http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\08\16\story_16-8-2009_pg3_2

ANALYSIS: Sympathy for the Devil -Dr Hasan-Askari Rizvi



 Support for Islamist discourse on national and international issues and 
militancy is reflected in the electronic media and the press, especially the 
Urdu press. Some columnists and TV anchors present an extremely slanted view of 
politics and society



It is reassuring that Pakistan's army, air force and paramilitary have 
dislodged the Taliban from Malakand and are now concentrating on South 
Waziristan. The current single-minded approach of the civilian government and 
the military authorities for countering terrorism has checked the creeping 
advance of the Taliban-led militancy into mainland Pakistan.

The threat of the Taliban establishing permanent control over Pakistani 
territory is now reduced, but the Taliban mindset is going to haunt Pakistan 
for a long time. This mindset goes well beyond the Taliban. Many political 
circles share this perspective to varying degrees. A large number of Islamist 
parties and groups either support the Taliban or share their worldview, 
although some of them maintain a distance for political reasons.

A large number of people and societal groups sympathise with the Taliban 
because they have been socialised into religious orthodoxy and militancy. They 
may not agree with the Taliban's violent ways but they protect and defend their 
cause or attempt to neutralise any action by the state and society against 
militant groups.

Islamist parties like the Jama'at-e Islami and the JUIF, and factions of 
Jamiat-e Ahle Hadees openly support the Taliban and oppose military action 
against them. They either describe Taliban violence as a reaction to US 
military presence in Afghanistan or drone strikes. At times, they argue that 
some agents of foreign countries have entered the Taliban movement to engage in 
violence to undermine the reputation of the Taliban, who are actually friends 
of Pakistan. Some activists of these parties express a lot of appreciation of 
Taliban rule in Afghanistan before September 2001.

The Jama'at-e Islami realised soon that its opposition to military action 
against the Taliban does not evoke a positive response at the popular level. It 
changed its strategy by avoiding direct criticism of military action and 
focused more on criticising the US and its policies in Afghanistan and 
Pakistan, accusing Pakistan of killing its people for the sake of the US in 
return for money and weapons.

Some religious circles oppose the Taliban mainly because of Islamic 
denominational differences. They also support military action against them. 
However, they are critical of the US like those religious leaders who support 
the Taliban. They also support the introduction of an Islam-dominated religious 
political system in Pakistan.

The appeal of these Islamic parties is limited to their hardcore supporters who 
come out for their public rallies, but these Islamist parties cannot launch a 
sustained agitation to stop military action in the tribal areas or force the 
government to sever its ties with the US. The mainstream political parties do 
not endorse their views and demands, neutralising the appeal of Islamist 
parties beyond their core support.

However, these groups have sustained overall sympathy for conservative 
religious discourse and Islamist militancy in society. This runs deep into 
official civilian and military circles. A good number of civilian and military 
officials express sympathy, if not support for militancy (avoiding the name of 
the Taliban) or argue that Pakistan has been dragged into an American war in 
the region. This sentiment is strong among retired officials who are more open 
in expressing their views.

In the past, these diverse groups sympathising with militancy could often 
soften the government's counter-terrorism policy because of lack of unity of 
mind in the official civilian and military circles.

Now, the civilian leadership and the military have come to the conclusion that 
stern action has to be taken against the Taliban and other militant groups that 
challenge the writ of the Pakistani state. Therefore, these elements have 
become less effective. However, they continue to engage in a whispering 
campaign against the government either with reference to military action in the 
tribal areas, pro-US policies or alleged corruption and mis-governance of the 
federal government.

Support for Islamist discourse on national and international issues and 
militancy is reflected in the electronic media and the press, especially the 
Urdu press. Some columnists and TV anchors present an extremely slanted view of 
politics and society, influenced mainly by a strong Islamist orientation, 
subtle sympathy for the Taliban and strong anti-West, especially anti-US 
sentiments. Pakistan's internal problems, especially suicide attacks, bombings 
and killings, are attributed to India, the US and Israel. The standard argument 
is that these countries want to destabilise Pakistan because the US has plans 
to directly take over Pakistan's nuclear arsenal or use the UN to take control 
of nuclear weapons ostensibly to protect them from falling into the hands of 
the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

It is interesting to note that one Urdu columnist wrote that India must be 
upset by the death of Baitullah Mehsud. Another argued that the Americans 
decided to kill him after he lost relevance for the US.

The Red Mosque incident (2007) is periodically highlighted by some columnists 
as a legendary incident of sacrifice by the inmates of the mosque and 
brutalities by Pakistan's security forces. Writing in August 2008, an Urdu 
columnist compared the Red Mosque incident with the incident of Karbala by 
showing how the forces of "Yazidiat" killed the innocent people in the mosque, 
in an operation that resembled the extremely hostile treatment of the family 
and companion of Imam Hussain RA. Obviously, by "Yazidiat" the author meant the 
government of Pakistan and its security forces.

Such a partisan mindset is the product of pro-orthodoxy and militancy policies 
adopted by the government of General Zia-ul Haq. It adopted militancy as an 
instrument of its foreign policy in Afghanistan. And later in the 1990s, 
governments adopted the same approach in Indian-administered Kashmir.

Several factors contributed to the gradual shift in the orientation of 
Pakistani society and state towards religious orthodoxy and militancy. These 
included the setting up of Islamic-Afghan resistance in Pakistan to fight the 
Soviet military in Afghanistan; the search for legitimacy and support by the 
military government of General Zia-ul Haq; the opportunity provided to Islamist 
parties and groups to penetrate state institutions; use of the state's reward 
and punishment system to strengthen religious orthodoxy and constitutional and 
legal changes for that purpose; changes in recruitment and promotion policies 
for government and semi-government jobs; Islamisation of the media and 
imposition of cultural norms reflecting conservative Islamic norms and values; 
and changes in courses of studies at the junior and high school levels to 
socialise children into religious conservatism and make them more receptive to 
Islamic militancy.

The government encouraged proliferation of madrassas not only in the NWFP but 
also elsewhere, and state patronage was used to encourage public displays of 
religiosity.

Having gone through pro-Islamic orthodoxy and militancy socialisation, the 
generation that got high school and college education from the mid-1980s to 
2004-05 was bound to lean heavily towards conservative Islamic political and 
social discourse and militancy.

Some half-hearted efforts were made during the days of General Pervez 
Musharraf's rule to control Islamic orthodoxy and militancy. These efforts did 
not produce much results.

The major challenge for the government is to neutralise the Islamic 
conservative orientation of the populace, especially the generation socialised 
in the 1990s. Unless an effort is made to encourage pluralist notions of 
society and multiple political and social discourses, the government will 
continue to face domestic criticism of its counter-terrorism policy, pro-US 
orientation, corruption and mismanagement.

Dr Hasan-Askari Rizvi is a political and defence analyst


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