Effects of 9|11 on pakistan
(sarwar hussain, karachi)
ALMOST five years after 9/11,
the scars of the American-led war on terror are fast becoming visible in
Pakistan. Backlash from Pakistan’s over-generous support to the US has
radicalized society and placed the nation on an uncharted political course.
With damage control measures yet to be implemented, the prospect of unifying the
different factions of society remains dim. International and regional events
have been shaped by a strong reaction to the so-called war on terror which is
now driving Pakistani youth to give up their lives for the “greater cause of
jihad”.
Contrary to western reports, most militants are not madressah students.
Unfortunately, the western media has as usual resorted to stereotyping nations
and individuals, giving rise to the misleading belief that every act of terror
is masterminded by a Taliban or mullah. But the reality is quite different.
In late 2005, the interior ministry compiled an investigative report on the
identity of suicide bombers in Pakistan. The report reveals that 9/11 produced
22 suicide bombers. Of these, only three were madressah students. The rest were
ordinary youngsters who had joined militant outfits, and who subsequently went
on to target western interests and mosques of rival minorities including the
Shia community. Unofficial figures of homegrown suicide bombers have now risen
to as many as 30.
The pre-9/11 era spanning more than 50 years in Pakistan saw hardly any suicide
bombers. But in a matter of just five years, 30 cases of suicide attacks were
recorded in Pakistan. One of the reasons for this is that the government has
opted for a secretive modus operandi instead of pursuing a genuine and
transparent long-term strategy with regard to the US-led anti-terror campaign
that is undermining the country’s sovereignty.
There has been a 10 per cent increase in the enrolment of well chieve its
long-term vital geo-strategic interest. Strategic goals might turn out to be
shortterm tactical policy arrangements if the people continue to feel insecure
over the infringement of their rights as citizens of a sovereign stateoff
educated students in madressahs. Abdul Rashid Ghazi, who heads the second
largest madressah network in Pakistan, says that highly qualified youngsters are
approaching the religious scholars to know more about jihad.
Hundreds of suspected militants have been detained without any charge. Their
families have not been informed about their whereabouts. Many Pakistanis were
handed over to the US clandestinely on unproven charges of connections with Al
Qaeda and the Taliban. This has generated a wave of public sympathy for them.
This means that there are more minds that accept suicide bombings. Many young
men who are no strangers to images of destruction and who have been brushed
aside by their own undemocratic regime are willing to become suicide bombers.
Internet and the comprehensive coverage of world events by the international
media have raised the level of political awareness. The media provides
youngsters with graphic text, videos and images of US carpet bombings and air
raids in Afghanistan and Iraq. They see the devastation and humiliation wreaked
on ordinary Muslims including those who have suffered physical and mental agony
at the hands of US forces in Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison and Guantanamo Bay. These
images are not easily forgotten and remain etched on the minds of hundreds of
millions of Muslims around the world silently watching the rape of Muslim
nations by the world’s lone superpower.
The question is where these frustrated youngsters will end up in their effort to
participate in what they view as a jihad. Obviously, their prime targets are
western interests to which the general public in Pakistan may not object given
the growing anti-American wave in the country and elsewhere in the Muslim world.
But at the same time, this unbridled lot is vulnerable to misuse by powerful
unscrupulous elements for suicide targets against different Islamic sects. These
targets are no longer restricted to the Shia community. The recent bombing in
Nishtar Park in Karachi has sowed sufficient seeds of enmity within major
schools of thoughts among Sunnis.
Another part of the problem is the frequent compromises the government makes
with regard to Pakistan’s sovereignty. There have been incidents of direct
commando operations by the FBI that has whisked away citizens in league with
Pakistani security agencies. Similarly, repeated incursions of US forces in the
bordering northwestern region with Afghanistan have incensed tribesmen who see
the Pakistan army as an extension of US forces on the other side of the border.
So far, armed militants have ambushed and killed over 650 Pakistani soldiers in
North and South Waziristan region since 9/11. Within the last two months, over a
dozen security officials have been killed in suicide attacks, a level of
violence never witnessed in the tribal belt before.
Lack of democracy, institutional instability and the resultant breach of
sovereignty have compounded the problem.
While our rulers may finally be trying to navigate a new course and exploring
strategic options including looking for more reliable allies, tackling domestic
problems might prove a far more difficult exercise.