Pakistan’s airstrikes in Afghanistan — the aftermath

Urgency and seriousness of the matter demands situational appreciation, policy formulation and implementation


Inam Ul Haque March 21, 2024
The writer is a retired major general and has an interest in International Relations and Political Sociology. He can be reached at tayyarinam@hotmail.com and tweets @20_Inam

print-news

On 16 March 2024, a multiple suicide truck bomb and gun attack carried out by militants linked with TTP’s Hafiz Gul Bahadur Group, in the Khaddi Market area at a Frontier Corps (FC) base in North Waziristan border district (NWD), was the latest in a string of TTP-IEA linked and inspired attacks in Pakistan. This attack resulted in the death of troops including two officers and partial demolition of the post. Civil, military leaders during the funeral of the martyred officers on Sunday resolved to retaliate, and Pakistan’s response was imminent.

Last year, more than 650 attacks were launched by TTP and its affiliates across Pakistan, causing over 1,000 deaths, mostly of security personnel. Over 93 per cent of these attacks occurred in KP and Balochistan, substantiating cross-border support to these armed groups, who use Afghan soil as safe-haven, and are patronised from within certain…not ‘all’ elements of the IEA. Pakistan has consistently shared relevant intelligence with IEA, which is unable or unwilling or both, to restrict the use of Afghan soil against brotherly Muslim Pakistan and restrain TTP militants into a life of quietude in the Afghan countryside. This leaves limited options with Pakistan that has stood with Afghans through thick and thin. Pakistan must protect its citizenry and strategic interests.

So, on 18 March, in intelligence-based anti-terrorist operations in NWD, one of the masterminds, Sehra aka Janan, involved in the FC attack, was killed besides other terrorists. And in the wee hours, Pakistan launched airstrikes in Paktika and Khowst provinces of Afghanistan, targeting TTP. Unlike the past air operations inside Afghanistan, especially in April 2022, Pakistan officially acknowledged striking Afghan border havens.

The Afghan analyst network is in overdrive to paint the situation into an essentially anti-Pakistan light, with some within Pakistan in cahoots. However, the urgency and seriousness of the matter demands clear-eyed and clear-headed situational appreciation, and policy formulation and implementation.

Firstly, the fact that anti-Pakistan TTP groups, most notably the Hafiz Gul Bahadur Group, are comfortably lodged on the Afghanistan side of NWD and South Waziristan, is no secret. And these groups enjoy IEA’s hospitality and its moral, political, military and logistic support. If not the entire IEA, at least an influential portion of it, under the patronage of the Qandahari puritans. And they have access to sophisticated weaponry, left by the retreating Coalition Forces in 2021, and now under control of IEA Forces.

Secondly, because of the potential split that TTP causes within the IEA, Afghan Interim Government cannot and will not take any ‘potent’ action against these terrorists. IEA will continue to support negotiations as a terminal strategy. And for Pakistan, such a route is ridden with risks as seen after the collapse of the botched negotiations in 2022 in Kabul under the good offices of Haqqanis.

Thirdly, a policy of firm-handling, under synergy of leverages (plentiful); humanitarian restraint, and de-escalation has worked well vis-à-vis Afghanistan in the past, when Pakistan bombed Afghan territory in September 1961 during the Bajaur Campaign. Then…hostilities broke out, when Afghan Prime Minister Daoud Khan, a vocal supporter of Pashtunistan and opponent of the Durand Line, sent Royal Afghan Army backed up with Afghan lashkars in 1960-61 to occupy strategic regions in Bajaur Agency. The PAF’s F-86 Sabre jets targeted Afghan Army positions in Kunar province inside Afghanistan, forcing a retreat. Afghanistan had then deployed tanks and artillery along our Western border.

Fourthly, militarily IEA is faced with operational vulnerabilities. A resurgent IS-K; TTP a force-in-being, able and willing to interfere and influence Afghanistan’s domestic politics (due to its wartime camaraderie with Afghan forces, its combat potential, its recruitment, and the fear of it joining the IS-K); a latent insurgency in the northern Afghanistan; lack of IEA’s alliances and support due to non-recognition; and Afghanistan’s not so robust economy. Afghanistan like in the past will not pursue open and sustained hostilities with Pakistan, except border shelling (as continues), and the use of TTP proxies inside Pakistan.

Following on from the above essential background, the suggested contours of entailing policy should be as follows.

One, staying the course. Pakistan should continue to demonstrate its resolve militarily through IBOs and strikes, as possible and necessary...without making noise and under any ‘possible’ tacit arrangements with elements within the Emirate. The IEA is not a monolith and there are sympathetic voices within the interim Afghan political dispensation…who a) understand Pakistan’s predicament, b) do not agree with the puritan Qandahar, c) realise the negative potential of TTP (its ability to obviate IEA control over the entire Afghan territory and the potential split with Pakistan…IEA’s only ‘indispensable’ interlocutor), and d) want to get rid of TTP, a legacy issue to focus on governance, economy and IS-K. It is instructive to realise that Pakistan’s sustained pressure divides IEA, to Pakistan’s advantage.

Two, continue with ‘religious diplomacy’. Using the good offices of JUI — all factions — especially the Darul Uloom Haqqania in Akora Khattak, KP and other seminaries all over Pakistan, in order to plead Pakistan’s case in a sustained manner with the Amir-ul-Momineen, the venerable Moulvi Haibatullah Akhundzada, and his inner circle.

Three, diplomatically, avoid statements and briefs. Sometimes keeping quiet and pursuing a course of action quietly helps yield results.

Four, sociologically and in the media, pursue a narrative that builds on Pakistan’s goodwill towards Afghans and Afghanistan historically, with “Islamabad always offering humanitarian aid and other possible help; whereas ‘certain Afghans’ continue to demonstrate recalcitrance and inability or unwillingness to return Pakistan’s favour, violating Pashtunwali’s bedrock tenet shegara (favour), and other Islamic fraternal obligations.” Continue to remind the Afghan brethren the folly and short-sightedness of following an anti-Pakistan policy, focusing on TTP, as a single-point agenda.

Five, hold the nerve. Afghanistan is not Iran, and Pakistan is not the infidel foreign occupation force, with lackluster interest in the region. Pakistan above all has a ‘just cause’ like IEA did while fighting the foreign forces. There is no reason to go for appeasement, quick de-escalation, and other ill-thought measures under the influence of this or that lobby. Pakistan’s strategic dividend, temporarily suspended, will be restored.

We must have the belief that just like Afghans prevailed in their decades-long struggle against the occupation forces with the help of Pakistan and their just cause, so would Pakistan against the proponents of hostility in Pak-Afghan bilateralism. This essentially is transient tarboorwali — the cousin rivalry!

Published in The Express Tribune, March 21st, 2024.

Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.

COMMENTS (3)

Saleem Akhtar Malik | 7 months ago | Reply In his opinion piece dated 21 March 2024 Major General Inam Ul Haque writes about PAF s retaliatory airstrikes in Afghanistan in the aftermath of TTP s recent suicide bombing and fire raid against an FC base in North Waziristan. TTP a Taliban-influenced group that sprouted in Pakistan after the infamous Lal Masjid Siege is also known as the Pakistani Taliban. Lal Masjid was the first mosque constructed in Islamabad. It was inaugurated in 1966 by President Ayub Khan. The siege of Lal Masjid was an armed confrontation in July 2007 between the Islamabad police and an ultra-fundamentalist group led by Abdul Rashid and his brother Abdul Aziz. The two clerics were the sons of one Muhammad Abdullah. President Zia donated the mosque - a state property - to Abdullah in 1977. Abdullah for some obscure reason renamed it Lal Masjid. Over time the mosque was converted into a hotbed of militant Islam. Abdul Rashid was killed in the Lal Masjid siege and his brother was arrested by the security forces when clad in a burqa he tried to flee the mosque that had been a battleground between the clerics diehards and the security forces for more than two weeks. Soon after that a hitherto anonymous militant group claiming itself as the Tehrik Taliban Pakistan TTP surfaced in the tribal areas and vowed to avenge the death of Abdul Rashid. TTP as it stands today is an umbrella organization of various Islamist militant groups operating along the Afghan Pakistani border. It gained notoriety when on 16 December 2014 six gunmen affiliated with the TTP conducted a terrorist attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar. The terrorists entered the school and opened fire on school staff and children killing 149 people including 132 schoolchildren ranging between eight and eighteen years of age making it the world s fifth deadliest school massacre. TTP terrorist operations in Pakistan continue. General Inam writes that last year alone more than 650 attacks were launched by TTP and its affiliates across Pakistan mostly in KP and Balochistan causing over 1 000 deaths. Security forces suffered maximum casualties in these attacks. On their part maintaining a poker face the Afghan Taliban deny any complicity with TTP. The Afghan Taliban seized power after a panicky US withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021. The disengagement between the US and the Afghan Taliban that followed the US withdrawal was brokered by Pakistan. Two things happened after the US withdrawal Taliban rejected the Durand Line as the international border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Created ambiguity about their relationship with the TTP. Contrary to Pakistan s expectations the Afghan Taliban have given a strong impression that they are no different from their predecessors who had ruled Afghanistan since 1947. After the US withdrawal the Taliban have been consistently appealing for recognition of their government. The US had frozen approximately USD 9 billion in Afghan government assets held in the US banks threatening almost a near-total meltdown of the Afghan economy. However the IEA has managed to survive the freezing of Afghan assets. They are working with China to open an alternate route to the Indian Ocean through Turkmenistan and Iran s Chah Bahar port bypassing the CPEC. Recently they have started negotiating with India to checkmate Pakistan. And they thrive to the hilt through smuggling across the Durand Line. The IEA and TTP logistics line as mentioned earlier extends up to Karachi and thence onward to the Gulf. This is roughly the extent of the Afghan Reach In the meanwhile the Afghan Taliban have used Pakistan as a conduit for getting the much-needed recognition from the world. A pragmatic and sane lobby in the US represented by the late National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger labeled the past Afghan rulers and their Indian mentors as a Cartel of Thugs . The Afghan Taliban are no exception. What is the way forward for Pakistan Pakistan s policy regarding Afghanistan keeps changing. The world alleges that Pakistan created both the Taliban and the TTP. The allegation gets credence because TTP after having been chased out into Afghanistan a few years ago was allowed to return and re-establish its hide-outs in KP. Our internal instability is another factor that allows the Afghans to keep Pakistan on tenterhooks. Though PAF s recent airstrikes give a strong message to Afghanistan this cannot be the new normal. Israel to keep its neighborhood peaceful and deter the terrorist outfits that popped up soon after the creation of the Jewish state had been ruthlessly beating the living daylights out of Egypt Syria Jordan and Lebanon. It even bombed the PLA refugee camps as far away as Tunis approximately 3500 km away from Israel. Gradually the Arab armies except the militant organizations of Hezbollah and Hamas realized that their terrorist activities resulted in Israel exacting a disproportionate revenge - more than a tooth for a tooth Israel is presently playing hell with the Palestinians in Gaza while the world watches with impotent silence. However Israel has so far failed to defeat Hamas. Pakistan will also not be able to defeat TTP even as Israel has failed to subdue Hamas and Hezbollah. It is because the art of warfare has shifted the battlefield prowess towards small militant outfits against which regular armies cannot do much. PAF strikes against targets in Afghanistan look impressive for the time being but the Law of Diminishing Returns will prevail in the long run. The creation of a vested interest for the Afghans of all denominations is a viable solution. It requires dedicated efforts to promote Pak-Afghan trade by establishing industrial zones on both sides of the Durand line streamlining trade relations and channeling the terrorist energy into creative efforts. We should remember that terrorist organizations have flourished mainly in deprived and poor societies. Affluent societies like the Gulf states are almost free from this scourge. So create better opportunities for the terrorist to feed himself and his family and he will turn his back on terrorism as a means of livelihood. Saleem Akhtar Malik 23 March 2024
Viqar Siddiqui | 8 months ago | Reply 100 Agree. We should respond with our full might not should threaten the Afghan Government that if they are unable to control restrain TTP and its various factions we reserve the right to retaliate. A bomb or two on Afghan Cities should be used as a dire warning to these ungrateful brethren to put the fear of God. They will only understand this Language. Block the Afghan Transit for a week as a deterrent too
VIEW MORE 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