UNSC report endorses Pakistan’s stance on TTP

Monitoring committee report says outlawed group ‘emboldened’ with return of Afghan Taliban


Kamran Yousaf July 28, 2023
Representational picture. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

print-news
ISLAMABAD:

 

The return of the Afghan Taliban to power has “emboldened” the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is seeking to re-establish control in the erstwhile Pakistani tribal areas, a report compiled by the UN Security Council monitoring committee revealed.

The committee, which submitted its report to the UN Security Council on July 25, sheds light on how the TTP is gaining momentum in Afghanistan since the Afghan Taliban took control in August 2021.

The report also highlights how other terrorist outfits are using the TTP cover to operate in the war-torn country.

In reality, the report has endorsed Pakistan’s stance that the TTP was operating out of Afghanistan. “Member states assess that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan is gaining momentum in its operations against Pakistan,” it says.

“Since the reunification with several splinter groups, the TTP has aspired to re-establish control of territory in Pakistan after being emboldened by the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan,” the report notes.

According to the UNSC report, the TTP was focused on high-value targets in border areas and soft targets in urban ones.

“The TTP’s capability is assessed as not matching its ambition, given that it does not control territory and lacks popular appeal in the tribal areas.”

The report, however, notes that in June, certain TTP elements were relocated away from the border area, as part of the Taliban’s efforts to reign in the group under pressure from the government of Pakistan.

“The member states are concerned that the TTP could become a regional threat if it continues to have a safe operating base in Afghanistan,” the report says.

Some member states registered concern that the TTP might provide an umbrella under which a range of foreign groups operate, or even coalesce, avoiding attempts of control by the Taliban.

One member state noted the possibility of al Qaeda in Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) and the TTP merging.

It assessed AQIS to be providing guidance to the TTP for conducting increased attacks within Pakistan.

It was also reported that ETIM (East Turkestan Islamic Movement) training camps in Kunar province were being used for the TTP fighters.

The report says that the situation in Afghanistan has become more complex, with member state concerns increasing about the ability of Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant-Khorasan to project a threat into the region, and further afield into Europe.

The member states reported that Afghanistan remained a place of global significance for terrorism, with approximately 20 terrorist groups operating in the country.

One member state assessed that the goal of those terrorist groups was to spread their respective influence across the regions and to build theocratic quasi-state entities.

The relationship between the Taliban and al Qaeda remains close and symbiotic.
For the most part, al Qaeda operates covertly in Afghanistan to help promote the narrative that the Taliban comply with agreements not to use Afghan soil for terrorist purposes.

Under the patronage of high-ranking officials of the de facto Taliban authorities, al Qaeda members infiltrate law enforcement agencies and public administration bodies, ensuring the security of al Qaeda cells dispersed throughout the country.
The capability of al Qaeda to conduct large-scale terror attacks remains reduced while its intent remains firm. The group uses Afghanistan as an ideological and logistical hub to mobilise and recruit new fighters, while covertly rebuilding its external operations capability.

The al Qaeda is in a reorganisation phase, establishing new training centres in Kunar and Nuristan provinces. The member states assessed that al Qaeda would likely remain dormant in the short-term while developing its operational capability and outreach.

The al Qaeda leaders seek to strengthen cooperation with regional terrorist groups of non-Afghan origin located in Afghanistan, including the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), ETIM/TIP and the Jamaat Ansarullah, intending to infiltrate and establish strongholds in countries in Central Asia.

One member state assessed that the mid- to long-term prospects of al Qaeda depended on the overall situation in Afghanistan. Should Afghanistan descend into chaos and insecurity, the base for al Qaeda would likely strengthen. Should the country achieve stability, al Qaeda would likely seek to shift.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ