http://www.aopnews.com/opinion/mir_payback.html

It's Payback Time

By: Haroun Mir
April 9, 2008

In 1994 when Pakistani officials decided to create a dreadful monster called 
the Taliban, they didn't bother to estimate its impact on their own society. 

In fact, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence's (ISI) militaristic policies, 
which consisted of bleeding the Indian army in Kashmir and turning Afghanistan 
into their virtual fifth province, have blinded them to the consequences. 

Their ill-conceived strategy has failed once again. Consequently, the Indian 
military has emerged stronger from the long conflict in Kashmir and the 
coalition forces have assisted Afghans to liberate Kabul from the grasp of the 
Taliban. 

Eventually, Pakistan has become the biggest loser because the same radical 
movements, which its military leaders have created, threaten its very 
existence. 

In the spring of 1992, the communist regime fell and Ahmad Shah Massoud's 
forces entered Kabul. Pakistani officials instructed their trusted man and 
surrogate Gulbudin Hekmatyar (leader of Hezb-e-Islami), who had just been 
appointed the prime minister of the newly established coalition government in 
Kabul, to burn down the city. 

>From 1992 to 1994, the Afghan capital became a living hell. Despite intensive 
>efforts, Hekmatyar's forces were stuck in the southern and eastern parts of 
>Kabul and were unable to make significant progress. Pakistani authorities 
>decided to shift their support from Hekmatyar to a then-unknown radical 
>movement - the Taliban. 

Along with the ISI the late Benazir Bhutto and Nasrullah Babar - then 
respectively the prime minister and interior minister of Pakistan - are also to 
blame because the movement was created under their direct watch. 

Few politicians in Pakistan and in the rest of the world ever questioned 
Pakistan's dangerous policy of purposely nurturing a radical Islamist group. 

In September 1995, Colonel Imam (a senior ISI official), with impunity and 
consent of western officials who had an interest in the Turkmen pipeline 
project, personally led Taliban forces to capture Herat, which is the largest 
city in western Afghanistan. 

In 1996 when Bin Laden's airplane landed in the Afghan city of Jalalabad, no 
alarm went off in the capitals of the West. 

When the Taliban were beating women, destroying schools, and holding public 
executions, Pakistani officials were trying to convince the rest of the world 
by saying that Afghanistan was a backward, fragmented, and ethnically divided 
country which needed an iron hand to stabilise it. 

Today, the same ills that destroyed Afghanistan plague Pakistan. Pakistani 
society today has become fundamentally divided. The home to Pakistan's 
intellectuals and moderate middle class is Punjab and Sindh, while radicalism, 
terrorism and poverty thrive in the Pashtun heartland and in Baluchistan 
province. 

Up to the present moment, Pakistan's military authorities have favoured radical 
Islamist groups at the expense of moderate and democratic movements. 

For example, President Musharraf didn't hesitate to jail lawyers who protested 
in favour of rule of law and democracy but appeased murderous radical Islamists 
and Taliban leaders under the phony Pashtun code of conduct enforced in the 
tribal area. 

Until now, Pakistani authorities have been able to avoid a full confrontation 
with local Taliban groups for fear of alienating Pashtuns who constitute over 
15 per cent of Pakistan's popu-lation, but are intentionally over-represented 
up to 25 per cent in Pakistan's army. 

Despite continuous pressure from the US, Pakistan's military authorities have 
resisted bringing their Punjabi elite units to the tribal battlegrounds against 
the Pashtun radical movements. 

Instead, they heavily relied on militia forces from the tribal zone to secure 
the area. Pakistani leaders rigorously want to avoid a rift and direct 
confrontation between Punjabis and Pashtuns. 

Indeed, there is a real risk that the "war on terror" in Pakistan might 
transform into a full war for autonomy or independence of Pashtun tribes from 
Islamabad. 

Pakistani authorities have broken the status quo in the tribal zone by 
promoting radical Islam and extremist religious leaders at the expense of 
traditional tribal leaders and institutions. 

Pakistan's policy in the tribal zone has been a continuation of former British 
colonial policy, which consisted of keeping Pashtun tribes economically 
dependent, politically fragmented, and intellectually backward. 

The government in Islamabad has continued to subsidise them and bribe their 
leaders, instead of creating a sustained economy and providing modern 
education. 

The ageing Al-Qaida leaders and Afghan veterans of the Soviet war are ceding 
leadership to much younger and emerging local Taliban leaders. 

Baitullah Mehsud is the best example of the new leaders, who want to set the 
agenda rather than follow anyone's orders. 

Despite the efforts of ISI and Pakistani religious leaders to force him to 
fight against "infidel troops" in Afghanistan, Mehsud persisted with his goal 
to take the battle to Islamabad instead of Kabul. 

Many fellow Afghans praise him for taking on Pakistani forces. Indeed, 
Pakistani authorities created Taliban to protect their interests in Afghanistan 
and in Kashmir, but are now faced with uncalculated consequences, which 
seriously threaten Pakistan's own existence. 

The newly elected civilian leaders will have a hard time setting right the 
mistakes committed by the military over more than three decades.  

Haroun Mir served as an aide to late Ahmad Shah Massoud, Afghanistan's former 
defense minister. He is the co-founder and deputy director of Afghanistan's 
Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS).


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