From key Pakistani general to ISIS terrorist killed in Jihad, the
chilling saga of Shahid Aziz
An army cannot afford to
allow so many ideologically motivated hardliners to rise to senior ranks and to
freelance on behalf of their ideology after retirement.
It is very unusual for retired
senior officers of a professional military to end up fighting alongside
militants attacking soldiers they once commanded.
But the recently reported saga
of retired Lt. General Shahid Aziz — whose 37-year service in the Pakistan army
included postings as director-general military operations, chief of general
staff from October 2001 to December 2003, and commander of the IV Corps in
Lahore from December 2003 to October 2005 — points to the hazard of allowing
ideology to supercede professionalism in a modern military.
After retiring from the
military, Aziz was appointed chairman of the National Accountability Bureau, a
post he left in May 2007. His heart, however, was in Jihad. General Pervez
Musharraf, under whom Lt. General Aziz served in top positions, recently said
in a television interview that he had learned about Aziz growing a long beard,
going to Syria to fight alongside ISIS or some other Jihadi group, and being
killed there. Other reports suggested that he had gone to Afghanistan several
months ago “to compensate for what he had done in favour of US troops” and it
was in Afghanistan that he died.
Aziz has not been heard from
for quite some time and some members of his family have confirmed that he left
the country around January-February 2016. Apparently, he just disappeared,
leaving his mobile phone at home. The family kept receiving emails and SMS text
messages informing them that he was alive and well. But for several months even
these messages had stopped.
Reports suggest he had gone to
Kunar in Afghanistan, across the border from Pakistan, and joined the forces of
the Islamic State in Khurasan there. Subsequently reports came that he had gone
on to Syria and that he was either killed in US bombing in Jalalabad,
Afghanistan or in Syria.
Recently, Aziz’s son denied the
reports about his father’s death and recent activities. He told Voice of
America (VOA) that his father was in Africa on a Tableegh (religious preaching)
mission. According to the son, “Gen. Shahid Aziz lives a very private life” and
“does not want public appearances or information regarding his
travels/Tableegh.”
For the sake of Aziz’s family,
one hopes that his son is right but all evidence suggests that his statement is
meant to save face for the family as well as Pakistan’s army. Aziz was never a
private person, as suggested by his son, and has always been very public about
his religious and political stances.
Aziz’s acceptance of extremism
The retired general revealed
his preference for an Islamist Pakistan in his 2013 book, Yeh Khamoshi Kahan
Tak: Ek Sipahi ki Dastan-e-Ishq-o-Junoon (How Long This Silence: A Soldier’s
Story of Passion and Madness). Aziz was not a marginal figure in the Pakistan
military. He fought in Kashmir and was trained at the National Defence
University. As major general, he headed the analysis wing of the ISI and as
director-general military operations (DGMO) in 1999, he was involved with
planning and executing the overthrow of Nawaz Sharif’s elected government.
In 2001, after 9/11, Aziz
served as CGS, a position that often leads to ascent as army chief. His going
off the reservation is not comparable to the occasional military officer
embracing conspiracy theories or going somewhat batty –something unfortunately
not unknown to most militaries.
In his book, Aziz speaks of the
‘eye of Dajjal’ (Antichrist) on the US dollar bill, which to him symbolizes
‘the grand conspiracy set in motion by the Freemasons and many powerful
families in league with the American Neocons’. In his world view, all major
events in the world were ‘in line with the Jewish conspiracy outlined in The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion’, notwithstanding the fact that the protocols
have been proved to be a European anti-Semitic forgery. For him, ‘only the
Quran stands in the way’ of the modern world’s ‘Satanic way of life’.
His desire to join ISIS to
compensate for the wrong he committed by being part of Pakistan army’s
cooperation with the United States was likely inspired by his belief that the
army he served for 37 years had fallen into the ways of the devil.
Long history
There are other senior Pakistan
army officers, too, who have crossed over from being sponsors of Jihadi
activity as strategic action on behalf of a professional military to becoming
true believers in extremist causes. The most prominent example is that of Lt
Gen. Hamid Gul —another ideologue who was within reach of leading the world’s
sixth largest army.
Gul had commanded two of
Pakistan’s top strike formations and headed both Military Intelligence (MI) and
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agencies. He publicly declared that he could
not accept a state not based on Islam and saw nothing wrong in his reaching out
to the Haqqani Network in Afghanistan and supporting the rise of the Taliban
inside Pakistan.
Gul almost boasted about
rigging the 1990 election while in uniform to oust the Pakistan People’s Party
(PPP) from government. He maintained that all his actions were aimed at
protecting Pakistan from external and internal enemies even when he acted
outside the chain of command or in violation of the country’s Constitution.
The long list of general
officers combining conspiracy theories, Islamist ideology and the concept of
Pakistan being permanently under threat includes former ISI chief Lt. General
Javed Nasir, who bragged about violating international sanctions while arming
Mujahideen in former Yugoslavia, and Major General Zaheerul Islam Abbasi, who
was arrested while trying to orchestrate ‘an Islamic coup’ in 1995 to create a
regime ‘based on Quran and Sunnah’.
Then there was Brigadier Amir
Sultan Tarar, a Special Operations officer trained at Fort Bragg in North
Carolina, United States, who earned fame as ‘Colonel Imam’ while fighting alongside
Taliban that he had trained. ‘Colonel Imam’ refused to accept General
Musharraf’s decision to side with the US after 9/11 and supported the Afghan
Taliban publicly. The Taliban, however, were not sure of his loyalties.
Brigadier Tarar was kidnapped by a splinter Jihadi group along with fellow
former ISI officer, Squadron Leader Khalid Khawaja, British journalist Asad
Qureshi, and Qureshi’s driver Rustam Khan in March 2010. Although Qureshi and
his driver were released in September, Khawaja was killed within a month of the
kidnapping and Brigadier Tarar was killed in January 2011 by Al-Qaeda affiliate
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi Al-Alami.
The stories of these officers
should ring alarm bells among the top echelons of Pakistan’s armed forces.
An army cannot afford to allow
so many ideologically motivated hardliners to rise to senior ranks and to
freelance on behalf of their ideology after retirement. From Hamid Gul to
Shahid Aziz, some bright alums of the Pakistan Military Academy ended up siding
with groups that have attacked and killed Pakistani soldiers. This is a
travesty that must be studied and understood instead of being covered up.
The current COAS, General Qamar
Bajwa, has publicly spoken of his desire to close the chapter on his
institution’s embrace of extremist ideology. If that is to happen, it is
imperative that Pakistan discuss openly the ideological distortions that led
some of its retired generals to become fellow travellers of groups such as ISIS
and Al-Qaeda. Course correction is not possible without recognizing what went
wrong.
Husain Haqqani, director
for South and Central Asia at the Hudson Institute in Washington DC, was
Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States from 2008-11. His latest book is
‘Reimagining Pakistan.’
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