Naheed Janjua
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Ever since Pakistan’s participation in the so- called war on terror, the country has solely relied on a warfare approach to deal with terrorism. Operation Zarb-e-Azb was able to turn the tide, and seemingly restored calm. This is evident from a dramatic decrease in the incidence of violence in the country since 2015.
During this time, the civil leadership in the country also evolved two important strategic documents – National Internal Security Policy (NISP), and the National Action Plan (NAP), the latter conceived following massacre of school children at Peshawar in December 2014. The former was a continuation of a prior effort legislating the establishment of NACTA. Both of these articulations were legitimatized by the country’s legislative bodies. NAP was an extra-parliament development conceived under an all parties conference.
Why has the blood letting resurfaced in Pakistan?
All of it sounded cozy to the citizenry, and especially so when the military was ‘winning.’ If that were the case, the conditions that were created by Zarb-e-Azb under the command of General Sharif should have persisted.
Why then has the bloodletting resurfaced in the first place and with remarkable intensity, and why is there the wider perception about the army’s conceding its predominant role in its hitherto full blown prosecution of national counter-terrorism effort. Two aspects warrant attention; first, the reduction in violence which was misconstrued as a victory, is historically not a reliable indicator of terrorism
Two aspects warrant attention; first, the reduction in violence which was misconstrued as a victory, is historically not a reliable indicator of terrorism waning, let alone the decimation of perpetrator groups. Thus an uninformed sense of security was created, which resulted in the relaxing of guards specifically in the civil sphere. Secondly, the objectivity would reveal that the army is continually committed, as it was previously, and its lead role in supporting intelligence based operations throughout the country, within its capacity,
Secondly, objectivity reveals that the army is continually committed, as it was previously, and is still playing a leading role in supporting intelligence based operations throughout the country, within its capacity, and has not altered in direction and scale.
read more: Expanded remit of military operations in Punjab, no decision on PSL yet
Has the military reached limitation over what it can do
Why has the bloodletting resurfaced with remarkable intensity, and why is there this wider perception about the army’s conceding its predominant role in the hitherto full blown prosecution of national counter terrorism effort.
Significantly, where the realization is not understood is that the military system has some inherent limitations. It has reached its organizational and kinetic threshold, and cannot do beyond what it has already achieved. The military instrument by virtue of its structural implications is otherwise unsuited to undertake operations in hinterland. Radd-ul-Fasaad will validate this assertion.
read more: Pakistanis must learn the limits of military led counter-terrorism
This article makes a great point that we - Pakistanis - have left everything (terrorism in this case) for the army to deal with and are not understanding the social disease requires leadership to take the lead - Do you agree?
During this time, the civil leadership in the country also evolved two important strategic documents – National Internal Security Policy (NISP), and the National Action Plan (NAP), the latter conceived following massacre of school children at Peshawar in December 2014. The former was a continuation of a prior effort legislating the establishment of NACTA. Both of these articulations were legitimatized by the country’s legislative bodies. NAP was an extra-parliament development conceived under an all parties conference.
Why has the blood letting resurfaced in Pakistan?
All of it sounded cozy to the citizenry, and especially so when the military was ‘winning.’ If that were the case, the conditions that were created by Zarb-e-Azb under the command of General Sharif should have persisted.
Why then has the bloodletting resurfaced in the first place and with remarkable intensity, and why is there the wider perception about the army’s conceding its predominant role in its hitherto full blown prosecution of national counter-terrorism effort. Two aspects warrant attention; first, the reduction in violence which was misconstrued as a victory, is historically not a reliable indicator of terrorism
Two aspects warrant attention; first, the reduction in violence which was misconstrued as a victory, is historically not a reliable indicator of terrorism waning, let alone the decimation of perpetrator groups. Thus an uninformed sense of security was created, which resulted in the relaxing of guards specifically in the civil sphere. Secondly, the objectivity would reveal that the army is continually committed, as it was previously, and its lead role in supporting intelligence based operations throughout the country, within its capacity,
Secondly, objectivity reveals that the army is continually committed, as it was previously, and is still playing a leading role in supporting intelligence based operations throughout the country, within its capacity, and has not altered in direction and scale.
read more: Expanded remit of military operations in Punjab, no decision on PSL yet
Has the military reached limitation over what it can do
Why has the bloodletting resurfaced with remarkable intensity, and why is there this wider perception about the army’s conceding its predominant role in the hitherto full blown prosecution of national counter terrorism effort.
Significantly, where the realization is not understood is that the military system has some inherent limitations. It has reached its organizational and kinetic threshold, and cannot do beyond what it has already achieved. The military instrument by virtue of its structural implications is otherwise unsuited to undertake operations in hinterland. Radd-ul-Fasaad will validate this assertion.
read more: Pakistanis must learn the limits of military led counter-terrorism
This article makes a great point that we - Pakistanis - have left everything (terrorism in this case) for the army to deal with and are not understanding the social disease requires leadership to take the lead - Do you agree?