http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-9-212996-A-six-month-timeline-is-all-we-have



A six-month timeline is all we have



*Islamabad diary*






*Ayaz Amir 
*<http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintWriterName.aspx?ID=9&URL=Ayaz%20Amir>Friday,
November 08, 2013





By mid-2014 what many Pakistanis have been crying themselves hoarse about
will have happened: most of the Americans in Afghanistan will have gone and
we will be alone with our terrorist problem. If a residual American
presence remains there may be some drones flying around. But we can be
reasonably certain that the intensity of the present drone war will
subside. Taliban leaders in North Waziristan will heave a sigh of relief.

When the Soviets were in Afghanistan they were afraid of one thing above
all: Stinger missiles which made their helicopters vulnerable. The tide of
war in Afghanistan changed with the arrival of the Stingers. The one thing
for which the Taliban have no answer is drone technology. They will be
counting the days when that is gone, or most of it is.

Pakistan was unprepared for post-Soviet Afghanistan. Is it any better
prepared for post-American Afghanistan?

Some of the nonsense emanating from the political class can be easily
dismissed. Despite all the heat and noise peace talks is a non-starter, not
least because no one has been able to define the basis of a peace
settlement with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Some other illusions
can also be put to rest. Once the Americans pack their bags and leave the
Taliban will not descend from the mountains and lay down their arms before
the Pakistani authorities. The sources of militancy will not dry up.
Taliban ardour, far from diminishing, will be on the rise.

Just imagine what the Taliban around their campfires will be saying: Islam
and faith defeated one superpower; this combination has now defeated the
superpower which remains. The soft state of Pakistan now beckons. The
dynamics of the situation in Afghanistan may be different, either the
country again descending into civil war or some attempt being made at
power-sharing…if Afghanistan is lucky, that is. But over here, given what
we know of the TTP, naked ambition will be on the march.

The TTP has tasted power and no one gives up power voluntarily. We have to
understand the social transformation that has been wrought: small-time
mullahs, village maulvis, have come to wield power and authority, the lower
orders of tribal society riding to the top, guns in their hands and
fighters at their command, and revelling in the freedom of the mountains,
and the previous tribal hierarchy gone, the old order of Maliks eliminated
at the point of the bullet.

People with nothing before, now having all this…would they want to give it
up? It’s like – just try imagining this – your neighbourhood maulvi
suddenly becoming a leader of society, dictating orders and laying down the
law. Take this as a test: if anyone thinks that matters can be settled with
the TTP, he should first try his hand at discussing something, anything,
with his local preacher. If he succeeds then only let him visualise talking
to the Taliban.

This is not to run these people down but only to point out that we are
dealing with a different set of people and a different worldview. Most of
the Taliban figures, whether in Afghanistan or Pakistan, are either
unlettered or products of madressah education. We have a whole population
of madressah students in Pakistan, but the difference is that those who
have joined the Taliban have a gun in their hands and are mostly
battle-hardened. Primitivism is one thing but add a Kalashnikov or a rocket
launcher to it and it becomes a deadly combination.

Consider also another aspect of this situation. The Taliban have their
mountain fastnesses. The army cannot reach them, or can reach them with
considerable difficulty. But the Taliban are free to come down to Peshawar,
to the plains of Punjab, and mingle with the population. A whole criminal
industry has developed since the onset of our terrorism war, car-lifting,
extortion and kidnappings being masterminded from the tribal belt – anarchy
at the service of the Taliban.

The Pakistani state can remain where it is, and the Taliban can remain
where they are, but the kind of power the Taliban now enjoy they would not
like taken away.

If my MQM friends would forgive my saying so, the MQM has also wrought a
social transformation in Karachi, a powerless stratum organising itself and
rising to a position of power. If the MQM is not going to cede authority in
Karachi – the smallest thing happens and gunmen are on the loose and the
city is made to shut down – the Taliban are not going to cede authority
where they exercise it.

There’s a difference too: MQM power is confined largely to urban Sindh. In
the shape of Deobandi madressahs and networks of sympathizers, the Taliban
can project power and carry out deadly actions across the country. Mehran,
Kamra and GHQ attest to this Taliban capability.

The purpose of this explanation is simply to show that whether we like it
or not, we have a fight on our hands. We can close our eyes to it, as we
have been doing for a long time, we can bury our heads in the sand, an
activity at which we also excel, but this problem is not going away. It’s
no use saying that the American presence in Afghanistan has brought this
militancy about or has exacerbated it. This is now a futile discussion, of
academic interest perhaps but of no practical relevance. Even if we prove
to ourselves or to others that it’s all America’s fault how does it help
us? We have this problem. What do we do about it?

Before we go on to what we should do, or what choices we have, there is
another piece of nonsense that we can nail to the mast: the cliché much
beloved of the Pakistani political class that war is no solution to
anything. The world as presently constituted, the map-lines we see, all of
it is a product of strife and conflict.

Throughout history, through the rise and fall of empires, power and its
application, blood and iron to use Bismarck’s phrase, have shaped the
destiny of nations. If this is putting it crudely, you can sugar coat the
words but the underlying reality would remain the same.

A de Gaulle quote is apt: “The sword is the axis of the world and its power
is absolute.”

Power of course doesn’t mean its crude application. What did Horace say?
“Brute force bereft of reason falls by its own weight. Power with counsel
temper’d even the gods make greater…” That’s it: power with counsel
tempered, power balanced by reason. But against the problem we are facing
we are showing neither power nor reason…we are just mumbling stupidities,
and sometimes shouting these same stupidities from the housetops.

Nobody wants to be harsh on the political class, we are all great democrats
and we are all for democracy, but the political class, as heaven is our
witness, seems to have given up on thinking altogether. Do we see any
analysis, rigorous or not, about the situation facing us not in the remote
future but the next six months? Can anyone take the proceedings of
parliament, both houses, seriously?

The army is supposed to be great at analysis. At least that is the
carefully cultivated myth. But has the army, after all its Afghan travails,
discarded its notions of Taliban assets and seeking influence in
Afghanistan? Or is it still stuck in the old grooves?

We could have made good use of these six months and pressed the Taliban
against their havens, drones in the sky and our forces on the ground. But
this is not going to happen. From what we can judge, this opportunity, the
only that remains before the Americans are gone and the shape of the
horizon changes, will be frittered away. To no one’s surprise really given
that both the political class and the military are torn betwixt platitude
and irresolution.




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