PAKISTAN IS NOT NEGOTIABLE and anyone who contemplates doing so is a TRAITOR. PTT leader has no mandate to hand over any part of Pakistan to Taliban and accepting TTP demands as precondition for talks tantamount to leaving FATA for Taliban to rule. Does Naya Pakistan mean a truncated Pakistan?
TTP did not ask for an office and ANP leader is correct in stressing that TTP don’t need an office; Imran Khan is a spokesman for TTP.
I quote a good analysis of the situation.
Ground realities
Aasim Zafar Khan
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Negotiations start from the impossible to attain positions on both sides. And slowly, if the intent is true, both parties give way, to eventually reach a mutually acceptable position.
To summarise, the militants want ‘their interpretation of the Shariah’ enforced in the country, a complete redrafting of Pakistan’s foreign policy, moving away from the partnership with the United States, and a complete cessation of military operations against them. The state doesn’t want anything at all in return. A ceasefire, laying down of arms, and respecting the constitution of the land would be par for the course, but even that’s not on the table. Still, let’s assume that these are the state’s demands.
Let’s also assume that both sides agree to the other’s demands. What happens then? What is the logical end of the negotiating process?
Does the state agree to hand over a portion of Fata/KP to the militants, to rule as they please? What about the will of the people? Does that even matter in such a situation? Are they up for public floggings, executions and burkas? Are they okay, with not having their daughters get an education? Does every male want to carry a beard, and wear shalwar kameez suits two sizes too short?
Okay, so let’s say this isn’t a logical end. What other options do we have? Do we invite the terrorists into the political process, encourage them to open offices, hold rallies, and run for office? Imran Khan’s said the same, but then again, he’s also voiced most of the Taliban’s rhetoric anyway. Second, to bring the militants into the political process, amendments will need to be made to our constitution: as things stand, the law doesn’t allow murderers and butchers to hold public offices. And besides, we already have one political party with blood on its hands, and some good it’s done us.
The truth is that there is no logical middle ground for negotiations. Both parties are coming to it, with selfish reasons, and with absolutely no plans on being true. The militants are buoyed by what their Afghan brethren have managed to do across the border and see themselves as future stakeholders in the country. However, there are stark differences between what the Afghan Taliban have been doing in their neck of the woods (and the reasons behind it), and what the TTP thinks it can achieve here.
The state, on the other hand, in the absence of courage, is safeguarding itself in consensus. It is banking on the militants’ history of breaking all peace agreements with the state or one of its institutions. The PML-N has no real option but to take the fight to the militants. To safeguard itself from public backlash when the inevitable military operation happens, it has wrapped itself in the political consensus garb. What the PML-N must understand is that there is never full consensus amongst the people about war/military operations. There will always be people against such actions. And thay are the ones who don’t matter.
On the sideline lies the National Counter-Terrorism and Extremism Policy (NCTEP) 2013. Through August it was the talk of the town; we were moments away from what was the need of the hour. But, as is often the case in Pakistan, the moment never arrived. While this policy is inevitable sooner or later, there remains a major fault line in Pakistan’s position on terrorism, visible in both the NCTEP and the government’s current stance of negotiations: who exactly is the enemy? Or, to put it differently, which of the terrorists aren’t enemies?
In Pakistan’s definition, a terrorist is someone who is operating against the state. This definition effectively excludes groups such as the Haqqani network, Al-Qaeda and the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), who do not directly attack targets within Pakistan. However, the decentralised nature of terrorism is such that groups such as the ones mentioned above, while not directly attacking the state, are involved in aiding and abetting others who are.
As long as this support system exists, terrorism cannot be effectively combated, because anti-state terrorists will be able to retreat into areas controlled by these pro-Pakistan groups, regroup, and resume attacks. Regardless of whether the way forward is a military operation or negotiations, these non-Pakistan attacking groups must be engaged along the lines of: for status quo to be maintained, any and all support to anti-Pakistan groups must end immediately.
The status quo bit must seem like a bitter pill to swallow. But that’s how it is. Expecting the state to do an about turn on groups it has nurtured and used for strategic gains for decades is unrealistic. There are certain ground realities one must accept with regard to terrorism in Pakistan. A) As long as terrorists are compartmentalised in accordance with what they do, and what they don’t do, terrorism cannot be defeated. B) Accepting the first point, the best solution in the current situation, is terror management.
The fallout of these two ground realities is that one cannot rule out the emergence of ‘splinter cells’ from pro-Pakistan groups, unhappy with the state’s pressure on what’s allowed and what isn’t. Sounds like a lose-lose situation, doesn’t it. It’s more like choosing a lesser, perhaps necessary, evil over another. There is an outside chance, if Pakistan were to explore this path, to effectively cripple anti state terrorist groups and maintain regional influence.
Is having such regional influence a good idea? One cannot say yay or nay, since nearly every country in the world is up to some tricks of its own, the only problem is, theirs don’t get found out.
The writer is a media consultant and trainer.
He tweets @
aasimzkhan
Email: aasimzk@**********
Ground realities - Aasim Zafar Khan