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The army’s last chance?

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The army’s last chance?

By Mahir Ali

Wednesday, 21 Oct, 2009

As far as the present drive is concerned, blatant failure is clearly not an option. But a military triumph on its own will not suffice.

THE notion that the spate of terrorist attacks across Pakistan in the run-up to the military operations in South Waziristan was intended as a deterrent comes across as unconvincing, if not altogether untenable.

The infiltration of the military headquarters in Rawalpindi earlier this month, in particular, seemed like a ‘bring it on’ signal.

If that was indeed the intention, it appears to have served its purpose. The embarrassment factor effectively meant that army action could no longer be put off without such a delay being perceived as a sign of weakness. That does not, of course, explain why it took the military commanders so long to get their act together. Would it not have made sense, for instance, to capitalise on the confusion caused by the elimination of Baitullah Mehsud back in August?

It’s possible the army was ill-prepared at that juncture, in the wake of its purported success in Swat, to launch another assault. Perhaps it needed time to work out a tenable strategy. Whatever the cause – or excuse – it certainly gave the Taliban time to finesse their own modus operandi. Which appears to have included calling on their Punjabi allies to pile on the pressure.

The breach in Rawalpindi and the series of coordinated attacks on security-related sites in Lahore prompted the official admission that jihadist tendencies are by no means restricted to the northwest but are thriving in parts of Punjab as well. This is something that has in fact been evident for quite a while, as has the administrative reluctance to do anything about it.

The sordid killing spree in Mumbai nearly a year ago ought to have served as an eye-opener. But it didn’t, and in the present context it is noticeable that whereas groups such as Jaish-i-Mohammad and Lashkar-i-Jhangvi are commonly being cited as Taliban collaborators, there is little mention of Lashkar-i-Taiba, as if the organisation evaporated into thin air following a handful of desultory arrests.

Chances are it was not entirely a coincidence that the Rawalpindi and Lahore terrorist actions were eerily reminiscent of the Mumbai outrage.

Meanwhile, the suicide attack that claimed dozens of lives in Iran’s Sistan-Balochistan province on the weekend has also been blamed on infiltrators from across the Pakistani border (although Tehran has at the same time cited complicity by ‘the great Satan America and its ally Britain’, without attempting to explain why Pakistan-based Sunni extremists might be associating with nations that they, too, perceive as inveterate foes).

The Pakistan Army’s reluctance to tackle the Jaish and the Lashkars has invariably been associated with its role in their progeniture. A similar explanation could, of course, be extended to its attitude towards the Taliban, although the intent behind its sponsorship of the latter in their original incarnation was two-pronged: a strategic grasp of Afghanistan (without the sort of investment Moscow or Washington made in pursuit of the same objective), plus the bonus that they would be uprooted from Pakistan.

The first prong proved temporary, the second illusory. The implications of the latter may not have fully manifested themselves until 9/11, but even that was more than eight years ago. Forays into South Waziristan under Gen Pervez Musharraf were spectacularly unsuccessful. The futility of the alternative tack of negotiations ought to have been immediately obvious to the interlocutors from Islamabad.

As far as the present drive is concerned, blatant failure is clearly not an option. But a military triumph on its own will not suffice. The risks inherent in subduing the Taliban and leaving it at that have already manifested themselves in parts of Swat, where the absence of reconstruction and support systems creates conditions conducive to the tug of militancy.

These are not tasks than can or should be left to the army, not least because doing so brings into question the civilian administration’s raison d’être. The latter is in the habit of crying poor in such contexts, perhaps not entirely without justification – although it remains an open question whether the problem is the absence of resources or merely their misallocation.

The neglect of decades cannot be made up for in short order, but that is hardly an excuse for inaction. The seminaries that incubate jihadis will continue to flourish in the absence of viable educational alternatives. The absence of even rudimentary state medical facilities makes room for Taliban-affiliated doctors and quacks who selectively offer succour to some with the intention of causing pain to others. And sustained unemployment enhances the seductiveness of unpalatable alternatives.

Therefore, unless the war in Waziristan is followed by a peace that pays dividends in particular to those most susceptible to the lure of the Taliban, it will at best be a pyrrhic victory. The controversy over the latest American aid package has hardly been helpful in this regard. The handout inevitably emphasises Pakistan’s status as a client state, but the noisiest opposition to it has come not from folks with a principled objection to this kind of charity, but from those who question the conditions attached to it.

Washington was somewhat taken aback because as far as it was concerned, the emphasis on civilian control over the military was little more than a formality. It knows only too well what the reality is, and it pays only lip service to the alternative. It failed to take into account the fact that what the army took in its stride under a military ruler carries different implications in the context of the Zardari administration – whose unpopularity proved all to easy to capitalise on.

For some reason, The New York Times’ Jane Perlez has drifted into the habit of describing the army as an institution that ‘is regarded with the highest esteem among the Pakistani public’. That is patently not the case. Not after Bangladesh, Balochistan, the Zia regime, the Afghan jihad, the Taliban, Kargil and other manifestations of the fixation on Kashmir.

For all its foibles, follies and farces, the army at present has a chance to redeem itself. But the onset of winter may well slam shut this small window of opportunity.

mahir.dawn@gmail.com

i may not entirely agree with the writer
 
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For all its foibles, follies and farces, the army at present has a chance to redeem itself. But the onset of winter may well slam shut this small window of opportunity.

Do Pakistani's ask themselves (in whispers, behind closed doors perhaps) the same question that the rest of the Pakistan-weary world is openly talking about?

Is this entire Taliban hoopla merely a stage-managed eyewash as a prelude for the saviour army to march back into Islamabad after the necessary interval democratic irritant/formality ..... for the umpteenth time?

I get this strong sense of deja vu when I see the slick side-parted hair-do army spokesman grabbing eyeballs on National TV far more than the civilian leaders of the nation.

Cheers, Doc
 
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No army will move in Afghanistan and claim it like we should its about time:coffee:

The root cause of the problem is only Pakistan Army can control the region and kick out all taliban in waziristan and afgania province (pakistan's next province)

And its natural we move our army into Afghanistan as US is already leaving all the posts to Pakistani army's command

We can discuss matters with Karzai after that, untill we figure out what to do with huge afghan population etc in Pakistan and may be find a way for them to move safely to their homes and kick start afghan province's economy after all smoke settles
 
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Do Pakistani's ask themselves (in whispers, behind closed doors perhaps) the same question that the rest of the Pakistan-weary world is openly talking about?

Is this entire Taliban hoopla merely a stage-managed eyewash as a prelude for the saviour army to march back into Islamabad after the necessary interval democratic irritant/formality ..... for the umpteenth time?

I get this strong sense of deja vu when I see the slick side-parted hair-do army spokesman grabbing eyeballs on National TV far more than the civilian leaders of the nation.

Cheers, Doc

people dont believe in the politicians - its unfortunate!!!
 
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^^^ That is obvious from all the posts here itself.

So who controls the army? Legally? Not Zardari? Who takes the political decisions on army deployment and engagement? Or does pakistan run as below:

Army - Calls all the shots related to the nation's defense (internal more than external), rule unto itself

ISI - Calls all the shots related to the destruction/destabilisation of India

Democratic Government - Fall guys for the Army's return to power, who are supposed to utilise their time in the interim as the poster boys in drumming up sponsorship from democratic USA

Police/Paramilitary - We never really hear of them out here

Judiciary - Same as the above (except for Hindu judge and Judge sackings and street public protests)

Oh to be a Pakistani common man ......

Cheers, Doc
 
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^^^ That is obvious from all the posts here itself. So who controls the army? Legally? Not Zardari? Who takes the political decisions on army deployment and engagement? Or does pakistan run as below:

Army - Calls all the shots related to the nation's defense (internal more than external)

ISI - Calls all the shots related to the destruction/destabilisation of India

Democratic Government - Fall guys for the Army's return to power, who are supposed to utilise their time in the interim as the poster boys in drumming up sponsorship from democratic USA

Police/Paramilitary - We never really hear of them out here.

Judiciary - Same as the above (except for Hindu judge and Judge sackings and street public protests)

Oh to be a Pakistani common man ......

Cheers, Doc

thats your view - didnt expect anything different!

currently the civilian govt has authorised the army to take action against the militants.

there is nothing wrong IMO for the military to give its POV on external and internal security matters. it is a bit overt here in our country but its the same in india too except not overt.

read RAW - Calls all the shots related to the destruction/destabilisation of Pakistan.

democratic govts in pakistan have foot in mouth disease along with a serious inferiority complex viz the army. and yes the army does make good poster boys no doubt about that.

police/para's have their job to do and do it well under the circumstances and budgetery constraints.

judiciary is trying to turn the corner - lets see what happens! - the politicians should take their example.

and the pakistani common man well he has the same problems like the indian common man...

cheers!
 
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looks to me this operation will decide the army's 'izzat' and 'auqat'.Loose this operation and the army will loose grip on people .
May be a big loss of face after 1971 if they don't suceed
 
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there is nothing wrong IMO for the military to give its POV on external and internal security matters. it is a bit overt here in our country but its the same in india too except not overt.

IMO an army blunts itself and becomes soft (in addition to losing focus) when it is expected (or wants to) to fight as well as rule. I am 100% with you on the giving of POV part ..... but it needs to end there and not transgress into the making of doctrine and policy (I think on our side, the great late Sam Maneckshaw came closest to this ..... but the final call was always Indira Gandhi's).

democratic govts in pakistan have foot in mouth disease along with a serious inferiority complex viz the army. and yes the army does make good poster boys no doubt about that.

Democratic governments in pakistan have never ever been given the tenure of a continuous run free from army overthrow. Hence democratic governments of (as opposed to "in" .... subtle but telling difference in the way a Pakistani and Indian mind works) pakistan recognise this fact of life and conduct themselves according to ground realities ..... I have expressed my views on the same in another thread.

Cheers, Doc
 
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IMO an army blunts itself and becomes soft (in addition to losing focus) when it is expected (or wants to) to fight as well as rule. I am 100% with you on the giving of POV part ..... but it needs to end there and not transgress into the making of doctrine and policy (I think on our side, the great late Sam Maneckshaw came closest to this ..... but the final call was always Indira Gandhi's).



Democratic governments in pakistan have never ever been given the tenure of a continuous run free from army overthrow. Hence democratic governments of (as opposed to "in" .... subtle but telling difference in the way a Pakistani and Indian mind works) pakistan recognise this fact of life and conduct themselves according to ground realities ..... I have expressed my views on the same in another thread.

Cheers, Doc

agree to point 1 (FM Manekshaw was a proud indian officer - old school)

point 2 - its their fault !
 
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looks to me this operation will decide the army's 'izzat' and 'auqat'.Loose this operation and the army will loose grip on people .
May be a big loss of face after 1971 if they don't suceed

maybe but lets see!
 
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Can't say for sure if this is ' last chance ' or not. But failure would be catastrophic for more reasons than one.
 
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I agree with the author, The present acition should be backed by sustainable reconstruction effort else it will back to square one again.
 
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what about US and Nato if they cant do with so much accessories and advanced weapons.
but we are sure that insha-ALLAH pak army will kick their a**es out of pakistan soil...
big reason for Nato and U.s army not getting the result is that they are coward but pak army has shown what they are capable of.
Insha-ALLAh army is not going any where they will defend our boundries for ever.
 
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I agree with the author, The present acition should be backed by sustainable reconstruction effort else it will back to square one again.

that is part and parcel of COIN!
 
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looks to me this operation will decide the army's 'izzat' and 'auqat'.Loose this operation and the army will loose grip on people .
May be a big loss of face after 1971 if they don't suceed

well then currently the AUQAT & IZZAT of the NATO & US has gone down the drain because neither have they won in IRAQ or in AFGHANISTAN....that is the problem with guerrilla warfare....a complete all out victory is hard to achieve...because these guerrilla fighters just want to inflict damage and crawl back into their fox holes! so yes we won in SWAT and SWAT is restored but the threat is not completely finished!

as for the example if SRI LANKA well "outisde" support for the LTTE had finished this lead to the defeat of the LTTE....every gurreilla war has some invisible outside hand...:coffee:
 
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