Each time
the Pakistani media wrote about the existence of the
Al-Qaeda network in the country's tribal belt, General
Musharraf and his spokespersons vehemently denied
it and denounced the press for spreading false rumours.
It was only when Washington cracked the whip that
the Pakistan army got cracking.
But
if Mr. Bush had hoped that either Osama bin Laden
or Ayman Al Zawahiri would be delivered on a silver
platter, well in time for his re-entry into the White
House, that didn't happen.
The
"high-value" target Musharraf talked about
in his NBC interview, either got away or was not there
in the first place, and the Pakistan army ended up
with a bloody nose - 46 military and paramilitary
personnel lost their lives in a fortnight of combat,
in which the government claimed to have killed 63
militants and captured166, among them 73 foreigners.
And that's not all. Several innocent civilians were
killed in the crossfire, around 100 houses of 'errant'
tribesmen were demolished and 100,0000 of a population
of 160,000 tribesmen were displaced, provoking the
wrath of the tribesmen.
Mr. Bush may be in a tearing hurry to garner votes,
but does that mean that we should show the same kind
of haste and impatience in operating in what is essentially
uncharted territory? Our state of preparedness, and
the calibre of our intelligence network can be gauged
from the remarks of an ISPR spokesperson: "The
army was taken aback at the extent of the firepower
at the militants' disposal - rocket launchers, missiles,
artillery."
What
exactly did the army expect from a bunch of battle-hardened
militants - among them Chechens, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Arabs
and Afghans - who were trained in the tricks of the
trade by the CIA and our very own ISI, and stationed
in South Waziristan, the launching pad of the offensive
against the Soviets in Afghanistan? Abandoned by their
erstwhile masters and unwanted in their respective
countries, these militants are fighting a battle for
their survival, and they will use all the firepower
at their command. Moreover, having lived in this terrain
for years and married, in certain instances, to local
women, they obviously enjoy the support of the local
tribesmen. The army is being presumptuous if it marches
in and expects the locals to hand over the militants
or betray them. Especially since the country's rulers
have failed to engage with the inhabitants of this
region in any manner whatsoever.
Fifty-seven years down the road, the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) remain the most backward
in the region. Devoid of any infrastructure, schools,
colleges and medical facilities, FATA is frozen in
time. It conjures up visions of the Wild West, as
every tribesman brandishes a weapon as a matter of
pride and honour, and tribal chieftains call the shots.
Inhuman and unjust practices prevail: women are rarely
to be seen in public places, revenge-killing is common
practice and there is no recourse to any law other
than the decision of the Jirga.
Stories are legion of how the British in the
200 years of their rule here, could not rein in the
Frontier tribesmen. That, however, does not mean that
they be allowed to continue in the same fashion by
the Pakistan government, for another 200 years.
If FATA harbours terrorists who want to destabilise
the region and are involved in insurgencies within
and outside the country, an effective strategy needs
to be evolved to strike at the root of this lawlessness.
The time
has arrived for FATA to be integrated into the state
of Pakistan and the country's writ to be extended
to its wild frontiers. Concurrently, a massive socio-economic
development package needs to be put in place to pull
this area out of the medieval ages and into the 21st
century.
All of this requires time and money. Law and order
cannot be imposed in the region with a show of the
American fist. It has to be introduced through a show
of understanding of the sensitivities and the needs
of the region.