The Taliban Dilemma, the US and Pakistan | Asia Sentinel
,19 NOVEMBER 2013
Did the US botch a Pakistan peace overture with the killing of the head of the local Taliban?
The Nov. 1 drone attack by the US
that killed the Pakistani Taliban leader, Hakimullah Mehsud, appears to
have paralyzed whatever prospects there were for a ‘peaceful solution’
to Pakistan’s continuing terrorism and violence and has to be regarded
as a major blunder stemming from lack of communication and distrust
between the two countries.
Worse, the killing of Mehsud, who had
expressed at least some inclination to start a dialogue with the
Pakistan government for normalization -- although many believe he had no
intention of seriously negotiating -- has allowed for his replacement
by Mullah Fazllulah, who has vowed never to negotiate with Pakistan.
Faizlullah is the hardliner who ordered the attempt to kill the
schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, turning her into a world figure after she
survived being shot in the head.
To the utter dismay of the government
in Islamabad, the US once again has played its part in bringing the
whole process of dialogue, however fragile it was, to a dead end. Not
only does it reflect lack of cooperation and coordination between
Pakistan and the US authorities, but also the markedly different visions
and priorities they have of the region’s future.
The timing of the attack has further
added to the already brewing lava of intense suspicions in Pakistan over
US intentions although the killing was and is still being followed by
serious attempts on the part of Pakistani authorities to prevent the
breakdown of the dialogue, even in the face of doubts over the Taliban's
desultory offers of negotiation as ploys to gain time.
The killing has led many to the
conclusion that the US is not interested in helping to establish peace
in Pakistan, at least until Pakistan helps the US to achieve its war
objectives in Afghanistan.
The question of the Pakistani Taliban
has thus become a very serious dilemma for the Pakistani authorities,
one which demands serious political and strategic maneuvering both at
the national and international levels.
One thing is becoming increasingly
clear in Pakistan with every passing day – that the incumbent government
is serious in a reaching a compromise with the Pakistani Taliban,
perhaps because the ruling business-oriented party, the Pakistan Muslim
League, has rightly realized the crucial importance of establishing
peace as a prerequisite for making Pakistan an attractive place for
foreign direct investment. The first thing the government had to do was
to dissociate itself from this particular attack in order to maintain
its credibility vis-à-vis the Pakistani Taliban, leading the interior
minister to declare the attack an “ambush of peace talks.”
On the other hand, the provincial
government of Khyber Pakhutnkwa Province, the most troubled and
terrorist-hit province of Pakistan, also declared its intention to stop
the flow of NATO/ISAF supplies through areas under its jurisdiction.
The disagreement between the troubled
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial government, formerly known as the of
Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or the Pakistan Movement for Justice, and the
central government of the Pakistan Muslim League over the issue of NATO
supplies against the backdrop of US withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014
has further exacerbated the political environment in Pakistan,
reinforcing the fact that terrorism in Pakistan is inevitably linked
with the Afghan conflict.
While the wrapping up of the Afghan
conflict is on fast track, a number of bilateral and multilateral events
are in process with a single objective: to provide a face saving exit
to the US forces. Most recent one was a trilateral meeting hosted by
David Cameron, the UK prime minister, and participated by Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif and President Karzai. After this meeting, Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif announced in London that the dialogue process with the
Pakistani Taliban had begun.
Significantly, Sharif’s statement
came in response to Mehsud’s interview with the BBC in October, in which
he declared his intentions to start serious negotiations with the
Pakistani government. It is also significant to note that Islamabad,
prior to Oct. 9, the date of the BBC interview, had not formally
announced the initiation of talks or establishment of contact with the
Pakistani Taliban. Not only did he invite the government to engage in
dialogue, but also made it clear that for the ceasefire to be credible,
“it is important that drone attacks are stopped.”
The Pakistani Taliban had placed some
hope on the negotiation process, especially in light of the prime
minister’s assurances to terminate air strikes on FATA territory after
his October visit to the US. However, why did the US kill Mehsud right
after the PM’s announcement of the initiation of talks? Nisar Ali Khan,
the interior minister of Pakistan said in a press conference after the
attack that the strike came just hours before a delegation was supposed
to travel and initiate talks with the Pakistani Taliban.
The minister added that during
bilateral interactions with the US, including with Secretary of State
John Kerry, Pakistan had urged that drone strikes to be halted
completely, especially during the peace talks. Thus it is difficult to
believe the often repeated rhetoric that both the US and Pakistan are
“closely cooperating” in curbing the menace of terrorism in the region.
Mehsud was one of the US’s most
wanted terrorists, with a reward on his head of US$5 million. The
Pentagon suspected him of arranging the attack on a NATO base in
Afghanistan, of a botched car bombing in New York’s Times Square, and of
terrorist attacks against Americans in Pakistan. Nonetheless, critics
say the US is seeking to keep Pakistan in line with the policy
objectives of the US, which is to ensure the orderly departure from
Afghanistan, and a peace with the Pakistani Taliban would have got in
the way of that.
Such views are not unfounded. For
example, the killing of Wali-ur Rehman, the second in command to the
Pakistani Taliban also came against the backdrop of a possible
initiation of negotiations between the government and the Taliban. He
too was killed in a drone attack by the US, on May 29, when the
governments at the center and in provinces had just been formed after
elections on May 11, 2013.
During elections, all parties in
general emphasized the need for engaging with the Taliban in dialogue
and find a peaceful solution. Rehman’s killing within weeks after
elections had the effect of postponing the talks until Sharif’s
statement of Oct. 31 in the UK.
The killing of Rehman and now Mehsud
is most likely to have a similar effect, or even worse since the new
Taliban leader, Mullah Fazllulah, happens to be a staunch enemy of the
State of Pakistan. He is the man who established his control in the Swat
Valley, among other things banning the attendance of girls in school.
Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head and neck on Oct. 9, 2012 on his
orders. She survived and has become a symbol of resistance to
fundamentalism.
Mullah Fazllulah and his troops were
eventually pushed out and forced to leave military operations in the
region in 2009. Announcement of his appointment was immediately followed
by an official statement by the Pakistani Taliban declaring that there
would be no negotiations with the government of Pakistan since Mullah
Fazllulah “is already against negotiations with Pakistan.”
The mess created after the attack has
pushed the government of Pakistan to its limits. Its consequences can
be very grave. One thing must be clear that one cannot hope to find
solutions to such complicated problems as terrorism and insurgency
merely by removing heads of such organizations and networks. And,
considering the loose structure, vague ideology and motivation of the
Pakistani Taliban, this strategy may not work. Such organizations are
never short on leadership. Hence the killing of Hakeem may not affect
the Taliban’s continuity in carrying out attacks. Therefore, the need is
to take pragmatic steps to review counter-terrorism strategy in the
light of Pakistan’s socio-political realities and review aspects of its
relations with the US.
There is arguably no other way of
dealing with terrorism than through dialogue. Pakistani authorities seem
to have realized this, and their intention to go ahead with the
dialogue process was reinforced in a statement by the foreign office
which said that, “the government, however, is determined to continue
with efforts to engage with the Pakistani to bring an end to the ongoing
violence and make them a part of mainstream politics within the
parameters of our constitution.”
The statement is very meaningful, not
because of its content, but because of the agency through which it has
been given i.e., the foreign office., giving the impression of having
been specifically directed against the US’ calling the dialogue process a
matter “internal” to Pakistan, and celebrating Hakeem’s death a victory
of the US in the war against terrorism.
The dilemma for Pakistan is wide and
open. Where it has to deal with the Pakistani Taliban, it has to handle
the US as well. Lack of coordination between the US and Pakistan is
becoming a major issue and a problem to be seriously reckoned with.
However, how and the extent to which it would affect the approaching
end-game in Afghanistan and Pakistan-US bilateral relations in that
context is another question. But it is more than apparent that the
damage to the Pakistan government’s efforts to establish peace with the
Taliban has been done.
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