Jihadist penetration of Pakistani armed forces may be deeper than feared
BY AMIR MIR on JUNE 9, 2016
ISLAMABAD–A Pakistani Navy
tribunal’s recent awarding of death sentence to five officers for the September
6, 2014 terror attack on the Karachi Naval Dockyard points to the growing
penetration of the Pakistani armed forces by radical elements including
Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) launched by Dr Ayman Al Zawahiri.
While Pakistan’s military had
been secular and disciplined, it is now being infiltrated at all levels by
jihadists and al-Qaeda and Taliban sympathizers.
This obnoxious development has
brought into open the conflicting ideologies which seem to have caused fissures
in the ranks of the Pakistani armed forces by pitting Islamists against
reformists.
The death
sentence awarded to five officers proves that the fidayeen assault
on the naval dockyard could not have been possible without “inside help.”
Those court-martialed and
sentenced to death by the Navy tribunal after in-camera trials were
Sub-Lieutenant Hammad Ahmed (whose father Saeed Ahmed is a retired Army Major),
Irfan Ullah, Hashim Naseer, Mohammad Hammad and Arslan Nazeer.
The naval authorities concluded
the court martial proceedings on April 12, 2016 and promulgated the judgment on
April 14, 2016. Those arrested were tried on charges of inciting mutiny,
hatching a conspiracy and carrying weapons in the naval dockyard.
The naval court reportedly
refused to provide copies of trial proceedings to the family members of the
convicted officers who want to challenge their death sentences. All the five
officers had links with AQIS led by Commander Asim Umar who is an Indian
national from the state of Uttar Pradesh.
The AQIS was launched by Al
Zawahiri on September 3, 2014 and the dockyard attack was carried out three
days later. AQIS spokesman, Usama Mahmood, claimed the attack by the group in
his September 11 statement.
US and
Indian navies the targets
The incident came as a big blow
to the credibility of the Pakistani military which had received billions of
dollars of US aid since 2001 when General Pervez Musharraf joined the US-led
war against al-Qaeda.
The statement issued by AQIS
spokesman identified their target as USS Supply, a US naval ship which is used
to refuel warships at sea. It was part of a plan to strike at the American
military strength on the seas.
In a nine-page press release,
Mahmood said the targets were American and Indian Navies and the operation was
carried out on the orders of Al Zawahiri.
The Pakistani military
authorities took 20 months to convict those naval officers who had been
indoctrinated by al-Qaeda and were part of the dockyard attack which
killed four Navy officers, including two dissidents.
However, worries for the
Pakistani military establishment are far from over.
The
Washington Post reported
on June 3, 2016 that AQIS is regrouping in Pakistan and re-adapting through
enhanced alliances with established militant groups there.
The report said: “Five years
after most senior al-Qaeda leaders are thought to have fled the port city,
officials in Karachi worry that the organization is regrouping and finding new
support here and in neighboring Afghanistan.
“They are especially concerned about
the recruitment of potential foot soldiers for the next major terrorist attack.
The resurgence has been managed by a South Asian offshoot called Al-Qaeda in
the Indian Subcontinent, created by the top al-Qaeda leader, Ayman Al Zawahiri,
in 2014 in order to slow advances by rival Daesh (IS) militants in the region.”
Going by
the Post report, the AQIS initially struggled to gain traction
in Pakistan as it has been the principal target of US President Barack
Obama’s drone-strike strategy in the country’s northwestern tribal belt.
“But AQIS is now finding its
footing in southern Pakistan, powered by fresh recruits and budding alliances
with other militant organizations. They are making a comeback of sort in the
form of a different, more localized al-Qaeda. The formation of AQIS is again
allowing al-Qaeda to tap into Karachi’s wealth and network of madrasas in
search of recruits and technical expertise and sparking deadly clashes with the
Pakistani security forces,” the report said.
“The core al-Qaeda, the thinkers
and planners are not coming to the front right now, rather they are giving
directions and the local boys are going in big numbers. While Pakistani
officials remain confident that al-Qaeda can’t pull off another 9/11-style
attack on the United States, there is concern that the group is planning
something big,” it said.
In Karachi, the AQIS has divided
itself into three operational segments — recruitment, financial and tactical —
made up of four-to-six-person cells. The recruitment cells work in madrasas and
schools, casually preaching Islam before targeting certain students for
potential recruitment. These cells solicit local businesses for donations,
often under the guise of supporting Islamic charities, officials said.
They have no estimate on how much
money al-Qaeda raises from relatively wealthy Karachi but said militants are
often found carrying hundreds of dollars in cash. Militants are being told they
don’t need to do any job and they don’t need to indulge in petty crimes. But
they should remain discreet.
The Washington Post story
is alarming as al-Qaeda has targeted several military installations in Karachi
in recent years.
Assault on
PNS Mehran Naval base
The most damaging assault was
carried out on May 22, 2011 when Taliban- and al-Qaeda-linked terrorists
stormed the heavily-guarded PNS Mehran Naval base with sophisticated weapons
and fired rocket-propelled grenades which badly damaged some important defense
assets, including Pakistan Navy’s highly expensive surveillance aircraft P-3C
Orion, worth more than $35 million.
The attack began around 10.30 pm
and lasted for over 16 hours. Fifteen security forces personnel were killed in
the gun battle while 15 others were critically injured. The attack was carried
out with such precision that it must have taken months of planning and drills.
The attackers knew where to get
in from and where to find the P-3C Orion. Such sensitive information could have
only come from insiders. Unfortunately, there are a number of cases where those
with links to the armed forces have been involved in attacks targeting the
military.
The Pakistani authorities
subsequently arrested an ex-commando of the Navy, Kamran Ahmed, and his younger
brother, Zaman Ahmed, from Lahore for aiding the attack.
Kamran, who had joined the Navy
in 1993 and was trained as a Special Services Group commando, was detained on
charges of providing maps of the Mehran Naval base to the attackers. He
was court-martialed and terminated in 2003 for assaulting a senior
officer. The military court declared Kamran unfit for the job because of his
extremist views.
A former
medic of Pakistan Army, ‘Dr’ Usman aka Aqeel, was the ring leader of the 12 fidayeenattackers
who stormed the General Headquarters (GHQ) in the garrison town of Rawalpindi
in October 2009 and killed over two dozen people.
He was subsequently
court-martialed and hanged.
Another dreaded jehadi, Adnan
Rasheed, known for various terrorist acts including an attempt on General
Pervez Musharraf’s life, was a former air force man before he turned his guns
on the state.
Now affiliated with the
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Adnan was freed along along with 400 other
inmates by Taliban militants when they stormed the Central Prison in the Bannu
district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 2012.
He later masterminded the Dera
Ismail Khan jailbreak in August 2013, in which 175 prisoners were freed.
Attack on
Karachi Naval Dockyard
The Karachi Naval Dockyard attack
was carried out entirely by serving Navy personnel, along with Owais Jakharani,
a former Navy cadet. Jakhrani, son of Assistant Inspector General of Karachi
Police Ali Sher Jakhrani, was killed during the operation.
The
mystery behind the attack was solved when AQIS spokesman Mahmood issued a
statement denying reports that the fidayeen operation was
carried out by “some intruders.”
He said some naval officers
executed the operation to take control of a Pakistani Naval ship PNS Zulfiqar
to launch missile attacks on US warships in the Indian Ocean, carrying eight
C-802 surface to surface anti-ship missiles.
He said all the participants
in the “fearless operation” were officers of the Pakistan Navy. He
described it as an act of rebellion against the Pakistani Navy by its own
elements, striking at its policy of humiliation and subjugation to the United
States.
He issued another statement on
September 29, 2014, making public the name and picture of a Pakistan Navy
officer, Second Lieutenant Zeeshan Rafeeq. He said the attack was to take
control of two Pakistan Navy warships – PNS Zulfiqar and PNS Aslat – and use
them for destroying an American oil tanker and an Indian warship.
The press release carried
pictures of bearded Rafeeq and Jakhrani briefing “the leadership of the mujahideen
on the Naval Dockyard operation.”
The statement said: “By the grace
of Allah Almighty, the Mujahid brothers assumed control of both frigates. A
firefight ensued with the officials of the Pakistan Navy. It lasted for several
hours on both the warships. Due to this firefight with officials of the
Pakistan Navy, the brothers were not able to fully execute the next part of
their plan, namely the attack on American and Indian warships. Several soldiers
and officers of Pakistan Navy were killed and injured while a number of our
brothers attained martyrdom.”
Subsequent investigations by the
Pakistani authorities revealed that Rafeeq was a serving Navy officer. He blew
himself up after being surrounded by naval commandos. Zeeshan acted in
unison with Jakhrani before being killed in a gun battle with the Special
Services Group (Navy) commandos.
Four more attackers, who had
taken refuge in one of the compartments of the PNS Zulfiqar, were locked inside
by the Navy commandos and arrested afterward. At least a dozen rogue Navy
personnel were detained by the Pakistan Naval Intelligence based on the phone
records of the attackers, including four aboard PNS Zulfiqar, for their alleged
involvement in the dockyard attack.
In a
follow up report pertaining to the dockyard attack, the Wall Street
Journal, quoting a senior American official, claimed on September 17,
2014 that although al-Qaeda recruited within the Pakistani military, such
occurrences were rare.
“Still, there have been several
attacks on military facilities and personnel in Pakistan carried out with the
help of serving and retired military personnel,” the report said.
Alert
gunner foils plan
According to the report, during
the attempt to seize PNS Zulfiqar, the rogue officers were in uniform and had
their service cards displayed. They simply walked on board.The frigate was due
to sail the same day to join an international naval flotilla in the Indian
Ocean. However, the plan was foiled primarily by the alertness of PNS
Zulfiqar’s gunner.
The militants, who were supposed
to board PNS Zulfiqar, approached the docked ship in an inflatable boat,
wearing Marine uniforms. The gunner felt they were too close and their weapons
appeared to be AK-47s which are not standard Marine issue. The gunner turned
his sights on them and fired a warning shot.
The militants, fearing the game
was up, retaliated with rockets and automatic weapons. At the sound of the
firing, Marines and naval commandos rushed to the ship and were engaged by the
renegade officers awaiting the militants on the inflatable boat.
While those on board the ship
continued to fight it out for a few hours, the ones in the inflatable boat had
no chance. The gunner ripped apart the boat with his Gatling anti-aircraft gun,
killing all six on board. The four rogue naval men were killed aboard the
frigate.
The battle ended when the last
surviving rogue naval officer, a young sub-lieutenant, blew himself up after
being surrounded, the WSJ report concluded.
The specter of Islamist
infiltration has haunted the Pakistani armed forces for decades. The creeping
coup of conservatism in the armed forces is a legacy of the country’s third
military dictator, General Zia-ul Haq, under whose command the state policies
were cantered on Islam; religious sermons by fanatic mullahs in military units
were encouraged and even Tableeghi Jamaat (the party of preachers) members were
allowed to preach in the garrisons at will.
This drift within the armed
forces was first revealed during Benazir Bhutto’s second tenure as Prime
Minister in 1995 when a group of senior Army officers led by a serving Major
General was busted while planning to topple the federal government in Islamabad
and to eliminate the top military leadership to enforce Shariah in the country.
Attempts
on Musharraf’s life
The arrests of dozens of
commissioned and non-commissioned officers of the Pakistan Army and the Air
Force in connection with the December 2003 twin assassination attempts
targeting General Musharraf’s presidential cavalcade in Rawalpindi did not come
as a surprise to many.
Subsequent investigations
revealed that al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked militants had penetrated the Pakistan
Army and Air Force units to preach their brand of jihad and recruit personnel
to assassinate none other than their own army chief.
During investigation of the two
assassination attempts that took the military investigators to Rawalpindi,
Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Federally Administered Tribal Areas, about 150
suspects including four-dozen commissioned and non-commissioned personnel of
the Army and the Air Force were questioned.
The investigators concluded that
the attempts on Pervez Musharraf’s cavalcade (on December 14, and on
December 25, 2003) were an exclusive job of over a dozen
brainwashed-technicians of the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) who lived in a
residential facility nearby. They were directed, motivated and armed by a
Pakistani contact person of al-Qaeda.
The investigation showed that the
Air Intelligence, which is the intelligence wing of the Air Force, had no wind
that its personnel — about two dozen at the Chaklala airbase — had been
attending meetings with religious extremists and were making preparations at
the Pakistan Air Force base to bomb the presidential motorcade.
The investigation also led to the
arrest of civilian religious extremists, including three clerics involved in
the indoctrination of the PAF technicians and planning of attacks. A small
group of religious extremists who had supplied the C4 explosives to the Air
Force technicians and the suicide bombers were also arrested.
The investigation team, headed by
Pakistan’s former Army Chief General Ashfaq Kiyani, who was a lieutenant
general at that time, was shocked to learn that the Air Force technicians spent
two days making several trips beneath the Lai Bridge to strap large quantities
of the C4 explosives to the pillars of the bridge, all without being noticed
either by the police or the Military Intelligence, which was supposed to keep
an eye on this presidential route.
Almost 13 years after these
attacks, with General Musharraf gone overseas and al-Qaeda founder Osama bin
Laden killed, there are strong indications that Islamic extremists remain
within the lower ranks of the Pakistani armed forces and are involved in
several deadly terrorist attacks targeting important military installations.
This raises the billion dollar
question: Is the jihadi penetration of the Pakistani armed forces deeper than
feared?
Amir Mir is a senior Pakistani journalist known for his research work on
Islamic militancy and terrorism in Pakistan. He has authored several books
including “Talibanization of Pakistan: From 9/11 to 26/11,” “The Bhutto Murder
Trail: From Waziristan to GHQ,” “The True Face of Jehadis” and “The Fluttering
Flag of Jehad.”
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