Attack on Pakistan Army GHQ--A Tentative
Assessment
International Terrorism Monitor--Paper
No. 564
By B. Raman
This is
only a tentative assessment on the daring
commando-style attack on the General
Headquarters (GHQ) of the Pakistan Army at
Rawalpindi for which responsibility has been
claimed on behalf of a so-called Amjad
Farooqi detachment of the Pakistani Taliban
known as the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
Sixteen hours after the attack started
around mid-day on October 10, 2009, the
Pakistani Army, including its Special
Services Group (SSG), are still engaged in
an attempt to flush out at least two to four
terrorists, who managed to gain entry into
the premises and take at least 20 to 30
inmates of the premises as hostages to
negotiate their demands. An Army spokesman
has claimed that 22 of these hostages have
since been got released and that the
operation is coming to a successful
conclusion, but this is not confirmed by
independent sources so far.
2.It is understood that the terrorists
have put forward a number of demands such as
the release of all those captured by the
Army during the operations in the Swat
Valley and the rest of the Malakand Division
of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP),
the calling-off of the reported plans to
start a military offensive in South
Waziristan,immediate stoppage of aerial
strikes by the Pakistani Army in the tribal
areas and of the Drone strikes by the US
intelligence, the termination of all
counter-terrorism co-operation with the US
and the trial of Pervez Musharraf on a
charge of treason. The terrorists have
reportedly been projecting their successful
attack as in reprisal for the death of
Baitullah Mehsud, the then Amir of the TTP,
in a US drone attack in South Waziristan on
August 5, 2009.
3.The facts are still sketchy and
confusing. From the available facts, one
could attempt the following reconstruction.
A group of at least four terrorists, wearing
the uniform of SSG commandoes, drove up to
the Security Gate No.1 of the GHQ premises.
There was an exchange of fire lasting about
45 minutes between them and the security
picket at Gate No.1. During the exchange, a
Brigadier, who was in charge of the physical
security of the premises, a Lt.Col assisting
him and four other military personnel and
all the four terrorists who came by the
vehicle were killed.
4. As the exchange of firing was going on
in Gate No.1, the members of the security
picket guarding Gate No.2 rushed to Gate No.
1 to help the security picket there. Taking
advantage of the unmanned Gate No.2, two to
four other terrorists----also wearing the
SSG uniform---- managed to enter the
premises, rush to the Army library and take
hostage a number of persons who were there.
It is not known whether they have been kept
by the terrorists in the library itself or
whether they have been taken to some other
building. It is also not known whether the
terrorists have captured any other person in
the GHQ premises. Also not clear is whether
this second group came by the same vehicle
or reached the GHQ independently.
5. The identities of the hostages have
not been revealed by the Army. The
commando-style attack on the GHQ---like the
commando-style terrorist attack in Mumbai in
November last year--- has the imprint of the
operational methods of the SSG. The
terrorists in the GHQ have had the benefit
of the kind of training and expertise, which
is available in the SSG. The reported death
of Ilyas Kashmiri of the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) in a recent
Drone strike brought out in Pakistani media
accounts the fact that he was a trained
officer of the SSG, who had gravitated to
the world of jihadi terrorism and joined the
HUJI.
6. There are possibly other SSG
officers---serving and retired---- who have
similarly gravitated to the world of
terrorism. As a result of this, knowledge of
commando-style operations seems to be
widespread in Pakistan's jihadi world. Till
now, the international focus has been on the
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) as the
sponsor and trainer of jihadi groups.
Indications of a similar role being played
by at least some elements in or of the the
SSG---- possibly in tandem with the ISI ---
are coming to the fore now.
( The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute for Topical
Studies, Chennai. E-mail: sevenbtyone2@gmail.com
)