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Acts of Terrorism in Pakistan

Anyway there is always a foreign hand behind at last! this is not new.....it's not as simple as we think, there is a long chain.

The masters never show there faces, to take care of all this mess we must get to the bottom of the problem.

Eliminate both internal and Externel threats. :sniper:
 
Buner falls to Swat Taliban

By Abdur Rehman Abid
Wednesday, 22 Apr, 2009

BUNER: Taliban militants from Swat took control of Buner on Tuesday and started patrolling bazaars, villages and towns in the district.

The militants, who had sneaked into Gokand valley of Buner on April 4, were reported to have been on a looting spree for the past five days.

They have robbed government and NGO offices of vehicles, computers, printers, generators, edible oil containers, and food and nutrition packets.

Sources said that leading political figures, businessmen, NGO officials and Khawaneen, who had played a role in setting up a Lashkar to stop the Taliban from entering Buner, had been forced to move to other areas.

The Taliban have extended their control to almost all tehsils of the district and law-enforcement personnel remained confined to police stations and camps. :disagree:

The Taliban, equipped with advanced weapons, were reported to be advancing towards border areas of Swabi,

Malakand and Mardan, the hometown of NWFP Chief Minister Amir Haider Khan Hoti.

According to reports reaching here, the militants have set up checkposts and camp bases in Kangar Gali village, along the Malakand border; Naway Dhand village, along the Mardan border; and Tootalai village, along the Swabi border.

The sources said officials of the FC camp in Jorh had asked people to vacate their homes in view of threats of an attack.

The militants have started digging trenches and setting up bunkers on heights in strategic towns of Gadezi, Salarzai, Osherai and other tehsils.

After occupying the Buner district and setting up their headquarters in the bungalow of businessman Syed Ahmed Khan (alias Fateh Khan) in Sultanwas, the militants started patrolling the streets and roads with no signs of law-enforcement personnel.

Led by Fateh Mohammad, the militants were asking local people, particularly youngsters, to join them in their campaign to enforce Sharia.

They have established checkposts on roads and are searching all passing vehicles. They have virtually established their writ in Buner region, once a stronghold of the Awami National Party.

On Tuesday, armed groups entered the Rural Health Centre at Jure in Salarzai area and took away a Land-Cruiser being used by the Expanded Programme of Immunisation (EPI), Buner.

On April 17, they raided a basic health unit in tehsil Chamla and looted 480 cans of edible oil. They took away from the house of a lady health visitor a large number of food and nutrition packets supplied by USAID and sewing machines from an Action Aid-sponsored vocational centre in the Korea village of tehsil Chamla.

On April 18, they looted a huge quantity of medicine from a health facility at the Afghan refugee camp in Koga in the same tehsil and 640 cans of edible oil from a godown of the World Food Programme in Nawagai.

On April 19, armed men took away a Suzuki Potohar Jeep from a rural health centre in Nagrai. A group of 20 militants took away a Suzuki Ravi car and 400 cans of edible oil from a basic health unit in Garga.


Another armed group snatched an ambulance, a pick-up provided by Gavi for EPI cell, a Suzuki Ravi from a health centre in Swari.

They also broke into the offices of Paiman (Save the Children) EPI, Jica offices and took away several computers, printers, two generators, fax machines, UPS and other appliances.

The armed men stopped near Ambela a double-cabin vehicle of Paiman going to Buner from Peshawar and took it along with the driver to a nearby camp. Later, they released the driver and escaped with the vehicle. They have also occupied the main office of Rahbar in Swari.
 
Cravenness everywhere

By Kamran Shafi
Tuesday, 21 Apr, 2009

MUST apologise to my readers first off for using the word ‘craven’ so often during the past few months and years, but how else should one describe the way the Pakistani state has handled the most critical of matters that are heralding the death of the country itself?

From the Commando acquiescing to every heartlessly stupid action of Dubya and his band of idiots, to the present lot giving in to criminals and terrorists without a fight and handing over a part of the country to lawless and violent people, you name it and it will be something as craven and spineless as anything can be.

But somewhere else first. Whilst we have many other matters of import to discuss this week, just look at the way in which Pakistan was represented in Tokyo at the so-called Friends of Pakistan meet. I mean Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood actually had the temerity to call the $5bn that has been ‘pledged’ to Pakistan a great victory of Pakistani diplomacy, as a success of our foreign policy! I ask you.

Far more than the manner in which it was said, is what was said. Instead of hanging our heads in utter shame, we trumpet the fact that the world has granted us these alms to save us from ourselves? Indeed, is the fact that the Pakistan Army and its much-praised ‘agencies’ have given up the fight in Swat a success of our foreign policy? Is the fact that we could not find an FM radio station — there are many more now which will be jammed by the Americans we are told — a great victory for our core professionals?


Neither is what Qureshi said the end of it. Look at what the president of the Islamic Republic had to say: “Help us to help yourselves” or words to the effect? Meaning what, Mr Zardari? That we will become a bigger headache for the world if it did not cough up, and fast? Have we no shame left at all? The Commando going begging to the Americans was one thing, for he was an illegitimate dictator; must our elected government do the same and shame us even more? Even more critically, we seem to be saying to the world that if you don’t give us lots of cash, no questions asked, we will drown without trying to make even a weak attempt at swimming, and take you down with us.

With the Taliban becoming ever more emboldened (surprise, surprise) and demanding the hand-over of all the seven districts of Malakand division and Kohistan district (through which runs the Karakoram Highway, thank you very much), does anyone think the world will be fooled into handing out cash to a sinking entity? An aside: some villages in Haripur district of Hazara division are already infested with the Taliban. Who the hell do we think we are fooling?

Why did Asif Zardari have to go himself anyway, when no other head of state or government was going to be there, except for the prime minister of the host nation? It was a ministerial meeting and could well have been handled by the foreign minister and his officials.

But no. We simply have to do things in our own unique way. We could learn, if we wanted to reform, a lot from the way others around us comport themselves when they interact with their interlocutors. I can only pay tribute to the way the Iranians do it. If you notice closely, their foreign minister will always have a half smile on his face; his every word will be carefully weighed, and then spoken in a soft but firm manner. There is no breathlessness, no theatrics. Take the Indians. Their officials and political leaders will only meet their counterparts. When was the last time you saw Master Boucher, Hilal-i-Pakistan etcetera, and Gen Petraeus call on Sardar Manmohan Singh?

But leave all of that alone. Do our great economic planners and our Napoleons and Guderians and Rommels really think that even if, by some miracle, this dollop of $5bn was handed over to us in cash, today, we will keep the rampaging Taliban at bay? Will even $10bn cash help the immediate issue of the apparent loss of will on the part of the Pakistan Army to combat the most serious threat to Pakistan after the loss of East Pakistan?

No sirs, no! Act now, or forever be damned in the eyes of the people not only of this country, but of the world at large. I have written about this before, let me, one more time. There is no greater canard than the one being spread about these days, and which everyone, even the Americans, seem to think is true: that the Pakistan Army is only trained for conventional warfare and that the Americans have to come train our troops in the art of fighting an insurrection.

Nothing could be further from the truth. All that needs to be done is for our intelligence apparatus to start reporting the truth, and for the army to finally understand that its enemy is not on the eastern front but on the western. And that once what little is left of the so-called writ of the almost non-existent state of Pakistan is gone, the army too will be swept away.


I may also point out here that, like a lot of us, I do not think there is any danger of an attack by India. I think India has its job cut out in trying to make the lives of its people better; in industrialising itself; in bringing in foreign investment and tourists. What they will be extremely worried about is the take-over of Pakistan by fanatics, however, just as we would be worried if Bal Thackeray and gang were to take over India. All they have to do if that happens is to reinforce their borders.

A critical matter: we hear a lot about the great losses in men the army/Frontier Corps/Frontier Constabulary/police have suffered, which we mourn. But may we please have a breakdown in terms of officers/JCOs/NCOs and men, so as to come to an informed opinion on whether these poor unfortunates were properly commanded and led from the front.

Subaltern Winston S. Churchill in his book Frontiers and Wars has this to say about local Maj-Gen Sir Bindon Blood who was put in command of the Malakand Field Force to go to the relief of Chakdara on July 28, 1897 while he was at Agra. The general reached Malakand at noon on Aug 1. “The general-in-chief was confident and serene. He summoned the different commanding officers, explained his plans, and shook hands all around.” Chakdara was relieved on Aug 2. Nothing comes without honest hard work, sirs.

PS. Dr Sajid Kaul, great friend, generous philanthropist and above all else a good human being died last month. Yesterday, Aunty Hamida, fellow columnist Irfan Husain’s dear mother, hostess par excellence and wonderful raconteur, under whose roof all comers were welcomed, passed on. I am disconsolate.
 
Contradictions point towards a crunch

By Mahir Ali
Wednesday, 22 Apr, 2009

LAST week began with President Asif Zardari signing a bill that effectively legalises the hand-over of a portion of Pakistan to a branch of the Taliban.

It drew to a close with a bunch of countries pledging, at a meeting in Tokyo, to donate $5bn to the country. The president promised to devote the extra resources to combating the ‘tremendous challenge’ posed by Islamist extremism, and warned the nation’s benefactors: ‘If we lose, you lose, the world loses.’

The very same day, Maulana Abdul Aziz returned in triumph to his favourite haunt, Islamabad’s Lal Masjid, where he appeared to claim at least some of the credit for the outcome in Swat and promised that a similar fate lay in store for the country as a whole and for the rest of the world.


The instrument of surrender in Swat was more or less unanimously endorsed following a perfunctory parliamentary debate — and even that gesture appeared to spook the Awami National Party and its leader, Asfandyar Wali Khan, who threatened to pull the ANP out of its alliance with Zardari’s PPP in the event of the bill being presented for discussion to the National Assembly.

There appears to be a relatively simple explanation for the ANP’s nervousness: it is very, very scared of the Taliban and their allies. Which says a lot about the state of affairs in the NWFP. If the once progressive party’s leading role in negotiating a highly reactionary deal in Swat is based on the assumption that a concession in Swat will allow the provincial government more breathing space elsewhere, then it clearly does not understand the Islamist mentality.

The vast majority of MNAs who spoke on the bill defended it on the basis that similar laws had been enacted in 1994 and 1999, although former information minister Sherry Rehman pointed out that ‘in those times the elected representative of the province had executive control over the area. There was no danger of people being subjected to privatised justice, to Taliban vigilantism and public brutality’.

The only party that refused to acquiesce in endorsing the bill was the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, whose parliamentary leader Farooq Sattar challenged the idea of allowing an armed ultra-radical group to establish its writ by force, and was subsequently quoted as saying that the move will ‘have far-reaching consequences for the idea of a moderate and liberal Pakistan’. I don’t often find myself in agreement with the MQM, particularly in the context of its stranglehold over Karachi, but in this case its stance seems unexceptionable.

One possible factor behind the refusal of other parties to acknowledge that the Swat deal sets an ominous precedent was elucidated by an intriguing analysis by Jane Perlez and Pir Zubair Shah, published last week in The New York Times, according to which the Taliban have advanced their cause by taking the side of landless peasants against landlords — sometimes by intimidating the latter into running away from their estates, and then sharing the spoils with the peasants, who in return are willing to serve as the shock troops of the extremists.

There are unlikely to be many countries in the world where feudalism is as deeply ingrained as in Pakistan, and landed interests dominate most of the larger parties (the MQM, for what it’s worth, is an exception). They are obviously keen to restrict the Swat phenomenon — described by an unnamed senior Pakistani official as ‘a bloody revolution’ that could sweep away the established order — to that region, so that their own latifundia are not similarly threatened. This, again, is a vain hope: there’s a considerably better chance that the Taliban will only be emboldened by their success in the Malakand area.

Although most of the peasants may not realise it, this is essentially a case of one form of exploitation being superseded by another variant that is equally toxic, albeit in a different way. Regardless of the circumstances, the discomfiture of the feudal elements does not render them any worthier of sympathy. The pity is that it was left to the Taliban to capitalise on the natural resentment of the rural proletariat: the political parties that could have done so chose instead to align themselves with, and to accommodate, the propertied opportunists.

In a recent interview with The Independent, Zardari suggested that he understood the nexus between poverty and militancy, saying: ‘We will never really succeed in containing and destroying the militants and fanatics if we do not address the social needs of our people.’ That is perfectly true — although it ought to be pointed out that unacceptable levels of poverty were taken for granted for decades before fundamentalism became a deadly force. What’s more, addressing the social needs of our people’ has never been a priority for any Pakistani government, and it does not follow from the presidential acknowledgment of this problem that the present administration will behave any differently.

Arguably, the best possible use for the bulk of the forthcoming $5bn would be to spend it on education, whose inadequacy is in all probability the largest single reason why the sowers of ignorance find such fertile soil — and the dominant feudal mentality again helps to explain why the idea of enlightening the masses has never quite caught on. Chances are the money will be put to more mundane uses, such as upgrading weaponry or servicing the international debt. A certain proportion may also end up in someone or the other’s pocket. Richard Holbrooke says the handout should have been multiplied by 10; Zardari, who at one point was keen on soliciting $100bn, would wholeheartedly agree.

Meanwhile, the inadequately explained bail for Maulana Abdul Aziz and his return to the scene of the crime, so to speak, is more or less guaranteed to enhance the sense of beleaguerment that has become second nature to the majority of Islamabad’s residents, accustomed as they are to sporadic blasts and massive security barriers.

‘The government,’ according to a report in The Guardian at the weekend, ‘is urging foreign embassies to move into a diplomatic enclave that may soon resemble Baghdad’s green zone.’ Almost everyone acknowledges, however, that adequate precautions against suicide bombers are hardly feasible. The vulnerabilities of Lahore and Karachi — to say nothing of Quetta and Peshawar — have already been demonstrated, while the likes of Baitullah Mehsud are free to hold press conferences, evidently with little fear of interception.

If the centre cannot hold, things will inevitably fall apart. Every now and then the odd flicker of hope can be glimpsed, but chances of redemption are fading fast. Once India concludes its drawn-out electoral process, it might be well-advised to make contingency arrangements for a wave of refugees driven by Islamist anarchy.
 
so sad, we have been drawn into this bullshit wa ron terror, the army cant attack anyone except for their own people under the orders of the United snakes of america , the only way out is to hang every politician in this country every single one is a corrupt selfish lying dog and now we have the biggest crook in the world running our country, this will never end as democracy is a delusion, there is no democracy anywhere in the world, prove me otherwise after explaining what democracy really is
 
Ben Gurion wrote about his thoughts regarding Pakistan in the Jewish Chronicle, 1967:
"The world Zionist movement should not be neglectful of the dangers of Pakistan to it. And Pakistan now should be its first target, for this ideological State is a threat to our existence. And Pakistan, the whole of it, hates the Jews and loves the Arabs.
"This lover of the Arabs is more dangerous to us than the Arabs themselves. For that matter, it is most essential for the world Zionism that it should now take immediate steps against Pakistan.
"Whereas the inhabitants of the Indian peninsula are Hindus whose hearts have been full of hatred towards Muslims, therefore, India is the most important base for us to work therefrom against Pakistan.
"It is essential that we exploit this base and strike and crush Pakistanis, enemies of Jews and Zionism, by all disguised and secret plans.
 
We have to do any thing for stability of our country either it is a Agreement, a deal or a attack we should use whatever tactic which is necessary for the stability of our northern areas. They must be taught that you are living in Pakistan either follow its Rules or get out of here if you dont go PA will be here for you.

Regards
Wilco

by anything you also mean suicide attacks also, as that was what saved pakistan in the first war against india didnt it, hahaha blowing themselves up, so if it was ok then why not now explain
 
Taliban closing in on Islamabad: Fazl

April 23, 2009

* JUI-F chief says Swat peace deal ‘based on defeat, not success’
* Khawaja Asif asks government to revisit Swat deal


By Zulfiqar Ghuman

ISLAMABAD: JUI-F chief Fazlur Rehman warned in a speech in the National Assembly on Wednesday that the Taliban were closing in on Islamabad.

“You talk about Swat and Buner, but according to my information, they have reached Kala Dhaka and Tarbela. And if they continue advancing, there will be only Margalla Hills between them and the federal capital,” he said. He blamed the “civil war-like situation” on former president Pervez Musharraf’s decision to join the US-led war on terror. He said the fallout would also affect India and China.

The Swat peace deal was “based on defeat, not success”, he said. Fazl said there was no writ of the state in the NWFP.

PML-N’s Khawaja Asif urged the government to revisit the deal with Sufi Muhammad saying the Taliban had made public their intention of taking over the whole of Pakistan.
 
Editorial: The army must face up to Taliban

April 23, 2009

The majority opinion which not so long ago favoured the Nizam-e Adl Regulation (NAR) in Swat is now shifting away from a pro-Taliban stance and conceding that Pakistan might have to fight them as Pakistan’s own war after all. This has happened owing to developments that were predictable to the entire world but not to most Pakistanis because of a media bias. The Swat Taliban have finally said that they are not bound to honour the peace accord between the government and the TNSM cleric Sufi Muhammad. That puts paid to the NAR.

Sufi Muhammad was supposed to declare war against the Taliban if they did not abide by the NAR, but he has instead condemned the Constitution of Pakistan as an infidel institution. A kind of jihadi nepotism has overcome him as he refuses to see what his son-in-law Fazlullah is doing in Dir and Buner in violation of the accord. Indeed, the Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan has denounced those who criticise the Sufi’s “verdict” against democracy and insists that his brand of shariat will be applied throughout Pakistan, with jiziya (protection tax) imposed on non-Muslims. (Jiziya can be retrospective, amounting to crores of rupees, as happened in the case of the Sikh community in Orakzai.)

There’s more disquieting news. Like all Taliban, including some pro-Pakistan warlords like Maulvi Nazir, the Taliban spokesman has welcomed Al Qaeda and its leadership to the areas conquered by the Taliban and vowed to help such formerly state-backed jihadi organisations as Lashkar-e Tayba and Jaish-e Muhammad in addition to the “foreign” outfits such as the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, to consolidate their hold on Pakistan’s territory. The chief of the Lashkar is in protective custody and the Jaish chief has been made to “disappear” for the same reason — if they are visible, there may be pressure to extradite them.

The message is clear: the Taliban are linked to Al Qaeda and they are counting on such elements in Punjab to help them take their war down to other parts of Pakistan. When the Swat deal was being sewed up, only the MQM objected, but it was soon isolated in parliament when the National Assembly voted in favour of the NAR. The media-mujahideen acted in the same irresponsible manner in which they had acted during the Lal Masjid affair by siding with the Taliban over the videoed whipping of a 17-year-old girl. The Supreme Court added its bit by releasing the Lal Masjid cleric who immediately announced his resolve to spread the Taliban shariat in Pakistan.

Interior Adviser Mr Rehman Malik has growled ineffectually in reply and the advocate general in Peshawar has asserted that the High Court will exercise full authority over the qazi courts in Swat. But everyone knows that the advocate general will never go to Swat to say this and risk getting his head chopped off at a Mingora square. Mr Nawaz Sharif has expressed concern after his party kept saying it was not Pakistan’s war that the army was fighting against the Taliban. His refusal to morally support the PPP government earlier and his party’s rejection of an ISI briefing on the matter in a joint parliamentary session had actually made the army back off.

Finally, it is the army that has to step forward and face the Taliban. It has baulked so far because of adverse public opinion and an equally lethal media tilt. But now that the politicians are waking up to the danger and the media is increasingly disabused, the army must end its India-driven strategy and try to save Pakistan from becoming the caliphate of Al Qaeda. In fact, Islamabad has to reach an understanding with New Delhi over the matter in order to get the army to mobilise in the numbers required. However, if this is not done, the people will have to fight the war on their own. The MQM is asking the right question: what if the Taliban come and the army is not there to protect us?

Swat is the challenge staring us in the face. If we don’t accept it and fight the Taliban, then the world will have to come and fight it the way it thinks fit.
 
Too little, too late?

Thursday, 23 Apr, 2009

PML-N leader Nawaz Sharif has conceded that the Taliban are “now threatening to get out of Swat … So we’ve got to avoid that situation”. His comments provide a distant ray of hope in Pakistan’s currently grim situation, where barbaric criminals make a mockery of the state and everything it stands for. Therefore, notwithstanding Mr Sharif’s and his party’s traditional alignment with the religious right, the belated recognition that the TTP’s manoeuvrings constitute a serious danger to the nation’s sovereignty must be appreciated. Supported by so-called peace broker Sufi Mohammad’s TNSM, the Taliban are no longer a threat but a grotesque reality. They already occupy certain sections of Pakistan’s territory where they formulate and enforce their own ‘laws’ that are neither just nor have anything to do with the country’s system of justice.

As such, Mr Sharif’s statement may prove a case of too little, too late. The Taliban have already taken control of Buner and adjacent areas such as Mansehra are in serious danger of being overrun. The writ of the government weakens by the hour, while the terrorists are steadily emboldened. Yet the state and its institutions — including the military — have so far shown an appalling lack of commitment or wherewithal to force back the swarm. In the face of the Taliban’s growing list of atrocities, the government’s silence has been deafening and the army’s lack of success inexplicably humiliating. Success has been claimed in negotiating with the terrorists but there is no evidence to support this. Far from laying down arms and allowing the government to re-establish administrative control, the Taliban advertise with impunity the goal of enforcing their own brand of Sharia across the country.

The time in which to turn back the tide is fast running out. It is of vital importance that other political leaders and parties recognise the threat posed by the Taliban and their expansionist agenda. A clear line has been drawn and members of both the government and the opposition — and the citizenry — must make clear which side they are on. The religious right and their political parties are of particular importance; they must stop disseminating ill thought-out rhetoric on the virtues of a system that has so far never been defined in terms other than the vaguely ideological. The steady indoctrination of the citizenry by the religious right was one of the factors that allowed the Taliban to garner so much power and support in the first place. The Taliban are using the banner of religion to mask their agenda for control of the country. That agenda, and their methods, must be condemned in the strongest possible terms and opposed through every means possible. Stripped of the guise of religion, the Taliban’s activities are clearly revealed as treasonable and seditious offences.
 
Prepare for the war

Thursday, April 23, 2009
Zafar Hilaly

South Asian experts from over half a dozen institutions in the US, when asked about Pakistan's prospects in confronting the Taliban challenge, gave a huge thumbs down. Our own pundit in residence, the much travelled and deservedly famous Ahmed Rasheed, is even more pessimistic in his candid moments. If then one were to sum up the take of the experts, both foreign and domestic, on Pakistan's future prospects it would be: "Pakistan is on the verge of disintegration. Nothing can save it. The present government is not able to mobilize the economic and political resources to push back the Taliban challenge. And, by the way, this is not the worse case scenario but a realistic version based on militant gains and the failure of the Pakistan establishment to respond. In sum Pakistan is beyond redemption."

Of course our prime minister disagrees, so do some more cerebral politicians but that is to be expected. Their response must per force have a Churchillian ring about it, although one friend remarked that the prime minister sounds like the infamous "Bagdad Bob", Saddam's information minister, who had the gall to say, even as he was being evicted from his office by American troops, that Bagdad had been cleared of all US forces.

As for what are public feelings due to the lack of reliable polls we are less certain. However, my admittedly unscientific private poll of taxi and rickshaw drivers, usually perspicacious political watchers, suggests that the public too believes that all is lost. About the only segment of the population which feels optimistic about Pakistan's future appear to be those who live off the domestic Stock Markets which are experiencing a mini boom. An ex-banker when asked how he could account for this sliver of optimism in a sea of pessimism remarked, "The individual you asked is one of the four biggest manipulators of the market, so what else do you expect him to say?"

Pakistanis are understandably loath to write off Pakistan not because the omens are good or because better leadership is at hand, in fact the failure of the civilian leadership to stem the violence is a warning that the end may well be nigh; but because the battle to rid Pakistan of the militant threat has not yet been joined in earnest. This will only happen once the military, which has kept itself aloof from the conflict, except when unavoidable, decides to enter the fray or alternatively stays out; and when the Pakistani middle classes, as yet uninvolved, are mobilised to join the fight that is under way.

This war, unlike that of 1971 is not a battle exclusively between the Taliban and the forces of law and order, nor is it one of secession. On the outcome of this war will depend how Pakistanis live and think, dress and eat, talk and pray, what they read, the games they play, etc. In this war not only Pakistan's unity or territorial integrity but also our version of life and religion is at stake.

The battle lines between the two sides are clear. On the one side are the Taliban extremists, their tribal supporters, the laskars and jaishes and the fanatical thousands groomed in some of the 18000 or so Wahabi funded madaressas that have proliferated. Facing them will be the military if, that is, it chooses to fight; and the masses. In the case of obtaining the support of the masses there is a caveat, namely, provided a serious and countrywide attempt is made by the government to energise/mobilise the masses, which is not happening.

Indeed, the outcome of the war may well be decided before the battle commences. It will depend on which side offers the best hope to the populace and how they move to garner mass support. Successful strategising rather than any feat of arms is how the Taliban captured Afghanistan. They are past masters at the art of promoting defections, sowing discord in the ranks of their adversaries, separating the commander from his forces, taking advantage of the widespread demand for law and order, putting themselves on a par with the people whose support they need to enlist, providing moral clarity, a promise of a just and safe society and hence a true Islamic state.

All baloney, of course, as Afghans discovered during the six years the Taliban ruled Afghanistan and returned the country to a state of pristine medievalism. Small wonder then that Afghans joyously welcomed the demise of the Taliban after a brief but conclusive defeat in 2001 at the hands of fellow Afghans supported by the US.

It is in the crucial realm of strategising that our government is losing the battle. The government and parliament must cease behaving as if we are merely taking on misguided brothers and their followers who are basically "patriotic Pakistanis". We are in fact taking on a blood thirsty horde that has hijacked Islam, trashed the image of Islam as a peace-loving religion, ignored the Quranic injunction that "There is no compulsion in Islam" and now mean to impose their version of the Sharia on Pakistan regardless of the cost in terms of human life and the security and safety of the country and the people.

To them no opponent who disagrees with their world view is a Muslim and all who do are worthy of death. It does not stop there, as they demonstrated in Swat, every relative, supporter and well-wisher of an opponent, however innocent, will receive the same punishment. In the face of such barbarism a pusillanimous and vacillating response won't do. As the Taliban give no quarter parliament should work up the courage to warn them that they can expect none in return.

Motivation is the staple on which wars are fought, and won or lost; and of this there is no better example than the striking contrast between the performance of our soldiers in Swat and those of their brothers in Kargil. In Swat, despite having the upper hand in terms of fire power, considerable reserves and the air force on call the army received a drubbing from a guerrilla force. In Kargil, on the other hand, not withstanding the lack of any backup support or being outnumbered and outgunned, and knowing that there was no way down from those heights except in a coffin our jawans fought heroically on an empty stomach till their ammunition ran out; and then only when the order came to cease fighting.

The reason for the contrast in performances is not because in Swat the enemy was a fellow Muslim while in the other India but rather the failure of their leaders to convey to the troops the reason and rationale of the war against the Taliban and why defeat was not an option. Swat has been a singular failure of civil and military leadership.

A highly motivated force of extremists does not fear death; in fact they vie to get killed, such is their longing for the rewards of paradise and their fearsomeness as opponents. We know that and hence the job of a disciplined army is to help them achieve their goal and enter paradise as quickly and in as vast numbers as possible. And if in the process we need to solicit the assistance of foreign powers by way of modern and appropriate weaponry we should do so.

To defeat one devil we should be prepared to sup with another. Talk of sovereignty, hidden US/Israeli/Indian conspiracies to defang/break up Pakistan is just so much idle prattle. Anyway, if the Taliban win the US will not need to "conspire to set the stage for their intervention" they will have a ready made excuse.

The war effort must be a national effort in which the entire population and every segment of society plays their assigned roles in the fight against the enemy and not, as at present, to leave matters to a weak, demoralised and underpaid police and overextended rangers while the army is ensconced in its bunkers on the Line of Control looking over its shoulder passively as large swathes of the country fall to the enemy.


The writer is a former ambassador
 
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