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India is fabricating Islamic State threat to stamp out Kashmiri activism

manlion

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The 'War on Terror' narrative is the gift that keeps on giving to illiberal, anti-democratic, and authoritarian regimes the world over.

A narrative that allows invaders, occupiers, and dictators to freely use the label terrorist as a pejorative term, one that conflates anti-colonial resistance movements, liberation struggles and civil rights groups with "radical Islamic terrorism," which, by default, brands every bearded Muslim holding a banner, stone, or gun a "terrorist", no matter whether their cause is legal, moral, or just.
For more than three decades, Israel has successfully conned the world into believing it is waging a fight against "Islamic terrorism," and not the liberation aspirations of a people it illegally occupies and represses.

This lesson in propaganda was previously demonstrated by China, which has falsely claimed it is fighting "radical Islamists" in East Turkistan - a territory China has occupied since 1989 - when, in fact, it's suppressing the liberation aspirations of 12 million Uighur.

Myanmar has also used the cloak of "Islamic terrorism" to fig leaf its genocide of 1.3 million Rohingya.

Then there is Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian dictator, who cynically and sinisterly took the "war on terror" narrative one step further. First, Assad tried to con the international community, particularly the United States, into believing his regime was fighting a terrorist led-revolt.

But when that ruse failed, he released thousands of Islamic extremists from his prisons, many of whom had battled US troops in Iraq, and staged false-flag attacks on Syrian government buildings "to foster the impression that al-Qaeda had an armed presence in Syria long before it did," observed Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Roy Gutman.

It appears India is now catching on to this duplicitous game of smoke and mirrors, but in occupied Kashmir. During protests in Srinagar, undercover Indian security forces not only embedded and disguised themselves as Kashmiri protesters, but also planted Islamic State (IS) flags among them, as reported by multiple eyewitness accounts on social media and Kashmir Monitor, one of the valley's leading English newspapers.


While India has long held up "terrorism" as a fig leaf to deflect international condemnation of its verifiable track record of human rights atrocities in the occupied territory - a reality acknowledged in a recent UN human rights investigation - it appears this is a new effort by India to conflate Kashmiri independence movements with the most nefarious of all Islamic extremist groups - IS.

"For India, to dissuade international pressure, it's common to link Kashmir's movement for self-determination to that of terrorism," Muhammad Faysal, a Kashmiri born journalist told me. "It becomes easier to raise a bogeyman, like IS, to distract from human rights abuse."

When I asked Sabena Siddiqi, a Pakistan based journalist and geopolitical analyst, what she made of what appears to be a strategy to hype up a non-existent IS threat in Kashmir, she told me, "It seems like a deliberate attempt to turn a legitimate UN recognised-freedom movement into a terrorist activity. The Indian Army might be doing it to paint Kashmiri freedom fighters as IS terrorists, so the movement can be crushed militarily."

Certainly both Siddiqi and Faysal's analysis hit the mark, but there's another likely, and even more compelling motive: A brazen attempt by the Modi government in New Delhi to reaffirm its alignment with the Trump administration in Washington DC.

"The anti-IS effort is one of Trump's key foreign policy priorities, and the Trump administration will presumably be more willing to engage with other countries who have similarly made countering IS a priority," observes Natalie Tecimer, a research associate with the US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

In other words, by feigning or hyping up an IS threat in Kashmir, India can both give cover to its brutal and repressive occupation management strategies, while also eliciting increased military aid and cooperation from the world's most sole superpower.

"But as India has not been involved in the fight against IS on a global scale, there have been few opportunities for US-India joint counter-IS operations," notes Tecimer.

Making what appears to be a coordinated effort to paint Kashmiri Muslims as sympathetic to IS a laughable claim, is the fact that even Indian government officials, including the Indian State Police Chief have flatly denied that IS exists in Kashmir; asserting the group has no "substantial" presence in the region, while Munir Khan, Inspector General of Police, Kashmir, says investigations into the group's presence have found "nothing concrete."

"For IS, Kashmir is somewhat fertile ground, owing to a long standing conflict, but the political awareness and years of political mobilisation means that such extremist organisations cannot gain heavy ground," Faysal told me.

India knows groups such as IS are irreconcilable with grassroots liberation struggles of the kind we see in Kashmir, the same way Israel knows this about the aspirations of Palestinians; the same way China knows this about Uighur Muslims; the same way Myanmar's military knows this about the Rohingya.

But none of this has stopped these states trying to conflate the desire for freedom from tyranny, with 'radical Islam', because the 'War on Terror' has been the gift that keeps on giving to illiberal, anti-democratic and authoritarian regimes.

https://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/c...ng-threat-of-is-to-suppress-kashmiri-activism
 
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What is this crap called?
 
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indeen . they are desperately trying to label all the population of Kashmir as terrorist .
 
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Could Islamic State make inroads in Kashmir?

Warning signs

Despite the fact that IS insignia has regularly appeared in protest rallies and the funerals of insurgents across Kashmir, the director general of the local police force, Sheesh Paul Vaid recently declared that the group's imprints in Kashmir were non-existent. The Indian Home Ministry seconded Vaid's statement.

According to Micheal Kugelman, Senior Associate for South Asia at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson Center, IS flags and other insignia in Kashmir are a highly superficial indicator of the group's popularity.

"Kashmir does not provide a conducive environment for IS to advance," he said.

"You don't have a deeply sectarian climate or a critical mass of hardened Islamists keen to take their fight across the globe," he added.

Secessionist leaders in Indian-controlled Kashmir maintain that jihadist groups like IS have no role to play in what they see as an essentially indigenous struggle against India's military presence.

Some experts maintain however that IS' experience in Pakistan and Afghanistan, via its parent organization al-Qaeda, remains helpful for the group to test the already troubled waters in Kashmir.

Joshua Landis, Director of the Center of Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, believes that this operational experience in the region along with the rapid rise of anti-Muslim sentiment across India provides ideal conditions for the group to thrive.

Although, in a 2016 interview (pdf) with IS's propaganda magazine Dabiq, Hafiz Saeed Khan, the head of the group's Khurasan branch, altogether steered clear of India and focused more on what he called Pakistan's betrayal of the Kashmiri insurgent movement.

When asked about the Afghanistan-based wing's capabilities on expanding into Indian-controlled Kashmir to "fight the cow-worshipping Hindus", Khan chose to focus more on getting rid of the Pakistani "regime" and exploiting its conventional military capabilities.

Ignorance

As recently as November 17 this year, IS claimed through its Amaq news agency to have killed a local police officer in Srinagar, Kashmir's summer capital.

The subsequent report in Amaq however, claimed the attack was carried out against Pakistani security forces. This gives some sense of how the group might be ignorant of even the basic political geography of Kashmir, let alone carry out any operations in the region.

In another goof-up, multiple news agencies in India, while attributing it to IS, simultaneously claimed the attack in Srinagar had been carried out by Ansar Ghazwat-ul Hind, al-Qaeda's recently formed local branch.

Considering that al-Qaeda and IS have been at loggerheads since the latter's appearance on the global Jihadist scene, it is hard to imagine that Ansar can work as a local front for both groups at the same time.

The armed insurgents in Kashmir are mostly driven by immediate grievances, which include the pervasive human rights abuses carried out by the Indian forces in Kashmir since the onset of insurgency in the late 1980s.

"Any association with IS would undercut and taint their cause, and that's the last thing these armed groups would want," Kugelman told The New Arab.

In fact, the threat of IS might be more urgent in mainland India. According to many reports, around 22 Indians, including women and children, from the Southern state of Kerala travelled to Afghanistan with the aim of living under the rule of supposed caliphate.

For now, the possibility of IS establishing any significant foothold in Kashmir seems implausible. However, IS's rapidly declining influence in its traditional bases of power may force the group to shift its focus on controlling or supporting insurgencies that remain operationally confined to relatively smaller areas. Kashmir presents itself as an ideal ground for that possible switch.

IS's ability to feed off local grievances, as was demonstrated in Iraq where the group cunningly exploited the national government's discriminatory approach towards the country's Sunni communities to initially gain prominence also makes Kashmir an appealing prospect for the group.

As the governments of both India and Pakistan prolong their decades-old conflict by failing to negotiate a sustainable solution, and the Indian government keeps responding to all forms of dissent in Kashmir with an iron fist, the possibility of this ruthless group making inroads into Kashmir, whether in the form of material support or ideology, cannot be altogether dismissed.

Umar Lateef Misgar is a graduate student of International Relations at the Islamic University of Kashmir. He regularly writes for The New Arab, openDemocracy, Counterpunch and London School of Economics Human Rights Centre.

https://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/indepth/2017/12/20/Could-Islamic-State-make-inroads-in-Kashmir
 
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"radical Islamic terrorism," which, by default, brands every bearded Muslim holding a banner, stone, or gun a "terrorist", no matter whether their cause is legal, moral, or just.
Holding ISIS banner - Terrorist supporter
Holding Stones - Terrorist supporter
Holding Gun - Terrorist
 
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Every self respecting human knows ISIS does not go to help Muslims but the other way around
 
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