Counter-Terrorism: Act Now - International
Terrorism Monitor—Paper No. 445
By B. Raman
The address of the
Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, to the
Governors’ conference at New Delhi on
September 17, 2008, contains a number of
important pronouncements relating to the
fight against terrorism. These
pronouncements taken together amount to an
attempt by the Government, which is almost
at the end of its term before the general
elections are due, to come out of the denial
mode into which it had kept itself confined
since it came to office in 2004.
2. While refuting
allegations from the critics that the
Government was soft on terrorism, the Prime
Minister admitted that there had been
intelligence failures and that in addition
to the continuing threats from jihadi
terrorists infiltrated from Pakistan, the
nation is now finding itself confronted with
a new dimension of the threat posed by more
Indian nationals gravitating to the ranks of
the jihadis.
3. A point, which was
not mentioned by the Prime Minister, but
which needs to be underlined is that the
phenomenon of home-grown jihadis is not new
to India. We had faced a serious threat of
home-grown jihadis from the Al Umma of Tamil
Nadu after the demolition of the Babri
Masjid in December 1992. Al Umma spread
death and destruction across Tamil Nadu
between 1993 and 1999 including the
orchestrated serial blasts in Coimbatore in
February, 1998. Al Umma was almost a hundred
per cent home-grown movement with no links
to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
or to the global jihad waged by Al Qaeda and
its Pakistani associates. The threat from Al
Umma was largely neutralized by the
effective action taken by the Tamil Nadu
Police after the Coimbatore blasts.
4. Between the end of
the Kargil conflict with Pakistan towards
the end of 1999 and November, 2007, we saw a
new wave of jihadi terrorist strikes outside
Jammu & Kashmir involving either the ISI-sponsored
Pakistani organizations such as the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), the Jaish-e-Mohammad
(JEM), the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) and
the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) or a
mix of Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Indian
elements. While the Pakistani and
Bangladeshi elements in this mix largely
belonged to the LET and the HUJI, the Indian
elements came largely from the Students’
Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) plus a few
with no previous affiliation to any
organization. These groups thought and acted
tactically as well as strategically.
5. Tactically, they
viewed their operations as meant to
retaliate against the demolition of the
Babri Masjid and the anti-Muslim incidents
in Gujarat in 2002 after the massacre of
some Hindu pilgrims traveling by a train by
some Muslim fanatics at Godhra.
Strategically, they viewed them as part of
the global jihad being waged by the
International Islamic Front (IIF) under the
leadership of Al Qaeda for achieving an
Islamic Caliphate and putting an end to the
presence and influence of the US in the
Islamic world.
6. What we have been
seeing across India since November last year
is a revival of the Al Umma phenomenon of
reprisal terrorism with the tactical
objective of wreaking vengeance against the
society as a whole and the Governments in
New Delhi and different States for the
alleged wrongs done to the Indian Muslims.
These elements have been operating under the
name of the Indian Mujahideen (IM) and deny
vehemently in their propaganda any foreign
links either with the ISI or with the
Pakistani organizations. They have till now
not given any indication of any strategic
objective. They just want to kill and desire
to demonstrate their ability to kill
wherever and whenever they want.
7. All the suspected
perpetrators arrested till now in Ahmedabad,
Jaipur and other places in connection with
the serial blasts for which the IM has
claimed responsibility are Indian Muslims.
This need not mean that there is no hidden
foreign involvement either of Pakistani
organizations or of Al Qaeda. The fact that
till now they have not been talking and
acting strategically does not mean that they
do not consider themselves as part of the
global jihad being waged under the
leadership of Al Qaeda.
8. One significant
difference needs to be noted in the modus
operandi of the Pakistan-sponsored jihadi
organizations and the IM. Under instructions
from the ISI, Pakistani organizations
generally do not claim responsibility for
attacks on civilians. They claim
responsibility only for the attacks on the
security forces. Like Al Qaeda, the IM
admits its responsibility for targeted
attacks on civilians and proclaims such
attacks as part of its policy. Al Qaeda
admitted its responsibility for the 9/11
terrorist strikes in the US and lionized the
terrorists, who attacked the London public
transportation system in July, 2005. There
have been other instances of Al Qaeda openly
proclaiming its responsibility for attacks
on civilians.
9. The new dimension of
the threat as stated by the Prime Minister
has made him concede the need to enhance the
powers of the police through special laws
where necessary and to set up a special
central agency to investigate and prosecute
terrorism-related cases.
10. Unfortunately, the
Prime Minister’s pronouncements, which
indicate a change in the Government’s
thinking and strategy, have come hardly a
few months before the elections. His critics
would, therefore, suspect that his
pronouncements were more an electoral ploy
than the result of a genuine change of
conviction as to how to fight terrorism.
11. Moreover, even if
he is able to counter successfully
suspicions of an electoral ploy, the
concretization of his pronouncements through
the drafting and enactment of appropriate
laws and introducing the necessary changes
in the counter-terrorism architecture will
take at least a year. This is not something
that can be done overnight. The Lok Sabha is
about to enter the lame duck mode and the
opposition will try its best not to give
the Government any credit for bringing
about the necessary changes.
12. In this context,
what is important is an urgent short-term
plan to identify the brains behind the
self-styled IM and neutralize them before
they spread further death and destruction.
As I have been pointing out repeatedly, this
is a pan-Indian threat not confined to a
single State and hence calls for a
pan-Indian response. It is important to make
the Police in all the States where the
blasts have already taken place carry out
their investigations in an integrated manner
through an appropriate short-term mechanism,
which would not require any major change in
the existing laws.
13. We have had three
examples of successful investigations and
prosecution. The first was the investigation
into the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi by
the LTTE in 1991. In view of its
ramifications extending to more than one
State and its external linkages, the Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI), then headed
by Vijaykaran, an officer of the
Intelligence Bureau, was asked to take over
the investigation through a special task
force headed by D.R.Kartikeyan.
14. The second was the
investigation into the Mumbai serial blasts
of March, 1993. Here the investigation was
done by the Mumbai Police with the CBI
handling the external ramifications.
Narasimha Rao, the then Prime Minister, set
up a co-ordination committee headed by
S.B.Chavan, the then Home Minister, to
co-ordinate the investigation on a
day-to-day basis. Rajesh Pilot, the then
Minister of State for Internal Security,
played a live wire role in this
co-ordination. Narasimha Rao closely
monitored the work of this committee, by
periodically chairing the meetings himself.
15. The third was the
investigation into the terrorist strikes in
Tamil Nadu. This was done in a very
creditable manner by the Tamil Nadu Police
through its own resources.
16. The serial blasts,
which the country has been facing since
November 2007, are more complicated. While
the Police officers of Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Delhi
have been doing excellent work through their
resources, the final results in terms of
identification, neutralization and
prosecution may not be quite satisfactory in
the absence of a continuous and effective
central role. How to achieve this has to be
decided by the Prime Minister quickly in
consultation with the Chief Ministers of the
targeted States.
17. Political and
electoral considerations should not be
allowed to come in the way of time-bound
action to put a stop to these serial
blasts.
18. If these blasts
continue in this manner with the police and
the intelligence agencies being perceived
not only by our public, but also by foreign
Governments and investors as helpless, it
could come in the way of our efforts to
invite more foreign investment. The foreign
investors have till now shown signs of
continuing confidence in the capability of
our Police and security agencies to prevail
over the terrorists sooner than later. But,
if such incidents continue at regular
intervals, this confidence could be shaken.
19. The time for action
is now, not tomorrow, which may be too late.
(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)