Another double take was in order when he claimed that the Pakistan-Afghanistan border had remained open all these years because our Pashtuns had wanted it to remain so. Though himself a Pashtun, he said he disagreed with this position of his ethnic brethren, as according to him, the large unmanned portions of the border only facilitated criminals and anti-Pakistan elements. General (retd) Ehsanul Haq, who was speaking at a SAFMA seminar last week on how the Isaf withdrawal from Afghanistan would affect Pakistan, said he had held the same opinion even when he was in service. That his opinion did not prevail over that of the institution does not prove anything, one way or the other. The subject requires a deeper analysis, anyway. But let us see what the Amnesty International report on drones says about those who mount jihad against US troops stationed in a foreign country and also attack our own troops and innocent Pakistanis from sanctuaries located on this side of the Durand Line:
“Three main armed group networks operate in North Waziristan, although there is significant overlap in their membership and they are known to cooperate with each other: the Afghan Taliban, which carries out military operations against US, Afghan and allied forces in Afghanistan and occasionally against Pakistani forces; the Pakistani Taliban, which seeks to overthrow the Pakistani state and is responsible for attacks on state forces in North Waziristan and others across Pakistan; and al Qaeda-linked groups, consisting of local and foreign fighters, which plan and promote attacks globally. All three of these groups have been targeted by US drone strikes.
“Armed groups based in North Waziristan are responsible for indiscriminate attacks and direct attacks on military forces and the general public that have killed and maimed thousands of people in Pakistan and Afghanistan over the last decade, some of which constitute war crimes. They have regularly carried out suicide and IED (improvised explosive device) bombings, targeting marketplaces, mosques, schools and other populated places that either indiscriminately or deliberately caused scores of civilian deaths. The Pakistani Taliban and al Qaeda-linked groups also abduct and kill individuals accused of spying on behalf of the USA and Pakistan, often employing quasi-judicial proceedings that are arbitrary and lack even the most elementary components of a fair trial. Seeking to maintain and expand their control of the region, these groups have also killed hundreds of ordinary residents in North Waziristan, including tribal elders who are the key link between the Pakistani state and local communities … There is no doubt, however, that armed groups are able to perpetrate abuses with impunity and significant portions of North Waziristan are under their effective control.”
Answering a question, during the Q&A session, the former general implied that the army has realised the danger posed by these non-state actors to our sovereignty, but getting rid of these organisations, he believed, required a gradual approach rather than a quick uprooting as, according to him, that would cause these groups to splinter into numerous factions posing an even more serious challenge to our integrity. But then, the gradual approach seems to have failed to yield the desired results. In fact today, we have many more non-state actors, killing and maiming Pakistanis in the name of Islam than there were about 10 years ago.
Tailpiece: PTI detractors should stop accusing it of being a Taliban sympathiser simply because it is accusing the US of droning our sovereignty, and by the same token, the PTI should stop accusing those who accuse the Taliban of challenging our statehood, of being US boot-lickers. No one in this country likes what the drones and the Taliban are doing to our sovereignty.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 4th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (15)
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Mr. Ziauddin has quoted a report of Amnesty International stating that "Armed groups based in North Waziristan are responsible for indiscriminate attacks and direct attacks on military forces and the general public that have killed and maimed thousands of people in Pakistan and Afghanistan over the last decade, some of which constitute war crimes." All this is common knowledge and there is nothing new in this for general public, Army or the Government. As a humble Pakistani, my simple question is: What is the duty of Army in a situation like this? Is the Army supposed to counter the direct attack on its forces or it must wait for a political decision?
Generals are mostly right when they are retired, I guess this uniform turn off something somewhere.
What is the difference between a state actor and a non state actor.Both seem to be playing the same drama and the choice of words seems to be a matter of convenience.
I thought ehsan ul haq was right on each and every count,
General is right. Closing the Afghan border would make the problem more manageable.
Hard or Soft - A State is still a State.
What Pakistan has is the writ of a slew of Stateless Actors right across Pakistan. Yes, not only NWA, and FATA but also Punjab and Sindh, specially Karachi, and Baloachistan and GB.
And all of them claim the right to 'Violence', which should rightly be the sole preserve of the state.
3) Monitor closely all aliens who enter Pakistan until they leave
I think this applies to OBL to a T.He was being 'Monitored' as closely to the bosom as is / was possible.
"Pakistan — a soft state?" +++++++++++++++++ Soft in the head.
@Zayyad: Guilty conscience. Same with bureaucrats in India. They are reserving their place in heaven.
Either general is lying or he is too naive- both cases he is not fit for the job..Thanks that he is gone.
Why is it that every General after retiring starts trying to say the opposite of what was being done while they were in the Army.
So,your so called soft state is sending terrorist through out the world with likes of afiya siddiqui and faisal shahzad...which according to u came into existence due to kashmir tragedy........please stop the melodrama...world knows that u are soft towards terrorist be it taliban or from xinxiang....your people are fighting wars in somalia,syria,yemen and most of the roots can be traced in training camp of pakisan occupied kashmir..ET ...do publish...I am stating facts...as I am not a strategic analyst like we have so many in pakistan...we Indians prefer to be a financial analyst,IT analyst,business analyst etc......
Sovereignty? What is that? When a nation fails to act in a responsible manner and has been training and dispatching jihadis across the border right since its birth, what is this talk about sovereignty now?
Closing the border and kicking out the Afghan's still leaves roughly half of Pakistan under the control of militants who want to overthrow Pakistan govt and/or Afghan govt. Closing the border and kicking out the Afghan refugees doesn't resolve that "elephant in the room". . Are you soft? Probably depends on what your talking about. You make little effort to defend the rights of minorities - that's "soft" depending on whether your a minority or not. You go through the motions on your "war on terror" but your military tends to avoid confrontation and seems comfortable to cede control of half of Pakistan to the militants. Is that soft? You bet.