‘ISKP will have to pay ultimate price’, US warns terror group

To those who wish America harm, we will hunt you down, says President Biden


APP September 01, 2021
PHOTO: APP/FILE

ISLAMABAD:

Graphic images in the aftermath of the horrific blast at Kabul airport shook the world as families mourned the deaths of 170 people, including 13 US servicemen, prompting US President Joe Biden to warn the terrorist group of Islamic State-Khorasan Province (ISIS-K) that it will have to "pay the ultimate price".

“To ISIS-K we are not done with you yet,” Biden said in his address to the Americans, a day after his country pulled out the last of its troops from the war-ravaged country, bringing to an end its 20-year long war.

“To those who wish America harm, we will hunt you down and you will pay the ultimate price,” he said in a stern warning to the ISIS-K, which has emerged as a major threat to regional peace.

The Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), despite its small numbers, has proved lethal and took credit for several major terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Read: Millions of Indians will turn up at Delhi airport if US offers to settle them in America: Taliban

According to data collected by Islamabad Policy Research Institute – IPRI, 515 people were killed, while 893 were injured in eight attacks by the ISKP in Pakistan. While in 22 attacks 912 people were killed in Afghanistan and 1,597 injured from 2016 to 2021.

India invested heavily in Afghanistan in the reconstruction and rehabilitation programmes and pumped in up to $3 billion in the war-torn country.

Under the cover of construction and related activity, it carried out its clandestine activities through its intelligence network to establish its deep foothold, a senior security official said.

With heavy funding from India, youth from Kerala were recruited and trained and tasked to target Pakistan, Afghanistan, US forces, the West and of course their arch enemy – the Taliban. This network comprised ISIS elements controlled by Indian RAW officers as manifested in the Doval strategy to hurt Pakistan’s internal economic stability. Ajit Doval’s open admission to this effect is on record where he pointed out the “vulnerabilities” of Pakistan.

The Indian stated policy against Pakistan becomes all the more clear if seen in the light of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s speech in Bangladesh where he confessed that the Indian establishment had created the Mukti Bahini in East Bengal to dismember Pakistan. To this date, the dirty game continues as New Delhi remains active in exploiting sub-nationalists in Balochistan and Sindh.

Read more: Taliban call for peaceful solution of Panjshir standoff

The Indian intelligence developed close contacts with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and used it to mount attacks on important military installations in the country besides targeting civilians. The close collaboration came courtesy of senior operatives of the Afghan intelligence – NDS.

The sudden emergence of the Taliban and the routing of the Afghan defence forces came as a severe shock for India as its long, expensive effort to foment unrest, create chaos and unleash a wave of terror in Pakistan crumbled.

Contrary to the mantra of an Incredible India and the soft image projected through Bollywood movies, the real India has been acting as a peace spoiler in the region especially Afghanistan, and when seen in the light of shocking revelations of how India influenced the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) against Pakistan and its subversive activities against the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

The UN 12th report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team concerning ISIS, Al-Qaida and associated individuals and entities focuses on Al Qaida Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) operating from Nimruz, Helmand and Kandahar provinces of Afghanistan.

Read Afghan women forced from banking jobs as Taliban take control

“One member state reported that the ISIL Indian affiliate (Hind Wilayah), which was announced on May 10, 2019, has between 180 and 200 members, the report stated. United Nations counterterrorism officials pointed that ISIS-K carried out 77 attacks in Afghanistan in the first four months of this year.

The report also mentioned the presence of “significant numbers of ISIL operatives in Kerala and Karnataka states.” In May last year, the Islamic State (also known as ISIS, ISIL or Da'ish) terror group claimed to have established a new “province” in India.

In issue number 246 of Al Naba, a weekly magazine of the Islamic State – ISIS, or Daesh, the front page was dedicated to the attackers of the August 2020 Jalalabad terror strike in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province, a known stronghold of ISIS-K. According to reports, the attack was conducted by more than 25 ISIS-K terrorists, which included three Indians and four Tajiks.

One of the three Indians, who allegedly took part in the attack, was reportedly a trained doctor, Ijaz Kallukettiya Purayil. According to the Indian National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Purayil was part of a 22-member contingent of men and women from the southern Indian state of Kerala that left the state’s Kasargod district to join the ISIS in Afghanistan.

Since 2016, reports have been emerging regularly about many members of this module dying in Afghanistan, including some in the American "Mother Of All Bombs" (MOAB) strike in the country’s Nangarhar province in April 2017.

In February 2020, a pro-ISIS online propaganda publication, Sawt-al-Hind (Voice of Hind) was launched by an online entity called Al-Qitaal Media Centre. The launch coincided with communal riots that were taking place in parts of the capital New Delhi at the time, with the cover also featuring images of the same.

Many pro-ISIS-related cases of radicalisation have come from the southern state of Kerala which has historic ties with the Gulf and has over 2 million of its citizens working in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, and other neighbouring states.

Issue Number 7 of August 2020 of Sawt-al-Hind had an interesting construct of ISIS’ vision of being a “global entity” while also maintaining a strong regional outreach.

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