|
A
well-educated young man from a middle-class background, 28-year-old
Mohammed Naeem Noor Khan hardly fits the profile of a hardened terrorist.
A computer whiz kid who abandoned a promising career for the call
to jihad, he is now being described as the crucial cog in Al-Qaeda's
operation in Pakistan. A graduate from Karachi's NED engineering
university, Naeem has allegedly played a central role in planning
new terrorist attacks in the US and other western countries.
Naeem,
who was arrested in Lahore on July 13, represents the new breed
of Pakistani militants linked with international terrorist networks.
This new cadre boasts highly qualified professionals and university
graduates. Children of opportunity rather than deprivation, they
are the masterminds behind many of the recent terrorist attacks
in the country.
Naeem
was lured into jihad by an Arab Al-Qaeda operative whom he met in
Dubai in 1997 during a family wedding. The young engineer was dispatched
to Afghanistan in 1998 to train in guerrilla warfare. On returning
home Naeem, who is also known as Abu Talha, set up Al-Qaeda's communication
base in Lahore, from where he relayed coded messages on the internet
from Al-Qaeda leadership hiding in the tribal areas, to operatives
abroad. "He became the bridge between Al-Qaeda leaders and
their operatives," says a senior Pakistani official.
Naeem's
arrest has exposed an intricate web of Al-Qaeda contacts in Pakistan,
Britain and the United States. Computers and CDs seized from his
base provided a"treasure trove" of information about the
Al-Qaeda's terrorist plans. Information received during his interrogation
not only helped in tracking down Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian
national indicted for murder in connection with the1998 bombings
of US embassies in East Africa, but also led to the arrests of several
Al-Qaeda operatives in Britain.
Ghailani,
who was arrested last month from Gujrat, is considered the most
prized catch by Pakistani security forces, second only to Sheikh
Khalid Mohammed, the number three in the Al-Qaeda hierarchy, who
was captured in April last year. Ghailani, whose capture commanded
a five-million-dollar bounty, had been hiding in Pakistan for quite
some time and was a key link between the Al-Qaeda and local militants.
" His arrest has helped us in breaking the terrorist network
in Pakistan," said interior minister, Faisal Saleh Hayat.
Coming from a similar middle-class ground, Attaur Rehman
is yet another face of the new Islamic militancy in Pakistan. A
graduate from Karachi University, he was arrested in June for masterminding
a series of terrorist attacks in Karachi. A tall and heavily built
man in his early 30s, Rehman was associated with Islami Jamiat-Talba,
the student wing of the Jamaat-i-Islami. He later broke away from
the Jamaat to form his own militant group, Jundullah (Army of God),
which draws its cadres mainly from the educated and professional
classes.
According
to police, Rehman is closely associated with Al-Qaeda's network
in Pakistan, which has grown in strength despite the capture of
hundreds of its operatives over the last few years. A well-knit
cell comprising some 20 militants, most of them in their 20s and
30s, Jundullah is one of the new and, perhaps, the most fierce of
the militant groups behind the recent spate of violence in Karachi.
The group hit the headlines after a daring attack last month on
the motorcade of Karachi's Corps Commander. The general narrowly
escaped death, but 11 people, including eight soldiers were killed.
It was the most serious terrorist action targeting the military
since the two failed assassination attempts on President Musharraf
in Rawalpindi in December last year. Jundullah has also been involved
in attacks on rangers, police stations, as well as the twin car
bombings outside the Pakistan-US Cultural Center last month.
Jundullah is but one of several small terrorist cells that have
emerged after the government's crackdown on 'jihadi' elements. According
to police officials, some 20 cells, largely splinters of the banned
militant outfits, are operating in Karachi, which has become the
main center of terrorist activities in recent months. "Many
of those involved in the recent terrorist attacks in the city received
training in camps in Waziristan," says Tariq Jamil, chief of
the Karachi police. "Jundullah has close ties with Al-Qaeda."
These splinter groups are trying to cash in on the rising popular
disaffection against Musharraf's domestic and foreign policy actions,
particularly his pro-American tilt. Musharraf's overtures for peace
with India and stopping the infiltration of militants into Indian-controlled
Kashmir is another thorn in their side.
"As
external avenues for waging jihad are being closed down, the militant
Muslim youth are turning inwards and targetting the military or
the state," says Riffat Hussain, a leading defense and security
analyst. Thousands of Islamic guerrillas trained by Pakistan's premier
spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), to fight against
Indian forces in Kashmir, are now frustrated by Musharraf's policies
and provide ready recruits to these new terrorist cells. "There
has been a tremendous upsurge in moral and intellectual anger among
the radical Muslim youth in Pakistan against the military establishment
for supporting the United States," says Hussain.
The rise of splinter cells has made the task of the security
forces increasingly difficult. According to a senior police official,
terrorist groups are multiplying as the crack-down intensifies.
Some of these militant groups have been involved in sectarian attacks,
but others are targeting western assets and security forces. "
Most of these cells have just four or five members, making them
much more effective. Suicide bombing does not require big organisation,"
says Tariq Jamil. There is no central command, but some of the groups
are coordinating with each other. Recently, five such groups forged
an alliance under the banner of Brigade 313.
Others arrested in the latest crackdown also have close
associations with the Jamaat. Doctor Akmal Waheed, a cardiologist,
and his brother, Dr. Arshad Waheed, an orthopaedic surgeon, who
have been charged with providing medical assistance and protection
to local and foreign militants, are associated with the Jamaat-supported
Pakistan Islamic Medical Association. Both members of Jundullah,
the two brothers have also been to Afghanistan to provide medical
help to the militants. Though Jamaat leaders have denied that their
organisation has any links with the militants, they have conceded
that some of their supporters may have joined terrorist groups.
A senior police official said the fact that the Jamaat is involved
with terrorist elements is indicative of a trend. "Jamaat cadres
have fought in Kashmir and Afghanistan, and it is not surprising
that they are angry with the military establishment," says
Khalid Rehman, executive director of the Institute of Policy Studies.
"There is a complete leadership vacuum and there are many who
can exploit their frustration."
However, of even more serious concern to the authorities
is that some of these new terrorist groups have penetrated into
the ranks of the military, police and intelligence agencies. Several
military personnel were arrested earlier this year for their involvement
in the attack on President Musharraf and on suspicion of having
links with pro Al-Qaeda Islamic militant groups. Some analysts maintain
that the influence of the Islamic militants is now extremely deep-rooted,
particularly among the soldiers and junior officers.
The growing influence of militant groups within the police force
has also got alarm bells ringing. At least three policemen acted
as a suicide bombers in the attacks on Shiite mosques in Karachi
and Quetta, which have also been hit by the spate of sectarian violence.
A security officer posted at the Punjab chief's minister's house
has also been arrested for his links with Al-Qaeda.
Pakistani authorities describe the capture of some high profile
Al-Qaeda operatives like Ghailani , Musaad Aruchi and Dawood Badani
as a major success in the war on terrorism, but that has not stopped
the violence. Al-Qaeda and its supporters struck back by targeting
top military and civilian leadership. Terrorist groups responded
to the latest crackdown with a suicide bomb attack targetting prime
minister-designate, Shaukat Aziz, during his election campaign in
Attock. The Finance Minister escaped unhurt, but his driver and
eight others were killed. The failed assassination attempt came
hours after Pakistan announced Ghailani's capture. "The bombing
carried the Al-Qaeda hallmark," says a senior police official.
An obscure group, the Islamboli Brigade - a group that officials
allege is linked to Al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack.
In a message posted on an Arabic news website, the group warned
of a series of retaliatory strikes if the government handed over
detained Al-Qaeda operatives to the United States. "One of
our blessed battalions tried to hunt down the head of one of America's
infidels in Pakistan, but God wanted him to survive," said
the message, which also warned of a series of violent strikes if
Musharraf did not change his pro-US policy.
Pakistani security officials believe the attack on Shaukat Aziz
was part of a terror campaign whose strings are being pulled from
the Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border where security
forces are engaged in fierce fighting with Al-Qaeda linked foreign
and local militants. However, fighting in the lawless tribal belt
is far from over. Troops are facing stiff resistance from the militants
and their tribal supporters and regularly come under rocket attack.
Wana, the region's headquarters, is a town under siege. Thousands
of heavily armed army and paramilitary troops are deployed on the
rooftops and surrounding mountains, while residents are under curfew
after dusk when militants launch attacks with rockets and heavy
machine-guns on army posts. This week the militants blew up a radio
transmission station in Wana which was commissioned only a week
ago.
More than 30,000 army and paramilitary troops - more than double
the US troops in Afghanistan - were deployed in South Waziristan
when Pakistan launched the hunt for Osama bin Laden and his close
associate, Ayman al Zawahiri, in March this year. Pakistani intelligence
officials believe that Waziristan has become the main base for the
remaining Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters. Despite the huge deployment
of military force, Pakistan appears to have achieved little success
in capturing any high-value Al-Qaeda operatives from the area. Pakistani
forces have so far lost more than 150 soldiers in fighting against
foreign militants and their tribal supporters. Most of the 500 Al-Qaeda
fighters who were holed up in the area around Wana and Kaloosha
are believed to have escaped. According to some local sources, most
of the militants have escaped to the thickly forested region known
as Bush Mountains, along the border with Afghanistan.
A botched-up operation and mishandling by the military leadership
has further exacerbated the situation and alienated even those tribesmen
opposed to the militants. What has infuriated the tribesmen most
is the closure of their business and the demolition of their houses
as part of the army's collective punishment for the defiance of
some of their fellow tribesmen. "Growing anti-government sentiments
among the tribesmen has made the situation much more explosive,"
says Nisar Lala, a local political leader. "The situation may
lead to an armed rebellion."
The fallout of the Wana operation has already spilled over to other
parts of the country. Pakistani officials believe that the recent
increase in terrorist activities in Karachi and other cities is
a direct result of the latest campaign against the Al-Qaeda. Many
political observers believe that the botched military operation
in Waziristan may lead to an escalation in terrorist activity in
the country.
Senior government officials, however, maintain that the recent upsurge
in terrorist activities is a sign of desperation on the part of
the terrorists. "They are on the run," says federal home
minister Faisal Saleh Hayat.
|