taliban army, swollen with new recruits from Pakistan, with no visible shortage of weapons, and coffers overflowing with drug money (the United Nations estimates a record 3,600 metric ton output of opium from Afghanistan in year 2003, with much of the trade controlled by the Taliban and warlords linked to Pakistan) and the contributions of the 'faithful'. The future of Pakistan's support to terrorism, not only in Afghanistan, but across South Asia is currently being determined in Iraq - and this is, at least in some measure and in combination with the arduous winter, the reason for the temporary dilution of the terrorist campaign in J&K. It is useful, in this, to recall the statement by the Amir (Chief) of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI), Pakistan, Qazi Hussain Ahmed, that the peace initiatives with India were a tactical move, so that the mujahiddeen could fight the 'Americans and Jews' in Iraq. The degree to which forces are actually diverted from Kashmir and other theatres to Iraq is yet to be seen, but Ahmed's statement is significant in terms of the strategic significance extremist Islam now attaches to the 'jihad' in Iraq. The degree to which the 'resistance' in Iraq is seen to be successful will define the future expanse of operational spaces for terrorism in South Asia, indeed, across the world. There is need, here, to recognize an essential psychological asymmetry in the criteria of success and failure in this conflict: for the terrorist, not to categorically fail is to succeed; for the counter-terrorism coalition, not to demonstrably and irrefutably succeed, is to fail. Terrorists and their sponsors in Pakistan, despite periodic reverses, conflicts and contradictions, have drawn great encouragement from events in Iraq, and there is a current and emerging myth that, even as the mujahidden 'defeated' the Soviet superpower in Afghanistan, the 'forces of Islam' will humble the world's sole surviving superpower in Iraq. Till the outcome of that engagement is decided, Pakistan will continue to sit on the fence, waiting and watching, with occasional and opportunistic forays on both sides, to retain or extend its strategic stakes as circumstances permit. In the interim, the processes of internal corrosion continue uninterrupted - generous 'developmental aid' notwithstanding - largely ignored within the enterprise of strategic overextension in which Pakistan has been engaged for over two decades.