http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/OA17Ag02.html

Jan 17, 2013 

Central Asia braces for militants' return from Afghanistan
By Jacob Zenn 

On December 4, 2012, the deputy chairman of Kazakhstan's National Security 
Committee, Kabdulkarim Abdikazymov, said that Jund al-Khilafa was a "real 
threat" to Kazakhstan's national security. Similarly, on November 26, 2012, the 
chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Security of Kyrgyzstan, 
Tokon Mamytov, warned that "there might be danger of an incursion from 
Afghanistan into Kyrgyzstan in 2013 or 2014". 

Abdikazymov and Mamytov's statements reflect concerns in Central Asia about 
"foreign fighters" currently in Afghanistan returning to their home countries 
after the planned United States and North Atlantic treaty Organization (NATO) 
withdrawal from Afghanistan. 

The last time a world power withdrew from Afghanistan - the



  
Soviet Union in 1988 - many foreign fighters from Southeast Asia returned to 
their home countries and used the financial and logistical networks and skills 
acquired in the war-torn country to form terrorist groups, such as Kumpulan 
Mujahidin in Malaysia, Jemaah Islamiyah in Indonesia and Abu Sayyaf in the 
Philippines. 
The question now is whether the several thousand Central Asians in Afghanistan 
present a "real threat" to their home countries, as Abdikazymov suggests, or 
whether the threat is only perceived. 

A review of three Central Asian militant groups based in Afghanistan - Jund 
al-Khilafah, which targets Kazakhstan, the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), which 
targets Xinjiang, China, and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) - shows 
that Central Asian fighters do not yet appear to be returning to their 
homelands. But history, as well as these groups' intent, suggests that the 
threat of their eventual return to their home countries - whenever it may be - 
is real. 

Jund al-Khilafah is based in the North Caucasus and the Afghanistan-Pakistan 
border region, and it carried out three separate attacks in Atyrau, Taraz and 
Almaty in late 2011. As evidenced by slain Tunisian-born Jund al-Khilafah amir 
Moez Garsallaoui's connections to Mohammed Merah, who killed three Jews and 
four French paratroopers in southwest France in March 2012, Jund al-Khilafah 
also has international operational capabilities. 

There are an estimated 200 to 300 Kazakhstani militants in Afghanistan and 
Pakistan, many of whom have financial relationships with Jund al-Khilafah 
supporters in Kazakhstan. 

This became apparent with the sentencing of Aidos Kusanov on October 8, 2012, 
who transferred 380,000 tenge (US$2,500) to Jund al-Khilafah in Pakistan 
through the Aqtobe-based militant group Ansar al-Din. Ansar al-Din has not 
claimed any attacks in Kazakhstan, but has issued numerous video statements 
condemning the Kazakhstani government on jihadist websites, such as hunafa.com 
and Kavkaz Center, and seeks to "establish links of material support" to 
"assist the families of the mujahideen," according to its own propaganda. 

Despite Jund al-Khilafa and Ansar al-Din's operational links to Kazakhstan, the 
flow of militants and funds still appears to be from Kazakhstan to Afghanistan 
and Pakistan or elsewhere - not the other way around. This could soon change. 

In a November 2011 Islamic Jihad Union video statement, a Kazakhstani fighter 
said that after victory in Afghanistan, their "goal" is Central Asia, while 
another fighter, who claimed to be the "amir", said their "sphere of interest" 
is Central Asia, in particular Kazakhstan. Other experts in the region argue 
that the IMU and other militants are already in Kazakhstan, using the country 
effectively as a "terminal" linking Europe, Central Asia and Afghanistan, and 
therefore the militants do not want to destabilize Kazakhstan, yet. 

The Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), which is led by Uyghurs from China's 
Xinjiang province and is based in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, also 
has Turkish- and Russian-speaking members. According to unsubstantiated Chinese 
reports, the TIP has connections to militants from Xinjiang who are fighting in 
Syria, while TIP members were convicted in Dubai in 2010 for attempting to blow 
up a statue of a Chinese dragon outside of a popular mall in a symbolic attack. 

The TIP has about 300 - 500 fighters, but there is only concrete evidence of 
one TIP fighter who has ever trained in Afghanistan or Pakistan and returned to 
Xinjiang to carry out an attack. 

He was Memtieli Tiliwaldi, the alleged leader of the July 30-31 attacks in 
Kashgar that killed more than 10 Han Chinese pedestrians. He was depicted in a 
TIP video training in a mountainous area resembling the Afghanistan-Pakistan 
border region and then was confirmed killed by Chinese security forces in 
Kashgar after the attacks. 

China's Vice Minister of Public Security Meng Honwei said one month before the 
attacks in Kashgar that that there were "signs [that] the 'East Turkistan' 
terrorists are flowing back" and "they are very likely to penetrate into China 
from Central Asia". 

Like Jund al-Khilafah and the TIP, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan has 
entrenched itself in northern Afghanistan, but it has not carried out any major 
attacks in Uzbekistan or elsewhere in Central Asia since at least 2004. 

Reportedly, the IMU is connected to Jamaat Ansarullah, which is an Islamist 
militant group operating in Tajikistan; and, according to accounts, armed 
groups in Afghanistan's Badakshan Province, which borders Tajikistan's 
Gorno-Badakshan Autonomous Oblast, are "becoming stronger". However, the IMU 
appears to be more effective in helping the Taliban seize control of northern 
Afghanistan than attacking targets in Central Asia, even if it does have a 
presence in Kazakhstan and other neighboring countries. 

The Southeast Asian militants who returned to their home countries after the 
Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan carried out or trained others to carry out 
terrorist attacks, which killed hundreds of people, but, they proved much less 
effective at generating change than the mass social movements in the Arab World 
in 2011. 

As long as the populations of Central Asian countries remain vigilant to the 
threat posed by these militant groups, the fighters returning from Afghanistan 
will likely be able to carry out only sporadic attacks and gain no traction in 
society. 

However, crises like the ethnic riots in Urumqi in 2009, the ethnic clashes in 
Osh in 2010, the deadly Zhanaozen protests in 2011, and the instability in 
Tajikistan's Gorno-Badakshan in 2012, all have the potential to erode 
government legitimacy, while increasing support for alternatives to the present 
leadership. 

Most alternatives come in the form of opposition parties, but some of those who 
have been aggrieved may turn toward groups like the TIP, Jund al-Khilafah and 
the IMU instead. 

Jacob Zenn is a lawyer and international security analyst based in Washington 
DC. He writes regularly on Central Asia, Southeast Asia and Nigeria and runs an 
open-source research, translation, and due diligence team through 
http://zopensource.net/. He can be reached at [email protected]. 

(This article first appeared in The Jamestown Foundation. Used with 
permission.) 

(Copyright 2013 The Jamestown Foundatio

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke