It was only two decades ago that Pakistan’s rulers took pride in making their country a frontline ally in the U.S.-led war on terrorism following the attacks of September 11.
But since the killing of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a U.S. special forces raid inside a Pakistani garrison town in 2010, Islamabad has struggled in its attempts to portray itself as a victim rather than a perpetrator of terrorism.
Experts maintain that Pakistan has failed to prioritize battling terrorism and extremism over its international standing, domestic security, and foreign relations. Meanwhile, its leaders have insisted they won their domestic war on terrorism.
It appears the international community is taking no chances. As U.S. troops make their final withdrawal from Afghanistan, NATO allies have adopted diplomatic and financial tools to hold Pakistan accountable for sheltering and supporting militant groups. Afghanistan and India in particular have demanded Islamabad rein in jihadists.
“Pakistan has acted against some militant groups that specifically target the state but has allowed groups that are key to its regional [ambitions] to remain active,” Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States, told Gandhara. “Pressure from the UN Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has also led the country to act on groups and especially their financing,” he added, alluding to Islamabad’s gray listing by the international money-laundering watchdog that says Islamabad must overcome “serious deficiencies” in fighting terrorist financing although it has made “significant progress.”
“There is still a long way to go,” Haqqani, now a senior fellow and director for South and Central Asia at the Hudson Institute think tank in Washington, says of Pakistan’s counterterrorism efforts.
The country’s security establishment has long used asymmetric warfare through Islamist militant groups, he adds, as a lever of its regional foreign policy against eastern neighbor and archrival India and western neighbor Afghanistan.
“Till the time that this policy changes, blowback, and criticism will not make any difference,” he noted.
Domestic Blowback
Asfandyar Mir, a South Asia security specialist, says Pakistan has seen “remarkable” success in reducing the level of violence that plagued the country from 2008 to 2012 when Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants controlled large areas and suicide attacks were an almost daily occurrence.
This success is owed to a “combination of Pakistani military operations, U.S. drone strikes, and major increases in policing and surveillance capacity in the mainland of the country,” Mir told Gandhara. “Yet, at the same time, Pakistan failed to cut off the drivers of the militancy.”
“Pakistan maintained its alliance with the Afghan Taliban, which enabled the TTP,” he added, mentioning the banned Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan by its acronym. “More recently, the TTP has resurged in eastern Afghanistan, which has been enabled by the Afghan Taliban as well as Al-Qaeda.”
Mir, a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University, says Islamabad’s relations with the Afghan Taliban and other pro-state militants have triggered angry protests from the country’s ethnic Pashtun minority in the former Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), where alleged atrocities by state-backed militant are frequent.
This, he argues, is partly the result of Islamabad’s failure to implement the counterterrorism strategy it adopted after TTP militants allegedly massacred 150 students and teachers at a school in the northwestern city of Peshawar in December 2014.
“This failure is proving to be especially consequential these days given the persistence of the highly radical Tehrik-e Labaik Pakistan (TLP),” Mir noted. Last month, a series of TLP protests crippled major Pakistani cities. The group has demanded the expulsion of the French ambassador after President Emmanuel Macron defended the publication of satirical cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, which many Muslims deem blasphemous.
Ahmed Rashid, the author of several best-selling books on Afghanistan and Pakistan, says the rise of the TLP, a group that had “been tutored by the intelligence services,” is a sign that Islamabad is repeating its mistake of nurturing hard-line Islamist groups that turn against their architects.
“A lot of these militant groups are still around,” he told Gandhara. “Groups such as Lashkar-e Taiba, Jaish-e Muhammad — these are some of the old groups — some of which have been caught but the rest are free,” he added as he explained that the country has failed to dismantle the financial wherewithal and political and covert support for militant groups that have engaged in attacks in India and Afghanistan.
Neighborhood Troubles
Pakistani Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa, arguably the country’s most powerful official, recently said Islamabad is consolidating its gains after overpowering terrorism and extremism.
“Our long campaign against the tide of terrorism and extremism manifests our resolve and national will,” he told a conference in Islamabad in March while counting the military’s efforts to rehabilitate the former FATA districts. “We have come a long way and yet we are a bit short of our final objective, but we are determined to stay the course.”
Pakistan’s neighbors, however, are taking his pronouncement with a grain of salt. In Kabul, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani wants Islamabad to use its leverage with the Taliban to deliver peace in his country.
“If Pakistan chooses to support the Taliban, however, then Islamabad would be opting for enmity with the Afghan nation and would be foregoing the enormous economic benefits that peace and regional connectivity would offer,” Ghani wrote in an essay in Foreign Affairs magazine this week.
“Pakistan would become an international pariah, as it would be left with no leverage in the aftermath of the U.S. troop withdrawal,” he warned. “The Pakistani government miscalculated in its response to the United States’ plan of action for Afghanistan and the region, but it is not too late for Islamabad to emerge as a partner and stakeholder in an orderly peace process.”
New Delhi, for its part, has long demanded Islamabad rein in the terrorist networks it holds responsible for attacks in Indian cities, military bases, and the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir. Islamabad has also accused India and Afghanistan of supporting militant ethnonationalism and even the TTP. Both have rejected the allegations, pointing to the killings of bin Laden, Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Mansur, and other senior militant leaders on Pakistani soil as proof of Islamabad’s complicity in fomenting such groups.
Relations With Washington
Haqqani was Pakistan’s envoy in Washington when the Navy Seals team killed bin Laden near the Pakistani military academy in the early hours of May 2, 2011. He recalls that the incident highlighted the lack of trust between the two allies.
“Pakistan felt that the U.S. had betrayed its trust by undertaking this raid without informing Pakistan,” he said. “The United States, however, felt betrayed that the world’s most wanted terrorist was found in a country that was for a long time America’s ‘most allied ally.’”
In the years following bin Laden’s killing, Mir argues, Washington found it difficult to coerce Pakistan due to the United States’ reliance on Pakistani supply routes to Afghanistan, the cooperation deemed necessary to prevent Al-Qaeda attacks in the West, and the need to secure the country’s nuclear arms program. He says the reduced threat from Al-Qaeda finally enabled the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump to cut military aid to Pakistan.
But he says there are still “concerns and friction” regarding Pakistan’s ties to the Afghan Taliban and anti-India jihadists.
“Former Trump admin officials believe that cuts in aid combined with the FATF pressure have restrained Pakistan on the use of anti-India jihadists, but that restraint is reversible,” he noted. “On [the] Afghan Taliban, U.S. asks have shifted from “’ kill and capture’ Taliban leaders to compel and convince them to negotiate a peace settlement.”
Mir says Islamabad’s future relations with Washington depend on its role in Afghanistan. “If the conflict there doesn’t mitigate and Pakistan fails to persuade the Taliban to step back, the relationship may deteriorate further,” he said.
Rashid says the suffering will continue in Pakistan if Islamabad fails to rein in militants, adding that the resurgence of terrorist attacks in various parts of the country is a reminder that Islamabad’s failure to effectively control terrorism comes at a cost.
“It is the civilians who are paying the price most of all,” he said.
Courtesy: Gandhara