TERRORISM IN PERSPECTIVE, K
Hussan Zia
According to the US CENTCOM estimates
Musharraf’s catastrophic decision to facilitate the US invasion of Afghanistan cost
our economy a loss of more than ten billion dollars in the first year alone
and the hemorrhaging continues unabated. This does not include the cost of
military deployment, provision of base facilities and other support.
Its detailed report published in 2002
reads in part, “Operation Enduring Freedom adversely affected the already
fragile economy of Pakistan. Major losses were caused to the civil aviation,
tourism, investment and shipping due to rise in the rates of insurance. Besides
this, Pakistani exports also suffered adversely and foreign investments
experienced a visible decline. According to a rough estimate, Pakistan's
economy suffered a loss of over US$ 10 billion since October 2001”:
The decision not only resulted in the loss
of close to two hundred billion dollars so far but also gave rise to
terrorism as we know it today. It is a misconception; in all probability
deliberately created that terrorism somehow has its origins in religious
fundamentalism. There have been religious extremists throughout history but
they have rarely resorted to sustained campaigns of violence. Terrorists
are not driven by religion as much as they are by a clear strategic objective to
compel the occupying power to withdraw military forces from the territory that
the terrorists view as their homeland.
This is just as true for Pakistan as
it is for Sri Lanka, Chechnya, Lebanon, Palestine, Kashmir, Corsica or Spain.
Prior to Musharraf’s ill-considered and unjustified induction of troops in
South Waziristan the only terrorist acts had been by some ineffectual Indian
agents. What we witness today was born and fueled by the desire to avenge the
death and destruction caused by the military incursion in FATA. Later, other
soldiers of fortune joined the fray for all kinds of motives and reasons,
For terrorism to flourish it needs a
few essentials like sympathy and support in the local community, a secure base
for training, logistic support and operational planning; large amounts of cash
to pay the mercenaries and their families, publicity, etc. and an assured
supply of volunteers. They also need a fairly sophisticated command structure
to gather intelligence, plan operations, control and organize troops, among
other things. The sophistication evident in some of the terrorist acts
in Pakistan had the hallmarks of professionalism that are far beyond the
capabilities of an ex-chairlift operator like Mulla Fazlullah.
Mercifully, TTP and its
affiliates have little popular local support outside FATA and must buy whatever
else they might need. The amounts involved are quite substantial as are their
logistical needs ---- much more than what they can realistically hope to get
from any private donations. Some of the weapons and equipment at their disposal
are also not easily procured in the market.
It is a misconception that various
groups that form TTP are ideologically motivated. Some of them may claim this
but in reality it is money, coercion and the need to take revenge that goads
them. If it had been religion, they would first target NATO troops,
installations and supplies which they scrupulously avoid. In return
the US and NATO have left them untouched except for people like Nek Mohammed
who declared it unlawful for TTP to kill fellow Pakistanis and Muslims and
Hakimullah Mehsud who tried to reach a settlement.
When viewed against this perspective
the outlandish TTP conditions and for the negotiations make perfect sense. The
powers that pull their strings are in no mood to come to an agreement. They
want the talks to fail and the army to expand its operations further. There
is no better way to destroy a country and its army than to make it fight a war
against its own people that has no end.
In all probability almost all of the
terrorists groups are compromised by now which makes dealing with them a
difficult and delicate exercise. They do not have centralized command and
control nor the same paymaster. It also means they cannot speak with one voice
and are not free to negotiate. They can only say and do what each puppeteer
desires. Nonetheless we have to sit at the table with them if for no other reason
than to gauge their attitudes, arrange a truce and possibly exploit any
divisions and rifts that are bound to exist.
The first line of defence for
internal security has to be the police, IB and FIA that have local knowledge,
intelligence and presence. The military is not equipped for dealing with
terrorism as such. It is basically configured and trained to deal with external
threats and not criminal activity. It can be called upon to help but by the
very nature of the task it has to be primarily handled through the combined
efforts of all the civilian agencies. Something is very wrong when so many
trained and armed soldiers led presumably by competent officers are taken
prisoner to be butchered by a rag tag band of Hill Billys. It needs to be
investigated if there has been a professional or institutional
lapse.
Unfortunately, in their eagerness to
please the US, Musharraf and his successors have made the situation far more
complicated. They allowed foreign intelligence agencies to have a free run of
the country, including access to offices and records of IB and FIA. Agents of
nefarious outfits like Blackwater/Xe were allowed to run amok.
A revealing article in the Asia Times, of 4th October 2003 claimed, ‘The FBI cells have established direct control over the law enforcing agencies, such as the police, who take orders from FBI agents. In return, they are believed to be handsomely rewarded financially.’ General Aslam Beg states, ‘Musharraf agreed to pull-out ISI from the border areas and allowed the CIA and the Marines to monitor the entire border belt from Swat to Balochistan’. The civilian security and intelligence agencies need to be cleansed and if necessary reconstituted if there is to be a secure future for Pakistan.
A revealing article in the Asia Times, of 4th October 2003 claimed, ‘The FBI cells have established direct control over the law enforcing agencies, such as the police, who take orders from FBI agents. In return, they are believed to be handsomely rewarded financially.’ General Aslam Beg states, ‘Musharraf agreed to pull-out ISI from the border areas and allowed the CIA and the Marines to monitor the entire border belt from Swat to Balochistan’. The civilian security and intelligence agencies need to be cleansed and if necessary reconstituted if there is to be a secure future for Pakistan.
The media have a crucial role to play
when times are difficult by rallying the people, giving them hope and raising
their morale. In Pakistan they have done everything but this. Day after day
pages of the press are blackened and television anchors cry themselves hoarse
magnifying every little incident out of all proportion to prophecy
nothing but doom and gloom. This is how Fifth Column operates. A US
diplomat in Islamabad summed them up in 2012:
“Pakistani TV
journalists are some of the easiest to buy or manipulate. ---------- Their
price is ridiculously small. A drink, a lunch with a second or first secretary
in a place where they can be seen by their admirers, invitations to official
receptions, or at most, a trip to the states, is all you need to buy their
loyalty. ----------- My dog is usually fussier.”
A great deal of damage has been done.
People are losing hope which is reflected in the social media. It has
encouraged flight of both capital and talent that does more harm to the
economy and the future than any amount of terrorism could ever do. It
is in fact treason. We only have to look at the conduct of media in Britain
when she faced terrorism by the IRA for more than twenty years to know this.
Every terrorist act entails some loss
and tragedy but it is local and limited in terms of the larger context and by no
means the end of the world as made out by our media. Again, to quote the
British example, in all the years that she was subjected to terrorism the
country functioned normally and her economy continued to prosper. In a similar
vein, despite everything, it is true that in general Pakistan still
offers more in terms of quality of life than any other country from Myanmar all
the way to Morocco.
Things change and it never pays to
lose hope. We have survived far more challenging times. The present is no
exception. After the US withdrawal from Afghanistan whosoever gains control,
especially in south and southeast Afghanistan, will need support from Pakistan
to survive. It will not be in their interest to allow foreign inspired outfits
operating under the TTP umbrella to use Afghan soil for their
purposes. Terrorism came to Pakistan when Afghanistan was occupied by
foreign powers. It will end only when the occupation ends. Wisdom demands we
should wait for that time before embarking on yet another costly
adventure. In the meantime, any respite afforded by the negotiations should not
be scoffed at.
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