Pakistan’s Terror Machinery Under International
Pressure, China Lone Savior
Following US President Donald
Trump’s executive order banning entry of people from seven designated Muslim
countries, and hints from the White House that more countries could be added to
the list, Pakistan moved swiftly to put Jamat-ud-Dawa (JUD) chief Hafiz Saeed
and four other aides under house arrest. JUD offices were sealed and bank
accounts frozen. The JUD’s charitable arm, Falah Insanyat Foundation (FIF) came
under the same directive. Both the government and the Pakistani army gave
similar terse reasons – national security was behind this action.
Hafiz Saeed was the head of the
terrorist organisation Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) which was involved in numerous terrorist
attacks in India, including the carnage in Mumbai (Bombay) in 2006. His role,
and that of the Pakistani intelligence agency, the ISI are now well known.
The Hafiz Saeed- led LET was banned
in 2002, but under the new name of JUD it was allowed to survive and flourish.
FIF was floated as a charitable organisation as a cover. JUD has emerged with a
new name again- the Tehreek Azadi Jammu and Kashmir (movement for Freedom of
Kashmir). The JUD continues to collect donations at their old centres, but without
JUD signboards and banners. So much for the ban on JUD.
Pakistan has drawn international
opprobrium, sometimes hostility, for harbouring, aiding and directing terrorist
groups. It has admitted these terrorist groups are part of its foreign policy
tools. Two countries which have suffered the most are India and Afghanistan.
Pakistani foot prints have been there in a number of terrorist attacks in the
west, from the 9/11 attack in New York to attacks in other cities last year.
After the attack on the Indian
airbase in Pathankot in January 2016 by Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) led by Masood
Azhar, international position took a sharp and vocal turn. Another Pakistan
based terrorist attack in Uri (Jammu and Kashmir) last year rendered Pakistan’s
arguments untenable.
Some Pakistani lawmakers including
from the ruling PML-N and the foreign office are frustrated at the rebuff they
face when they try to raise the Kashmir issue in international fora. At a
meeting of the Pakistan National Assembly Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs
last October, PML-N lawmaker Rana Muhammad Afzal asked why no action was being
taken against Hafiz Saeed. He said that during a recent trip to France, when he
tried to raise the issue of Indian atrocities in Kashmir, the interlocutors
raised the question of Hafiz Saeed, and that Saeed was considered a “notorious
character” in international circles.
Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
legislator Aitaz Ahsan told a joint session of Parliament (October 2016)
Pakistan was being isolated because it gave freedom to “non-state actors”. He
also sharply criticized the government for mishandling the Uri attack.
At a high level security meeting
between civil and military leadership in Islamabad (Dawn, October 06, 2016),
reviewing the recent diplomatic outreach by Pakistan, Foreign Secretary Aizaz
Choudhary disclosed that Pakistan faced diplomatic isolation and that
government talking points were met with indifference in international capitals.
The reason was the same – Hafiz Saeed and Masood Azhar issue always came up.
Last year (September 20, 2016), two
US congressmen moved a bill to designate Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism.
The congressmen, Ted Poe (Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Terrorism), and
Dana Rohrabacher, were incensed by Pakistan’s betrayal of the trust reposed by
the US in Islamabad including through civil and military aid and declaring
Pakistan a non-NATO ally. Both congressman are Republicans. The text of the
bill cited multiple infractions by Pakistan in its sponsorship of terrorism,
including harbouring Osama bin Laden and facilitating al Qaida’s movement of
fighters to and from Afghanistan as well as the organisation’s purchase of
weapons.
Ted Poe said “Not only is Pakistan
an untrustworthy ally, Islamabad has also aided and abetted enemies of the
United States for years.” Poe added “It is time we stop paying Pakistan for its
betrayal and designate it for what it is: a state sponsor of terrorism”.
The bill was largely symbolic as the
Congress was nearing the end of its term and the presidential race was heating
up. Yet, it is an emphatic expression of the mood in the Congress. Now with a
Republican President in place, who has shown a strong intention of cracking
down on terrorism, the spirit of this bill is very much alive.
In a more recent development (6 Feb)
a group of ten top level think tanks of Washington DC issued a report
cautioning the US government that Pakistan has been allowed to slip through in
the past while acting against US interests. The report titled “A New US
Approach to Pakistan: Enforcing Aid Conditions without Cutting Ties”, was
authored by Hussain Haqqani, Director for South Asia and Central Asia with
Hudson Institute and Lisa Curtis of Heritage Foundation. Haqqani was Pakistan’s
ambassador to the US from 2008-2011, a critical period, while Lisa Curtis was
an analyst in the US security. Other signatories include Bruce Reidel of the
Brookings Institution who served with CIA and the State Department as a counter
terrorism expert. All of them have profound knowledge of Pakistan and its state
policy of terrorism.
The report falls short of
recommending declaration of Pakistan as a state sponsor of terrorism, but does
not take the option off the table. It strongly advocates holding Pakistan’s
feet to the fire and recommends against “chasing the mirage of securing change
in Pakistan’s strategic direction by giving it additional aid or military
equipment”.
The CIA and the DIA are aware of
Pakistan’s double game including diversion of US counter-terrorism aid to
groups like the Haqqani network to target US intelligence personnel in
Pakistan. In one case the Haqqani network was paid by the ISI to decimate a CIA
establishment in Pakistan near the Afghan border. Some of this information came
out in the US last year.
What is China’s position in this
scenario? While the Chinese are aware that support to the Uighur separatists
comes from Pakistan, they have too much stake in Pakistan to let it down. In
fact, the Chinese further tightened the exit-entry points on their border with
Pakistan, in January this year. Supporting Pakistan, they put on technical hold
a US move backed by the UK and France on February 02, to list Masood Azhar an
international terrorist in the UN Sanctions Committee 1267.
Sealing the border with Pakistan in
China’s Xinjiang Autonomous Region was a Chinese read-out to Pakistan of its
displeasure that Pakistan was not doing enough to counter what they say are the
“three evils” – separatism, terrorism and religious extremism. Pakistan sent its
ISI Chief Lt. Gen. Naveed Mukhtar to China quietly in January to assuage their
feelings and promised more active measures. In 2008, in the run up to the
Beijing Summer Olympics, Xinjiang Party Chief, Wang Lequan had publicly accused
Pakistan of harbouring Uighur terrorists.
In the first week of February, China
despatched its State Commissioner for counter-terrorism, Cheng Guoping, to
Pakistan. The Chinese official media generally skirted the visit while the
Pakistani Foreign office issued a wishy-washy read- out, saying all is well
between the two countries.
Cheng’s visit to Pakistan was not a
tourism visit. There were reports in a section of the Pakistani media that
Beijing was putting pressure on Islamabad to take action against Masood Azhar
and Hafiz Saeed. Of course, the Chinese foreign ministry denied such reports.
China does not want to be seen as a “bad boy” among the Pakistani people, many
of whom either support the Jehadis or empathise with them, and see China as
their one and only all-weather friend. China wants Pakistan to take action on
its own. That is why the Chinese official position remains that the decision to
ban or designate terrorist leaders like Azhar should be resolved between India
and Pakistan through talks.
The Chinese are getting a little
uncomfortable with the Masood Azhar case. According to a Pakistani media outlet
which is up front and anti-Jehadi Pakistani Foreign Secretary Aizaz Choudhury
told at a confidential meeting last year, that the Chinese would still put a
hold on Masood Azhar at UN Sanctions Committee 1267, but also asked for “how
long”.
While China is a member of the
international coalition against terrorism, its track record does not encourage
confidence. Its focus remains mainly on the Uighurs who are Muslims of Turkic
Origin. Most recently, Beijing posted Chen Quanguo as Xinjiang Party Secretary.
Formerly Party Secretary of Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), Chen is a known
hardliner. With the support of the Communist Party and the central government,
Chen has launched a scorched earth policy against the ten million Uighurs
living in Xinjiang. Their basic rights have been suspended and every Uighur is
seen as a potential separatist or terrorist.
Beijing risks its big power status
as a global leader because of its aggressive, assertive and dual policies.
Whether it is its “grey” position on terrorism, or on the South China /East
China Sea, China is positioning itself against international laws, agreements
and opinion.
China says its position on Masood
Azhar and against India’s entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) are
“small issues,” that should not impact China-India overall relationship. For
India, on the other hand, these two issues are a direct threat to India’s
security and core strategic interests. New Delhi’s recent demarche to China on
the Masood Azhar issue is a slight change in its otherwise passive and
accommodative approach to China. India must keep an eye on all engagements
where its security is concerned – seeking investments from China in strategic
areas like the information technology sector is fraught with danger.
How long the US pressure on Pakistan
vis-a-vis terrorism will remain is still an open question. The US has strategic
interests in Pakistan. There is the Afghan problem, the Taliban issue and the
unhappy possibility of having to cede space to China.
And finally, the Pakistani army and
politicians have made Hafiz Saeed a monster threatening to swallow the nation.
Islamabad and Rawalpindi are already battling the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan
(TTP). But Hafiz Saeed is much stronger than the TTP, having spread his
influence to all corners of Pakistan, with hundreds of thousands of dedicated
cadres waiting for their leader’s command. They have also penetrated the
Pakistani security and military organisations. Jaish can also join them if
needed. An exceedingly gloomy situation indeed. No early solution is on the
horizon.
Bhaskar Roy is a New Delhi based security analyst.
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