Archive for the ‘War against terrorism’ Category

Understanding and combating terrorism

September 23, 2008

Huzaima Bukhari & Dr. Ikramul Haq

 

The blatant act of terrorism in Islamabad on September 20, 2008 targeting Marriott Hotel jolted the entire nation and world at large. This raised some important questions about the future shape of ‘war on terrorism’ and survival of modern day societies. Human societies secured freedom from political, economic and socio-religio shackles that have bound men for many centuries after a strenuous and protracted struggle during the last century. The 9/11 and subsequent incidents are creating serious apprehensions of losing freedom by these societies by every passing day. Terrorism like fascism is a self-destructive ideology.  If we want to fight terrorism we will have to understand it. Wishful thinking about military might and invincible air strike power will not help to win the war against something that relates to human behaviour. Use of brutal and ill-directed force against a few groups, dubbed as terrorists by United States and some of its blind allies, without eliminating the causes leading to “terrorism”, will be inadequate and self-defeating exercise in futility.

 

Humanization of world societies is the only effective tool to eliminate terrorism. Use of force and denial of peoples’ legitimate rights on the contrary is bound to provoke more terrorist acts around the world. The violent incidents in Afghanistan, Kashmir, Spain, London, Ireland, Iraq, Palestine, Beslan and elsewhere are self-evident. The doctrine of right of pre-emptive strikes and attack is only a short-term solution. In the long-term, the governments of the world will have to sit down and chalk out a comprehensive strategy to ensure that miscreants are dealt with a strong hand without disturbing the peace and tranquility of individual societies and the world as a whole. The most important question faced by humanity in the aftermath of 9/11 is whether we are afraid of freedom or want to preserve it for our future generations. All the terrorist attacks constitute a strike against freedom but at the same time are reflective of callous attitude of those who claim to be self-appointed guardians of free world, human rights, faith and freedom. In a unipolar world, after the debacle of communist oligarchy, the responsibility of western democracies increased manifold to assure the rest of the world that absolute power in their hands does not mean high-handedness towards others.

 

The mankind after much struggle and paying a heavy price learnt the principles of economic liberalism, political democracy, religious freedom and individualism in personal life. There are now certain forces having vested interest to push the mankind back towards the dark ages when inalienable fundamental rights were denied by the authoritarian rulers. There are debates inside the USA and elsewhere pinpointing the erosion of civil liberties on a massive scale in the name of defending the Frontiers of Freedom. Terrorism surfaced as a reaction towards growing “fascism” on the part of certain States is a human problem which needs to be understood. The analysis of character structure of a man is at the core of understanding the rising phenomena of fascism, fanaticism, fundamentalism and terrorism [which includes state terrorism]. The economic imbalances within a society and from global perspective, revival of religious movements (primarily a camouflage to manifest certain political aims) and imposition of will of the mighty on the weak have all given rise to what culminated in the shape of 9/11 in 2001 and events thereafter which have created worldwide turmoil and reign of fear.

 

Freedom of expression per se has been considered as sufficient fulfilment of the need to achieve a democratic society. The fall out of this fulfilment appears to be a misconceived notion on the part of individuals and groups that freedom of speech ipso facto gives them an authority or a license to impose their own ideas on others using money, power and physical force as means. They are not only intolerant towards others’ views but also suffer from the misconception that their ideas are the only truth through which the world can be changed into a wonderful place. The terrorists think their way of thinking is the correct version of life and the so-called defenders of freedom [who in substance are reincarnated fascists] are of the view that they hold the ultimate truth. Neither side is ready to open a dialogue. Both the sides have a non-comprising attitude when matter comes to ideology. This growing authoritarian thinking has led to a perpetual confrontational world in the 21st Century. In all the tumultuous areas in the world the main reason for unresolved disputes is this stubborn attitude on the part of the parties in conflict.

 

Lack of rationalism on the part of the powerful to be fair towards the powerless has converted our world into a place full of misery, destruction and unhappiness. The frustration of the powerless gets its vent in ghastly acts of terrorism and destruction. If we want to change this situation drastically, a balance has to be struck between the powerful and the powerless. If a large segment of the world lives in a state of powerlessness, the powerful will always remain the target of hatred and attack. The powerful want to transform the world as a machine where all others act as a cog while he has the master control. The cogs have their own way to develop malfunctioning to deprive the master from its absolute control.

 

This authoritarian thinking on the part of the powerful and mechanism adopted by him e.g. imposing economic sanctions is most illogical and irrational way to fight a war against fundamentalism and terrorism. The oppressed and powerless have their peculiar ways of reacting, which by no means can be expected to be according to the norms of internationally agreed principles. Their destructive tendencies (suicide bombings) are symptomatic of a sick world order. Our world is fast emerging as an authoritarian State reminiscent of fascist systems of the last century practices in Germany and Italy where the dominant role of authority in social and political structure rests with the dictators. The revival of dictatorial State orders in the name of security needs is a step towards fascist systems. On global level, there are now open expressions of superior and inferior statuses while entering into relations with different States and blind admiration of the unipolar force. This is like pushing the entire World to Ground Zero.

 

In devising military strategies to fight the forces of fanaticism and terrorism, the people at the helm of affairs should not overlook the human side of the whole problem. Freedom and democracy are inseparable. The right to express our thoughts clearly means something only if we are able to have thoughts of our own. If the media and state machinery is shaping the thoughts of everybody then where is freedom of expression? If one does not have his own thoughts what does democracy mean?  If the shape of the world is to be determined by a handful of people having known economic interests [who want to make oil and political maps right] then of what need is freedom for the common man? In the wake of 9/11 there is skepticism and cynicism towards everything. The future of freedom and democracy is at stake.

 

Looked at superficially, people in various societies may appear to be functioning satisfactorily in economic and social life: yet it would be dangerous to overlook the deep-seated unhappiness behind that comforting veneer. The loss of substantial human lives in brutal attack at Marriott Islamabad (named Pakistani 9/11) and atrocities committed by drone bombings in various parts of the country resulting into death of innocent civilians are interlinked, painful action-reaction chain. Human despair in the wake of these gruesome happenings is not an isolated individual experience of a community but a world-wide feeling on a political scale where dominant thought is losing of freedom at individual level at the hands of forces of obscurantism and fanaticism, which lack sanity and respect for human life. Those who are encountering it with military might are equally mindless of the fact that suppression of individuals and governments cannot win any agenda against terrorism. Erich Fromm in Free of Freedom rightly concluded, “The victory over all kinds of authoritarian systems will be possible only if democracy does not retreat but takes the offensive and proceeds to realize what has been its aim in the minds of those who fought for freedom the last centuries. It will be triumph over the forces of nihilism only if it can imbue people with a faith that is the strongest the human mind in capable of, the faith in life and in truth, and in freedom as the active and spontaneous realization of the individual self”.

 

The same is true for victory against terrorism. In order to secure triumph over the forces of destruction and disruption, the people will have to unite and convince the fellow human beings of faith in life, freedom and truth as the active and spontaneous realization of individual self. This in possible only in a world that is free of authoritarianism, exploitation and injustice.

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The writers (ikram@huzimaikram.com) are researchers, legal historians, tax advisers and authors of many books on tax laws, narco-terrorism, global heroin economy and socio economic problems relating to our present day international society.

 

 

War & “development” in tribal areas

May 4, 2008

Huzaima Bukhari & Dr. Ikramul Haq

The situation in Federally Administrated Areas (FATA) and Provincially Administrated Areas (PATA) of Pakistan remains very explosive due to perpetual violence, arm conflicts and military operations. Historically, these areas have been harbinger of drug trade, but after 9/11 have emerged as the focal point of ‘war against terrorism’ (sic). Social and economic development of these areas has never given a serious thought by successive governments in Pakistan[1]. In the wake of 9/11, the Musharraf’s government on the insistence of USA and donor agencies started earmarking more resources for the social uplift of the tribal area[2], but no tangible results are still in offing for various reasons, the most important one is lack of acceptance and/or representation of local people in development planning and its implementation[3].

The newly-elected Prime Minister of Pakistan, Yousaf Raza Gilani, in an article published in Washington Post the other day, vowed to continue war against terrorism, but “in our own way”. “Our strategy against global terrorism, he wrote, “will be multifaceted”. Mr. Gilani resolved that “Pakistan will not negotiate with terrorists, but it will not refrain from talking to insurgent tribesmen whose withdrawal of support could help drain the swamp in which terrorists fester and grow. Yet, no talks will be held with anyone refusing to lay down arms”. He further elaborated: “Our policy aims to marginalise terrorists in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and our North-West Frontier Province, where the rule of law had been abandoned and territory all but ceded to Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Negotiations with the various tribes are being pursued with the help of the secular Pakhtoon nationalist Awami National Party, which has intimate knowledge of tribes and clans in the area and which, along with my Pakistan People’s Party, received the bulk of the votes of ethnic Pakhtoons in the Feb. 18 parliamentary elections”.

Pakistani Prime Minister argued that “erroneous comparisons” had been made between the new government policy and the failed deals reached with tribal militants along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in 2004 and 2006. He elaborated that those agreements were signed after militant groups bruised Pakistan’s security forces in battle. “Now we are negotiating from a position of strength. Militants have been asked to surrender their weapons and unequivocally give up violence. We will not cut off our ability to use force or lower the vigilance we maintain to guard against violations of the peace agreements”, he added. “We intend to restore order and to give the people an option other than collaborating with murderers whose sole goal is chaos and anarchy. We will welcome our tribes back into society while respecting their conservative interpretations of Islam, as long as they give up violence and refuse to acquiesce to the intimidation of terrorists”, Mr. Gilani added.

Mr. Gilani, however, offered no explanation for the following bizarre events took place immediately after or little before his taking of oath of Prime Minister:

  • The Taliban gained the upper hand in the fight against the Pakistani military in the settled districts of Swat and Shangla in the Northwest Frontier Province. While the Pakistan military claims to have killed up to 150 Taliban. The government sent a telling message to the Taliban by releasing Sufi Mohammed, the leader of a virulent segment of the Pakistani Taliban. Sufi Mohammed is leading figure of the most dangerous Taliban leaders in the Northwest Frontier Province as head of the outlawed Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM – the Movement for the Implementation of Mohammad’s Sharia Law). He is said to have “close links with the administration of the Lal Masjid,” according to Sharif Virk, the chief of police for the Northwest Frontier Province as well as senior al Qaeda leaders.
  • The TNSM is known as the “Pakistani Taliban” and is the group behind the ideological inspiration for the Afghan Taliban. The TNSM sent over 10,000 fighters into Afghanistan to fight US forces during Operation Enduring Freedom in October 2001. Sufi was jailed by the Paksitani government after the TNSM was banned.
  • Time Magazine reported Sufi was released “in hopes that he can help calm the situation” in Swat and Shangla, the neighboring district the Taliban overran in the lase week of April, 2008. Sufi’s release was endorsed by General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the Director General of military operations in the region. “Shuja calls it part of the ‘political effort’ needed to accompany the military campaign,” Time reported. “Brute use of force alone would only take us backwards,” said Shuja.
  • Sirajuddin, the Taliban spokesman for Maulana Fazlullah, the Swat leader of the TNSM and Sufi’s son-in-law, stressed the importance of Sufi to the Taliban. “He is our leader and very dear to all of us, but our struggle for the implementation of a true Islamic system will not be affected,” said Sirajuddin. “Maulana Sufi is demanding the same. It is good that the government has released him; now it should start work on the implementation of Sharia.”
  • The release of Sufi is a clear sign the Pakistani government and the military are prepared to cut a deal with the Taliban in Swat and Shangla. The formation of a “peace jirga” is another. On November 18, Dawn reported local tribal leaders and members of the political parties have formed a peace jirga to end the fighting in Swat.
  • A jirga of elders and political leaders requested both the sides to cease fire.It urged the government to start talks with the militants. The participants said the government should implement the Shariat Act and Nizam-i-Adal regulations. The jirga convened by Syed Akber Shah Lala, cousin of provincial caretaker minister Mohammad Ali Shah Lala, was attended by former MNAs [Ministers of the National Assembly] and leaders of political parties.”
  • The Pakistani military continues to tout high body counts in Swat and Shangla as evidence it is succeeding in the districts. Major General Waheed Arshad claimed over 150 Taliban have been killed since fighting began in Swat. “Our offensive against militants has been continuing said Arshad.
  • The Taliban disputes the casualties cited by the Pakistani military. In an interview with Time, Sirajuddin said the numbers are “totally rubbish. Only ten of our jihadis have been killed.” In the past, the Pakistani military has inflated Taliban casualties while understating its own.
  • The military said it had mobilized 15,000 troops for a major offensive in Swat. But these troops were yet to be used in Swat, where air and artillery are primarily being used. “In Shangla we are using ground troops, and (elsewhere) in Swat we are using artillery and helicopter gunships,” said Arshad.
  • Baitullah Mehsud pulled out of peace talks after tribal leaders said the Army would not withdraw from South Waziristan. The government may release Abdullah Aziz, the former leader of Islamabad’s radical Red Mosque. The Taliban executed a “criminal” in Mohmand agency, where 12 Pakistanis were killed during battles between the Taliban and a tribe on April 27, 2008.
  • Musharraf said foreigners, especially Uzbeks and Afghans with links to al Qaeda are hiding in Pakistan’s tribal areas. The US said it would pursue Osama bin Laden in Pakistan if it has evidence of his location. The Pakistani Army has signed a peace deal with Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan.
  • The Movement for the Taliban in Pakistan, Baitullah Mehsud’s group, ordered the Mardan car bombing “in revenge.” Former Guantanamo Bay inmate Israrul Haq was rearrested while traveling to Mardan. Banned terror groups such as Jaish-e-Mohammad, Harkatul Mujahideen, and Hizbul Mujahideen are reforming in Karachi. Sufi Mohammed’s name has been removed from a murder case.
  • The TNSM earlier reportedly agreed to renounce violence in exchange for the release of Sufi Mohammed. Prime Minister Gilani said the government would not be blackmailed or release jailed terrorist as preconditions to talks. The Taliban warned it would resume fighting if the government does not stop the military operations in the tribal areas. A court ordered property own by Baitullah Mehsud be seized for his role in the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.

The bizarre situation in these areas gained momentum when the US announced that it would limit attacks in Pakistan and provide $7 billion for counterterrorism operations as part of its new strategy with the new government. The Pakistani Taliban agreed to implement sharia law in Mohmand agency. The Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan said it would stop fighting the government if negotiations are successful. The Taliban also held a two-day conference in Mohmand Agency. Earlier, the NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said Pakistan is “part of the solution” to the problems in Afghanistan. The Ahmedzai Wazir tribes in South Waziristan said the only acceptable replacement for the Frontier Crimes Regulation laws is shariah. The Taliban insisted the Pakistani government give up support for the US as conditions for peace talks. The Taliban also said attacks in Afghanistan would continue despite any deal made with the government. The Awami National Party made formal contacts with the Taliban, who praised the new government’s plan to repeal the Frontier Crimes Regulation and conduct negotiations.

The above developments convey mix signals and the chances of a lasting peace in these areas still not in sight. The new governments in Islamabad and Peshawar are sincere to achieve truce with Pakistani Taliban leaders, but situation is as complex as it was a year back when on on 7 March 2007, during his farewell visit to historic city of Peshawar, the outgoing US Ambassador to Pakistan, Mr. Ryan C. Crocker, stressed “long-term commitment to security and development” in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and the FATA[4]. He failed to mention PATA which are equally important and sensitive. Mr. Crocker emphasized that the United States should forge “multi-faceted and enduring relations with Pakistan” and reassured, “we are strongly committed to helping the people of Pakistan in our mutual fight against terrorism”.

The present situation in tribal areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan is direct result of initiation of so-called “jihad” (holy war) by USA and its allies to dismember the erstwhile Marxist USSR, after the coming of Red Army in Afghanistan. The USSR at that time was perceived by the West as its worst enemy endangering their international political and economic interests. The tribal people were used as mercenaries in this war against Marxism and after achieving the goal were left alone to fight each other. The United State’s role in converting these areas into hub of drug trade and terrorism is well-documented and cannot be controverted any more[5].

Historically, arms and drugs played a pivotal role in US foreign policy to control the groups, regimes and promote relations with military dictators. It is, therefore, not surprising if FATA finds strategic place in achieving what the US calls victory in the war against terrorism (sic)[6].  As done through out its history, the USA is trying hard to control tribal insurgents in FATA and other areas by helping Pakistani regime of General Musharraf[7].

It is strange to note that USA even in the aftermath of results of general elections of February 18, 2008 is supporting Pervez Musharraf despite the well-established evidence that he has been promoting religious obscurantism and jihadists (so-called holy warriors but in reality war mercenaries). The episode of Lal Masjid in Islamabad testifies to this unholy alliance and must have been an eye-opener as everyone knows who has been sponsoring the so-called, self-styled custodian of faith and what role the intelligence agencies were playing to use such subversive elements. The issue was highlighted out of proportions by the Musharraf to convince the West that if support was not lent to him, the religious extremists led by Mullahs could capture the nuclear State that would have disastrous repercussions for the world! This is sheer blackmailing and nothing else. It shows the real design of military-mullah alliance in Pakistan. The rise of clergy in Pakistan was not possible without the support of army that took place during the Ziaul Haq regime under the direct knowledge of USA and its allies. Its perpetuation is now the need of the army as both can guarantee each other’s existence and use of muscle power.

One wonders if US policy makers are so naïve not to decipher the real motive behind the government policies, which even a common Pakistani can elucidate. The ordinary Pakistanis do not approve of the nefarious policies of Musharraf and are fully aware of the nexus between law enforcement agencies and certain religious groups e.g. people controlling Lal Masjid or those waging sectarian and tribal battles in FATA and PATA[8].

It is lamentable that our so-called religious leaders incite the people of Pakistan in general and tribes living in FATA in particular against USA, but when opportunity to enjoy “foreign money” for relief or development comes, they claim their entitlement as a matter of right[9].  This is hypocrisy in its worst form. There is an urgent need to develop FATA, PATA and all the underdeveloped areas of NWFP[10]. Factors like poverty, lack of education and dominance of Mullah are the root cause of “terrorism”. The unemployed and disillusioned are easy victims of recruitment onslaught by certain terrorist groups and Taliban.

These merchants of death use these innocent people for drug trafficking[11] and fighting in the name of jihad. One wonders how is it justifiable to use drug money for holy war. They are no waging any ‘jihad’ as claimed by them. In fact they are exploiting helpless, poor tribal people[12] for nefarious motives i.e. minting money from drug and arms trade. The ongoing war on terrorism is not between Islam and the West but between the forces of obscurantism and the oppressors. Policymakers in USA and the West are serving the interests of war industry. The war industry cannot survive without selling its products and hot spots are required by Bush administer USA to get huge funds from Congress. The opponents groups also need armament which they buy from drug money. In this way certain mafia inside USA and elsewhere make huge profits for trading arms for drugs.

The issues of exploitation of governments by the war industry and drug trade need to be tackled by international community on urgent basis. Conflicts like Palestine, Iraq, Kashmir, Chechnya are to be resolved along with development of areas like FATA, PATA and NWFP, if we want to win ‘war against terrorism’. Mr. Crocker after serving in Pakistan is now performing duties as Ambassador in crisis-ridden Iraq. Having first hand knowledge of realities in tribal areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan, he can convince Dick and Bush to leave Iraq as quickly as possible, otherwise entire region will destabilize having negative impacts for entire world in general and the Muslim world in particular. In such an eventuality the sensitive areas like FATA, PATA and NWFP will turn out to be more and more attractive for US enemies.

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Huzaima Bukhari & Dr. Ikramul Haq (www.huzaimaikram.com) are authors of many articles and books on foreign policy, money laundering operations, tax frauds, narco-terrorism and socio economic problems concerning our present day international society.

 



[1] FATA covers a total area of 27,220 sq km with a population of 3.1 million living in seven agencies and six Frontier Regions. Since 2001 after becoming ally of USA, Musharraf has been claiming that efforts are underway to bring the tribal area at par with rest of the country. However, so far no significant achievement has been witnessed towards this end. The FATA literacy ratio is hardly 17 per cent (against the nation’s 45 per cent) which include 29.51 per cent for males and just three per cent for females.

 

[2] A nine-year uplift plan for the Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA), estimated to cost $2.6 billion, was unveiled at a donors conference held on April 12, 2007 in Peshawar. Representatives of different agencies, UN bodies, humanitarian organisations and diplomats attended. According to Arbab Muhammad Arif, Secretary Security (FATA), the idea behind the programme is the creation of a peaceful and equitable society in the tribal belt in order to curb militancy.

 

[3] Lack of capacity of the implementing agencies is a major constraint in FATA’s development. At the Agency level, the government has set up planning and finance departments, but they do not function properly because of the absence of an effective financial management system. Lack of coordination between various departments and the donor agencies also cause duplication of work and leads to financial wastage and administrative failures. Similarly, the community participation approach needs to be introduced in FATA. In recent past, the government tried to undermine the role of Maliks in project selection and making the process more participative by involving the Agency Counsellors, majority of whom are selected by the Political Administration. At the policy formulation level, the Counsellors are authorised to select and recommend the execution of development plans, but in reality no heed is paid to their recommendations. The planners believe that without putting in place an institutionalised mechanism for project selection, designing and implementation, sustainable development in FATA would not be possible.

 

[4] These are controlled by the provincial government of NWFP which is led by a coalition of religious parties known as Muthida Majlis Amal (MMA). The role of MMA as ally of General Musharraf in consolidating his rule is well-known. Though MMA keep on opposing (verbally) the pro-USA policies of General Musharraf, but in Balochistan, which is the largest province of Pakistan in terms of area, it made a coalition government with ruling King’s party, PML (Q). The independent analysts believe that Mullah-military alliance is still very strong and MMA was nothing but a tool in the hands of army to exert pressure on the West to ensure perpetual support for an undemocratic rule.

 

[5] See Pakistan: Drug-trade to Debt-trap (http://66.201.122.226/weekly/books/archive/031109/books9.htm )

 

[6] In his farewell interview with the editorial team of US Embassy’s Monthly Khabr-o-Nazar (March 2007), Mr. Crocker said: “I am leaving with a sense of sadness that I am not going to be able to remain longer here, but with a very good sense about where we are going in this relationship. I have enormous confidence in the future of this country, the capacities and the intentions of its people. Pakistan in the years to come is going to be a regional leader, and we look forward to being a partner, as the full resources and capacities of this country continue to be developed, and a partner as a world leader with again an absolutely vital regional state and a good friend and ally.”

 

[7] The US Ambassador, Mr. Crocker, in his farewell interview revealed a number of steps were taken up by the US government in the wake of declaration of ‘war on terrorism’ to make Pakistan strong, which included: (1) military assistance that marked the arrival of Cobra helicopters to support “Pakistan’s efforts in War on Terror”, (2) Supplies to the Pakistan Navy, (3) F-16 sale , two F-16s have already arrived in Pakistan and (4) three billion dollars aid over five years, split evenly between economic and security.

 

[8] US Ambassador admitted the fact in his interview that ordinary Pakistanis are very enlightened and hospitable towards foreigners contrary to their negative projection in Western media. He said: “I found Pakistan and Pakistanis to be enormously welcoming and hospitable people. I find it noteworthy that during my two-and-a-half years here that, while clearly there are many Pakistanis who have been unhappy over various aspects of U.S. policy in the region, my American staff consistently report the same thing that I have seen for myself. Individualized anti-Americanism virtually does not exist here. When Americans, either from this embassy or the community, are out in the streets, the markets around the city, in the country, they encounter nothing but hospitality and generosity, and I think it is quite extraordinary. It is the same thing I remember from my first trip to Pakistan, which was as a university student in 1970 – hitch-hiking from Peshawar to Wahgah. That Pakistan part of the trip stood out to me just because people were so very nice, and the people I was dealing with then did not have very much of their own but they were always wanting to share it. So, again, what struck me most during this period (in Pakistan) was the hospitality, courtesy and generosity.”

 

[9] It is a pity, but irrefutable fact, that so-called Muslim Ummah, especially the oil-rich countries, failed to commit or fulfill promised donation for the earthquake relief. On the contrary, the government of USA (the policies of which are strongly criticized by Muslim people) showed great generosity in helping the affectees of the disastrous earthquake in Kashmir.

 

[10] It is not merely lost economic revenue or local law and order that concerns Pakistani government officials. Many experts and officials believe that the FATA is being used as a staging area for militant activity, some of it directed against coalition forces in neighboring Afghanistan and some against the Pakistani government. This worry has grown more acute in the wake of several assassination attempts against Pervez Musharraf. In light of the difficult to verify but nevertheless oft-stated presumption that Osama bin Laden and other senior members of Al Qaeda are hiding in the mountainous tribal areas of Pakistan, perhaps with the knowledge of local leaders, the government’s efforts to gain control over these areas have gained urgency.  Security was considered to be one of the reasons behind the Pakistan government’s decision to close all of the remaining refugee camps in the FATA.

[11] One of the reasons the drug and smugglers’ markets have been difficult for Islamabad to deal with is that they exist in the so-called Federally Administered Tribal Areas(FATA), where the central government’s writ is weak. Although each of the FATA’s seven agencies is ostensibly governed by a “political agent” appointed by the government in Islamabad, in practice the tribal areas are ruled by traditional Pashtun leaders, exercising a blend of personal decree, Islamic law (sharia), and traditional Pashtun legal practices known collectively as pushtunwali. Despite Islamic proscriptions against drugs and alcohol, the smugglers’ markets have been an important source of revenue for some FATA leaders, who continue to permit this operation.

 

[12] Indicators on health sector in FATA depicts a dismal picture, where for 2179 persons only one bed and for 6762 persons only one doctor is available. However, the security situation does not offer ideal environment for unhindered development. In most of the tribal agencies, skirmishes between militants and security forces and inter-tribal feuds are a routine affair. But the conflict may not go away easily if the tribal areas remain under-developed.

Reality of “War against terrorism”

May 4, 2008

Huzaima Bukhari & Dr. Ikramul Haq

 

The newly-elected Prime Minister of Pakistan, Yousaf Raza Gilani, in an article published in Washington Post the other day, has vowed to continue war against terrorism, but “in our own way”. “Our strategy against global terrorism, he wrote, “will be multifaceted”. Mr. Gilani resolved that “Pakistan will not negotiate with terrorists, but it will not refrain from talking to insurgent tribesmen whose withdrawal of support could help drain the swamp in which terrorists fester and grow. Yet, no talks will be held with anyone refusing to lay down arms. He further elaborated that “Our policy aims to marginalise terrorists in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and our North-West Frontier Province, where the rule of law had been abandoned and territory all but ceded to Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Negotiations with the various tribes are being pursued with the help of the secular Pakhtoon nationalist Awami National Party, which has intimate knowledge of tribes and clans in the area and which, along with my Pakistan People’s Party, received the bulk of the votes of ethnic Pakhtoons in the Feb. 18 parliamentary elections”.

Our Prime Minister argued that “erroneous comparisons” had been made between the new government policy and the failed deals reached with tribal militants along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in 2004 and 2006. He elaborated that those agreements were signed after militant groups bruised Pakistan’s security forces in battle. “Now we are negotiating from a position of strength. Militants have been asked to surrender their weapons and unequivocally give up violence. We will not cut off our ability to use force or lower the vigilance we maintain to guard against violations of the peace agreements”, he added. “We intend to restore order and to give the people an option other than collaborating with murderers whose sole goal is chaos and anarchy. We will welcome our tribes back into society while respecting their conservative interpretations of Islam, as long as they give up violence and refuse to acquiesce to the intimidation of terrorists”, Mr. Gilani added.

Over six years have lapsed after the wanton attack on New York’s twin towers, symbols of America’s economic might, but the world is still waging ‘war on terrorism’ (sic) and searching for  a lasting peace. The perpetuation of terrorism since then and manhandling of the entire issue by United States and its allies has posed serious threat to international peace as evident from 7/7 brutal attacks in London and elsewhere. In the name of fighting terrorism certain proponents of “peace”, “democracy” and champions of human rights are colonizing oil and mineral rich countries, conspiring to topple some “unwanted” governments and lending support to drug trade and mass acceptance of fascism in the name of reforming the world. Our worthy Prime Minister has not pondered in depth before devising a strategy to start a fresh initiative on this front.

As reported in The Economist of London, there is growing tension between two US objectives in Afghanistan. The main thrust of US Afghan policy in the wake of 9/11 has been elimination of remaining apparatus of Al Qaeda and Taliban forces. But the US and its coalition partners are now emphasizing on eradication of drug trade in Afghanistan. These anti-drug efforts are fatally undermining the anti-terrorism campaign as drug baron and terrorists are joining hands in Afghanistan against US and its allies.  As long as the United States and other drug-consuming countries pursue a prohibitionist strategy, a massive black market premium exists that will make the cultivation of drug crops far more lucrative than competing crops in Afghanistan and other drug-source country. For majority of Afghan farmers, growing opium poppies is the difference between prosperity and destitution. They use those revenues to pay the militia that keep them in power. The ongoing drug eradication campaign of US and coalition partners is forcing important warlords into alliance with America’s terrorist adversaries.

It is a matter of record that much before 9/11, the US and its NATO allies decided to invade Afghanistan. The decision to this effect was taken in Berlin during the joint meeting of Council of Ministers held in November 2000.  It exposes the claims of US and coalition partners that 9/11 was the sole reason for invading Afghanistan. The actual cause was apprehensions regarding Turkmenistan Gas Pipeline Project in which powerful corporate entities, who actually rule US and other capitalist countries, had financial interests. It was not the existence of so-called Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan that forced US and its allies to invade Afghanistan but “financial terrorism” of US and its blind allies was the main cause of action. Till the said time Al Qaeda was a weapons in the hands of US policymakers to put pressure on Islamic States having enormous oil, gas and mineral wealth to toe its line and extend financial benefits uninterruptedly.

It needs to be remembered that President Bush appointed former aide to the American oil company Unocal, Afghan-born Zalmay Khalilzad, as special envoy to Afghanistan nine days after the US-backed interim government of Hamid Karzai took office in Kabul. This appointment underscored the real economic and financial interests at stake in the US military intervention in Central Asia. Khalilzad was intimately involved in the long-running US efforts to obtain direct access to the oil and gas resources of the region, largely unexploited but believed to be the second largest in the world after the Persian Gulf.

As an advisor for Unocal, Khalilzad drew up a risk analysis of a proposed gas pipeline from the former Soviet republic of Turkmenistan across Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Indian Ocean. He participated in talks between the Oil Company and Taliban officials in 1997, which were aimed at implementing a 1995 agreement to build the pipeline across western Afghanistan. Unocal was the lead company in the formation of the Centgas consortium, whose purpose was to bring to market natural gas from the Dauletabad Field in southeastern Turkmenistan, one of the world’s largest. The $2 billion project involved a 48-inch diameter pipeline from the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan border, passing near the cities of Herat and Kandahar, crossing into Pakistan near Quetta and linking with existing pipelines at Multan. An additional $600 million extension to India was also under consideration. Khalilzad also lobbied publicly for a more sympathetic US government policy towards the Taliban. Four years ago, in an op-ed article in the Washington Post, he defended the Taliban regime against accusations that it was a sponsor of terrorism, writing, ”The Taliban does not practice the anti-U.S. style of fundamentalism practiced by Iran.”

”We should… be willing to offer recognition and humanitarian assistance and to promote international economic reconstruction,” he declared. ”It is time for the United States to reengage” the Afghan regime. This ”reengagement” would, of course, have been enormously profitable to Unocal, which was otherwise unable to bring gas and oil to market from landlocked Turkmenistan.

Khalilzad only shifted his position on the Taliban after the Clinton administration fired cruise missiles at targets in Afghanistan in August 1998, claiming that terrorists under the direction of Afghan-based Osama bin Laden were responsible for bombing US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. One day after the attack, Unocal put Centgas on hold. Two months later it abandoned all plans for a trans-Afghan pipeline. The oil interests began to look towards a post-Taliban Afghanistan, and so did their representatives in the US national security establishment.

Born in Mazar-e Sharif in 1951, Khalilzad hails from the old ruling elite of Afghanistan. His father was an aide to King Zahir Shah, who ruled the country until 1973. Khalilzad was a graduate student at the University of Chicago, an intellectual center for the American right-wing, when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979. Khalilzad became an American citizen, while serving as a key link between US imperialism and the Islamic fundamentalist Mujahideen fighting the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul — the milieu out of which both the Taliban and Bin Laden’s Al Qaeda group arose. He was a special advisor to the State Department during the Reagan administration, lobbying successfully for accelerated US military aid to the Mujahideen, including hand-held Stinger anti-aircraft missiles which played a key role in the war. He later became undersecretary of defense in the administration of Bush’s father, during the US war against Iraq, and then went to the Rand Corporation, a top US military think tank.

After Bush was installed as president by a 5-4 vote of the US Supreme Court, Khalilzad headed the Bush-Cheney transition team for the Defense Department and advised incoming Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Significantly, however, he was not named to a sub-cabinet position, which would have required Senate confirmation and might have provoked uncomfortable questions about his role as an oil company advisor in Central Asia and intermediary with the Taliban. Instead, he was named to the National Security Council, where no confirmation vote was needed. At the NSC Khalilzad reports to Condoleezza Rice, the national security advisor [now US Secretary of State] who also served as an oil company consultant on Central Asia. After serving in the first Bush administration from 1989 to 1992, Rice was placed on the board of directors of Chevron Corporation and served as its principal expert on Kazakhstan, where Chevron holds the largest concession of any of the international oil companies. The oil industry connections of Bush and Cheney are well known, but little has been said in the media about the prominent role being played in Afghan policy by officials who advised the oil industry on Central Asia.

One of the few commentaries in the America media about this aspect of the US military campaign appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle on September 26, 2001. Staff writer Frank Viviano observed: ”The hidden stakes in the war against terrorism can be summed up in a single word: oil. The map of terrorist sanctuaries and targets in the Middle East and Central Asia is also, to an extraordinary degree, a map of the world’s principal energy sources in the 21st century…. It is inevitable that the war against terrorism will be seen by many as a war on behalf of America’s Chevron, Exxon, and Arco; France’s TotalFinaElf; British Petroleum; Royal Dutch Shell and other multinational giants, which have hundreds of billions of dollars of investment in the region.” This reality is well understood in official Washington, but the most important corporate-controlled media outlets — the television networks and major national daily newspapers — have maintained silence that amounts to deliberate politically motivated self-censorship.

The sole exception was an article which appeared December 15, 2001 in the New York Times business section, headlined, ”As the War Shifts Alliances, Oil Deals Follow.” The Times reported, ”The State Department is exploring the potential for post-Taliban energy projects in the region, which has more than 6 percent of the world’s proven oil reserves and almost 40 percent of its gas reserves.” The Times noted that during a visit in early December to Kazakhstan, ”Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said he was particularly impressed’ with the money that American oil companies were investing there. He estimated that $200 billion could flow into Kazakhstan during the next 5 to 10 years.” Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham also pushed US oil investments in the region during a November visit to Russia, on which he was accompanied by David J. O’Reilly, chairman of ChevronTexaco.

Former US Defense Secretary Rumsfeld has also played a role in the ongoing oil pipeline maneuvers. During a visit to Baku, capital of Azerbaijan, he assured officials of the oil-rich Caspian state that the administration would lift sanctions imposed in 1992 in the wake of the conflict with Armenia over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Both Azerbaijan and Armenia aligned themselves with the US military thrust into Central Asia, offering the Pentagon transit rights and use of airfields. Rumsfeld’s visit and his conciliatory remarks were the reward. Rumsfeld told President Haydar Aliyev that the administration had reached agreement with congressional leaders to waive the sanctions. The White House released a statement hailing the official opening of the first new pipeline by the Caspian Pipeline Consortium, a joint venture of Russia, Kazakhstan, Oman, ChevronTexaco, ExxonMobil and several other oil companies. The pipeline connects the huge Tengiz oilfield in northwestern Kazakhstan to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, where tankers are loaded for the world market. US companies put up $1 billion of the $2.65 billion construction cost. The Bush statement declared, ”The CPC project also advances my Administration’s National Energy Policy by developing a network of multiple Caspian pipelines that also includes the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Supsa, and Baku-Novorossiysk oil pipelines and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipeline.” There was little US press coverage of this announcement. Nor did the media refer to the fact that the pipeline consortium involved in the Baku-Ceyhan plan, led by the British oil company BP, is represented by the law firm of Baker & Botts. The principal attorney at this firm was James Baker III, Secretary of State under Bush’s father and chief spokesman for the 2000 Bush campaign during its successful effort to shut down the Florida vote recount”.

The subsequent invasion of Iraq by US and its allies using the myth of weapons of mass destruction [which proved to be a hoax] and appointment of Zalmay Khalilzad as US Ambassador later on proved beyond any doubt that the reality of ‘war on drug’ is nothing but quest for OIL. Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele [TIME, May 19, 2003] remarkably exposed the dark side of American oil policy from classified government documents and oil industry memos, involving a pair of Iraq’s neighbours, Iran and Afghanistan. The aim of controlling Iranian oil forced Americans for 25 years to spend more than $20 billion in U.S. taxpayers’ money as military aid and subsidized weapons sales for the Shah’s most undemocratic rule, its oppressive armed forces and ruthless intelligence apparatus SAVAK. These policies lead to takeover of Iran by anti-U.S forces in 1979. Resultantly for two decades, American oil companies were barred by the U.S. government from doing business with Iran.

 

In Afghanistan the story was even more bizarre as in 1977 the CIA “sounded an alarm on the Soviets’ faltering energy prospects in a secret 14-page memo titled: The Impending Soviet Oil Crisis.” President Jimmy Carter, in the wake of Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, concluded that the Soviet Army was passing through Afghanistan to seize the Middle East oil fields and “any outside attempt to gain control of Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States of America…” Soon after Reagan took office the CIA began one of its largest, longest and most expensive covert operations, “supplying billions of dollars in arms to a collection of Afghan guerrillas fighting the Soviets. The arms shipments included Stinger missiles, the shoulder-fired, anti-aircraft weapons that were used with deadly accuracy against Soviet helicopters and that are now in circulation among terrorists who have fired these weapons at commercial airliners. Among the rebel recipients of U.S. arms was Osama bin Laden, who is now considered as Enemy No.1 in ‘war against terrorism’.

 

At the same time the U.S. was moving into the Persian Gulf militarily and supplying Afghan rebels, all based on a faulty CIA oil assessment, it was also secretly supporting Saddam Hussein…in 1982 when the State Department removed Iraq from its list of countries supporting terrorism….The root of all this folly was the U.S. government’s officially sanctioned version of faltering Soviet oil production, which was at odds with reality…In fact, Russia today is the world’s second largest [oil] producer, after Saudi Arabia. Instead of becoming a major buyer of Middle East oil, as the CIA had warned, Russia ships 3 million bbl. a day to other countries, including the U.S.

 

As all this makes clear, the former Soviet Union was not running out of oil. Neither is the world. The one exception: the U.S., which was the Saudi Arabia of the first half of the 20th century, is finally running out. As a result, thanks in part to American policy that put an emphasis on foreign intervention rather than domestic conservation, American are more dependent than ever on imported oil.

 

The second myth that Taliban was not able to effectively curb poppy cultivation and drug trade is equally false. According to The Economist (August 16-22, 2003), the Taliban regime clamped down on poppy growing with an iron fist, and banned it completely in 2000. Production collapsed from its peak of over 4,500 tonnes in 1999 to 185 tonnes in 2001. However, the ban did not cover trade, and opiates kept on flowing into Central Asia. After demise of the Taliban, poppy cultivation re-appeared with a vengeance, in spite of a fresh ban issued by U.S.-installed Hamid Karzai’s government. According to UN estimates [United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime] production increased to 4,500 tonnes in 2004. Afghanistan once again dominates world production of opium, with almost three-quarters of the total annual global yield. About 80% of Afghans depend on what they can grow. But Afghanistan lacks water and cultivable land. Even in the halcyon 1970s, less than 5% of the land was irrigated. The war halved that. Then during the seven-year-long drought in some places, most of the livestock died and staple crops failed. In the south and south-west of the country, water-tables are dangerously low. Even with the best possible governance, that part of Afghanistan is a poor proposition.

In post-Taliban Afghanistan, drought, drugs and insecurity have started to feed off each other. Three of the country’s five big drug-producing provinces – Helmand, Uruzgan, and Kandhar – are unsafe and parched. Poppy cultivation is spreading to new areas, and with it insecurity. The nightmare is a new Colombia: a place where drug lords capture and wreck governments and the economy alike. The drug trade in the post-Taliban Afghanistan is becoming institutionalized. Opium is now being processed into morphine and heroin inside Afghanistan. That means a lot more money for commanders on the ground, something made apparent by the switch to ever more expensive jeeps. Democracy plays into the hands of more sophisticated naro-enriched commanders.

America could have played a useful role by acknowledging and supporting the efforts of Iran – whose policy on drugs is in many ways more intelligent – and by cracking down on (rather than supporting) warlords and commanders, its special forces know to be, trafficking opium. However, the American stance is diametrically opposite. It is levelling baseless allegations against Iran. It unveils the hidden agenda of U.S in Afghanistan and elsewhere to promote drug trade, religious fundamentalism and mass acceptance of its policies of fascism for its own self-interests and economic benefits of certain corporations in which the ruling elite has substantial interest.

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Huzaima Bukhari and Dr. Ikramul Haq (huzaimaikarm@gmail.com) are author of many articles and books on money laundering operations, tax frauds, narco-terrorism and socio economic problems concerning our present day international society.