Armed with anything from locally made rifles to machineguns,
thousands of Pakistani tribesmen streamed into Afghanistan to
fight against America after the Taliban cleared them to join
the jihad. For the past week they have been camping on
the borders in the Bajaur tribal area waiting for a green signal
from the Taliban. Though
earlier the Taliban had said they did not need outside help
to fight the US air assaults, a change came after Taliban leaders
met Sufi Muhammed, the firebrand leader of the Tehrik Nifaz
Shariat Muhammed. As
wave upon wave of holy warriors crossed over to the other side
of the Durand Line, thousands of armed zealots declared jihad
inside Pakistan blocking the Karakoram Highway.
Initially there was no move by the Pakistani authorities
to stop the heavily armed tribals from taking over the highway.
It was only when food supplies to the Northern areas
was threatened that the government began negotiations with the
area’s ulema.
Meanwhile on October
4, the US blitzed the Taliban frontlines north of Kabul with
the heaviest bout of bombing in its campaign so far. Observers estimate that at least a 100 bombs were dropped in the
attack. The Taliban’s
resolute resistance to the might of the world’s sole superpower
has provided renewed inspiration to their Pakistani radical
Islamic supporters waging war against the military regime for
supporting the US-led military campaign. Their tone has become much more stridently
aggressive as they call upon army officers to rise in revolt
against their leadership. The
pro-Taliban and anti-American agitation has fast turned into
an anti-government movement. And General Pervez Musharraf has become their
bete noir for reversing Pakistan’s long-standing policy of supporting
the harsh conservative Islamic regime in Kabul.
Most religious leaders have openly condemned Musharraf’s
policies and he has become the singular target of their hostility. “Musharraf should step down and be sent into exile, and the Pakistan
army and the people of Pakistan should take over the government,”
says Maulana Sami-ul-Haq, chairman of the Pakistan-Afghanistan
Defence Council. The council, which has 22 religious parties
in its fold, has called for a nationwide, wheel-jam strike on
November 9.
Meanwhile,
Islamic zealots seeking revenge for the American bombings in Afghanistan
massacred 18 innocent Christian worshippers in a Bahawalpur Church. This barbaric action was apparently inspired
by the rhetoric of war between Islam and the infidels, emanating from the
radical Islamists. The carnage has
given a new and violent dimension to the anti-American agitation by radical
Islamic groups and brought the war in Afghanistan into Pakistani territory. Heavy civilian casualties, the plight of
hundreds of thousands of Afghans driven out from their homes as well as the use
of Pakistani airbases by the American jets, have all dramatically changed the
atmosphere in Pakistan over the last few weeks. Anti-war protests have grown much bigger and more violent, while
prospects of a long drawn out war has further destabilised the region. The spillover effect of the war in
Afghanistan has begun to raise serious questions about the survival of General
Musharraf’s government.
As
the US-led war in Afghanistan enters its fifth week, public opinion has turned
increasingly against the United States raising
doubts about the military government’s ability to control the
situation. The rising Islamic militancy
in Malakand and Kohistan is ominous.
War has come to Pakistan with thousands of pro-Taliban fighters moving
from Pakistan into the war zone while hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees
are fleeing to Pakistan. The growing
number of Pakistanis joining the Taliban forces has exacerbated the military
government’s dilemma. While any use of
force to stop the tribesmen from crossing the border may lead to an armed
confrontation, continuing inaction on the other hand will weaken the
government’s writ and further strengthen the opposition forces. Any confrontation between the army and the
agitators will create a very dangerous situation carrying serious consequence
for the unity of the military. The
worst fear of the government is that the Taliban forces may use Pakistani territory
as a rear base for protracted guerrilla warfare after they are ousted from
Kabul.
Pakistan
is under constant pressure from the United States to stop the tide of the
Islamic militants joining the Taliban.
Washington is also pressing the military government to seal its borders
and arrest all Taliban coming to Pakistan.
American officials say that satellite images show a mass of people and
vehicles going back and forth. “We
can’t be sure what they are carrying,” said one senior US official. There are also reports quoting American
officials that some rogue elements of the military and ISI are still helping
the Taliban.
Though
Islamabad has reiterated that Pakistanis are not allowed into Afghanistan to
fight, it is clear that the government has little control over the movement of
people in the tribal belt, a semi-autonomous region that operates under its own
laws in a system virtually unchanged from the days of British colonial
rule. The government admits that it is
almost impossible to seal or monitor the entire 2000-kilometer border between
Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The US campaign in Afghanistan has not produced any results
so far and there is every danger that the US-led forces may
get bogged down in the Afghan quagmire.
Despite the American bombing of the Taliban frontline
positions in Mazar-i-Sharif and north of Kabul, the anti-Taliban
opposition forces have not been able to make any significant
advances. Against all
expectations, the Taliban government has remained united and
there is no visible sign of rifts developing in the near future.
By executing Abdul Haq and other pro-Zahir Shah commanders,
the Taliban have sent out a clear message that they still have
control over most of Afghanistan. “No one would like to risk their lives after
what happened to Abdul Haq,” said Afghan staffers of an international
relief agency. According
to reports from Kabul and Kandahar there is no panic among the
Taliban. There is business as usual in the cities despite the heavy bombing,
which has also resulted in many civilian casualties. Ironically enough, the incessant bombing has
had an adverse affect as most Afghans, particularly in the Pashtun
belt, have rallied around the Taliban to fight against the American
forces. The Taliban have started distributing weapons
to the people and there is a danger that some of these weapons
may also fall in the hands of pro-Taliban elements in Pakistan.
In Kabul too, where
the majority of the population were against the harsh Islamic
regime, the situation has changed drastically over the last
few weeks. “The fear of the hated Northern Alliance taking
over the capital has pushed many Afghans into supporting the
Taliban,” says a political observer.
Most observers believe that the fall of Kabul to the
American-supported opposition will trigger a new and even more
violent phase of civil war in Afghanistan, with the emergence
of new warlords establishing their own small fiefdoms. “It will be going back to the pre-Taliban situation
when Mujahideen factions were locked in war against each other,”
said a relief agency official.
The continuing civil war and instability in Afghanistan
will have a serious destablising effect on Pakistan. Though
General Musharraf has been calling for targeted bombing for
a short period, there are no indications of that happening soon.
President Bush has repeatedly
warned that it is going to be a long haul.
Whether Pakistan can survive a protracted war that has
already entered its own backyard is a question that has become
paramount for all Pakistanis.