The report concludes that Pakistan lacks adequate resources to combat terror funding and money laundering, and thus calls into question the national capacity to fulfill at least one of the 20 points that make up the National Action Plan. This lack of capacity has to be aggregated with the flaccid political will to confront the funding of terrorist groups, or to crack down on groups that are banned. Putting institutional and political deficits together it is clear that Pakistan does considerably less than it needs to do in this vital area of operation. Groups thus resourced in Pakistan often have international aspects and operations, and in the light of a report such as this it is unsurprising that other nations look somewhat askance when we claim to be winning the war against terrorism.
This is the kind of smoking gun that gets pointed to when the ‘must do more’ mantra gets a recitation. As has been observed you cannot keep snakes at the bottom of the garden and only expect them to bite the neighbours. The report is clear — Pakistan is ‘high risk’ when it comes to terror financing and money laundering. It ought to form the basis for a national strategy to cure a national affliction.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 25th, 2017.
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