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Who Wants to Turn Bangladesh Into Bangla-Daesh?

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Andrew Korybko


Sputnik News – October 26, 2015


The Mideast-based terrorist group has taken responsibility for a string of violence in the South Asian country, but the question is, to whose benefit does this ultimately play out?
The Russian Aerospace Forces, Syrian Arab Army, and their corresponding Coalition of the Righteous partners are pressing forward in their quest to rid the Mideast of terrorism, but it appears as though ISIL’s retreat in West Asia is taking place concurrently with its preplanned expansion into South Asia.

The terrorist group (also referred to as Daesh in Arabic) claimed credit for three gruesome attacks in Bangladesh over the past month, which include the back-to-back killing of two foreigners and last weekend’s bombing of a Shiite procession that killed one and injured over one hundred others in the capital. While the government denies that ISIL has a presence in the country, some are skeptical about that claim.

It’s important for observers not to lose sight of the tense domestic context in which all of this is playing out, since internal political factors have certainly contributed to making the country more susceptible to externally managed destabilization attempts.

Furthermore, any breakdown of Bangladeshi society would result in strong regional aftershocks that would negatively affect India, both in terms of its physical security and the viability of its ambitious Act East foreign policy initiative. Considering everything that’s at stake if terrorism takes root in the South Asian state, it’s timely to ponder which actor would gain the most by turning Bangladesh into Bangla-Daesh.

Dueling Dynasties

Bangladeshi domestic politics has essentially morphed into a two-party system ever since 1990, with the Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) fiercely competing with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). BAL is led by Sheikh Hasina and is the party currently in power, while the opposition BNP is controlled by Khaleda Rahman.

Each of these ladies is directly related to one of Bangladesh’s historical leaders.

Sheikh Hasina is the daughter of independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, while Khaleda Zia is the wife of military leader Ziaur Rahman who came to power in the wake of Sheikh Mujibur’s assassination. For over the past 20 years, the country’s leadership has alternated between these two women.

The two parties couldn’t be more different in their national vision, which makes their rivalry all the more intense.

BAL is genuinely recognized as being more pro-Indian and strongly adheres to the country’s secular roots, while BNP is seen as being pro-American and pro-Saudi and supportive of the Islamization of society.

Tension between the two exploded into political violence after a hard-core Islamist party allied with the BNP provoked nationwide riots in 2013 to protest the BAL government handing down a death sentence to one of its leaders.

Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, the former Vice-President of the now-banned Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami party, was convicted of crimes against humanity for atrocities that he committed during the 1971 War of Independence, and while the resultant Color Revolution attempt that he sparked failed to bring down the government and replace it with the BNP, his legal appeal succeeded in reducing his sentence to life in prison.

The domestic political fallout from the riots can still be felt today, and it’s at the core of Bangladesh’s present instability.

The BNP boycotted the 2014 general election in response to the government’s reaction to the rioters, alleging that the vote wouldn’t be free or fair (despite its results later being accepted by the international community, although with some criticism). Due to their obstinacy, the BNP hasn’t had a single seat in parliament since, and in a circuitous fashion, they allege that this makes the current government illegitimate.

The latest update in the political rivalry came in mid-October when Sheikh Hasina accused Khaleda Zia of “conspiring from abroad [note: she’s in the UK for “medical treatment”] to tarnish the country's image through killing foreigners”, intimating that she and her political allies were working with terrorists.

Implications For India

The spiraling situation in Bangladesh couldn’t come at a more geopolitically inconvenient time for India. Prime Minister Modi has just gotten started in excitedly promoting his country’s new Act East policy, and he sealed historic border and trade agreements with Bangladesh during a visit there in June.

The border aspects put to rest all prior impediments to a true strategic partnership, thus allowing India the economic privilege of using Bangladeshi territory for transshipments to the country’s seven northeast provinces. The “Seven Sisters”, as they’re colloquially called, have historically been hotbeds of anti-government unrest, and Bodo and Naga terrorist groups have lately resumed their activity there.

It’s absolutely crucial for New Delhi to stabilize and develop this far-flung region for use in properly launching the mainland portion of the Act East strategy. Just last month the India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway (India’s “ASEAN Road”) became operational, thus linking the Indian-led South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) with one of the world’s other fastest-growing economic blocs, ASEAN. The potential for mutual benefit is limitless and could do wonders for India’s rising multipolar status in the world, but it’s conditional on the preservation of peace all along this highway route, including in vulnerable Northeast India. An ISIL-initiated terrorist war in Bangladesh could ruin all of that, however, since the trans-border humanitarian and terrorist overflow could drastically destabilize India and set off a chain reaction of conflict inside the country itself.

The Damocles’ Sword Of Daesh

No matter how India tries to assess it, the reluctant realization has likely dawned on its leadership that the viability of its Act East strategy and the ASEAN Road are dependent on internal conditions in Bangladesh that are beyond their control, but are dangerously threatening to explode and take the whole region down with it.

The visionary dreams of India’s rightful place as a multipolar centerpiece are endangered by the uncontrollable destabilization that an Islamist terrorist war in Bangladesh chillingly poses, and it’s clear that the latest attacks are being done with the intent of weakening the government and prompting snap societal chaos that could suddenly engulf India.

Daesh’s activities in Bangladesh are a sort of Damocles’ Sword hanging over Modi’s head, as the controlling forces behind this terrorist group hold the ultimate form of blackmail in influencing New Delhi. If India doesn’t accede to their geopolitical ‘suggestions’ (perhaps to distance itself from Russia and start ‘containing’ China), then the terrorists will unreservedly be ordered to go forward with their regime change scenario in either installing an anti-Indian government in Dhaka or turning Bangladesh into a black hole of chaos instead.

Recall how Khaleda Rahman has been scheming for “early elections” almost right after the ones that she boycotted were held, and how Sheikh Hasina has just tacitly accused her of being in cahoots with terrorists. President Putin warned last week in Valdai that “some terrorists are used as a battering ram to overthrow the regimes that are not to one’s liking”, and while spoken about the Mideast, it now looks to be applicable for South Asia as well. Expanding on this insight, it wouldn’t be unreasonable to wonder whether the same culprit responsible for destroying the Mideast might be the one that’s using the threat of terrorism in Bangladesh to blackmail India away from its Eurasian BRICS partners.



Who Wants to Turn Bangladesh Into Bangla-Daesh?
 
.
Andrew Korybko


Sputnik News – October 26, 2015


The Mideast-based terrorist group has taken responsibility for a string of violence in the South Asian country, but the question is, to whose benefit does this ultimately play out?
The Russian Aerospace Forces, Syrian Arab Army, and their corresponding Coalition of the Righteous partners are pressing forward in their quest to rid the Mideast of terrorism, but it appears as though ISIL’s retreat in West Asia is taking place concurrently with its preplanned expansion into South Asia.

The terrorist group (also referred to as Daesh in Arabic) claimed credit for three gruesome attacks in Bangladesh over the past month, which include the back-to-back killing of two foreigners and last weekend’s bombing of a Shiite procession that killed one and injured over one hundred others in the capital. While the government denies that ISIL has a presence in the country, some are skeptical about that claim.

It’s important for observers not to lose sight of the tense domestic context in which all of this is playing out, since internal political factors have certainly contributed to making the country more susceptible to externally managed destabilization attempts.

Furthermore, any breakdown of Bangladeshi society would result in strong regional aftershocks that would negatively affect India, both in terms of its physical security and the viability of its ambitious Act East foreign policy initiative. Considering everything that’s at stake if terrorism takes root in the South Asian state, it’s timely to ponder which actor would gain the most by turning Bangladesh into Bangla-Daesh.

Dueling Dynasties

Bangladeshi domestic politics has essentially morphed into a two-party system ever since 1990, with the Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) fiercely competing with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). BAL is led by Sheikh Hasina and is the party currently in power, while the opposition BNP is controlled by Khaleda Rahman.

Each of these ladies is directly related to one of Bangladesh’s historical leaders.

Sheikh Hasina is the daughter of independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, while Khaleda Zia is the wife of military leader Ziaur Rahman who came to power in the wake of Sheikh Mujibur’s assassination. For over the past 20 years, the country’s leadership has alternated between these two women.

The two parties couldn’t be more different in their national vision, which makes their rivalry all the more intense.

BAL is genuinely recognized as being more pro-Indian and strongly adheres to the country’s secular roots, while BNP is seen as being pro-American and pro-Saudi and supportive of the Islamization of society.

Tension between the two exploded into political violence after a hard-core Islamist party allied with the BNP provoked nationwide riots in 2013 to protest the BAL government handing down a death sentence to one of its leaders.

Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, the former Vice-President of the now-banned Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami party, was convicted of crimes against humanity for atrocities that he committed during the 1971 War of Independence, and while the resultant Color Revolution attempt that he sparked failed to bring down the government and replace it with the BNP, his legal appeal succeeded in reducing his sentence to life in prison.

The domestic political fallout from the riots can still be felt today, and it’s at the core of Bangladesh’s present instability.

The BNP boycotted the 2014 general election in response to the government’s reaction to the rioters, alleging that the vote wouldn’t be free or fair (despite its results later being accepted by the international community, although with some criticism). Due to their obstinacy, the BNP hasn’t had a single seat in parliament since, and in a circuitous fashion, they allege that this makes the current government illegitimate.

The latest update in the political rivalry came in mid-October when Sheikh Hasina accused Khaleda Zia of “conspiring from abroad [note: she’s in the UK for “medical treatment”] to tarnish the country's image through killing foreigners”, intimating that she and her political allies were working with terrorists.

Implications For India

The spiraling situation in Bangladesh couldn’t come at a more geopolitically inconvenient time for India. Prime Minister Modi has just gotten started in excitedly promoting his country’s new Act East policy, and he sealed historic border and trade agreements with Bangladesh during a visit there in June.

The border aspects put to rest all prior impediments to a true strategic partnership, thus allowing India the economic privilege of using Bangladeshi territory for transshipments to the country’s seven northeast provinces. The “Seven Sisters”, as they’re colloquially called, have historically been hotbeds of anti-government unrest, and Bodo and Naga terrorist groups have lately resumed their activity there.

It’s absolutely crucial for New Delhi to stabilize and develop this far-flung region for use in properly launching the mainland portion of the Act East strategy. Just last month the India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway (India’s “ASEAN Road”) became operational, thus linking the Indian-led South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) with one of the world’s other fastest-growing economic blocs, ASEAN. The potential for mutual benefit is limitless and could do wonders for India’s rising multipolar status in the world, but it’s conditional on the preservation of peace all along this highway route, including in vulnerable Northeast India. An ISIL-initiated terrorist war in Bangladesh could ruin all of that, however, since the trans-border humanitarian and terrorist overflow could drastically destabilize India and set off a chain reaction of conflict inside the country itself.

The Damocles’ Sword Of Daesh

No matter how India tries to assess it, the reluctant realization has likely dawned on its leadership that the viability of its Act East strategy and the ASEAN Road are dependent on internal conditions in Bangladesh that are beyond their control, but are dangerously threatening to explode and take the whole region down with it.

The visionary dreams of India’s rightful place as a multipolar centerpiece are endangered by the uncontrollable destabilization that an Islamist terrorist war in Bangladesh chillingly poses, and it’s clear that the latest attacks are being done with the intent of weakening the government and prompting snap societal chaos that could suddenly engulf India.

Daesh’s activities in Bangladesh are a sort of Damocles’ Sword hanging over Modi’s head, as the controlling forces behind this terrorist group hold the ultimate form of blackmail in influencing New Delhi. If India doesn’t accede to their geopolitical ‘suggestions’ (perhaps to distance itself from Russia and start ‘containing’ China), then the terrorists will unreservedly be ordered to go forward with their regime change scenario in either installing an anti-Indian government in Dhaka or turning Bangladesh into a black hole of chaos instead.

Recall how Khaleda Rahman has been scheming for “early elections” almost right after the ones that she boycotted were held, and how Sheikh Hasina has just tacitly accused her of being in cahoots with terrorists. President Putin warned last week in Valdai that “some terrorists are used as a battering ram to overthrow the regimes that are not to one’s liking”, and while spoken about the Mideast, it now looks to be applicable for South Asia as well. Expanding on this insight, it wouldn’t be unreasonable to wonder whether the same culprit responsible for destroying the Mideast might be the one that’s using the threat of terrorism in Bangladesh to blackmail India away from its Eurasian BRICS partners.



Who Wants to Turn Bangladesh Into Bangla-Daesh?

These are going to be the consequences for forcing secularism on Bengalis.
 
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Bullshit ...... Bangladesh is not the deserts of Arabia..... We are Muslims, but the culture, outlook, demography, and future perspective of the people are opppsite of the factors necessary to breed and allow backward mentalities like ISIS to thrive.

They will fail not because of the efficiency of our government but because our people will simply never accept such insular worldview.


And f*uk India.... Bangladesh is sovereign it's destiny is in its control.
 
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:lol: police have arrested the killers of the italian and they aren't islamic millitant now stop ranting.
 
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:lol: police have arrested the killers of the italian and they aren't islamic millitant now stop ranting.


Who are you talking too.... It's an article by a Russian worried about the Russia-India strategic alliance. They do not give a damn about Isis as such just possible implication of BD facing instability as it would impact on India. The article is about India with BD playing second fiddle.

Please read article.
 
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Bullshit ...... Bangladesh is not the deserts of Arabia..... We are Muslims, but the culture, outlook, demography, and future perspective of the people are opppsite of the factors necessary to breed and allow backward mentalities like ISIS to thrive.

They will fail not because of the efficiency of our government but because our people will simply never accept such insular worldview.


And f*uk India.... Bangladesh is sovereign it's destiny is in its control.
I'm so glad our geography is more suited for communist type mentalities that officially took over in 1971 eating our guts out. The wants of BD population never mattered and it is still very much so. Bangladesh is sovereign, my foot. I'm sorry but Bangladesh is another word for a big joke. The efficient machinery set up by India run by its proxy BAL ultimately reigns supreme in this sorry joke called Bangladesh.

On Isis/isil/whatever, they along with other parties in the conflict are a tool propped up by certain advanced foreign powers to destroy Syria and destabilize the lands of a bunch of expendable third world people. Syrian people would have been in a much better position than Bangladeshi people to say their culture and their fertile resource rich land and their outlook was "opposite of the factors necessary to breed and allow backward mentalities like ISIS to thrive". The backward impoverished hotbed of Hindu Bengali fundamentalism called Bangladesh is suited for something as insular and backward as Isis if not more so; we have seen that at least since 1952.
 
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It is inevitable. And the outcome will eventually see a strong Muslim nation emerging with BD in the center. Unfortunately and sadly. a lot of blood may flow meanwhile. If you consider the history of Bengali Muslims from 1900 onward, you will feel the same.
 
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The backward impoverished hotbed of Hindu Bengali fundamentalism called Bangladesh is suited for something as insular and backward as Isis if not more so; we have seen that at least since 1952.
I also believe something much worse than ISIS is waiting to float from there. After all Bangladesh outdid Pakistan in reducing Hindus in their country. @Rain Man
The Ghazwa e Hind may be attempted* not from the West but from the East.

*I used the word attempted because the spectacle will be worth watching - neo-mujahids will be slaughtered on a scale never seen before and the dried rivers will again flow with fluid - this time with Bangla ISIS blood.
 
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backward mentalities like ISIS to thrive.

Yes, what more will be FORWARD looking than Jamaat..........

Remember Sayedee face on moon..........

sayeedi.jpg


:rofl:

Bengali chicks deserve better.

@Imran Khan will take care of that.....

:rofl:
 
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I'm so glad our geography is more suited for communist type mentalities that officially took over in 1971 eating our guts out. The wants of BD population never mattered and it is still very much so. Bangladesh is sovereign, my foot. I'm sorry but Bangladesh is another word for a big joke. The efficient machinery set up by India run by its proxy BAL ultimately reigns supreme in this sorry joke called Bangladesh.

On Isis/isil/whatever, they along with other parties in the conflict are a tool propped up by certain advanced foreign powers to destroy Syria and destabilize the lands of a bunch of expendable third world people. Syrian people would have been in a much better position than Bangladeshi people to say their culture and their fertile resource rich land and their outlook was "opposite of the factors necessary to breed and allow backward mentalities like ISIS to thrive". The backward impoverished hotbed of Hindu Bengali fundamentalism called Bangladesh is suited for something as insular and backward as Isis if not more so; we have seen that at least since .

Whilst I understand your perspective I fundamentally disagree but respect your right to have it. Some food for thought.

- The Muslims of Bengal are the heart and soul of Bangladesh and it is our number and identity that has enabled the creation of Bangladesh. This identity has been forged over centuries and the machanitions of BAL will ultimately be mere footnote of history. The genesis of our identity is the establishment of the Delhi sultanate which solidified through the independent sultanate period. It remained unbowed through the ravages of of the British raj and Hindu supremacy and rose like a Phoenix in the Bengal parliament and gave birth to the Muslim league and ultimately Pakistan . It is this same indomitable spirit that lead to the formation of Bangladesh. This spirit lives on and a nation of 160 million can not be invaded controlled or dominated.


- Your claim of lefty communist mentality again I do not see as a negative. Leaders like sheer-e-Bangla or maulana bhashani worked their entire life to lift up poor Muslims. Were they wrong? When you make pronouncement and sweeping generalisation you insult the giants who raised this nation up.

- insult mujib as much as you like , he was a terrible administrator but as a revolutionary leader he is worthy of respect. He was the right man for the job. When you say we should not have separated you are going against the experience of every Bengali premier that was deposed by the west. You deny the right of mugib to form a government after wining the election in 1970. Let us go back a little to the Agartala conspiracy..... The prime architect within it is Osmani. Will you denounce our greatest soldier in modern times as a indian agent? Bangladesh is a reality, the cause of it is simple, our unwillingness to live as second class citizen in a country we bought about. What we have created we had absolute right to rip asunder. I am a proponent of pan-Islamism but not servitude even if it is under a Muslim master.
Have more confidence in your people. We are a premoghul Muslim nation that yet stands in the subcontinent.

I am unclear what your definition of sovereignty is. Is it to live in perpetual fear of the external enemy and define oneself by such fear. Only artificial entities needs to do this like India or Pakistan who are many nations clumped together. We are a ginormous homogenous nation with a rich history and a solid identity and is completely immune from external threat by the dint of our sheer number. why would we need to adopt such posture. It is true that BAL have pushed through some policies that does not seem to benefit BD much. You are absolutely correct to criticise that. But I think it is a stretch of the imagination to conclude sovereignty has been compromised. BAL currently are a scourge upon our nation and they have killed democracy. Pendulum will swing the other way as it always does. We have faced far worse and have survived intact and this period of BKSHAL will end in ignominy like before.


As for the Arabs, they are children. They have no sense of themselves. Every Arab country is an artificial entity and since independence from the ottoman and subsequent British/French/Italian rule not a single country can claim to have formed an intelligencia. Each is ruled by despots whether in the guise of King or a president. The democracy deficit allowed exploitation. I have not been to Iraq but have been to Syria. It was a beautiful country but it's people were not free. They would not speak to us other than bland platitudes as the government machine was fully geared to spy on its populace. It was a country where every newspaper printed the same news, it's editorials all government sponsored. Imagine that happening in BD. Yes BAL has done many a thing to stifle opposition media but decenting voices still exists in the country. The average man can still say what he feels .... This is not the case in the Arab world. ISIS is a product of Sunni disenfranchisement at the lack of representation in Iraq Which took advantage of Syria where government lacks legitimacy. You give Syrians too much credit...., except for tiny minority of upwardly mobile educated the rest of Syria was kept poor and uneducated. Look up Hama uprising.


In conclusion try to look for the good in your people .... You will find there is ample strength and dignity which is the true measure of sovereignty.
 
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