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On different wavelengths — Ayesha Siddiqa

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On different wavelengths


By Ayesha Siddiqa

Friday, 16 Oct, 2009 | 08:41 AM PST |



The recent attack on GHQ and yesterday’s attacks in Lahore and Kohat and the government’s response to these incidents reminded one of the days after the terrorist attack on Islamabad’s Marriott Hotel.

There were some in the government who referred to the incident as Pakistan’s 9/11. While that particular date in American history can be interpreted in several ways, its greatest significance lies in the fact that it brought the state and society in the US on the same page as far as fighting the war against terror was concerned. Did we manage to achieve this consensus on Sept 20 last year? Perhaps not.

But this is where the catch lies. The enemy is far more intelligent than what some of our television commentators would like us to believe. In the GHQ case, the terrorists not only understood the strategic value of attacking at the heart of the army’s power base, they also appeared to understand the chasm between the state and society and within the state at several levels. The attackers understand the civilian-military divide better than a lot of people who talk about a new era of civilian-military relations in the country and boast about the two sides being on the same page.

They probably understand that the civilian government might pretend to be powerful but that it depends on externally borrowed power and that in the case of friction between the two centres of power, it is the civilians who would back off. This was most obvious from the fact that instead of raising some critical questions after the attack on GHQ, all that the president and prime minister could do was congratulate Gen Ashfaq Kayani on the excellent handling of the crisis.

There is no doubt that the nation is saddened by the death of unarmed officers and soldiers, and supports any action to punish those who carried out the attack. But the entire event ought to be discussed threadbare without any mudslinging. Why was it that 10 men penetrated a highly guarded area and remained ensconced in GHQ for about 19 hours, especially when the army’s high command was in the premises?

There are two important issues here. First, the Pakistan Army, which is trained mainly in conventional warfare and fighting state forces, is not well trained in counter-insurgency operations. This explains why despite being armed with G3s and other types of infantry equipment the force guarding GHQ could not respond properly. Hence, this capacity must be beefed up at the earliest.

Second, the connection of the key planner Aqeel, alias Dr Usman, with the army medical stores is a reminder of the problem that could perhaps prevail in pockets inside the rest of the military. This pertains to the religio-political inclinations of individual civil and military officials and officers that directly or indirectly support the jihadis.

Aqeel’s is not a unique case. Earlier there was Major Haroon Ashiq alleged to be involved in the murder of Gen Faisal Alavi.
He was linked with one of the Punjab-based militant outfits. His capture led the police and agencies to other retired officers who had split from the Lashkar-i-Taiba and were waging ‘jihad’ on their own. We must also not forget the air force officials and officers involved in the first attack on the former president Gen Pervez Musharraf. Reportedly, the agencies were forced to go deep within the PAF in search of people connected to different militant outfits or the tableeghi jamaat.

At this point, how sure are we that all older links between the jihadis and individuals in the police or military have been snapped? Instead of eulogising the army, parliament should be carefully looking at and questioning the old linkages from the perspective of having a handle on the problem of ‘jihadism’ and what it means for the state.

ISPR director general Maj-Gen Athar Abbas stated that the attackers had planned to use the hostages to negotiate the release of about 100 terrorists. Reportedly, there are about 400 terrorists in different jails. Some of the more high-profile detainees are believed to include Malik Ishaq, head of the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ) and Qari Saifullah Akhtar, head of the Hizb-ul-Jihad Islami. The government must now look at its preparedness and the capacity to protect its high-value detainees.

Although the military and government now seem inclined to consider other reasons for the attack, such as the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan trying to avenge Baitullah Mehsud’s death, the rescue of high-value terrorists seems to be the primary reason, which must not be ignored at any cost. It must not be forgotten that the attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore was also meant to take hostages who could then be exchanged for top jihadis. Sources even claim that the LJ’s Malik Ishaq was involved in the earlier case and had decided to use the attack to get himself freed after the elected Punjab government failed to deliver on a mutual agreement between LJ and the PML-N leadership.

What’s equally interesting is the fact that there is an effort by those in power to ignore or divert attention from areas which are as infested with extremist militants as Fata and the tribal areas. The sudden effort to get policemen from most districts of south Punjab to deny the existence of the jihadi problem in their areas is a reaction similar to when the government denied the Pakistani connections of the Mumbai attackers even before investigating the matter. The denial is strange since most of the attacks in Punjab or the federal capital are believed to be provoked or carried out by Punjabis or Punjab-based militant outfits.

Perhaps the fear is that this might divert international attention towards Punjab or make ordinary Pakistanis think about the reasons why jihadis have spread terror across Pakistan and not confined themselves to the tribal areas as the authorities would like us to believe. Interestingly, even the ISPR’s emphasis is that the attack might have involved Punjabis but that it was carried out at the behest of the Pakhtun Taliban.


It is indeed important to fight militants in Waziristan who are influenced by Al Qaeda, but why does it have to be at the cost of ignoring the Punjab-based outfits who are proving to be good hosts for the terrorist network? Sources believe that Al Qaeda has trickled into areas bordering Punjab. These outfits operate beyond the Pakhtun-inhabited tribal areas and their threat is evident from the sectarian killings in Dera Ismail Khan and other places.

There is a possibility that the civilian government might lose the initiative in an urge to appease the military and the latter might just lose the initiative to act against those that were part of the GHQ attack for unexplained strategic reasons. This raises the question of how much bloodshed would there be before strategic re-evaluation.

The writer is an independent strategic and political analyst.

ayesha.ibd***********
DAWN.COM | Columnists | On different wavelengths

Copyright © 2009 - Dawn Media Group
 
On different wavelengths


By Ayesha Siddiqa

Friday, 16 Oct, 2009 | 08:41 AM PST |


Second, the connection of the key planner Aqeel, alias Dr Usman, with the army medical stores is a reminder of the problem that could perhaps prevail in pockets inside the rest of the military. This pertains to the religio-political inclinations of individual civil and military officials and officers that directly or indirectly support the jihadis.

Aqeel’s is not a unique case. Earlier there was Major Haroon Ashiq alleged to be involved in the murder of Gen Faisal Alavi.
He was linked with one of the Punjab-based militant outfits. His capture led the police and agencies to other retired officers who had split from the Lashkar-i-Taiba and were waging ‘jihad’ on their own. We must also not forget the air force officials and officers involved in the first attack on the former president Gen Pervez Musharraf. Reportedly, the agencies were forced to go deep within the PAF in search of people connected to different militant outfits or the tableeghi jamaat.

At this point, how sure are we that all older links between the jihadis and individuals in the police or military have been snapped? Instead of eulogising the army, parliament should be carefully looking at and questioning the old linkages from the perspective of having a handle on the problem of ‘jihadism’ and what it means for the state.

The writer is an independent strategic and political analyst.

ayesha.ibd***********
DAWN.COM | Columnists | On different wavelengths

Copyright © 2009 - Dawn Media Group

The writer makes an important point - the 'older links' between jihadi terrorists and military officials must be fully investigated by the Parliament and any serving military officers found complicit must brought to justice in a transparent manner.

For too long, the PA has preserved its dirty underbelly (the Jihad Inc. network) for so-called 'strategic' reasons, and has effectively 'lost' soldiers due to reverse-indoctrination.

Its time for the military (with the backing of the civilian government) to clean up the mess it has helped create.
 
For too long, the PA has preserved its dirty underbelly (the Jihad Inc. network) for so-called 'strategic' reasons,

the strategic reason was real, not "so called", an important hedge.

who could have predicted the us would come along and blow away the whole balance.
 
the strategic reason was real, not "so called", an important hedge.

who could have predicted the us would come along and blow away the whole balance.

The 'strategic depth compulsion' was concocted by the pakistani military and clearly showed a lack of vision and foresight. It was borne out of the military's assumption that we will be in a permanent state of conflict with the neighbor.

More importantly, the 'means to the end' was where it all went wrong.

The US did not just come along in 2001 on a whim. If the PA had not been so hungry to fill the power vaccum in the region, and had not created a jihadi monster infused with salafi ideology which in turn helped spawn a jihadi - al qaeda nexus, the US would not be in the region, and we would'nt be in the mess we are in today.

First Moral of the Story: Don't ever create or recruit mercenaries infused with a pseudo-religious extremist ideology to promote strategic interests(real or imagined) of the State.

Second Moral of the Story: Strategic Interests of the State should be determined by the democratically-elected Parliament and NOT the Generals.
 
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The 'strategic depth compulsion' was concocted by the pakistani military and clearly showed a lack of true vision and foresight. More importantly, the 'means to the end' was where it all went wrong.

The US did not just come along in 2001 on a whim. If the PA had not been so hungry to fill the power vaccum in the region, and had not created a jihadi monster infused with salafi ideology, which in turn helped spawn a monster - al qaeda nexus, the US would not be in the region, and we would'nt be in the mess we are in today.

Moral of the Story: Don't ever recruit mercenaries infused with a trans-national extremist ideology to promote strategic interests(real or imagined) of the State.

wrong wrong wrong

the taliban had nothing at all to do with international jihad, nothing.

they separate to al ciada, they are primarily about pashtun power, infused with some tribal backward islamism, get your facts right.
 
She has only one wavelength and that is Anti-Army.

end of argument. What suggestions she forwarded to deal with the sitution other than again coming to army bashing.

anyway

Maybe the army deserves a little bashing for its past sins. The PA is accountable to the parliament and the people, and should be open to admitting its past strategic blunders.
 
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If the PA had not been so hungry to fill the power vaccum in the region, and had not created a jihadi monster infused with salafi ideology which in turn helped spawn a jihadi - al qaeda nexus, the US would not be in the region, and we would'nt be in the mess we are in today.

The jihadi ideology is a spillover from the Afghan/Soviet war. Pakistan had almost no choice but to nurture them, due to the proxy war in Afghanistan against the Indian backed Northern Alliance.

The difference between Pakistan and India was that India kept its own house clean, and made sure the Afghan jihadis stayed in Afghanistan. Pakistan, on the other hand, allowed them to spread their poison within Pakistan.

Strategic Interests of the State should be determined by the democratically-elected Parliament and NOT the Generals.

True in theory but, given Pakistan's civilian politicians -- past and current -- I will trust the army instead.
Every time.
 
So many fallacies in her article, where should one even begin?

I do agree that supporting these jihadi groups as state policy was wrong, but now that pandora's box is already open, closing it not that simple as she tries to portray it.
 
Until your parliament exercises its responsibilities for detailed oversight, until your army wears a path to that parliament and submits by law to examination, until your civil leaders grab the reins of nat'l security and foreign policy and direct the formulation of such, you shall lack the requisite transparency to understand your nat'l motivations and how such is developed.

There is no convenient option to testify before civil leaders-at least not elsewhere. It is law, often predictable by both schedule and need, and entails the full subordination of your military to a HIGHER power.

There is none at present in your country nor has there ever been. Again, currently the Pakistani people and state serve at the behest of the army-not vice versa.

Incompetent or otherwise, there will be no institutional improvement until such is reversed. It is the way of the world. You are welcome to look around and observe- even the PRC adheres to such, where the PLA must answer to their communist party cadre.

Perhaps it's best that you institute a coup and make matters plain to all. If not, it is high time that your army take shame in its intimidation of the state and SUBMIT to its rightful superiors from whom they should TAKE orders...

...not give them.

If so all-knowing and wise, their advice to state and parliament will win the day by logic. Dictation at the barrel of the gun with COUP as the threat hardly inspires belief in their astuteness of insight, however.

Thanks.:usflag:
 
On different wavelengths


By Ayesha Siddiqa

Friday, 16 Oct, 2009 | 08:41 AM PST |

What’s equally interesting is the fact that there is an effort by those in power to ignore or divert attention from areas which are as infested with extremist militants as Fata and the tribal areas. The sudden effort to get policemen from most districts of south Punjab to deny the existence of the jihadi problem in their areas is a reaction similar to when the government denied the Pakistani connections of the Mumbai attackers even before investigating the matter. The denial is strange since most of the attacks in Punjab or the federal capital are believed to be provoked or carried out by Punjabis or Punjab-based militant outfits.


Copyright © 2009 - Dawn Media Group



She is so right here We keep denying untill it hits us ..
 
Until your parliament exercises its responsibilities for detailed oversight, until your army wears a path to that parliament and submits by law to examination, until your civil leaders grab the reins of nat'l security and foreign policy and direct the formulation of such, you shall lack the requisite transparency to understand your nat'l motivations and how such is developed.

There is no convenient option to testify before civil leaders-at least not elsewhere. It is law, often predictable by both schedule and need, and entails the full subordination of your military to a HIGHER power.

There is none at present in your country nor has there ever been. Again, currently the Pakistani people and state serve at the behest of the army-not vice versa.

Incompetent or otherwise, there will be no institutional improvement until such is reversed. It is the way of the world. You are welcome to look around and observe- even the PRC adheres to such, where the PLA must answer to their communist party cadre.

Perhaps it's best that you institute a coup and make matters plain to all. If not, it is high time that your army take shame in its intimidation of the state and SUBMIT to its rightful superiors from whom they should TAKE orders...

...not give them.

If so all-knowing and wise, their advice to state and parliament will win the day by logic. Dictation at the barrel of the gun with COUP as the threat hardly inspires belief in their astuteness of insight, however.

Thanks.:usflag:

very well said but here is our <civilians > perspective a little insight ifthat helps "PA have a reason also minor civil support or this is some thing they always sell us that we have kashmir, other indian threats and the whole set of conspiricies against muslims "israeli etc , So unless this ends or atleast Kashmir is resolved to start with nothing can happen ,and thats pretty much the only way civilians & citizens of Pakistan will tell the army to go back to baracks .
 
Until your parliament exercises its responsibilities for detailed oversight, until your army wears a path to that parliament and submits by law to examination, until your civil leaders grab the reins of nat'l security and foreign policy and direct the formulation of such, you shall lack the requisite transparency to understand your nat'l motivations and how such is developed.

There is no convenient option to testify before civil leaders-at least not elsewhere. It is law, often predictable by both schedule and need, and entails the full subordination of your military to a HIGHER power.

There is none at present in your country nor has there ever been. Again, currently the Pakistani people and state serve at the behest of the army-not vice versa.

Incompetent or otherwise, there will be no institutional improvement until such is reversed. It is the way of the world. You are welcome to look around and observe- even the PRC adheres to such, where the PLA must answer to their communist party cadre.

Perhaps it's best that you institute a coup and make matters plain to all. If not, it is high time that your army take shame in its intimidation of the state and SUBMIT to its rightful superiors from whom they should TAKE orders...

...not give them.

If so all-knowing and wise, their advice to state and parliament will win the day by logic. Dictation at the barrel of the gun with COUP as the threat hardly inspires belief in their astuteness of insight, however.

Thanks.:usflag:

Just to add;
Until US stop meddling into Pakistani affairs through constant support of dictators (Ayub, Zia, Musharraf all enjoyed excellent personal relations with US)
 
very well said but here is our <civilians > perspective a little insight ifthat helps "PA have a reason also minor civil support or this is some thing they always sell us that we have kashmir, other indian threats and the whole set of conspiricies against muslims "israeli etc , So unless this ends or atleast Kashmir is resolved to start with nothing can happen ,and thats pretty much the only way civilians & citizens of Pakistan will tell the army to go back to baracks .

No my dear you haven't read history correctly... "It is very existence of this country"... Which is original reasons for Army to be as what it is.KL bill speaks enough about wisdom of politicians of Pakistan. Lol even opposition start shouting after army shown grave concerns over this ****** peace of trash.

Problem is not intervention problem is when this intervention converts into long long period of dictatorships with powers to manipulate constitutions. There are country where army have had brief intervention but that never hurt democracy as army was not allowed to be in power for too long.
 
Just to add;
Until US stop meddling into Pakistani affairs through constant support of dictators (Ayub, Zia, Musharraf all enjoyed excellent personal relations with US)

Fair point - While the PA needs to be held accountable by the civilian government, the US must not repeat the mistake of coddling military dictators like Zia and Musharraf.
 
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