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Posts Tagged Fanatics

Hamid Maker’s Straight Talk – The March of the Taliban

Straight Talk – The March of the Taliban 

On a bright Sunday morning in April, 2005, a group of excited and eager young men and women had gathered at the Gujranwala stadium, to participate in a mini-marathon, organized by the city administration, on a cue from President Musharraf and his wishes of presenting a soft image of Pakistan to the world. Something the CM, Punjab had done with his Lahore Youth Festival recently. 

 

 

 

 

However, the organizers at that time had not taken into consideration the wrath of the self appointed protectors of the faith, who strongly felt that men and women running together in a mixed race was a threat to Islam and its values. So, they decided to put a stop at this un-Islamic display of vulgarity, by attacking the unarmed young men and women.

 

And instead of running in the race, the women participants had to run for their lives to save themselves from being attacked by hundreds of furious and angry MMA workers, who gate crashed into the stadium.

 

 

Armed with batons, sticks, Molotov cocktails and various weapons, they burnt cars and motorbikes, set fire to vehicles andpetrol pumps, damaged other property, injured policemen and tried to kill the district police officer. 

And instead of the “soft image” of Musharraf’s Pakistan, the world watched in horror the harsh images of innocent women being chased through the streets of Gujranwala by frantic, angry, screaming, stick waving MMA workers. The police tried to protect the participants by using teargas, but finally had to open fire to subdue the angry mob, injuring several and arresting hundreds – The March of the Taliban had begun.

 

Recently, a Rtd. Parsi Maj. Gen. of the Pakistan army had also warned that the Taliban had entrenched themselves in Karachi and in two more years, the city would face serious infighting between MQM and the Taliban. He had advised people with money, to take their heads out of the sand and get out from this blighted city, as they would be the first target.

According to the security agencies, thousands of Taliban now have a well organized network throughout Pakistan, equipped with sophisticated and modern weapons. They have already captured large portions of the tribal areas and are now preparing to grab the rest.

The continuous and repeated daring attacks on our secured areas, including army and police installations, are a proof that the Taliban have infiltrated these highly sensitive institutions, as such attacks are not possible without the help and assistance from the Enemy Within. To win back their hearts and minds is not going to be easy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For the time being, a cease fire between the government and the Taliban has been declared, but how long it will last is anybody’s guess. The March has come to a temporary halt, but have their demands changed? Their leaders have stated that Islam does not allow democracy or elections and they view democracy as a system imposed on us by the infidels and declared that they do not respect the Constitution of Pakistan or the laws of the country and want the supremacy of the Sharia Law in Pakistan.   

 

Many fear that making a deal with the Taliban will lead to more violence and bloodshed, which could finally be the beginning of the end of our way of life. Our governments have been using the Taliban as the ‘Bogey Men’ and crying ‘Wolf!’ to scare the West into pouring millions of dollars to fight them, but now, the Bogey Men have become a reality and have come to haunt us.

Our leaders have always been reluctant to establish social justice and an equitable socio-economic order, the root cause of the discontent between the haves and the have not’s and have only been interested in looking after themselves. They have ignored the needs of the poverty-stricken population, who have been suffering for the last five decades.

And we, the educated and the privileged, have played the fiddle, while our cities burnt. Therefore, the stage has been set for the March of the Taliban, which began many years back. The danger was never admitted until now, when it is too late.

Mr. Roedad Khan, a relic of the past and a senior, retired federal secretary who served under two Prime Ministers and six Presidents, in varying positions, has expressed his anguish and pain at what Pakistan has become.

 

In his article, ‘The rage in my heart’, in the News on February, 2009, Mr. Khan had written: ‘Mr. Jinnah could not have foreseen the tragic decline of Pakistan when he passed his flaming torch into the hands of his successors or how venal those hands could be. Sixty five years after Mr. Jinnah gave us a great country, little men mired in corruption, captured political power and destroyed his legacy. I have been frightened for my country only a few times in my life, this moment is the scariest of all’.

 

We all appreciate and share Mr. Khan’s anguish and pain, but wish that he and other senior bureaucrats, judges, professionals, journalists and citizens, had only remembered the words of Sir Hartley Shawcross, the Attorney General of GB, at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946, where he had stated:

‘There comes a point when a man must refuse to answer to his leaders, if he is also to answer to his conscience ’. And another, which states that: ‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.’  And that is the sad story of Pakistan.

 

If these fine, honorable men had broken their Silence of the Lambs, acted according to the dictates of their conscience and voiced their anguish and pain two decades back and had The the courage to say NO to the policies of their leaders, things in Pakistan would have been different.

 

In fact, most of the problems that we face today are linked to the wrong policies of our leaders and their advisors, who were only interested in their ‘merck’s and perks’. And even now, when the country is facing such a grave situation, our assemblies are filled with Ministers, MNAs, MPAs and Senators, whose only interest is self preservation and to benefit from the joy ride. They refuse to break the ‘Silence of the Lambs’ and lack the moral courage to say NO to the wrong policies of their leaders.

 

May God save the country from the shallow and hollow men and women of Pakistan.

 

Hamid Maker. (email: [email protected]).

 

Also Published in: 

(The Nation, Sunday, 9th March,2014)

 

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SAUDI ARABIA EXPORT OF TERRORISM TO PAKISTAN – WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE WHO NEEDS ENEMIES

 

Recent diplomacy between Riyadh and Islamabad reminds me of delinquents daring a hornet’s nest. Iran spared no moment to threaten Pakistan with a military raid while Russia was curt to caution Pakistan about meddling in Syria. Deep in trouble itself and grappling to fight insecurities created through non-state actors, how could Pakistan even think of becoming part of a dangerous game that failed three decades ago?
Pakistan has a historical propensity to nibble its space in big power rivalry, while its economic short cuts could make the temptation too lucrative to resist. But Pakistani policy planners need to realise that in the final analysis, the transition from an Afghan Jihad against godless communism to a liberation struggle of enlightened moderates in Syria is the name of the same game. The policy failed in Afghanistan and Indian Occupied Kashmir. It will fail in Syria but not before unleashing a new genre of non-state actors. As Benjamin Franklin said, ‘Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.’ Pakistan has remained a loser for the past three decades and must resist the forbidden fruit offered by a kingdom fast losing its credibility.
Saudi policy to reshape the Middle East after toppling Morsi in Egypt lost its steam in Syria because Putin intervened. However, the Saudis are convinced that success was just around the corner had President Obama not blinked first. Disillusioned by the lack of US support and its thaw with Iran, the kingdom began contemplating its own shadow war. It toyed with the idea of enlisting Pakistan to train and arm Syrian rebels on the pattern of Afghan cooperation. However, it was forced to abandon the plan after the USA confronted it with incriminating information over terrorism. Still, old habits die hard. With slight modifications, Saudi Arabia is now advocating a sugar coated alternative laden with the same intentions. Eager, Saudi Arabia donned a soft face by sacking its terrorism czar and issuing an unprecedented royal decree that condemned terrorism. The effect was immediate. It ended reluctance on the part of President Obama to visit Saudi Arabia in March this year when this new idea backed by the French Civil-Military Complex could be endorsed or rejected.
Saudi Arabia does not wish to lose its position as a hegemon in the region where Iran is fast asserting its presence. The house of Saud will spare no effort to sell its win-win proposal with a moderate make-up. The plan seeks to soothe American nerves, appeases Israel and checkmates the Russo-Iranian influence. With triple objectives of containing Islamic extremism (Al Qaeda and its shadows, a paradigm shift but led still, by the Salafis), brining some relief to Palestine and the collapse of the current Syrian regime (read end of Russo-Iranian Influence), Saudi Arabia feels the act can be pulled off with the assistance of Pakistan, Jordon and France. Of course, the dirtiest role has been assigned to Pakistan. We are required to supply weapons and train moderate (read Salafi) militants against Syria, wielding a poor man’s stinger Anza. The wish list also includes renting over 30,000 Pakistani troops to address Saudi internal and external insecurities and pose a structural threat to Iran. The plan reflects Saudi callousness and insensitivity to the security of other countries; its the money that makes the mare go.
For over a year, Saudi Arabia had become an irritant for most countries involved in the Syrian conflict. It was officially and privately accused of sponsoring terrorism. Though Pakistan never raised the issue, whispers suggested that many militant groups in Pakistan had Saudi and Middle Eastern ideological and monetary support. The DNA is more than visible. To impose caution, USA confronted Saudi Arabia with a highly classified dossier of terrorist activities. Somehow the most incriminating and irrefutable contents got leaked showing Saudi terrorist foot prints in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, Pakistan and Russia. The dossier is now known to Russia, China and Iran who could embarrass USA and France for supporting Saudi Arabia as sponsor of global terrorism at the UN Security Council. Saudi Arabia immediately embarked on the business of salvage.
Saudi Arabia plans to replace extremist jihadists with a moderate force of Salafi rebels who incrementally bring President Bashar Assad to his knees. In contrition for fermenting terrorism, a royal decree condemned Islamic Jihadist with known linkages to Al Qaeda (similar to US objectives of eliminating Al Qaeda). In addition, Saud Arabia disowned thousands of Saudi soldiers it pumped into Syria and Iraq. They have been told that to avoid execution back home, they are better off  continuing their mission till death or to disperse to other fighting areas (Pakistan and Afghanistan). Pakistan’s geographical position will be used to checkmate Iran (Shia) and Russian influence in Afghanistan. To affirm that old habits are dead, Saudi Arabia has sent its terrorism guru Prince Bandar Bin Sultan on forced leave to the USA. The new chief Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, perfectly fits the American eye.
Fouad al-Ibrahim a reputed Middle East commentator for Al Akhbar presents a chilling assessment shared by many other analysts. “Saudi Arabia had mastered a double game. In public, it expressed a contrived strictness about the participation of Saudis in fighting abroad or collecting donations for al-Qaeda and its old and new subsidiaries. But in secret, money, men, and weapons were flooding the battlefields without any control.” He goes on to write, “Observers have gathered overwhelming evidence about the complicity of Saudi political, media, and religious institutions in the emigration of thousands of Saudis… prohibited from traveling abroad, except by special orders of the military leadership.” Some of them will find their way into Pakistan.
Saudi planners hope that the USA will buy the Saudi idea in return for Kerry’s Palestinian proposal. The proposal seeks the recognition of Israel as a Jewish state in return for a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital. Israel on its part has made clear that it will adjust its policies according to the larger US plan in the region, while Mahmood Abbas wants Saudi consent before he endorses. All this will come under discussion when President Obama visits Saudi Arabia in March.
Following the flurry of Saudi diplomacy, Pakistan has revised its position on Syria implying its willingness to be a minion and mercenary in exchange for riyals. Given the strong connections with the present government, Saudis could bankroll an intense counter terrorism operation in Pakistan to help subsequently release troops and efforts for the Saudi game in Syria. Alternatively, Pakistan could slow down its operations (particularly Haqqani Group) and leave redressing its vulnerabilities for another day. In both cases it will directly affect Pakistan’s operations against militancy and invite more foreign interference. With a fast forming Russian, Chinese and Iranian nexus, Pakistan runs the risk of being regionally isolated and smitten.

The writer is a retired officer of Pakistan Army and a political economist and a television anchorperson.

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