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Children
crying, men and women desperately searching for their loved ones,
blood splattered all over the walls, and you are scared of walking
over some body part - this is the sight of a terrorist attack. A
month ago such pictures had almost become an everyday story. No
city was safe from terrorist attacks and it was difficult to imagine
a way out. And now another set of peace deals is in the offing which,
it is hoped, would bring down the incidence of violence. The question
is: Will this work?
Currently
two separate deals are being negotiated. The first one is between
the political agents of the Frontier government and representatives
of the tribal elders of the Mehsud tribe. According to this latest
deal, the tribe will ensure that government security forces are
not attacked, foreign terrorists are ousted from South Waziristan
and development work is carried out in the area without any hindrance.
The tribal elders have also agreed to curb and punish anyone who
violates the agreement. The other deal is between the Tehreek-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi
(TNSM) and the government, according to which, the organisation
would desist from violence and resolve issues through dialogue.
Resultantly, the government recently released TNSM chief Sufi Mohammad,
who had been under arrest since 2001.
The
current peace deals have evoked a mixed reaction. While there is
a lot of caution in western capitals, some analysts in Pakistan
argue that this peace deal will work because it is between an elected
government and tribal elders instead of militants. The peace initiative
itself is part of the new civilian regime's programme to talk to
the militants instead of using purely military options.
For
the past few months, the government in Islamabad had been trying
to convince its American and NATO allies to desist from using military
force in the tribal areas. The US forces had employed drones to
target suspected terrorist hideouts in the tribal areas, which created
more bad blood between the militants and the military, resulting
in a series of suicide attacks against the military and other government
agencies in mainland Pakistan. Islamabad wants to cut its costs
in fighting the war on terror by talking with the militants.
The
current scenario raises two questions: is there a difference of
opinion between the US and Pakistan, and will this strategy work?
The
new regime's pronouncement regarding the war on terror gives an
impression that there is a difference of opinion between Washington
and Islamabad on how the war is to be fought. In fact, if anything,
there is a lack of consensus in Washington regarding the handling
of terrorism in Afghanistan and Pakistan. There is a segment of
American policymakers and the larger security community, who believe
that the militants must be engaged through a dialogue, with the
hope of creating divisions between the various segments of the militants
that could later be used to the advantage of the allies in the war
on terror. This strategy is similar to what is being tried in Iraq.
The release of Sufi Mohammad, for example, is meant to create a
bulwark against the activities of Sufi Mohammad's son-in-law, Maulvi
Fazlullah, who created havoc in Swat and the adjoining areas. Another
set of American policymakers, on the other hand, are extremely nervous
with the idea of a dialogue. They believe it will not work and would
fail like the earlier deals struck between the Pakistani government
and the militants in 2004, 2005 and 2006.
In
2004, a deal was cut with Nek Mohammad, one of the leaders of the
Pakistani Taliban, according to which money was paid to the Taliban.
However, the deal did not last very long. Then, in 2005, two deals
were signed in South Waziristan with a Nek Mohammad loyalist, Baitullah
Mehsud, who is now wanted in Benazir Bhutto's murder. The deal stipulated
the withdrawal of government troops to designated camps and forts,
ceasing ground attacks and air assaults, and dismantling the 12
checkpoints set up to hunt down the Taliban and Al Qaeda. Again,
in 2006, another deal was signed in which the military agreed to
pay Rs.230 million to the Taliban, return their seized weapons and
release 132 militants. However, the peace accords failed, which,
according to the ANP's information secretary Zahid Khan, was because
the peace deal was between the military and the Taliban. Hence,
in his visit to Pakistan on the day of the swearing-in of Pakistan's
new prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gillani, US Deputy Secretary of
State John Negroponte raised questions about whom Islamabad will
talk to and whether talks would reap any dividends.
The
militants operating in Pakistan and Afghanistan are a diverse group.
According to an assessment by Steve Coll, who is the writer of the
famous book, The Ghost Wars, there are four kinds of militant groups:
(a) Al Qaeda - operating mainly in North Waziristan, the group includes
Uzbeks and Arabs. According to Coll's estimates, the core Arab group
comprises 300-400 members; (b) the Afghan Taliban - with its senior
leadership based in Pakistan, the group mainly operates across the
border in Afghanistan. The writer describes it as a top-heavy leadership
group, under the command of Mullah Omar, which has connections with
locally oriented councils in Quetta, Miranshah, Peshawar, etc.;
(c) the Pakistani Taliban - a group that crosses tribal, ethnic,
and linguistic divisions. The Pakistani Taliban have moved away
from their Pakhtun origins, which is the source of its success at
the moment. Its goals mirror those of the Afghan Taliban: establishing
an emirate under their conception of Islamic law. Baitullah Mehsud
is the nominal emir of this group, whose formal establishment was
announced only in the last six to seven months. The extent to which
the Pakistani Taliban controls territory - in FATA, sections of
the NWFP, and Balochistan - is striking. They operate along a familiar
model: delivering a comprehensive set of services, adjudicating
disputes, etc. While not as sophisticated as Hamas or Hizbullah,
and not drawing from the professional classes to the same degree,
the Pakistani Taliban are, nonetheless, more "three-dimensional"
than expected. The Pakistani Taliban are trying to control territory
through extensive media operations by broadcasting on FM radio in
Pakistan; and (d) other militants - also referred to as the Punjabi
Taliban, it comprises groups fighting in Kashmir or engaging India.
Some of these groups are breaking away, traveling west, and connecting
with the Pakistani Taliban. The Red Mosque siege has attracted a
diverse group of younger, more action-oriented radicals, a substantial
number of whom, despite being non-Pashtun speakers, have traveled
west to Swat and elsewhere. The diversity of these groups and the
"looseness" of their violent nihilist agenda is a source
of potential difficulty for the Pakistani Taliban leadership trying
to assert control out of South Waziristan.
While
they have their independent agendas, these groups or networks are
connected as well. For example, a number of Pakistani Taliban or
other groups have, in the past, sought financial help from Al-Qaeda.
The diversity of these groups is a major hindrance to peace.
However, the more important question is, will the government and
the militant negotiations succeed? Tactically, the negotiations
will provide a short-term and immediate relief to the security forces
and to the Taliban. The recent suicide attacks inside mainland Pakistan,
that is Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Karachi and Lahore, indicate the
penetration of these extremist forces and their ability to punish
the government, including the military, for what they view as a
sudden abandonment at the behest of the US. The series of suicide
attacks, including the one which killed Benazir Bhutto, resulted
in a lot of pressure which would partially dissipate due to the
peace deal. The ANP spokesperson Zahid Khan was of the view that
the new deal is different because it is with the tribal leaders
of the Mehsuds and not with the militant leaders. Moreover, it is
between an elected government and the tribal leaders and not between
the military and the militants. Such statements give an impression
that the agreement is over and above the military, which is not
true. The implementation of the plan includes the military. Furthermore,
the military can never be taken out of the equation as long as some
of the militant groups or individuals are held as the military's
'assets.'
Strategically, what will the government negotiate since one of the
major demands is to oust American forces and impose Shariah. Since
Islamabad has no control over the US, it will be difficult to uphold
the peace deal for long. The same applies to the imposition of Shariah.
How can the Pakistani government afford to implement this set of
laws at gunpoint?
Also,
it does not sound probable that the militants will allow the government
to introduce development. Infrastructure development and improvement
of socioeconomic conditions will challenge their authority, unless
there is a consensus among the tribal leaders to dump the Taliban
or other terrorist networks. The coming months will show whether
the plan works at all. In fact, the next 12-16 months are critical
in terms of the fight between the militants and the Pakistani government.
If the peace deal does not work, the Taliban will push for more
territory.
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