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http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\05\26\story_26-5-2011_pg3_2
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another editorial in pak press - an interesting read
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*COMMENT:* Drigh Road or Shara-e-Faisal? — I *—Dr Mohammad Taqi*
* *
 The secular leaders have abdicated all foreign and security policy-related
matters pertaining to the establishment but WikiLeaks suggest that privately
they keep venting their spleen to the US diplomats about it


“I keep six honest serving-men,

(They taught me all I knew);

Their names are What and Why and When,

And How and Where and Who” — Rudyard Kipling.


Another week, another tragedy: the series of unfortunate events has no end.
But each catastrophe, no matter how enormous, is matched with a conspiracy
theory of even bigger proportions. The predilection for gossip and intrigue
to explain away the existential threats has morphed from a national pastime
to the national creed. The fear of mirrors appears to have robbed this
nation of the last vestiges of objectivity.

But first things first: no matter how spectacular the attack on the Pakistan
Naval Station (PNS) Mehran, far greater remains the sacrifice of the men of
Pakistan’s armed forces who laid down their lives in the line of duty.
Lieutenant Yasir Abbas and his comrades, martyred while wrestling back the
control of PNS Mehran, deserve a collective bow from this nation. May their
souls rest in peace.

It would have been highly desirable if the top civil and military leaders
had deemed it their responsibility to attend the funeral of these heroes,
for boosting the rapidly plummeting morale, if not to send a message to the
terrorists. In a country where vicious killers like Mumtaz Qadri are
garlanded for the most heinous acts, such omissions are literally a
dereliction of duty on the part of the civil and military leadership. For
our part, we can only offer our deepest condolences to the bereaved families
to whom we shall remain ever indebted.

The leadership’s ambivalence points towards our real dilemma. While the
killers and their supporters are absolutely clear about their objectives and
how to achieve them, the state seems to be clueless and rudderless. From an
absolute denial to dodging accountability, those at the helm come up with
the lamest possible excuses: foreign hand a la American-Indo-Zionist agents
unleashing a reign of terror on one of the oldest military establishments of
the subcontinent. Is it possible? Well, theoretically it is. But if such is
the case then perhaps someone needs to turn in a cap, pips, baton and a
belt.

However, even if the blame for a security lapse or breach is affixed justly
and all questions are answered appropriately, it may only satisfy the what,
when, where, who and how of the event. A military investigation would likely
focus on the methods and weaponry used by the attackers and the response of
the security agencies. From a tactical perspective this could certainly be
very helpful in hardening and thus safeguarding any potential targets. But
from a strategic standpoint, unless one seeks an answer to the why, all
inquiries, no matter how impartial, will remain meaningless and lead to dead
ends. The domestic, regional and international implications of any such
attack are myriad and it is imperative that lessons are drawn, and swiftly
at that. But it would be impossible to formulate a response without clearly
identifying the enemy and determining its motive. And that is where it
becomes tricky.

India or the US may be looking at the PNS Mehran attack with glee but there
is absolutely nothing strategic that they gain from two P-3C Orion aircraft
being destroyed. The psychological impact of audacious attacks on iconic
targets is a tactic in asymmetrical — not conventional — warfare. The al
Qaeda-Taliban have announced not only their viability through this attack
but it perhaps marks the arrival of Saif-al-Adel, who had masterminded a
similar attack in Riyadh, as al Qaeda’s new leader. And nothing induces
recruitment of cadres than a high profile retribution for bin Laden’s
killing.

Pakistani right-wing politicians like Imran Khan and Munawar Hassan would
have one believe that everything was hunky-dory in Pakistan till the big bad
US rolled into Afghanistan in 2001. They would go blue in the face talking
about the dollars that bankrolled the anti-Soviet mujahideen. But they
conveniently gloss over the fact that Saudi Arabia matched the US
dollar-for-dollar to help Pakistan create the jihadist monster. That great
patron of jihadist pan-Islamism, General Ziaul Haq, consummated the tying of
the knot with the Saudis by rechristening many cities and places in
Pakistan. The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) base Drigh Road thus became the PAF
base Shara-e-Faisal in 1977. (Arabic word ‘Shara’ and not the Persian
‘Shahrah’, was used for the road). The PNS Mehran is an extension of that
same PAF base Drigh Road.

However, this is not just where the selective amnesia ends. These
ultranationalists and their cohorts in the media, who are projecting them
24/7 into our living rooms, take great pains to avoid pointing a finger
towards the jihadists, especially the ones who are predominantly
India-oriented. Parallels are being drawn between the PNS Mehran attack and
the one on the GHQ in 2009, which is a partial truth. The first such attack
that had showed a high level of strategic vision through an erudite choice
of high profile target and deployment of sophisticated tactics was on the
Red Fort, Delhi, on December 22, 2000, carried out by the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba
(LeT). Subsequent attacks, including on the Indian parliament, Mumbai, Sri
Lankan cricket team, Manawan Police Academy, the Pakistani GHQ and several
in Afghanistan have the fingerprints of the assorted jihadist franchises
affiliated with al Qaeda.

But people like Imran Khan who leads sit-ins attended by members of banned
terrorist outfits, whose lieutenants are seen literally holding hands with
Hafiz Saeed of Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD), and who makes it a point to visit every
major madrassa from where the jihadist leadership has graduated, can hardly
be blamed for protecting their ilk. These obscurantists will continue to
weave webs of lies and deceit that perpetuate not just the confusion in the
general public’s mind but make an already perfidious enemy even more
nebulous.

While the pro-Taliban leaders led by Imran Khan have been steadily building
a neo-jihadist narrative, the secular leadership has been missing in action.
The secular leaders have abdicated all foreign and security policy-related
matters pertaining to the establishment but WikiLeaks suggest that privately
they keep venting their spleen to the US diplomats about it. I have written
many times that the intelligentsia can only do so much to counter the venom
spewed by the neo-jihadists. It is ultimately the secular political
leadership that has to do the heavy lifting. The Pakistani security
establishment has no intention to correct its course and perhaps the
politicians cannot sway it either. But they could at least be on record to
have warned the Pakistani people that the jihadist objective is not Mehran
or Manawan — they are going for the Pakistani state.


-- 
With best wishes

SC Batra

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New Delhi 110063

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-- 
With best wishes

S Chander

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