State Response to Terrorism
Najam Sethi TFT Issue: 13 Jun 2014
The audacious terrorist attack on
Karachi airport by Central Asian terrorists has finally brought home one naked
truth. The terrorists have cunningly utilised the space for “talks ” and
“ceasefire” to entrench their fierce resistance to the state. The application
of force only can now degrade and disrupt their plans. Accordingly, the
military has announced its decision to go after terrorist hideouts in the
tribal areas and solicited the help of American drones to take out targets.
Does this signify a resolve by the Pakistani state to uproot the scourge of
terrorism by all means possible?
Some questions are bound to linger
and cast doubt about the state’s will and ability to go after the terrorists.
Why didn’t the state come to this conclusion years earlier when high state
functionaries like General Musharraf, Salman Taseer, Shahbaz Bhatti, Benazir
Bhutto, and several ANP leaders were attacked or killed by terrorists? Or when
soldiers like Lt Gen Mushtaq Baig, Maj Gen Ameer Faisal Alvi, Maj General
Sanaullah Niazi, Commandant Safwat Ghayur and scores of army and police
officers were target assassinated? Why didn’t we respond when state
institutions like Bacha Khan Airport Peshawar, Minhas Airbase Kamra, Mehran
Naval Base Karachi, GHQ Rawalpindi, Manawan Police Training School Lahore,
Askari Mosque Rawalpindi Cantt, Pakistan Ordinance Factory Wah Cantt, were
targeted? Why has it taken the lives of over 50,000 people, including 5000 LEA
personnel, to persuade us that we need to act firmly and finally against the terrorists
who have laid us low?
The fact remains that there is still
no consensus in state and society about a suitable response to terrorism.
Should we still consider talking to the terrorists or should we fight them to
the bloody end? Are there good terrorists and bad terrorists? Are these
terrorists homegrown or foreign inspired? Is this a case of Intel failure or
policy failure? Who is responsible for this crisis, soldiers or civilians, or
both? How should we deal with it? So many unanswered questions!
The irony is that since independence
we have doggedly built a “national security state” against external threat and
aggression and now find ourselves under relentless attack from an internal
enemy. No one put it better than ex-army chief General Ashfaq Kayani, who led
the ISI and GHQ by turns, when he publicly confessed before retirement that the
existential threat to Pakistan is internal and not external. The irony is that
there are 33 police, army, paramilitary, security and intelligence
organisations employing over 800,000 people and spending over Rs 1000 billion
every year (half our tax resources) and they cannot protect us against this
terrorism. A bigger irony is that – according to the National Internal Security
Policy document drawn up recently by Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan – 56,000 vacancies
exist in these 33 security organisations, absurdly implying that if these
vacancies were to be injected into the ocean of over 800,000 security
personnel, the internal terrorist threat would be effectively tackled.
There are two dimensions to the
problem. The first relates to the State’s perception and assessment of various
aspects of terrorism. The second relates to the State’s response to them on
various fronts. If the perception is skewed, or distorted, or false, and
therefore removed from reality for one reason or another, then the response is
bound to be inadequate or misplaced.
It is correct that Hindus and Muslims
couldn’t live together in one state because of economic and political
discrimination. This led to the creation of Pakistan. But the narrative of post
independence Pakistan that its survival is based on assessing and reacting to
India in a sum-zero game as the permanent enemy is the fatal flaw that haunts
this country.
There are two adverse consequences of
this fatally flawed “national security” narrative. One, it has accorded primacy
to the military over the civilian order. This has had adverse consequences for
the rule of law, political stability and democracy. Two, it has justified the
military’s doctrine of “asymmetric warfare” based on first-strike nuclear
weapons and armed non-state actors for external meddling in the region to
redress conventional military imbalances. This in turn has led to the growth of
cancerous sectarian, jihadi and Taliban groups. Three, it has sanctioned a
disastrous love-hate relationship with the United States which has stunted
economic and political development.
Therefore it is not enough to launch “targeted”
military operations against terrorists in the tribal areas. A new and
comprehensive socio-political narrative is needed to educate the civil-military
bureaucracy, media and judiciary about the primacy of the internal enemy and
the need to build peace with, and diffuse, the external threat. This narrative
has to be woven around notions of a civil-military balance, democracy, regional
amity, global integration and universal human rights, and embedded in revised
curricula and textbooks. The sooner the first steps are taken to signal a
dynamic reassessment of the new realities, the better.- See more at:
http://www.thefridaytimes.com/tft/state-response-to-terrorism/#sthash.CL307dBr.dpuf
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