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Taliban Advance: Is Pakistan Nearing Collapse?

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Taliban Advance: Is Pakistan Nearing Collapse?
23 April 2009

The move by Taliban-backed militants into the Buner district of northwestern Pakistan, closer than ever to Pakistan's capital of Islamabad, have prompted concerns both within the country and abroad that the nuclear-armed nation of 165 million is on the verge of inexorable collapse.

On Wednesday a local Taliban militia crossed from the Swat Valley — where a February cease-fire allowed the implementation of strict Islamic, or Shari'a, law — into the neighboring Buner district, which is just a few hours drive from Islamabad (65 miles, separated by a mountain range, as the crow flies).

Residents streaming from Buner, home to nearly a million people, told local newspapers that armed militants are patrolling the streets. Pakistani television stations aired footage of Taliban soldiers looting government offices and capturing vehicles belonging to aid organizations and development projects. The police, say residents, are nowhere to be seen. The shrine of a local Muslim saint, venerated across the country, was closed. The Taliban, which adheres to a stricter version of Islam than is practiced in most of Pakistan, hold that worship at such shrines goes against the teachings of Islam.

Meanwhile courts throughout the Malakand division, of which Swat and Buner are a part, have closed in deference to the new agreement calling for the implementation Shari'a, law. "If the Taliban continue to move at this pace they will soon be knocking at the doors of Islamabad," Maulana Fazlur Rehman, head of one of the country's Islamic political parties, warned in Parliament Wednesday. Rehman said the Margalla Hills, a small mountain range north of the capital that separates it from Buner, appears to be "the only hurdle in their march toward the federal capital," The only solution, he said, was for the entire nation to accept Shari'a law in order to deprive the Taliban of their principal cause.

The fall of Buner is raising international alarm. Speaking before the House Foreign Affairs Committee in Washington Wednesday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton characterized the situation was a danger to Pakistan, the U.S. and the world. "We cannot underscore the seriousness of the existential threat posed to the state of Pakistan by continuing advances, now within hours of Islamabad, that are being made by a loosely confederated group of terrorists and others who are seeking the overthrow of the Pakistani state," Clinton said. She also accused Pakistan's leaders of "basically abdicating to the Taliban and the extremists" by signing the cease-fire agreement.

Even before the fall of Buner, the capital was in a state of panic. Private schools were closed for two weeks for fear that militants would attempt a siege, along the lines of the Taliban attack on a police academy in Lahore last month. And an unspecified threat against foreigners two weeks ago resulted in the closure of the U.S. embassy and the British High Commission for a day.

On Sunday, just a week after Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari signed a provision allowing for the implementation of Islamic law in Malakand, Sufi Mohammad, the local religious leader who negotiated the accord (and who is father-in-law to the local Taliban leader), announced that he would not recognize the Supreme Court of Pakistan, even in cases of appeal. He also said that while the Taliban fighters would adhere to the peace agreement, they would not give up their arms.

Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S., Husain Haqqani, defended the government's concession to the Taliban, denying in an interview with CNN that the cease-fire agreement amounted to capitulation. He justified the action by comparing it to the 2006 U.S.-led Anbar Awakening in Iraq in which U.S. military commanders struck agreements with moderate jihadists. "We are open to criticism of that strategy, but to think that that strategy somehow represents an abdication of our responsibility toward our people and toward the security of our country and the region is incorrect," Haqqani said.

Also on Wednesday, a top adviser to Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani made an explosive announcement accusing a long-simmering separatist movement in the province of Baluchistan of being sponsored by archenemy India and Afghanistan. The mysterious deaths of several Baluch leaders over the past few weeks have renewed demands for Baluch independence from the nation of Pakistan.

The implication by Rehman Malik, Gilani's Interior Affairs adviser, that neighboring countries were fomenting instability in Pakistan will only heighten regional tensions at a moment when the country is least equipped to deal with them. Already columnists in several Pakistani newspapers are warning of a return to 1971, when a separatist movement in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, ended with a civil war that split the nation.

David Kilcullen, a counter-terrorism expert for both the Bush and the Obama administrations, warned that Pakistan is on the brink of collapse. "Afghanistan doesn't worry me," Kilcullen said in an April 12 interview with the Sydney Morning Herald. "Pakistan does. We have to face the fact that if Pakistan collapses it will dwarf anything we have seen so far in whatever we're calling the war on terror now."

During an April 16 conference in Tokyo to raise donations for his beleaguered nation, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari warned that terrorists operating in the country posed a global threat. At that conference, countries including the U.S. and Japan pledged more than $5 billion to improve health, education and governance in Pakistan.

But with security and stability increasingly in doubt, it's becoming clear that more urgent action is needed beyond financial donations aimed at institution-building. Neither Zardari nor opposition leaders have been able to come up with answers to the insurgency. Columnist Kamila Hyat, writing in The News, called for an overhaul of current strategies, including reaching out to Pakistan's old foe, India. If Pakistan doesn't have to worry about protecting its eastern flank, she argued, it can concentrate on solving its internal problems. "The only option for Pakistan is to break free of the militant grip, focus on building a new relationship with India and realize the only hope for a brighter future lies in building regional harmony rather than waging war." It's a sound proposal for the long term, but with the Taliban already taking advantage of the peace deal in Swat to expand their reach, Pakistan may be forced into negotiating with militants first.


Source: Time Inc
 
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Nops, its an ill fated plan of the anti-Pakistan plans made and developed by various multinational countries.You know which 3-4 countries r involved.number of this militia is not more then 15-35000.
I am really surprised why Pak Army did'nt crushed them in Swat operations.Maybe not planned properly...
Its not more then a game of 5-15 days if operation is really conducted against them.
But solution requires many fold other tactics too:

1. Consealment of border between afghanistan and Pakistan, as all of the support is carried forward from there.It should be consealed and manned.
2. Getting all out against all of the countries that are hurting interests of Pakistan, no matter whom ,by shear will and brave stand.Not like in the past to act cowardly.
3.Using intelligence 2 counter and interdict the financial support that is being gathered from anywhere to support these elements.
4.Getting out of the Phony, pathetic war on terrorism, banning all support of Pakistan to it.
5.Then ambush the elements and engage.
6.Start a pathetic war of that sort to infuse the same cancer in the countries that are part of this game.Let them taste in their homes what they are doing here.

This is the only solution to it.
Lastly, encircle black goats that are within Army that are against Pakistan.And also within the country and try them at free and fair trials for treason and betrayal.Be truthful, realistic , fair and win the war that is ragging against our country.
 
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Taliban Advance: Is Pakistan Nearing Collapse?
23 April 2009

Columnist Kamila Hyat, writing in The News, called for an overhaul of current strategies, including reaching out to Pakistan's old foe, India. If Pakistan doesn't have to worry about protecting its eastern flank, she argued, it can concentrate on solving its internal problems.

Source: Time Inc

This is one area where the west (and even China) could help Pakistan by facilitating assured cease fire along the India/Pakistan border (Including the LOC). This will help Pakistan focus more on its westren front, help India by reducing the infiltration and also build trust between the old adversaries. IMO, India will be more than happy with such an agreement, and will quickly agree provided the same is done by back channel diplomacy.
 
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Actually, this 'understanding' is already in place, more or less. It’s just that India's itchy fingers get uncomfortably close to the 'invade Pakistan' button every time half a dozen terrorists decide to go on a rampage. Which, obviously, ends up helping the militant cause by reducing Pakistan's ability to respond to terrorist threats as well...
 
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Actually, this 'understanding' is already in place, more or less. It’s just that India's itchy fingers get uncomfortably close to the 'invade Pakistan' button every time half a dozen terrorists decide to go on a rampage. Which, obviously, ends up helping the militant cause by reducing Pakistan's ability to respond to terrorist threats as well...

If you strike out the words 'Invade Pakisthan', I agree with you.
Unfortunately this has become a domestic political compulsion. People who protest on the street wanting war do not know what it means. These guys are unable to sustain the global recession, and they talk of war. May be they think that war is fought between armies only.

However Pakisthan also can neutralize the situation by visibly cooperating. If you see the Mumbai incident, Pakisthan could have cooperated better. Refusing Kasab's nationality, disregarding GPS info, dismissing phone recordings, asking for more information for the sake of it, etc., did not send the right signals. Even now, It could cooperate better.

This is not to say that India was cordial with Pakisthan in the whole affair. India also could have agreed for the joint probe (with assurance from some neutral countries that Pakisthan will not derail the process). India could have avoided efforts to alienate Pakisthan in international fora etc.

I don't know when this will stop.
 
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