What Next in Pakistan's Pashtun Belt? -
International Terrorism Monitor---Paper No.
625
By B. Raman
The Pakistan Army and the US intelligence
are making headway in the battle against
jihadi terrorism --- the indigenous as well
as the global varieties--- in Pakistan's
Pashtun tribal belt in the Malakand Division
of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP)
and the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas
(FATA).
2. They are working in tandem in some places
such as the Swat Valley of the Malakand
Division and South Waziristan in the FATA
and separately of each other in
co-ordinated, but not joint operations in
other areas such as the Bajaur and the North
Waziristan Agencies of the FATA. While the
Pakistan Army has been exclusively handling
the ground situation in the Bajaur Agency
with very little US involvement, the US has
been keeping up relentless pressure on the
terrorists in North Waziristan and
occasionally in South Waziristan through its
Drone (pilotless planes) strikes.
3. There is a gentlemen's agreement between
Islamabad and Washington that the former
will keep making proforma protests against
the Drone strikes without trying to stop
them. If Pakistan protests really and
vehemently, the US will have to stop them.
The US is able to continue them because the
Pakistani protests are a charade. Pakistan
knows it is benefiting from the Drone
strikes and wants them to continue. Fears
that disproportionate civilian casualties
might add to anti-American feelings have
been belied. Civilian casualties there have
been, but they are not as heavy as made out
by some US analysts. Even the Pakistani
civil society and the local tribal
population no longer protest against the
civilian casualties. They have realised that
by eliminating the jihadi terrorist leaders
of not only Al Qaeda, but also indigenous
organisations such as the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) and the anti-Shia
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LEJ) and trans-border
organisations such as the
anti-Chinese Islamic Movement of East
Turkestan (IMET) the US has given them some
relief from the intimidation and terror
imposed on the local population by these
terrorist groups.
4. There are signs of a jihadi fatigue in
the Pakistani Pashtun belt. This fatigue
should account for the remarkable decline in
public protests over the Drone strikes. It
has also contributed to the increasing flow
of valuable intelligence to the US agencies.
Almost all the successful US Drone strikes
were intelligence-driven. Initially, the
intelligence came overwhelmingly from
technical sources. Now, they are coming more
and more from human sources. When there is
popular fatigue with the terrorists,
intelligence flow improves. We are
witnessing this in the tribal belt.
5. The remarkable successes of the US
intelligence in North Waziristan have been
accompanied by the headway made by the
Pakistani security forces in the Swat
Valley, South Waziristan and the Bajaur
Agency. These operations cannot be described
as successful in terms of identified
terrorist leaders neutralised by the
Pakistan Army. Many of the terrorist leaders
operating in these areas have escaped
capture by the Pakistan Army. Their trained
followers have dispersed and peeled off.
They have retained a capability for
re-grouping and striking back at a later
stage if the Army pressure eases.
6. Despite this, the Pakistan Army
operations have been successful in the sense
that it has been able to re-establish
territorial control over Swat, South
Waziristan and the Bajaur Agency and deny
the use of this territory to the terrorists.
Is this territorial control ephemeral or
will it be enduring? The training and
equipment given by the US to Pakistani para-military
forces such as the Frontier Corps have
improved their morale and made them fight
better to wrest control of the territory
from the terrorists, but their ability to
hold on to the "newly liberated" territory
in the face of a renewed assault is yet to
be tested.
7. Any comprehensive operation in this area
has to have three components---liberate,
hold on to it and develop. Only the first
component is now being attempted by the Army
with US assistance. US policy-makers and
Pakistani civilian leaders are yet to pay
attention to the other two components.
Holding on to the "liberated" territory
demands massive investments for a crash
development of roads and other means of
communications. One sees no signs of any
such investments and related activity. It
also demands a robust civilian governing
machinery which enforces the civilian
authority, brings the liberated areas into
the national political mainstream from which
the entire FATA had remained excluded ever
since Pakistan became independent in 1947
and undertakes massive economic development
programmes.
8. The elected civilian Government in
Islamabad has shown very little interest in
the civilian follow-up to the military
actions. It has left all the initiatives in
the FATA in the hands of the Army. There is
hardly any thinking or discussion in
Islamabad or the rest of the country on how
to increase the extent and effectiveness of
the civilian governing machinery in the
tribal belt. The civilian leaders have no
interest in the tasks of governance in the
tribal areas. Even US policy-makers and
experts have shown not much interest in
following up on the military successes by
undertaking a programme for changing the
political and economic landscape of the
tribal areas.
9. This total lack of interest in "what
next" could facilitate re-grouping and a
come-back by the terrorists and insurgents.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)