Some
government officials still continue to live in a
state of denial. Take the Punjab law minister, for
instance. He saw an “Indian hand” in
the recent suicide bombing of Rescue 15 and the
ISI headquarters in Lahore in which 30 people were
killed and around 300 injured. Can’t a legal
mind fathom that the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan
are being hit hard by the army operation in Swat
and that they are retaliating in the manner they
know best: suicide bombings?
The
Punjab law minister does not have to cover up for
the Taliban. They already have avid fans in the
persons of the Tehreek-i-Insaaf chief, Imran Khan,
and the former Jamaat amir, Qazi Hussain Ahmed,
who continue to castigate the army and the Americans
for their sins and turn a blind eye to the atrocities
of “Allah’s warriors.” Possibly
to ensure an exalted position for themselves in
the Taliban paradise?
The
army faces tough times ahead. The enemy is ruthless,
relentless and adept in the art of guerrilla warfare.
And if two million plus internally displaced persons
travel to Pakistan with only the clothes on their
back and experience equally traumatic times in camps,
in extreme weather conditions with no running water
or electricity and only limited rations, the pressure
on the Pakistan Army to succeed – and fast
– will mount. And then, too, there are no
guarantees that the Taliban, who have a vast network
of battle-hardened fighters and financial backers
within and outside the country, will not return
to haunt them. The army will have to secure the
places it has cleaned up and put a foolproof security
network in place. More importantly, the Frontier
government will have to move fast to establish its
writ, get the infrastructure up and running, and
persuade the police force and the civil servants,
who had deserted their posts following the beheadings,
to return.
Unfortunately,
Swat is only the beginning of the story. The army
and the government will have to fight many more
battles ahead in order to put our house in order.
For one, they will need to keep an eye on the proliferating
madrassas that are spewing hatred and brainwashing
impressionable minds. Maulana Aziz and Hafiiz Saeed
are on the loose again, and we have seen them and
their protégés in action.
Secondly,
there has to be a major rethink of our foreign policy
in order to rid the country of the menace of Talibanisation.
The army and its intelligence network, which has
often been accused of maneuvering foreign policy,
will have to drop words like “jihad,”
“strategic depth” and “foot soldiers”
from its vocabulary in order for any political government
to make headway in improving its relations with
Afghanistan and India.
The
Taliban were created to wage a “holy war”
against the Soviets in Afghanistan, not to wage
a war against the world, using Pakistan as their
base and reducing the entire Pakistani nation to
pulp or a state of pariahs. For that is what we
of the green passports have become – a nation
of pariahs. If we are desirous of regaining our
reputation as a dignified nation, we will have to
lay to rest the ghost of the Taliban forever.