|
It
was just before dawn when the residents of Chinagai, a small border
village in the Bajaur tribal area, woke to a thunderous blast. Before
they realised what had happened, three more explosions ripped through
the village. The lightning missile attack reduced a local madrassah,
Zia-ul-Uloom, into a massive pile of rubble. Pieces of flesh were
strewn all over the place. Many bodies were burnt beyond recognition.
Some
85 people died in the deadliest ever single operation launched by
Pakistani forces against suspected militants in the lawless tribal
region. According to Pakistani military officials, the madrassah
was being used as a terror training facility where suicide bombers
were being trained to launch attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
However,
the mounting backlash against the raid, which also killed many young
children, forced President Musharraf into a tight spot. Thousands
of heavily armed protesters took to the streets in the biggest anti-government
demonstrations ever seen in the volatile border areas, while Islamists
seized on the attack to whip up anti-government and anti-American
sentiments. In fact, the attack proved to be the perfect propaganda
tool for the Taliban and other militants to exploit and gain sympathy
for their cause.
The
protesters' anger was further fuelled by hot rumours that the attack
was carried out by armed US military predators. This belief was
reinforced in light of a US missile attack in January on the village
of Damadola, just two kilometers away from the site of the latest
attack, which killed 13 women and children. Adding to the controversy,
many in Chinagai maintained that Pakistani helicopters appeared
a good 10 minutes after the two blasts. Though Pakistan and the
US have both denied that US predators took part in the attack, security
confirmed that the raid was conducted on intelligence information
provided by the United States.
A
senior Pakistani security official described the raid as, "A
major counter terrorist operation." But exactly who was killed
in Chinagai remains unclear. Local residents and some survivors
claimed that several children, as young as seven years old, were
among the dead. The New York-based Human Rights Watch has called
the Pakistan government to allow an independent enquiry into the
madrassah bombing: "The onus is on the Pakistani government
to provide a credible account of the legitimacy of the attack resulting
in the deaths of so many," said Ali Dayan Hasan, a spokesman
for the group.
A
reporter for an English-language national newspaper, who was one
of the first persons to reach to the bombing site, said the bombing
caused much collateral damage. "The place was strewn with mutilated
bodies, while shoes and clothes of young children were scattered
all over," he said. Some other victims were said to be members
of a pro-Taliban organisation, called Tehreek Nifaz Shariat Mohammadi,
who were there to attend a tribal assembly due to take place the
next day to approve a peace deal with the government.
Musharraf, meanwhile, contended that those killed in the madrassah
raid were not innocent. "They were militants doing military
training . We were watching them for the last six or seven days
who they are and what they are doing," he maintained.
Pakistani
security officials said the raid was conducted on the basis of solid
intelligence information provided by the Americans, as well as local
informers. Apparently, US drones flying over the area for several
days before the attack, picked up some extraordinary activity inside
the compound. Roughly 100 men were undergoing some kind of guerrilla
training on the campus, which is usually closed down during the
Ramadan and Eid holidays.
A
high-resolution camera also detected a middle-aged bearded man delivering
a lecture to the trainees. US and Pakistani intelligence officials
suspected he could be Ayman Al-Zawahiri or Abu-al-Obaida-al-Misri.
The two Al Qaeda leaders had regularly frequented the mountainous
region, which had become a hotbed of Islamic militants. Al-Misri
is believed to be the mastermind behind the plot to blow up passenger
aircrafts flying out of Heathrow International Airport in London.
Bajaur
borders the troubled Afghan province of Kunar, where American forces
are carrying out a major offensive against Al Qaeda and Taliban
insurgents. Hundreds of militants had taken sanctuary in Bajaur,
from where they launched frequent attacks on US and Afghan forces
across the border. The region also hosts a large Afghan refugee
population sympathetic to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan mujahideen
leader who was aligned to Al Qaeda and Taliban insurgents fighting
the American forces in Kunar.
According to Pakistani security sources, many Al Qaeda leaders,
including Abu Faraj-al-Libbi, had been operating from Bajaur. A
Libyan national, Al-Libbi had worked as head of Al Qaeda's external
operation after the capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and was the
key link with the Pakistani militants. Al-Libbi, who was one of
the most wanted men on the US terrorist list and believed to be
number three in the Al Qaeda hierarchy, was captured in a dramatic
manner from Mardan in the NWFP last year.
The attack on the Chinagai madrassah could have been triggered by
the 3,000 strong rally in Khar, the main town in Bajaur, in which
militants chanted slogans in support of Osama bin Laden and the
Taliban leader, Mullah Omar. The latest military offensive in Bajaur
shows that Musharraf is running out of options to control his lawless
western border. The General appears to have no coherent plan, as
he switches from "peace deals" with tribesmen to attacks
on them. Surprisingly, the attack came on a day when the government
and the local militants were scheduled to sign a peace deal brokered
by tribal elders.
In
September, Musharraf agreed to halt the military campaign against
pro-Al Qaeda tribesmen in neighbouring North Waziristan, saying
they had agreed not to give refuge to foreign fighters. The military
leader defended the deal, saying it would help isolate the militants.
But earlier this month, a NATO spokesman in Afghanistan said that
cross-border attacks had increased three-fold since the truce. The
new offensive could undo Islamabad's efforts to strike a similar
deal with tribesmen in Bajaur.
Musharraf
appears to be in a no-win situation. While he risks a strong backlash
at home, on actions like the Bajaur madrassah raid, he is under
increasing pressure from the US and NATO commanders in Afghanistan
to act more sternly against militants operating from the Pakistani
tribal region. At the heart of Musharraf's predicament is the failure
of the Waziristan pact in the past six weeks. It shows that it is
counter-productive when the government's anti-terror policy swings
from unconditional appeasement to brute force against the militants.
However,
a major concern for Musharraf, at the moment, is how to defuse the
mounting public anger that has the potential to divide the army.
The madrassah attack has not only provoked strong anti-government
reaction among Pakistan's border-dwelling Pashtun tribal groups,
but has also spilled over to parts of the North West Frontier Province,
where Musharraf's pro-US policies are the most unpopular. There
is a growing concern that the incident could fan political unrest
in other parts of the country.
Some
political observers believe that President Musharraf has wedged
himself between a rock and a hard place by taking the blame for
the pre-emptive American strike in Bajaur. "Like Saddam Hussein,
Musharraf might be tried by a future regime for killing his own
people," said General Hameed Gul.
The
most serious threat Musharaf faces is that any further military
operation in the border areas could split the army, which is clearly
unhappy at the prospect of fighting "their own people."
Around 700 soldiers have been killed in the military campaign in
North Waziristan alone, and at least six middle ranking army officers
have been court-martialed for refusing to fight. This growing dissent
has probably forced Musharraf to pull back troops from Waziristan
and pursue peace deals in other border regions. But this policy
has drawn criticism from coalition commanders, as well as the Afghanistan
government. The Bush administration, which in the beginning was
willing to give Musharraf's new peace approach a chance, has begun
to ask him to review his tactics.
Musharraf
is confronted with tough choices: to send a reluctant army back
to fighting in the tribal areas, risking accusations that innocent
civilians are killed, or strike more peace deals, giving the Taliban
and other militants, the opportunity to intensify cross-border attacks
inside Afghanistan. It is a classic catch-22 situation: he is damned
if he does and damned if he doesn't.
|