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Islam,Terrorism and Jihad ( 28 Jan 2014, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Pakistan Is Losing the Plot to Taliban

 

 

By Arif Nizami

January 26, 2014

"Pakistan: the country where even the martyred dead protest, because the living have failed them". So tweeted Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, freshly-minted Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) chief.

Young Bilawal's lament should put to shame most of his seniors in the business of politics including of his own party. Condemning the Taliban is a far cry for them. Out of fear or expediency (or both) even the "T" word is missing from their lexicon. The PPP leadership is lamenting the present state of affairs. Staying in the opposition, they can afford the luxury. However when in power for five years Zardari and his cohorts abdicated to the military their primary responsibility of devising a cogent counter terrorism strategy. The shoe is now on the other foot. Perhaps they can derive vicarious pleasure from seeing the Sharifs stew in their own juices. Unfortunately situation has come to such a pass that it is no longer merely a question of survival of the government but that of salvaging the state.

Altaf Hussain, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) chief, comfortably ensconced in self-exile has voiced his concern regarding Talibanisation of the country. The Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) are literally on the rampage. Numbers of incidents of terrorism that have taken place during 2014 exceed the number of days in January. More than a hundred people including security personnel have perished in the fresh spate of terror. Punjab remains relatively less prone to such attacks. But for how long? Meanwhile, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) (PML-N) clueless as ever, pathetically looks like a headless chicken running helter-skelter.

The much-touted counterterrorism policy is missing. As anticipated, events have overtaken posturing and chicanery, so often on display by the enigmatic interior minister Nisar Ali. The day the draft of the policy was to be presented to the federal Cabinet, the TTP struck near the General Headquarters. The previous day at least 25 security personnel were killed in an audacious attack in Bannu. Without a policy in place, events have overtaken the government. When the Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif called the Prime Minister just before the cabinet meeting to review the security policy draft on Monday he probably made it clear: enough is enough.

Apparently, the counterterrorism draft was inadequate. The Prime Minister was left with no option but to return the draft for further tweaking. Seven months is a long time for a nation under existential threat and still without a coherent strategy to combat it. The military under General Kayani had stuck to its peculiar approach to combat the threat of terrorism based upon its obsolete and flawed security paradigm.

Half hearted attempts to scorch the snake and not kill it resulted in the Taliban dictating the agenda. While the army was calling the shots on security issues and foreign policy, the PPP government chose to take the path of least resistance merely to survive. Kayani always maintained that the military launching action against terrorists holed up in North Waziristan would result in the TTP unleashing a wave of rampant terrorism all over the country. Inaction in the badlands of Pakistan was also justified on the plea that the military would be spread too thin guarding the eastern and the western borders.

Justifying support of the Afghan Taliban phrases like: "we cannot wish away our enemies," were frequently used in occasional interactions with the media. Now it transpires that the TTP has taken the war to every nook and corner of the country without the military lifting a finger to launch a concerted operation in North Waziristan. Similarly apart from the military under its past leadership, we are told by Imran Khan and others of his ilk, that it's not our war but America's war. Unfortunately we can no longer afford the luxury of fighting the Taliban not being our war. The US is packing its bags to quit Afghanistan and we are stuck with the consequences.

After NATO forces leave Kabul the blowback is bound to affect us adversely. Hence the myth of "good Taliban and bad Taliban" is bound to explode in our face. Events have also exposed the bankruptcy of the PTI's anti drone policy and its consistent blockade of NATO supplies. Drone strikes killed only four civilians in 2013, whereas scores of civilians have died in much more lethal PAF strikes and military actions in the tribal areas.

Hopefully the current action by the military in N. Waziristan is not merely a reaction to the TTP moves and is part of a well thought out strategy. Piecemeal measures will simply not deliver. The two Sharifs, Nawaz and Raheel, should be on the same page. Unless the Prime Minister leads from the front, having already left his government with much to blush about, the events have the potential to overwhelm his government.

Source: http://www.sunday-guardian.com/analysis/pak-is-losing-the-plot-to-taliban

URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-terrorism-jihad/pakistan-losing-plot-taliban/d/35479

 

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