http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?272003

 

pakistan: terror strikes

 <http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?272003> Inside The Terror Swill

The 'Pakistanisation' of Al Qaeda has grave fallouts

Outlook <http://www.outlookindia.com/peoplefnl.aspx?pid=3890&author=Outlook>


It seems Pakistan is undergoing a radical metamorphosis, moving from the
phase of Talibanisation of its society to what can be called the
Pakistanisation of Al Qaeda. Preliminary investigations into the Mehran
attack suggest it was a coordinated operation involving Al Qaeda interim
chief Saif Al Adal, who's based in Waziristan, Ilyas Kashmiri, a Pakistani
who's now counted among the Qaeda's top strategists, the Tehreek-e-Taliban
and the Punjabi Taliban, a term used to describe Punjab-based militant
groups who are opposed to, and fighting, the Pakistani state and the United
States. Experts believe the Al Qaeda-Taliban alliance has gained an edge
because of the support local groups provide.

Ideological ties bind the Al Qaeda, the TTP and the Punjabi Taliban, driven
as they are about evicting international forces from Afghanistan. These
three share intelligence, human resources and training facilities even as
the US-Pak forces (however strained the relationship between the two
countries may be) target them. These three initially came together after the
United States invaded Afghanistan post-9/11, prompting Al Qaeda and the
Afghan Taliban to rely on local partners such as Pakistani pro-Taliban
tribes, anti-Shia outfits such as the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and jehadi
mercenaries in Pakistani seminaries for shelter and assistance.

The ties between local groups and Al Qaeda were cemented further as the
Afghan Taliban's astonishing successes against the international forces
prompted the US to increase drone attacks in the tribal areas and turn the
heat on Pakistan to crack down on the TTP.

But what gave the alliance a fillip was the migration of battle-hardened
Pakistani jehadi commanders from the battlefront in Kashmir to north
Waziristan. Veteran leaders like Ilyas Kashmiri and Badr Mansoor adopted the
Al Qaeda ideology wholesale-that the weakening of the world's only
superpower is essential for the Muslim world. Commanders like Kashmiri also
brought with them contacts in the lower echelons of the Pakistan
establishment and intricate knowledge of the Pakistan terrain. The ties were
mutually beneficial- working with Al Qaeda activists like Saif, who had
served as a colonel in the Egyptian Army Special Forces, boosted their
capabilities. Is it any wonder then that the Pakistan military has been
unable to thwart attacks on its personnel and assets?

 



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