http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\12\14\story_14-12-2009_pg3_2
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\12\14\story_14-12-2009_pg3_2

Monday, December 14, 2009


COMMENT: Terrorism, extremism and militancy -Shahzad Chaudhry



 Tensions find root either amongst civilisations, which is bad for world peace, 
or within civilisations when the two ends of a spectrum compete for domination 
against each other in a society. Those on the extreme end of a religious 
spectrum, the extremists, are thus existentially present and are a phenomenon 
of relativism within the spectrum

Militancy separates extremism from terrorism. I had stated in my last week's 
column, 'A grand failure' (Daily Times, December 7, 2009), that "we must 
differentiate between extremist sentiment and militant extremism" and that even 
after a successful end to the ongoing counter-insurgency effort in Waziristan, 
"some extremist sentiment will persist, for that is the nature of any 
religion". The sense needs to be better explained; as indeed it is likely to 
become the bane of Pakistani society to resolve the dilemma as it charts its 
future in the backdrop of an armed insurgency and an unstinted suicide bombing 
campaign wrought by the terrorist groups in Pakistani cities.

Any action begets a reaction; such definition has been extremely harmful to the 
need for congenial coexistence, thus reinforcing a divide amongst the Christian 
world, the Muslim world, the Jews and the rest; hardly the stuff of peace - 
thanks to no uncertain philosophising by people like Samuel Huntington. Secular 
societies like the Swiss are reasserting their faith; a reverse implication of 
denying another faith the freedom of practice and physical symbolism. For the 
Muslims to become aware of their distinct denomination thus is the obvious 
fallout. 

Is religiosity bad? Not the least. Religion too exists on a spectrum from the 
extremely religious to the hardly religious; religious they all are if that is 
the uniform creed of acceptance in a society. After all the higher calling of 
any religion is to make society better and a human a better human. There cannot 
be anything wrong with that. 

Tensions find root either amongst civilisations, which is bad for world peace, 
or within civilisations when the two ends of a spectrum compete for domination 
against each other in a society. Those on the extreme end of a religious 
spectrum, the extremists, are thus existentially present and are a phenomenon 
of relativism within the spectrum. 

While insurgency seeks a territorial entity and a parallel system of laws, and 
challenges an existing system of governance, control and administration to 
wrest it away from the competing authority, terrorism is the means employed by 
an entity within a spectrum to impose its views and dominate it through cowing 
the rest into submission. It may be used by insurgents to aid their larger 
design of forcing a submission of will on the target state and society, or 
usually a more preferred means of those within a spectrum to give expression to 
their militant endeavour to dominate and impose their sense of religiosity in a 
society. Pakistan has its hands full on both counts. The recent spate of 
bombings is the expression of such intent by the insurgents being pursued in 
Waziristan. Militant extremism has found presence in no uncertain terms in 
Pakistani society and will be a prime area of focus for resolution.

In a hierarchy of resolution one hopes that the ongoing insurgency will soon 
wither in the face of a determined application of force by the state. There are 
other essentials to a complete elimination of an insurgency, and the earlier 
the Pakistani state rises to the challenge of addressing the remaining 
socio-political and socio-economic measures to completely stabilise the 
situation in FATA, lesser shall be its own dilution to the even bigger 
challenge of addressing terrorism arising out of militant extremism in our 
midst. We need to close this front to move to the next.

On the other end of the religious militancy spectrum is of course the sentiment 
of extremism - an almost essential presence in any religious denomination, 
though of varying intensity. Condensing the spectrum to a minimal acceptable 
spread is a long haul and will need a determined input of intellectual effort 
as indeed necessary resources and attention of both the state and society. 
Education is perhaps the best antidote to this malaise, and yet there will be 
the presence of a benign strain of committed religiosity such as the one 
pursued by politically motivated religious parties or the puritanical strain of 
the Tableeghi Jamaat. The more cohesive and central the religious strain 
pursued by the majority, less shall be the tensions in the permitted extremes. 
Extremism could thus be contained. 

The clergy and the ulema have a most important role to mitigate the differences 
and coalesce together on most uniform areas of applicability. The importance of 
a composite syllabus for the madrassas and inclusion of religious studies, more 
so of a comparative nature among global religions in the so-called state and 
private institutions cannot only enable better understanding of the other, it 
can also further tolerance.

What takes the meat though is the comprehensive understanding and institution 
of the necessary set of strategies inhibiting extremism taking the route of 
terrorism, the consequence of which one witnesses in the recent destructive 
spate of bombing. Denying extremism from turning militant separates extremism 
from converting into terrorism. 

What will it take to stop extremist sentiment turning militant? First, a few 
law enforcement measures: cancellation of all licensed prohibited bore weapons 
across the board in the entire country; inhibiting access of these groups to 
weapons and means of destruction and interdicting supplies at their source of 
origin; strict enforcement of the law with exemplary punishment where violated; 
reinvigorating intelligence agencies and forming new ones where required to the 
lowest level of an administrative structure to gather information on group 
activities of known militants and extremist elements. The ISI should only 
assist but cannot be given the prime responsibility since that is not its prime 
area of functioning; forming special cyber-crime protection cells for tracking 
funds movement and other related funding activities that sustain such groups; 
formation of special forces groups at the district level to provide quick 
reaction to known militant activities and proactively engage such groups to 
apprehend those. Such special forces need to be trained to the highest levels 
in combating terrorism and particularly urban terrorism and provided on 
priority with the latest mobility and communication resources. The intelligence 
and special forces outfits must be placed under one command at all levels 
within an administrative structure for unity of command and the most optimum 
coordination that will rest at the heart of such a counter-terrorism effort.

Counter-terrorism experts can actually come up with a litany of steps needed to 
put such an effort in place. What confounds reason though is the absence of any 
sense in this direction from the government. Is it their belief that the 
military's counter-insurgency campaign will deliver the country entirely of the 
curse of terrorism? If so, they shall be patently wrong. Pakistan's next 
frontier is counter-terrorism and that needs a better explanation of how 
religiosity culminates in turning violent and militant. The awareness of the 
roots of the problem will need to be followed with a concerted action by 
parliament in framing necessary laws, provisioning resources and following up 
on government implementation. Is there a need for forming a Joint Parliamentary 
Committee on Elimination of Terrorism? There definitely is, since the haul is 
likely to be long and will need continued focus.

The writer is a retired air vice marshal and a former ambassador

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