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Pakistan's military government appears increasingly concerned
about the emerging nexus between the Al-Qaeda and Pakistani Islamic
radical groups. Hundreds of Islamic militants returning from Afghanistan
after the collapse of the Taliban regime have moved to Pakistan
administered Azad Kashmir and are ready to join the "jihad"
against the Indian forces on the other side of the border. Most
of these militants are associated with the three militant groups
banned by the Musharraf regime which are trying to regroup in Pakistan
to launch terrorist attacks against the US and other western interests.
For more than a decade, these militants have been fighting a "holy
war" to press Pakistan's claim on the disputed princely state.
Thousands of "holy warriors," trained and armed by the
ISI, have been killed fighting Indian forces. Most analysts agree
that it will not be easy for the military to break that link.
In January this year, President Musharraf outlawed the three main
Pakistan-based Islamic guerrilla groups, blamed by Delhi for terrorist
attacks on Indian parliament, and arrested hundreds of their activists.
But the crackdown has had little effect on these organisations which
have shifted their headquarters from Pakistan to Azad Kashmir and
started working under new names. The restrictions may have slowed
down the efforts by the guerrillas to infiltrate the Indian-controlled
area, but most observers agree that it is not possible for the Pakistani
military to stop all guerrilla movement in the high altitude mountainous
terrain.
More than half a dozen Pakistan-based Kashmiri guerrilla groups
have been involved in the separatist war against Indian forces.
In the mid '90s, three of the largest pro-Pakistani groups, Lashkar-i-Taiba,
Jaish-i-Mohammed and Harkatul Mujahideen, which have been blamed
by Delhi for most of the terrorist attacks, became a dominant guerrilla
force that sidelined the indigenous and pro-independence Kashmiri
fighters. They also tried to "Islamise" the Kashmiri separatist
movement and gave it a more violent turn.
Initially propped up by Pakistan's main military spy agency, these
militant groups are now functioning independently, causing serious
concern to the Musharraf government. "Having operated openly
for over a decade in full public view, and with obvious state backing,
only magic or massive military action can eliminate them,"
says Dr Pervez Hoodbhoy, a professor of physics and a leading peace
activist.
Pakistani military authorities believe the outlawed Islamic militant
groups are trying to destabilise President Musharraf's government
with the support of Al-Qaeda. "Those involved in terrorist
attacks in India are also trying to destabilise Pakistan,"
President Musharraf said in a recent address on national television.
Pakistani investigators suspect the group responsible for the slaying
of kidnapped American journalist, Daniel Pearl, might have been
involved in last month's suicide bombing on a Pakistani navy bus
in Karachi carrying French defense technicians. Twelve French nationals
and two Pakistanis were killed in the first ever suicide attack
on Pakistani soil.
The same group may also have carried out the grenade attack on a
church in Islamabad's high security diplomatic enclave that killed
five people, including the wife and daughter of an American diplomat.
Pakistani security officials said these attacks were part of a larger
terrorist plan to target western nationals in Pakistan as well as
to destabilise President Musharraf's pro-west government.
Pakistani police have arrested several members of an outlawed group, Jaish-i-Mohammed,
and a Sunni Muslim sectarian organisation, in connection with these
terrorist attacks.
Jaish-i-Mohammed is the newest and most rapidly growing militant
outfit fighting in Kashmir. The group is led by Maulana Masood Azhar,
a firebrand Islamic cleric freed by Indian authorities in December
'99, in exchange for the 160 passengers aboard an Indian airlines
jet hijacked by his supporters from Kathmandu to the Afghan city
of Kandahar.
Maulana Azhar launched a campaign in Pakistan to recruit half a
million Muslim volunteers to fight against India. A fiercely anti-American
organisation, the Jaish had close links with the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.
Hundreds of its supporters went to Afghanistan to fight alongside
the Taliban.
Ahmed Saeed Omar Sheikh, the British-born Muslim militant who masterminded
Daniel Pearl's kidnapping, and his accomplices in the crime were
all linked with Jaish-i-Mohammed. The group was the first to launch
a suicide attack in Kashmir when a British-born Muslim, Mohammed
Bilal, rammed a truck loaded with explosives into an Indian army
barracks last year. Pakistani investigators find a similarity in
the Kashmir and Karachi bombings. The Jaish is also suspected to
have provided shelter to Al-Qaeda fugitives.
US personnel have now joined Pakistani troops in a hunt for Al-Qaeda
and Taliban fugitives, believed to be hiding in the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas. Foreign troops have now landed in an area where even
the Pakistan army had not been allowed to operate until last year.
Waziristan, a semi-autonomous Pakistani tribal region, borders the
Afghan province of Khost which has been the main centre of operation
of the US-led coalition forces against the vestiges of Al-Qaeda.
Pakistani and American officials suspect that Osama bin Laden and
his men might have been hiding in the area where the former Afghan
Taliban regime had strong support.
Pakistani troops, helped by US personnel, began combing the area,
but met with little success. They have seized some caches of arms,
but no terrorist has yet been apprehended. They evoked the ire of
the tribesmen when they recently raided an Islamic seminary established
by Jalaluddin Haqqani, the supreme commander of the former Taliban
forces, suspecting it was used as an Al-Qaeda hideout.
Once a major centre of Islamic learning for the Afghan Taliban,
the madrassah, known as Munbaul Uloom (the source of learning),
was closed down by Pakistani authorities last December, but was
later handed over to local Islamic leaders. On the US list of 20
most wanted Taliban leaders, Haqqani was reportedly injured in the
American bombing of his headquarters in Khost a few months back.
His family, including one of his brothers, still live near the madrassah.
The involvement of American personnel in raids in the sensitive
tribal areas came after the arrest of Abu Zubaydah, a deputy to
bin Laden, and some 50 Al-Qaeda members from their hideouts in Faisalabad
and Lahore. Most of them were believed to have travelled through
Waziristan after fleeing from Tora Bora, Khost and the Paktia province
in eastern Afghanistan.
The secret raids on Al-Qaeda hideouts came as a result of CIA electronic
surveillance. According to a senior official, the CIA, which has
developed its intelligence assets in Pakistan over the last six
months, tracked Abu Zubaydah's network by intercepting electronic
messages sent by them from their hideouts. The CIA has also been
using huge amounts of money to buy information. "All of that
helped in netting the prized catch," says a senior Pakistani
official.
According to a senior ISI official, the agency has handed over 294
Al-Qaeda activists to the United States since the collapse of the
Taliban regime. "They belonged to 36 different nationalities
and the majority of them were Saudis and Yemenis," said a senior
Pakistani official.
It is still not clear how these activists managed to enter Pakistan
despite the deployment of thousands of troops on the border with
Afghanistan. Some reports suggest they either bribed their way through
or crossed over with the help of their Pakistani sympathisers in
the lawless tribal areas bordering Afghanistan.
Since the fall of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Zubaydah and former
Taliban leader, Jalaluddin Haqqani, have been leading an effort
to regroup Al-Qaeda in Pakistan, with the support of Pakistani Islamic
militant organisations. An increase in money transfers and e-mail
communications suggested they were commanding a terrorist faction
that was planning fresh attacks against American interests.
The participation of American agents in these raids has, however,
proved politically sensitive for President Pervez Musharraf. Accusing
President Musharraf of being "an American agent," a newly
formed alliance of conservative Islamic parties has threatened to
launch a nationwide movement to oust him.
As the operation proceeded, Pakistani officials claimed that the
number of American personnel involved in the search operations was
not more than a dozen, and they were just helping Pakistani troops
with communication and intelligence.
The search operation has been stepped up as British Marines and
Australian troops pursue the Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters in eastern
Afghanistan, close to the Pakistani border. Pakistani officials
maintain that security around the border has been further tightened,
but dismissed reports that coalition forces have been allowed to
cross into Pakistan in hot pursuit.
Pakistan has rejected repeated requests by Washington to allow US
combat troops to be deployed in the tribal areas, saying their presence
would provoke the fiercely independent population. "We don't
want the American forces to operate here as they are doing in Afghanistan,"
said a senior military official. Pakistani military authorities
have also refused to let US officials make direct contact with local
tribal leaders. "The Americans want to distribute money to
the tribal chiefs as they did in Afghanistan," said the official.
"We don't want them to breach our sovereignty."
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