http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\05\19\story_19-5-2009_pg3_1

Editorial: A broader front against Taliban



President Asif Ali Zardari said Sunday that the Pakistan Army would be going 
into other tribal areas of the country in the hunt for the Taliban. He 
explained that the army had 150,000 troops there and it was already costing a 
billion dollars; an expansion would depend on how much the world would want to 
help. The collateral fallout will include more refugees, but then their quick 
return would depend very much on the success of the army operations. And for 
all this the world would have to help financially because Pakistan was in the 
eye of a global Taliban threat.

For the first time, Pakistan seems to be truly grasped of the situation. The 
operation in Swat is going well, judging from the very favourable casualty 
count of the enemy. But all analysts agree that the dwindling Taliban force 
will in time be reinforced from other parts of the Federally Administered 
Tribal Areas (FATA) that abut on Malakand Division. Also, for the first time 
there is almost a complete national consensus behind the plan to start wider 
operations. In fact, for the first time, the religious-clerical community has 
voiced its opposition to the Taliban brand of Islam, or at least the majority 
school of thought has dared to speak against a force that has hounded them over 
the years into submission.

There are, however, political problems within this consensus that will have to 
be faced squarely. The political parties have overt and covert agendas which 
they insist on expressing through various levels of "objection" to the military 
operation. From the extreme view, that our army is merely fighting America's 
war and killing its own people, to the less extreme view that some parties were 
not consulted to avoid "talking" to the Taliban, the disagreement is very much 
there and can become more strident in the face of the attrition of fighting an 
insurgency involving foreign infiltrators.

The way the people at large have reacted to the savagery of the Taliban against 
the people of Swat is sure to make the resolve to fight the terrorists more 
firm. The resolve to take on the Taliban in FATA clearly demonstrates this new 
confidence. The Taliban must be stopped from coming to the help of warlord 
Fazlullah, and that can be done only by engaging the other warlord Baitullah 
Mehsud. Swat can be "conquered" and the refugees could start returning, only to 
find that Baitullah has sent in his people from South Waziristan to start the 
massacre all over again.

The triangle of discord in Karachi over the presence or non-presence of the 
Taliban in the mega-city unfolds with three coalition partners in the 
government steadily losing their men to "unknown" killers. After muhajirs and 
Pashtuns, now the PPP leaders at the local level are getting killed. Sadly, the 
three parties suspect one another of having carried out the killings. The MQM 
is seen as being alarmist about the swelling of the Taliban ranks in Karachi 
but, despite reports supporting this point of view, the other two insist that 
the Pashtun of Karachi are not terrorists. The police, however, go on reporting 
the arrest of Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders and their rank and file who confess 
that their men come to Karachi to get medical treatment and to take rest.

International opinion has turned in favour of Pakistan since the military 
operation began in Malakand Division. This is understandable because the policy 
of "talking" to the Taliban and making "peace deals" with them was seen, 
correctly, by world leaders as a policy of dereliction. When Islamabad and 
Rawalpindi decided finally to grasp the nettle of Taliban treachery, this 
opinion softened and is now inclined to help Pakistan financially as its army 
mobilises.

Therefore, for now at least, Pakistan is well set to face up to the menace of 
the Taliban without taking an economic nosedive. It now depends on our 
internecine politicians to keep the national consensus against terrorism intact 
and bite the bullet of some collateral damage in the coming days. *

Second Editorial: Terrorism defeated in Sri Lanka

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), surrounded in a narrow strip of 
northern beach, have abandoned their war against the government of Sri Lanka 
saying they didn't want innocent people to be killed by the Sri Lankan army as 
collateral damage. "We remain with one last choice - to remove the last weak 
excuse of the enemy for killing our people. We have decided to silence our 
guns. Our only regrets are for the lives lost and that we could not hold out 
for longer."

The Sri Lankan army was scoring against the Tamil guerrillas for some time and 
the world had started appealing last weak for a stand-off if innocent people 
were to be removed from crossfire. The Tigers were using them as shields and 
were known to have killed their co-ethnics to show to the world that the Sri 
Lankan army was killing them.

There is no doubt that the Tamils had genuine claim on rights as a minority 
community. But the organisation of terror as a method of getting these rights 
could not be sustained for long as a legitimate measure against a state. The 
LTTE lost international support, was abandoned "officially" even by India and 
was finally declared a terrorist organisation. This no doubt gave opportunity 
to the Sri Lankan government, backed by the Sinhala majority population, to use 
all kinds of rash strategies. Since January 20, over 8,000 civilians have been 
killed in the fighting.

LTTE has killed its own people like the Taliban. It has used suicide-bombers to 
kill innocent people just like the Taliban. But the LTTE did not threaten the 
world as the Taliban do as affiliates of Al Qaeda. The Muslim world functions 
as the hinterland of support for the Taliban. This function was performed by 
the Indian state of Tamil Nadu with a population of 65 million as against Sri 
Lanka's 20 million, 5 percent of whom are Tamils. And Tamil Nadu has people of 
high emotion who commit suicide for LTTE. This year alone there were five 
self-immolations in Chennai.

Nearly 200,000 Tamil refugees await rehabilitation. More than that, the Tamils 
of Sri Lanka need rights as a minority community and some devolution to the 
areas where they live. Sri Lanka will have to win them back with reconciliation 
and concessions. This is a good moment for that because the innocent Tamil 
population is in a state of disenchantment with the LTTE. 

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