Khalid Mehsud, alias Sajna, who has been prised away from the TTP by Pakistan's ISI
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 4th June 14
Tension is
rising across Pakistan’s embattled Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA), a
swathe of autonomous territory along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that is a haven
for the world’s most feared Islamist extremists. These include jihadi groups promoted
by Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) such as the Haqqani network and
the Afghan Taliban; as well as viscerally anti-Pakistan groupings like the
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or the Pakistani Taliban.
Pakistani
generals, irked by years of fruitless negotiations, short-lived peace
agreements and a spiralling casualty count, want to crack down on the TTP. With
the US pulling out of Afghanistan, the Pakistan army is gearing up to support
the Afghan Taliban as it confronts the Afghan National Security Force (ANSF).
The generals know they cannot project power into Afghanistan while a hostile
Pakistani Taliban controls the tribal agencies on the border, especially South
and North Waziristan.
On the
other hand, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif fears that a crackdown strikes would
trigger retaliation in Pakistan’s political heartland of Punjab, with waves of
suicide bombers wreaking havoc in densely populated areas. Persuaded so by
religious parties like the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), and by
cricketer-politician Imran Khan, Nawaz has held back the army for a year while
pursuing a fruitless dialogue with the TTP.
Last fortnight,
the Pakistan Army signalled it had lost patience. In a wave of ground and air
strikes the Pakistani military killed 80 militants in North Waziristan, the
most rebellious of seven tribal agencies (sub-districts) in FATA.
Reuters
reports that on May 20, the day before the military strikes, Pakistan’s army
chief, General Raheel Sharif, bluntly told Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif that the
military was taking matters into its own hands.
On May 27, the
army chief talked tough again, telling a military audience in Quetta that the
military would “deter and defeat any aggression across the entire threat
spectrum”.
This show
of force has yielded results, with a jihadi faction led by Khalid Mehsud (alias
Sajna) from the influential Mehsud tribe breaking ranks with the TTP. Rustam
Shah Mohmand, one of Islamabad’s interlocuters with the TTP, claims that
Sajna’s departure has seriously damaged the TTP. That is wishful thinking more
than reality, since the TTP retains a solid Mehsud core in the form of the
Hakimullah Mehsud faction, which has been battling Sajna’s fighters since April.
The ISI has
also sought to weaken Mehsud support for the TTP by highlighting the fact that
TTP chief, Mullah Fazlullah (alias Radio Mullah), hails from Swat. Yet most
Mehsuds remain with the TTP, except for Sajna who resents that the TTP chose Fazalullah
over him to succeed Hakimullah Mehsud, after the former TTP leader was killed
in a US drone strike.
Playing jihadi
groups against each other is the central tactic in the ISI’s playbook. In the endless
struggle between competing factions, the Pakistan Army’s support is often
decisive. Increasingly, however, the army’s and ISI’s hardball tactics anger jihadi
allies who resent being manipulated.
That was
evident on May 27, when Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a longstanding ally of the Pakistan
Army, turned against the generals. Gul complained that the army strikes had
violated the peace agreement the military had signed with him in 2008. He has ordered
his supporters to shelter in Afghanistan against an impending army crackdown on
June 10, and to fight the army for “the honour of Waziristan”.
There is
little certainty the Pakistan army can subdue the TTP anytime soon in the
rugged North Waziristan mountains. More than just combat capability, success
would depend upon how effectively the ISI exploits faultlines within the TTP, stripping
away support of malcontents like Sajna. Central to this subversion will be the
Haqqani network, a long-serving ISI conduit to a range of jihadis.
Several
local factors make the Haqqanis extremely influential along the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Mehsud territory is not contiguous with
Afghanistan, and the TTP relies on the Haqqanis for access to the Afghan
battlefields, without which the TTP would struggle to recruit and train
fighters.
Haqqani
territory extends from Waziristan deep into Afghanistan, where their own Zadran
clan are influential powerbrokers in the Loya Paktika region --- which includes
the provinces of Khost, Paktiya and Paktika that extend almost to Kabul. The
Haqqani network, therefore, is ideally poised for operations in and around
Kabul such as the two bombings of the Indian embassy and a range of operations
against NATO and the Afghan government.
Finally, as
pointed out by Vahid Brown and Don Rassler, who have studied the Haqqani
network for years, it provides “diplomatic good offices” to connect the ISI
with jihadi entities like Al Qaeda, the TTP and the most radical groups in the
Pakistani Taliban. This range of contacts will give the Haqqanis a key role in
helping the Pakistan army shape the environment for the coming endgame in
Afghanistan.
The key challenge for various parties interested in the future of Afghanistan is how to either embolden or isolate the Haqqani.
ReplyDeleteIF the Haqqanis can be isolated and or spilt between themselves or otherwise turned against the ISI, the Pakistani dream for Afghanistan would die.
I don't think Haqqani or any terrorist Taliban is a serious problem for Afghanistan. They have a trained and deadly Afghan National Army with more than 4 Lakh personnel. They can take care of any terrorist or Pakistani threat.Afghans are not scared anymore which they showed in elections.
ReplyDeleteThe main problem of Afghanistan is its economy. How will it support this trained Army with minimum $4 billion annually when it has virtually NO ECONOMY.That's why mining, dry fruits, oil n gas transportation and some industry is badly needed if long term peace is what anyone looking for.
No short term measure will work and if left as it is, another Afghan War would not be far in future against another set of Mullah Omar and his lumpens.
The Haqqani network is very much active in Jammu & Kashmir and also it has several sleeper cells across India. We should be bothered about it first. Let Afghanistan rot. Currently we don't have any common border with Afghanistan.
ReplyDelete