@Irfan Baloch
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February 25, 2015
Pakistan soldiers stand before taking their positions during a counter-terrorism training demonstration on the outskirts of Karachi on February 24, 2015. Paramilitary troops, led by Pakistani army officers, have been deployed in Balochistan to fight a mix of ethnic Baloch rebels and extremist militants.
ISIL infiltrates militant networks in Pakistan
ISIL’s South Asia chapter is spreading from north-western Pakistan into Balochistan province, rapidly establishing a network of cells to feed off widespread anger there toward the central government.
The extremist group announced last month the formation of ISIL Khorasan and quickly formed a military alliance with other militant groups in the tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.
Khorasan is a historic geographical term used by militants to describe an area that includes parts of Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and India.
Mufti Hassan Swati, the chapter’s deputy governor for Pakistan, told American broadcaster NBC News on January 31 that the group’s objective was to establish its headquarters in Balochistan, the vast, largely lawless province that borders Iran.
Some 60,000 paramilitary troops, led by Pakistani army officers, have been deployed in Balochistan to fight a mix of ethnic Baloch rebels and extremist militants.
In a series of interviews in Karachi near the border of Balochistan, influential members of that shadow community said the ISIL cells had plugged into a decade-old logistics network shared by militants and criminals that enables them to smuggle people and weapons into Balochistan from Afghanistan, Iran and the north-western tribal areas of Pakistan.
Through a retired Afghan Taliban commander, The National was introduced to the head of an ISIL Khorasan cell in the Makran coastal district of Balochistan.
The ISIL cell leader, a middle-aged ethnic Baloch from Makran, introduced himself as “Rahim”, and said he had previously fought in Afghanistan for the Taliban.
His profile was typical of the kind of recruit ISIL is seeking in Balochistan, militants there said.
The group is seeking to attract veteran Pakistani militants whose association with Al Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban dates back to the mid-1990s, before those groups were declared terrorist by the international community.
Having initially fought Indian security forces in the disputed state of Kashmir, these experienced Pakistani militants trained alongside Al Qaeda Arab operatives at Taliban camps.
Their relationship with Al Qaeda members, as well as their shared ideology and hatred for Shiites, have made them primary recruitment targets.
“This kind of jihadi has become addicted to the thrill of the kill. That makes them ideal ISIL recruitment material,” said the retired Afghan Taliban commander.
Such militants are split between groups which have been fighting exclusively in Afghanistan, including Jaish-i-Mohammed and Harakatul Mujahideen, and sectarian terrorist organisations active in Pakistan, such as Lashkar-i-Jhangvi and Jundullah.
Having accessed the shared Balochistan-based network, ISIL Khorasan cells are quietly working to cause splits within those groups, starting with militants most susceptible to its promises of monetary and logistical support, the sources said.
ISIL Khorasan has sweetened the pot, they said, by telling militant faction leaders they were free to claim credit, under their existing identities, for any terrorist activities carried out on their own initiative or on the orders of the ISIL Khorasan leadership.
It has already implemented that strategy in the north-western tribal areas, where in January, it formed a
military alliance with TTP and two other Pakistani militant factions against military forces advancing into the Khyber tribal area.
“ISIL isn’t looking for a quick propaganda hit. It is working on a long-term strategy, the stated aim of which is the establishment of a parallel state in Pakistan,” a Harakatul Mujahideen fund-raiser said.
Sources in Balochistan’s shadow community said ISIL was concurrently infiltrating operatives into legitimate political and religious organisations to establish its own network of intelligence gathering, recruitment and logistics support.
They said ISIL had already placed operatives in the Tableeghi Jama’at, a peaceable orthodox Sunni group of preachers and proselytisers active across Pakistan, and well represented throughout the civil service and military.
Similarly, it is also trying to infiltrate secular Baloch nationalist political parties represented in Pakistan’s federal parliament and the Balochistan provincial assembly, the sources said.
However, it is unlikely to make any serious inroads into Baloch nationalist groups, observers said.
“Separatists might make technical alliances with ISIL, but I doubt they would be able to infiltrate them because they are deeply secular,” said Amir Zia, editor-in-chief of a new English daily that will be launched this year by the Karachi-based Bol Network.
ISIL Khorasan is unlikely to become a major threat in Balochistan in the near future, because it is only seeking to play a peripheral role at present, the sources said.
Instead, it is positioning itself as a rallying point for anti-state groups as their organisational strength is further diminished by the Pakistani government.
Analysts said the Pakistani military’s zero-tolerance policy towards militant groups, adopted after militants executed 132 children at a Peshawar school on December 16, would make it very difficult for ISIL to establish any bases in vast, thinly-populated Balochistan.
“In the past, the military has allowed certain militant groups to operate, but now it’s clear the state machinery is not going to allow ISIL the space to become an immediate threat,” Mr Zia said.
ISIL infiltrates militant networks in Pakistan | The National