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Pakistani Taliban: Nipping the evil in the bud

Pakistani Taliban: Nipping the evil in the bud​

Author
DR SYED KALEEM IMAM
September 29, 202211:50



Espionage has always been an essential part of war and conflict between countries. New dimensions, such as disinformation, organized crime and social subversion have been added to it in the modern age. They help cause instability in opposition ranks and trigger a crisis of legitimacy in the hierarchy of its command. With such tools, the world is now hurtling towards a new era of permanent, low-level conflict — often unnoticed and undeclared.

We would do well to heed the maxim that ‘wars are no longer won on the battlefield’. Any space gained through kinetic means now only suffices to bury those who have fallen trying to seize it. Non-kinetic means are often the only option to ending conflicts with a greater degree of permanence. Eradicating the breeding grounds of enemies and addressing the root causes of their enmity is what finally yields fruitful results.

The Taliban emerged in September 1994 as a prominent faction in the Afghan Civil War. The international community had not cared much about the future when this force was seizing increasing power from the Mujahideen warlords. On our side of the border, their rise was sheepishly supported by the powers of the day, which gave space for Taliban factions to put down roots here.

The Taliban phenomenon was imprudently welcomed and adopted in Pakistan at the state level. Even a few stalwarts in law enforcement and civil society proudly and publicly branded themselves as Taliban. Eventually, as the group’s deep ailments were finally exposed, those who once nurtured and supported it abandoned it in haste. However, there was no strategy to neutralize it, and they are now back to haunt us in the TTP avatar — brandishing weapons and spreading terror as viciously as they have in the past.

The TTP finds charisma in Noor Wali Mehsud, who has united the various factions of Taliban. There is an agenda in the group’s attempts to regain control of an area where it was once dislodged from; especially since things are rough across the border. According to sources, some leniency had been shown to returning militants after earlier negotiations. However, the TTP leadership soon started asserting its authority over the lower tiers and, as a result, heavily armed groups moved in, often occupying vantage points in the region. They now stroll through Dir to Malakand, reaching areas as far off as those bordering the Hazara region.
Just a few days ago, I was at a famous eatery in Peshawar’s fabled Namak Mandi. We were shocked to learn that the restaurant’s owner had been paying the TTP to stay safe, lest grenades were hurled to damage his business.
Dr Syed Kaleem Imam

What are they up to and what do they want? According to some, the TTP’s usual demands include the removal of checkpoints, limited state patrolling, hegemony over the region, exploitation of its mineral resources, and even stakes in pinewood harvesting. As part of their new wish list, they want the previous status of FATA, the removal of border fences, and their brand of sharia to be enforced. Being vicious outfits, they may pressurize the state for additional gains. They seem obsessed with curtailing women's rights, maintaining patriarchal dominance and enforcing religious rituals in accordance with their likings to justify their violent behavior. It is no wonder that the local community is sick and tired of them.

A policy of appeasement has led to the creation of a new merciless breed, not descended from any particular tribe, but from an assortment of opportunists. Within the rank and file are the 'Gujran', who were largely ordinary deprived hands, joined by educated youth radicalized on narratives glorifying war. The TTP leadership is shrewd, trying to maintain relevance and dominate the territory by the use of methods such as abduction, rape, murder and destruction of state machinery. Unlike before, they are armed with leftover foreign weapons, which they have put on sale as well as made a part of their ideological arsenal.

Swat has witnessed some very alarming violence recently. Encouragingly, instead of being intimidated as in the past, its locals are now furious. Unexpectedly large protests have been held in Dir, Maidan, Bajaur, and other areas. Even though security forces are trying to do their best to contain the threat, violence keeps recurring. The latest is that some errant returnees have been pushed back after soldiers and law enforcers took them head on. Other TTP tiers have quietly crept out. It remains to be seen how lasting and effective the action has been.

The threat of a return to turmoil will remain present. There have been hundreds of killings and explosions across the border. There is a possibility that extremist outfits may act in response to the deaths of Amir Muhammad Kabuli and Ayman al-Zawahiri, Omar Khorasani, as well as Rahimullah Haqqani.

We cannot afford another prolonged and costly conflict that will extend the hardships of our long-suffering nation. The question is, will we be repeating our past mistakes? Allowing anarchy to take root in the remoter areas of the country and then taking harsh measures to eliminate it is a failed strategy. The timely enforcement of the law is critical in ensuring 'order'. It has been my experience that it is the law that often looks the other way when trouble is brewing; else how dare anyone challenge the state’s writ.

Just a few days ago, I was at a famous eatery in Peshawar’s fabled Namak Mandi. We were shocked to learn that the restaurant’s owner had been paying the TTP to stay safe, lest grenades were hurled to damage his business. It reminded me of our university days in Karachi, when many of our friends and relatives paid bhatta to an ethnic political party to avoid being bullied or even killed.

There can be no enforcement of a writ without good governance and the rule of law. The sooner dissent and disagreement are addressed, the better. The act of sparing wrongdoers is immoral and illegal. Creating an artificial leadership and using it to gain ad hoc benefits is a dreadful policy.

The state can appropriately respond to extremist groups by enhancing its interaction with the affected communities, which have risen strongly against the TTP in Swat’s case. There is a need to revive the apex committees and execute old policies to nip the root causes of terrorism and militancy in the bud. It is time that the police, as the first responders, and the chief secretary, as the head of the province, oversee counterterrorism policy, or at least be fairly represented in it. Taking an inclusive approach to this distressing issue is essential.

- The writer holds a doctorate in politics and international relations and has served as a federal secretary and inspector-general of police. He tweets @KaleemImam.

 
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So why is the state lenient and soft on them while hard on own citizens who criticise them on social media? Why were they let in along with weapons. Shopkeepers in karkhano market in Peshawar are paying bhatta to TTP because they threaten them with grenades. Who is behind all this? Who is letting all this happen? Any police official who tries to stop them and act is taken hostage, beaten, his family harassed and the state does nothing. It seems as if they are let in intentionally.
This british colonial leftover establishment actually uses these groups and when they see a danger of a genuine middle class uprising, they unleash these baboons on them.
 
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Shopkeepers in karkhano market in Peshawar are paying bhatta to TTP because they threaten them with grenades. Who is behind all this? Who is letting all this happen? Any police official who tries to stop them and act is taken hostage, beaten, his family harassed and the state does nothing.
Ask Niazi he is the one who rules KPK these days.
Plus he is the one who has spent half his career defending terrorists.
 
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Ask Niazi he is the one who rules KPK these days.
He is the one who has spent half his career defending terrorists.

And as if the rulers in Pakistan ever have control over the so called defenders or their policies and plans. A provincial govt does not control the border, they only have police and police officers are abducted and blackmailed. These baboons are way more armed than police and also highly trained.
 
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So why is the state lenient and soft on them while hard on own citizens who criticise them on social media? Why were they let in along with weapons. Shopkeepers in karkhano market in Peshawar are paying bhatta to TTP because they threaten them with grenades. Who is behind all this? Who is letting all this happen? Any police official who tries to stop them and act is taken hostage, beaten, his family harassed and the state does nothing. It seems as if they are let in intentionally.
This british colonial leftover establishment actually uses these groups and when they see a danger of a genuine middle class uprising, they unleash these baboons on them.


It's not lenient,, it's the locals who always cause fassad when the state trys to bring law and order

Fencing of the border
Checkpoints
Hunting down militants

How many times have the usual ANP, NDP, PTM types done jalsas because of the above

You can't bring law and order to a jahil people
 
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It is essential to understand the monster, before trying to tame or subdue it.

TTP represent the epitome of molvi culture,
these are people, who can't fit in a progressing society,
have little or no education,
have limited access to skill development,

their only chance for physical survival and make money, is through these activities,
Religion is a convenient cover.

Until such time, that feudal lords will dominate and not allow a middle class to survive.
these things will keep on happening.
 
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It's not lenient,, it's the locals who always cause fassad when the state trys to bring law and order

Fencing of the border
Checkpoints
Hunting down militants

How many times have the usual ANP, NDP, PTM types done jalsas because of the above

You can't bring law and order to a jahil people

The locals are not cooperative so u allow in the TTP with their weapons and let them collect bhatta? From ur statement it seems u r the biggest jahil here.
 
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The locals are not cooperative so u allow in the TTP with their weapons and let them collect bhatta? From ur statement it seems u r the biggest jahil here.

he is partly right,
locals too benefit from smuggling and drug trade that TTP brings with them.
Everything from cosmetics to tires to guns are smuggled.
 
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The locals are not cooperative so u allow in the TTP with their weapons and let them collect bhatta? From ur statement it seems u r the biggest jahil here.

The TTP are amongst the afghani refugees,, no one let's a armed man cross the border

In reality we have to be TOUGH and HARSH upon the refugees who we have let in to create fassad for decades

The problem is the lar aur bar mindset that is the basis of the problem

Not all the locals like the TTP but at the same time they are the first to attend jalsas and block roads like a bunch of morons if security kill a TTP terrorist, claiming the terrorist was just some local innocent sheep header, then que manzoora pasheen and the Mohsin dawar riding in on their White horse to stand with the locals against the Stet

You can't help people who create so much trouble when you are trying to help them



It's like sindhis blocking development of Dams and water reservoirs then crying about floods or droughts

Ethnocentric jahilat has been poison across the entire region
 
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he is partly right,
locals too benefit from smuggling and drug trade that TTP brings with them.
Everything from cosmetics to tires to guns are smuggled.

If u live by the border,ull know our ahem are more involved in smuggling than others. The smuggled items end up in karkhano market. Nowadays there is nothing to be smuggled, few american light arms came at the start but thats it. Nowadays most smuggled stuff come from iran. So i wonder which TTP facilitates smuggling from iran?

The TTP are amongst the afghani refugees,, no one let's a armed man cross the border

In reality we have to be TOUGH and HARSH upon the refugees who we have let in to create fassad for decades

The problem is the lar aur bar mindset that is the basis of the problem

Not all the locals like the TTP but at the same time they are the first to attend jalsas and block roads like a bunch of morons if security kill a TTP terrorist, claiming the terrorist was just some local innocent sheep header, then que manzoora pasheen and the Mohsin dawar riding in on their White horse to stand with the locals against the Stet

You can't help people who create so much trouble when you are trying to help them



It's like sindhis blocking development of Dams and water reservoirs then crying about floods or droughts

Ethnocentric jahilat has been poison across the entire region

TTP are mostly not refugees, ask anyone with abit of knowledge and they will tell u TTP is mostly Pakistani tribal ppl, mostly wazir and mehsud, with minority from swat, dir, bajaur etc. All produced from medrassas. The medrassas originally built to produce jihadis for afghan jihad against USSR. The locals of these areas are mostly anti taliban, they are more towards nationalists than religious extremists. You dont even know the basics man and just uttering nonsense here.
 
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Honestly, the day most Pakistanis realize TTP and Taliban are one and the same, this problem will vanish.

Not saying the defense forces go all guns blazing hunting the Taliban, but today we are fighting the khwariji dogs aka TTP, tomorrow in the not so distant future we will have to fight the Talibans.
 
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Police can be actually very effective in urban environments. The problem is that we dont fund police enough, they dont really have good equipment. Compare this with western police units, a lot of patrol officers have a heavily kitted AR15 in their cars along with a helmet and modern body vest. Not to mention they are more educated. They have very good SWAT and SOF units too. Our SOF police units have rarely progressed past old type 56s and PASGT helmets.
 
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TTP is mostly Pakistani tribal ppl, mostly wazir and mehsud, with minority from swat, dir, bajaur etc


And that's why the "locals" protect them, feed them,allow them to pass without notifying security and police

And then the same locals cry and moan about security and do bullshit jalsas


The locals of these areas are mostly anti taliban, they are more towards nationalists


WRONG the basis of Taliban and TTP is pashtunism, sure they may have a added religious element but fundamentally they are pashtun nationalists and what drives their extremism is nationalism and it's why they are causing trouble for hazaras, Tajiks, Uzbeks frankly anyone who isn't pashtun


And that's why the area is such a backward donkey hole

The Communist Lal salute nationalists like the Pashteens, Dawars and Khattaks are just the flip side of the SAME coin as the TTP Pashto nationalists

BOTH have similar aims
Fassad, lar aur bar, Pashto Pashto Pashto, Stet taking our resources, politics of resistance then something about that Kaffir Gaffur Khan and a bit about Abdali Baba



It's why when security forces had checkpoints it was the Pashteens and Dawar types who led years of jalsas to remove them

It's why when police or army killed TTP terrorist the first people at the lanats funeral was Pashteens and Dawar "Stet kill our poor brudder"



Who are you trying to con?


The people of those areas and afghans in general absolutely refuse to accept any blame for their jahilat and beghairati

That's why afghan blood at the moment is worth less then cow piss and is being spilt left and right and no one cares


The people of those areas need to slap themselves until they get some sense into them, if they don't start acting like decent people then the TTP pashtunism will burn them first
 
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