Dangerous Liaisons: Pakistan, India and Lashkar-e Taiba
Graham Usher
December 31, 2008
(Graham Usher, a contributing editor of Middle East Report,
filed this article from Lahore.)
For more on radical Islamists in Pakistan,
see Graham Usher, “The
Pakistan Taliban,” Middle East Report Online,
February 13, 2007.
See also Kamran Asdar Ali, “Pakistani Islamists Gamble
on the General,” Middle East Report 231 (Summer
2004). Order the issue online. |
The day after Christmas, the wires buzzed with reports that Pakistan
was moving 20,000 troops from its western border with Afghanistan
to locations near the eastern border with India. The redeployment,
said Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Qureshi, came in response
to “certain developments” on the Indian side of the boundary, one
reportedly being that New Delhi might be considering military strikes
on militant bases inside Pakistan. Pakistani security officials
stressed that these moves were “minimum defensive measures”: No
soldiers had been taken away from the theater of counterinsurgency
operations against the Taliban and al-Qaeda, only from “snowbound
areas” where the army sits idle. Still, the troop transfers marked
another dip in relations between India and Pakistan since the November
26 massacre of over 170 people in the Indian metropolis of Mumbai.
New Delhi avers that the ten known Mumbai gunmen were Pakistani.
Washington and London say the ten were recruited and trained in
Pakistan, and then dispatched to India, by Lashkar-e Taiba, a banned
Pakistani group active mostly in Indian-occupied Kashmir. Lashkar-e
Taiba denies the charge. The Pakistani government says any evidence
shared with the US and Britain should be shared with Islamabad
as well, as part of a joint Pakistani-Indian probe into the killings.
Pakistan should act first, answers New Delhi. It believes an urban
guerrilla assault as polished as that in Mumbai could not have
happened without the input of Pakistani army officers and/or agents
of the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate (ISI), “rogue,”
“former” or otherwise.
To test Islamabad’s mettle -- and sever or expose any ISI “link”
to militancy -- India demands that all Lashkar bases in Pakistan
and Pakistani-occupied Kashmir be “dismantled.” It also calls for
action on ten outstanding cases where militants have allegedly
launched attacks upon India from Pakistani soil and the prosecution,
imprisonment or extradition of 40 Pakistanis and Indians wanted
by India for “terrorism.” Until at least some of these demands
are met, India is unlikely to share intelligence with Pakistan.
“How can you give evidence to those you think have attacked you?”
asks an Indian government official.
Pakistan has responded, in increments. It raided an alleged Lashkar
camp in Pakistani-held Kashmir on December 7 and banned Jamaat
ud-Dawa -- Lashkar’s supposed civilian arm -- after its designation
as a “terrorist organization” by the United Nations. India’s other
demands are impossible, says a Pakistani source. “We told the Americans
-- and through the Americans, India -- that we can prosecute Pakistanis
involved in Mumbai. But we cannot extradite Pakistani suspects
to India.”
Washington apparently agrees. It wants prosecution of Pakistanis
said to be connected to the Mumbai attacks, including Jamaat ud-Dawa
“emir” Hafiz Saeed, currently under house arrest in Lahore. But
Pakistani action to date has satisfied no one. In the December
7 raid, Pakistan supposedly picked up Zaki ur-Rahman Lakhvi and
Zarrar Shah, two Lashkar commanders who India says orchestrated
the mayhem in Mumbai. They have since vanished. And Saeed says
he will be freed once he appeals to a higher court. “It will rule
that Jamaat ud-Dawa is an Islamic charity unconnected to Lashkar-e
Taiba,” he says.
This is why India should share evidence with Pakistan, says President
Asif Zardari. Privately, he has told “allies” that he cannot move
against Lashkar or Jamaat ud-Dawa without the support of the army
and the increasingly nationalist opposition in Parliament. And
the Pakistani army (and even more the ISI) may be reluctant to
act against a group it has historically deemed an “asset” at the
diktat of a state it has historically defined as an “enemy.” Nor
will an Indian troop buildup on the border alter behavior in Pakistan.
It simply binds the military-militant nexus tighter.
The only way the army may give up its use of “non-state actors”
to pursue state policies is when it sees groups like Lashkar as
a greater threat to Pakistan’s security than India. And for that
to happen it is not only the army that must end a policy of dangerous
liaisons; India must as well.
Lashkar-e Taiba
Lashkar-e Taiba was founded in the late 1980s as the armed wing
of Markaz ud-Dawa wal-Irshad, the original name of Hafiz Saeed’s
Islamist organization. Soon after its founding, Lashkar was enlisted
to help fight Pakistan’s “plausibly deniable” proxy wars, first
in Afghanistan and then in Kashmir, the Himalayan territory claimed
by both Pakistan and India since partition and the cause of two
of their three wars. Over the last two decades, Lashkar has earned
notoriety as the most lethal group fighting in Kashmir, at one
time claiming 50,000 men under its command. In December 2001, New
Delhi blamed Lashkar for an attack on the Indian parliament, the
last time South Asia’s two nuclear-armed states came to the brink
of war. The attack -- and India’s charge -- compelled Pakistan
and the US to ban Lashkar. After a few months, Markaz ud-Dawa wal-Irshad
was reincarnated as Jamaat ud-Dawa, a social welfare organization
that Saeed insists has no ties to Lashkar.
Lashkar subscribes to the Ahl-e Hadith school, an austere strain
of South Asian Sunni Islam that, like Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia,
advocates a literal reading of Islamic texts. It assumed its modern
shape at the hands of ‘Abdallah ‘Azzam, co-founder of Markaz ud-Dawa
wal-Irshad, a mentor to Osama bin Laden and a man recognized as
one of the major theorists of militant Islam. In the crucible of
the Afghan war against Soviet occupation, ‘Azzam instilled in Saeed
and the other Lashkar founders a zeal for “the lost science and
art of jihad,” says Pakistani analyst Hassan Abbas. And Saeed applied
his zeal to South Asia, not only Muslim-majority Afghanistan, Pakistan
and Kashmir, but also those Muslim-minority areas of south-central
India that once fell under the writ of the Mughal empire. He told
a Lashkar rally in Lahore in 1999: “We will not rest until the
whole [of] India is dissolved into Pakistan.”
Saeed’s hostility to “Hindu” India is not only ideological. Born
into a conservative Muslim household, he lost 36 family members
in the communal slaughter that accompanied partition. “India has
shown us the path,” he once said. Such antagonism chimed with the
ISI’s regional policies. The spymasters, too, sought to “bleed
India by a thousand cuts,” a phrase attributed to the 1980s dictator
Zia ul Haq, if not to “dissolve India into Pakistan,” then to force
India to cede Kashmir to Pakistan.
There were other reasons why Lashkar-e Taiba became the preferred
ISI proxy. Unlike the Taliban -- for whom modernity is anathema
-- Lashkar believes that fulfillment of the duty of jihad comes
through advanced scientific knowledge as well as military prowess.
A visit to Muridke, Jamaat-ud-Dawa’s “educational complex” near
Lahore, shows the difference. There are classes of boys (and girls)
reciting the Qur’an. But there are also students working in physics,
chemistry and computer laboratories. These are not the poor who
flock to Taliban seminaries in return for bed, board and faith.
They are scions of Pakistan’s urban middle class -- the educated
elite.
In Muridke -- at least when foreign journalists visit -- references
to jihad are muted. Not so in Pakistan’s southern Punjab belt bordering
India, Lashkar’s historical stomping ground. There one can find
villages plastered with Jamaat ud-Dawa and Lashkar graffiti proclaiming
jihad to “free Kashmir.” At a funeral in Bahawalpur in the summer
of 2008, a Jamaat ud-Dawa preacher eulogized “60 martyrs” from
the district, mostly killed in Kashmir. Such proselytizing could
not happen without the authorities’ knowledge, but is it encouraged
or tolerated on the basis of Jamaat ud-Dawa’s erstwhile status
as a charity?
In the 1990s, it was encouraged. Lashkar had recruitment centers
in every city in Pakistan, overseen by the ISI. In 1999 Lashkar
guerillas fought alongside Pakistani soldiers on the Kargil heights
in Indian-held Kashmir, the last time the two armies tried to force
a resolution of the conflict. In the same year Saeed welcomed the
coup of Gen. Pervez Musharraf against the elected government of
Nawaz Sharif. Dictatorship is closer to the “pure Islamic state”
than the “corruption” spread by democracy, he said, according to
a Jamaat ud-Dawa source.
Relations cooled after the attack on the Indian parliament. Musharraf
banned several “jihadi” groups, Lashkar among them. Funds dried
up and 12,000 fighters were demobilized in Pakistani-controlled
Kashmir. Six divisions of the army (80,000 to 100,000 soldiers)
were moved from the eastern border with India to the western border
with Afghanistan, where Pakistan was battling an indigenous insurgency
led by the Pakistan Taliban. As Pakistani-Indian relations improved
from a state of near war to, in 2004, a peace process, what had
seemed to be a tactical feint by Pakistan started to look like
a shift in strategy. “Under Musharraf the army moved from a position
of hostility to India to one similar to the pro-peace policies
of the Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto governments,” said an Indian
official. “He helped create a Pakistani consensus.”
But war by proxy was not abandoned altogether, particularly for
“pro-Pakistan” groups like Lashkar-e Taiba. Its camps on the frontiers
were moved inland or camouflaged as Jamaat ud-Dawa “centers.” Its
cadre was also encouraged to diversify, becoming Jamaat ud-Dawa
“social workers” rather than Lashkar mujahideen.
This transformation was not simply a “front” for continued Lashkar
militancy, as it is often called. Jamaat ud-Dawa runs schools,
hospitals and ambulance services in 73 Pakistani cities. In 2007
it tended 6,000 patients, taught 35,000 students and administered
800,000 hepatitis vaccinations, says Saeed. “When it comes to social
welfare Jamaat ud-Dawa’s model is Hizballah and Hamas,” says Ayesha
Siddiqa, a Pakistani analyst.
Jamaat ud-Dawa’s most public endeavor occurred after the 2005
earthquake in Kashmir, when Lashkar fighters emerged from their
lairs in the mountains to serve the wounded. Musharraf praised
them as “exemplary humanitarian outfits,” in the words of Pakistani
analyst Ilyas Khan. So did US officials, who were impressed by
Jamaat ud-Dawa’s “state-of-the-art” field hospitals, until they
were informed that the facilities were run by a “terrorist front.”
Nudged by India on the alleged link to Lashkar, the US blacklisted
Jamaat ud-Dawa in 2006. When confronted with the fact the jihadis
had not been demobbed but rejobbed, a Pakistani general was unapologetic:
“We won’t disband them. If we did, Kashmir would go cold and India
will bury it forever.”
Kashmir has heated up since. Indian monitors say there have been
41 militant infractions across the Line of Control separating Pakistani-
from Indian-controlled Kashmir in 2008, an escalation they say
must have been directed by the ISI since it came between the close
of Musharraf’s military regime and the election of Pakistan’s civilian
government in February. Far from preventing the incursions, the
Pakistani army provided “covering fire” to the infiltrators, say
the Indians. The army denies this. It cites Indian figures showing
a 40 percent drop in violence in Indian-held Kashmir in 2008, and
the lowest total of incidents in 20 years.
Indian analysts also accept there was no Pakistani prompting
for the mass protests that rocked Indian-controlled Kashmir in
the summer. These demonstrations were caused by indigenous Muslim
alienation from Indian rule. Nor did they follow a Pakistani script:
The protesters demanded independence not only from New Delhi but
also from Islamabad, and, in contrast to Lashkar, which believes
that “military jihad” is the path to Kashmir’s reintegration with
Pakistan, they were non-violent, even though more than 50 of them
were shot dead by the Indian army.
If the ISI has loosened the lid on Lashkar-e Taiba, it is not
because of Kashmir. It is because of Afghanistan.
The Army’s Worries
Islamabad has been worried by India’s influence in Afghanistan
ever since the fall of the “pro-Pakistan” Taliban regime in 2001.
Pakistani officers point out the Afghan government’s fledgling
military is “disproportionately” staffed by officers from the “pro-India”
Northern Alliance, the erstwhile Afghan coalition that, with the
US, drove the Taliban from power. But worry has become paranoia.
In the last year, India has drawn closer to two states the Pakistani
army deems hostile to its interests in Afghanistan: Iran and the
US.
India denies any mischief. “Our main activity in Afghanistan
is building roads,” says an Indian official. That is so. Together
with Iran, India is currently laying a road network that, when
complete, will circumvent landlocked Afghanistan’s need to use
Pakistani ports on the Arabian Sea, outlets Islamabad deems vital
to its economic future.
New Delhi is also exerting influence on US policy in Afghanistan,
alleges the army. Two examples are cited. One is Washington’s endorsement
of India’s claim of ISI involvement in the bombing of its Kabul
embassy in July. The ISI pleaded not guilty. But since then the
CIA has all but refused to share intelligence with the Pakistani
agency, including for operations on the Pakistani-Afghan border.
“It fears we will pass any information to the Afghan Taliban,”
says a Pakistani officer. The other piece of evidence is President
George W. Bush’s decree in July that US Special Forces could enter
Pakistani territory in pursuit of al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives
without the approval of the Pakistani government. There have since
been 23 US aerial strikes and one ground assault, together killing
more than 100 people. The CIA says it is targeting bases whence
Taliban fighters are dispatched to Afghanistan and where al-Qaeda
is “plotting the next 9/11.” It also says it has a “tacit” agreement
about the strikes with Pakistan.
The Pakistani government denies this. The army says the strikes
are violations of Pakistani sovereignty and “completely counterproductive”
in view of its attempts to rally local tribes against the militants
on the Pakistani-Afghan border. And it sees India’s fingerprints
all over the US missiles.
To what end would India be meddling in Afghanistan? Two scenarios
are bruited by the army. The milder of the two is that India and
the Afghan government wish to create such ferment in the borderlands
that the CIA and NATO will invade them, wresting back Pashtun territories
long claimed by governments in Kabul (which have never recognized
the legitimacy of Pakistan’s western border). The worse scenario
is that the US and its regional allies actually aim to dismember
Pakistan as the world’s only Muslim nuclear state. “India thinks
a fragmented Pakistan would reduce the threat level,” says an officer.
“The more I talk to the establishment, the more I’m convinced fear
and hatred of India is growing,” says a Pakistani analyst. “And
now it’s India with America.”
A Regional Solution
Does all this mean that the ISI was behind what happened in Mumbai?
Although Indian security officials have claimed as much, the US
says there is no evidence to support the charge. Pakistani historian
and author Ahmed Rashid has charted the ISI’s liaisons with militant
groups in Afghanistan and Kashmir. But he, too, thinks official
Pakistani involvement is unlikely. Although many Lashkar cadres
accepted the army’s decision in 2004 to wind down the “Kashmiri
jihad,” he says, others did not. And these “youngest and most radicalized
members joined up with al-Qaeda and the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban
in Pakistan’s tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan. They
embraced the global jihad to fight US troops in Afghanistan and
Iraq, and later attacked the Pakistan government.” These are the
likeliest suspects in the Mumbai massacres, says Rashid. “In my
opinion, [the Mumbai operation was] an al-Qaeda-planned attack
using local surrogates to relieve pressure on them in the tribal
areas. What better way than to create a conflict between India
and Pakistan?”
Other Pakistani analysts agree. Lashkar is no longer just a Pakistani
outfit, they say. It has transnational reach, with cells in Indian-held
Kashmir, India and Bangladesh. It acts autonomously. And while
India has played up the Pakistani origins of the gunmen, it is
inconceivable that the Mumbai attacks could have transpired without
backup from indigenous forces, Islamist or criminal or both. The
devastation wrought in Mumbai is also beyond anything the ISI would
have planned or desired, says a Pakistani security analyst. “It
may be that Mumbai has a Pakistani militant connection. But it
is also quite clear most active militant groups are no longer under
the control of Pakistan’s security apparatus.”
What the Mumbai events do underscore is the recklessness of Pakistan’s
long-standing policy of permitting militant groups free rein. This
is why many Pakistanis hope there will be a serious move against
groups like Lashkar-e Taiba. But they also know that the army is
unlikely to give up the use of proxies unless what it defines as
Pakistan’s security concerns are addressed: In Afghanistan, addressing
Pakistani concerns means recognition by the Afghan government of
Pakistan’s western border, and acceptance by the US that all operations
within Pakistan are the right of the Pakistani army alone. With
India, it means serious negotiations to resolve the conflict over
Kashmir.
But there is little use in India appealing to Washington to practice
coercive diplomacy with Islamabad. In many ways, recent US policy
has aggravated the sores that linger in Indian-Pakistani relations.
It was the Bush administration’s nuclear agreement with India that
convinced the army that New Delhi was now the “strategic partner”
of the US in the region, with Islamabad merely a hired gun for
the fight with the Taliban and al-Qaeda. And if India is considering
“surgical” strikes inside Pakistan, it may be because it sees the
US doing the same with impunity. There could be no more fatal equation.
“India is not the United States,” says analyst and retired Gen.
Talat Masood simply. The Pakistani army would respond to any Indian
strike.
A better approach would be recognition that Afghanistan and Kashmir
are regional problems requiring regional solutions -- and that
there are no regional solutions without India, Pakistan and Iran.
“We must steer an independent policy toward Iran as a factor of
regional stability…. [And] India must eventually resume the arduous
search to make Pakistan a stakeholder in good neighborly relations.
The US factor complicates this search, which is best undertaken
bilaterally,” says M. K. Bhadrakumar, a former Indian ambassador
and Ministry of External Affairs insider.
There could be no better response to the terror in Mumbai than
a common front of India, Iran and Pakistan against those who would
fragment the region by religion or rule it by division.
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