KARACHI - Spiraling conflict between the Pakistan army and Islamist militants
along the Afghan border, straddled by pro-Taliban, Pashtun tribes, has led security
analysts to talk of a full-fledged insurgency that poses a graver threat to
the country than admitted by authorities.
"Frequent, bloody gunbattles, heavy casualties, ambushes, attacks on military
outposts, and killing of informers and army collaborators are not ordinary crimes.
Make no mistake. It is an insurgency," said A.R. Siddiqui, well-known commentator
on military affairs and a former brigadier in the Pakistan army.
Siddiqui told IPS that he saw the three-year-old conflict as an "offshoot
or even a continuation" of the "war against terror" prosecuted
by the United States against Taliban-ruled Afghanistan immediately after the
Sept. 11, 2001, aerial attacks on New York and Washington.
Recent reports of violence from the border area of Waziristan are indeed gory.
In one incident, an attack on a Pakistan army contingent by suspected Islamist
militants led to exchanges of fire that resulted in the deaths of 15 women and
two children.
The army, which retaliated with rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs), managed to
hit a vehicle in which the women and children were riding, completely blowing
it up.
In another incident, the army found 26 bodies on the Pakistan side of the Durand
Line, which separates this country from Afghanistan. The bodies were said to
be those of Taliban members killed by U.S.-led coalition forces on the other
side of the border.
Coalition forces have been coordinating operations with the Pakistan army in
both North and South Waziristan and this is part of efforts to capture al-Qaeda
leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, said to be hiding in the mountainous
region along with a band of their supporters.
But in spite of the supposed coordination, the Afghan government and U.S. officials
have frequently leveled accusations of continuous incursions by the Taliban
from Pakistan into Afghanistan.
The extraordinarily high levels of "collateral damage" and the deaths
of many women and children in recent weeks has caused outrage that has only
resulted in further alienation of the Pashtun tribes that dominate Waziristan
and have formed the backbone of the fundamentalist Taliban movement.
"This is inexcusable," said Siddiqui. "Either Pakistan's intelligence
has failed, or wrong information was fed by the coalition's military sources
in Afghanistan. It is going to intensify the insurgency in all the tribal areas
and will mean many more recruits to Taliban and other militant outfits in both
countries."
Reacting to charges by the U.S. military that the Pakistan government was being
soft on the Taliban, Siddiqui pointed out that, in fact, Islamabad has been
arresting people from all parts of the country although many of the detainees
are believed to be innocent.
"People are being arrested right, left, and center," said human rights
campaigner and political leader B.M. Kutty, adding that he believed the government
approach to be "purely reactive."
The Pakistan army first began operations against al-Qaeda elements holing up
in Waziristan in July 2002 but quickly got bogged down in a war with fiercely
independent Pashtun tribes that saw the expeditions the first in more
than half a century as an attempt to subjugate them.
Siddiqui said the arbitrary arrests and the killing of women and children would
embitter the influential tribes and this could result in severe political consequences
for Islamabad.
Pashtun tribes are spread across the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA),
in which Waziristan falls, the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), and on the
other side of the Durand Line in Afghanistan.
Siddiqui said what was needed urgently was a "thorough inquiry into the claim
that the Pakistan army had been fired upon from inside a vehicle carrying women
and children" because "this sort of thing is going to make the insurgency
emotionally more intense."
For his part, Pakistan President Gen. Pervez Musharraf has said he is particularly
concerned about Pakistan's image as the hotbed for Islamist extremism, militancy
of various shades, and support base for the Taliban and the al-Qaeda.
Last week, Musharraf made a speech charging two Pakistan-based militant organizations,
the Jaish-i-Mohammed and the Sipah-i-Sabah, which he had ordered banned, with
being "responsible for indoctrinating some of the London bombers."
Musharraf also said he believed that some of the religious schools (madrassas)
were "dabbling in the military training of their students and preparing
jihadis."
But the fact is that it is business as usual for the leaders of many banned
outfits who are either out of jail or on bail and busily promoting militancy.
A worrisome development is the export of Taliban ideology from the NWFP to
the rest of Pakistan, most palpably in the shape of the fundamentalist "Hasba
bill" passed by the provincial assembly on July 15 and now awaiting
presidential assent.
"The Hasba bill is unnecessary as well as un-Islamic. It is an electoral stunt
in the name of acting on Islamic injunctions," said Yousouf Masti Khan, general
secretary of the Workers National Party.
Khan said the pro-Taliban MMA, the group of religious parties that rules the
NWFP, was out to "win the upcoming local bodies elections and have adroitly
put Musharraf on the horns of a dilemma."
"If he [Musharraf] were to take strong action against the MMA government
in the Frontier, they would go around the country claiming that they were victims
of injustice by non-Islamic forces in power at the center."
Musharraf has ordered a crackdown on militancy now that the details of what
the London bombers were doing in Pakistan, where they stayed, and how they were
indoctrinated are known.
It is more than apparent that a vast network exists not only of Taliban and
al-Qaeda supporters but also of pure jihadis.
Kutty said all of this led him to believe that Pakistan was "not only
heading toward conflict and chaos, but was in danger of producing a fascist
leadership in the name of Islam."
Disturbingly, the Hasba bill only carries out what the constitution defines
as the purpose for Pakistan's existence to enable Muslims to live their
lives in accordance with Koranic injunctions.
"If people think it is not right, then what they should do is try to amend
the constitution and have a proper democratic constitution rather than one which
puts us on the road to obscurantism and fascism," Kutty said.
"It is a bewildering situation," Khan, an ethnic Baloch nationalist,
said. "The government's approach is purely military. It has no political
strategy or political know-how."
The incidents in Waziristan have only added to the popularity of al-Qaeda among
illiterate and simplistic congregations that fall under the spell of Friday-prayer
oratory, say observers.
"Islamabad's policy of drift cannot long continue without negative consequences
for the future of the country itself the country is going nowhere, no overall
policy is visible," Kutty lamented.
(Inter Press Service)