http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htterr/articles/20061229.aspx

 


The Pakistan Paradox

December 29, 2006: For over a decade, Pakistan has sponsored (but denied
doing so) Islamic terrorist activity in Kashmir (an Indian province that
Pakistan claims as its own). Increasingly, those Kashmiri terrorist groups
have been found operating deep inside India. On December 19th, three Moslem
men were arrested in the Indian capital. Found with the three was bomb
making materials (7 pounds of RDX and detonators). These three men had been
found via information provided Bangladeshi Islamic terrorists who were
arrested last October, also in the capital. The Bangladeshi  men were also
caught with explosives. 

The Islamic terrorists operating in Kashmir have been recruiting and
training Bangladeshi Moslems, as well as Indian Moslems. The Pakistani based
terrorists are taking advantage of a growing Islamic militant movement in
Bangladesh, and ongoing (for decades) unrest in northeast India (which abuts
Bangladesh). Most of the violence in the northeast is tribal, with demands
that illegal migrants from Bangladesh, and legal migrants from the rest of
India, be kept out, and the tribes be given more autonomy. The northeast
states are especially corrupt, with criminals and terrorist groups running
extortion rackets and other illegal activity to finance their operations.
Overall, the terrorist violence in the northeast is only about a third of
what goes on in Kashmir, but the unruly atmosphere has enabled Islamic
terrorists to establish a pathway from Bangladesh, deeper into India.

Pakistan has always denied any connection with this Islamic terrorism. But
the terrorism in Kashmir is widely popular in Pakistan, for it strives to
retrieve a province many Pakistanis believe India "stole" when the colonial
power Britain departed in 1948, creating Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka in
the process. Thus the Pakistani government officially condemns the Islamic
terrorists camped out in northern Pakistan, where they train themselves, and
then sneak into Kashmir. But in reality, the terrorist camps are tolerated,
and any foreign reporter who can get into the region (which is not easy, or
safe, to do) can see the camps. Pakistan also tolerates Islamic terrorist
activity along the Afghan border, mainly because shutting it down would
involve a militarily and politically messy war with the Pushtun tribes
there. Thus, Pakistan has become the home of the most energetic Islamic
terrorist organizations on the planet. All this, despite Pakistan's official
status as a staunch U.S. ally in the war on terror.



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