Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Daily Times Editorial June 20, 2013
So much for talks
The suicide blast at a funeral in Shergarh, Mardan on Tuesday killed an independent MPA and 34 others, injuring dozens more. It seems the MPA was the target. The incident once again indicates that for the militants, nothing is sacred, not even the last rites of a person. This attack was the deadliest in three months. The MPA, Imran Mohmand, had apparently been receiving threats and had been provided police security, but this proved unable to prevent the bomber from exploding himself next to the MPA soon after the funeral prayers ended. While the ritual condemnations from high officials and the announcement of cash compensation for the dead and injured was once more on display, this is by now an insufficient response to the persistent terrorism that has brought the country to its knees. This bombing was the deadliest since the blast in Karachi on March 3 that killed 50 people, and occurred just three days after the horrendous attack on a women’s university bus in Quetta that killed 25 people, including 14 girl students. Shergarh borders Malakand, formerly a stronghold of the militants that was cleared through an army operation in 2009. Though there has been no claim of responsibility so far, the cast of usual suspects is headed by the Taliban, who hold sway in Mardan after being ejected from the Swat valley by a military campaign. To put things in perspective, it is important to recall that 150 people were killed by militant actions during the election campaign. After the campaign dust settled and governments were formed at the Centre and in the provinces, the terrorist ‘offensive’ has not ceased, if anything it has intensified.
Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali has put his finger on some of the anomalies attending the country’s anti-terrorism efforts. In a television interview, Chaudhry Nisar said the military needed to be purged of “Pasha-like” officers, a reference to former ISI chief General Pasha. The meaning of this pointed reference became clearer later in the interview when Chaudhry Nisar talked about the intelligence agencies. General Pasha may or may not deserve the ‘accolade’ paid to him by the interior minister, but his tenure was perhaps the high point of the duality of policy adopted by the military establishment vis-à-vis militant groups. The arbitrary division of these groups into ‘good’ and ‘bad’ Taliban ignored the nexus between those operating in Afghanistan and those targeting Pakistan. That ‘fiction’ has since been exposed in the media. On the intelligence agencies, of which there is a considerable panoply, Chaudhry Nisar decried the tendency to act as rivals to each other, at the cost of a coordinated and concentrated anti-terrorist struggle. As these lines are being written, there are reports that a national security policy is under consideration amongst Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, the interior minister and COAS General Kayani. This has not come a moment too soon. In this space we consistently advised the previous government that an overarching, centralised structure for the anti-terrorist struggle with a shared database was a sine qua non for an effective anti-terrorist strategy. Chaudhry Nisar appears to have endorsed the idea in principle in his remarks. It remains to be seen if the civilian and military authorities, and the Centre and provinces can bring all their intelligence assets on the same page against an elusive and deadly enemy. Without that, the authorities will continue to chase their tail, reduced as they are to reactive rather than proactive steps.
Amazingly, in the face of the latest attack that has killed the second MPA in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) since the elections, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) leaders continue to harp on the tired formula of peace talks with the murderers of innocent men, women and children. Their blinkered view continues to lay the blame for such incidents on the war on terror and drone attacks. What drone attack, even had it occurred, would justify killing people at a funeral indiscriminately and cruelly? The PTI and others of its ilk need to wake up and smell the coffee. What the country (and KP) needs to understand is that we are confronted by a fanatical enemy impervious to logic or reason. Talking to such elements is like talking to a brick wall. They need to be answered in the same language they have long employed, the language of force.
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