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OSAMA BIN LADEN: An Update
                                         
B.Raman 

The New Delhi Police announced on January 19,1999 the arrest of Syed Abu Nasir, a Bangladeshi national, who is allegedly a member of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (the Army of the Pure), the armed wing of the Pakistan-based Markaz Dawa Al Irshad (Centre  For Preaching), and recovery from him of two kgs of RDX explosive and some detonators.

 He was reported to have told the Police that he had entered India from Pakistan via Bangladesh in October,1998, along with 6 others—4 from Egypt and one each from the Sudan and Myanmar—to organise explosions outside the US Consulates in Calcutta and Chennai  around January 26,1999.He gave the names of the Egyptian nationals as Mustafa, Ibrahim al Hazaraa, Ismail and Zainul Abideen, of the Sudanese as Lui and  the Myanmarese national as Hafeez Mohammad Saleh.

 According to the Police, Abu Nasir (apparently an assumed name) said that all of them first reached Calcutta from Bangladesh and then proceeded to Chennai. Abu  Nasir alone thereafter came to New Delhi leaving behind the others in Chennai. The Police are searching for them and, at the time of the recording of this update, there is no news of their arrest. 

Press reports of the Police version have also alleged that the suspects “are believed to be close associates of Osama Bin Laden” and that they had “ active assistance and guidance from the ISI to blow up the US consulates.” The Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) is the military-controlled Pakistani external intelligence agency. 

 The Washington correspondent of “The Hindu” of Chennai (January 22), quoting a US State Department spokesman, has reported that US security experts are already in India for discussions with their New Delhi counterparts and for gathering more facts. 
Media reports indicate that while US security experts are taking the development

seriously, they are at the same time skeptical  of insinuations of ISI involvement. The Pakistan Government has also strongly repudiated the insinuations. 

It would have been better for the New Delhi police to collect more facts and verify them instead of rushing to the media with their conjectures and theories which, if proved wrong by subsequent investigation, could add to the doubts in the minds of international security experts about our professionalism and credibility. 

Claims of ISI involvement do not stand to reason unless it is the involvement of some rogue elements in the ISI without the knowledge of their superior officers and the political leadership. All indications from Pakistan are that the Pakistani political leadership as well as senior levels of the Pakistani security bureaucracy are themselves seriously embarrassed  by and concerned over the activities of Bin Laden and would be happy to be rid of him. 
         At a time when Pakistan is badly dependent on the US support for a rescue package from the IMF to prevent an economic collapse and trying to persuade the US to resume its past military supply relationship with Pakistan, it would be foolhardy  for its political leadership or security bureaucracy or both to get involved in any projects  directed against US lives and property. 

All indications from Pakistan are that the Nawaz Sharif Government, while overtly maintaining that the Bin Laden affair is a matter between the US and the Taliban of Afghanistan in which Pakistan has no role to play, is covertly co-operating with US security experts in their efforts to have Bin Laden smoked out of Afghanistan.  

What is significant about the development is the indication of the suspects belonging to the Lashkar of the Markaz Dawa Al Irshad. The Markaz and its Lashkar have had a close relationship with Bin Laden for over a decade and have been supporting his campaign against the Saudi ruling family for allowing Western, particularly US, troops into Saudi Arabia, thereby allegedly desecrating the Muslim holy land. 

In the past, Bin Laden had financially helped the Markaz and the Lashkar and financed the construction of a mosque and a guest house inside the complex of the Markaz at Muridke in Pakistani Punjab. 

Of the various Islamic organisations of Pakistan, the Markaz, its Lashkar, the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (formerly known as the Harkat-ul-Ansar), and the Sipah-e-Sahaba have become members of  Bin Laden’s  International Islamic Front For Jihad Against the US and Israel, formed in May,1998. 

The Sipah-e-Sahaba is a purely  Pakistani Sunni organisation with no foreign cadres. Its activities are confined to  Pakistan and Afghanistan and mainly directed against the Shias. While being verbally critical of the US and supportive of Bin Laden, it has not so far indulged in any ground activity against the US. 

The Markaz, its Lashkar and the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen have an international cadre of Jihadists with experience of ground operations in Afghanistan, Tadjikistan, Xinjiang, Chechnya,Bosnia, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Myanmar and the Southern Philippines. Possibly in Thailand too, but  one is not certain. 

In India itself, the presence and experience of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen have till now been confined to Kashmir and possibly Himachal Pradesh. Indications till now are that of all the Pakistani organisations forming part of Bin Laden’s  Islamic Front Against the US and Israel, only the Markaz and its Lashkar have cadres and experience of terrorist operations in other parts of India too. 

Before May 1998, the Markaz and its Lashkar had designated India and Israel as the principal enemies of Islam, but after the US bombings of Afghanistan in August,1998, they have included the US also in their enemies’ list and have been calling for a jihad against the US too in which they have called upon the Muslim citizens of the US too to join. 

Addressing the annual congregations of the two organisations at Muridke ( November 4 to 6,1998), Prof. Mohammed Saeed, their Amir, said that all evil in the world emanated from the White House which would be blown up by the Muslims. He expressed the determination of his organisations to have the flag of Islam planted in New Delhi, Tel Aviv and Washington. 
         Thus, if the Markaz and its Lashkar want to plan an operation against US interests, either on their own or at the instance of Bin Laden, India could very well be their first choice as suitable terrain. 
         Worrying from the point of view of counter-terrorism experts of not only the US , but also other countries should be recent indications that the Taliban, which had imposed certain restrictions on the movements and activities of Bin Laden after the US bombings, has since lifted them. He has again been allowed to travel to other parts of  Afghanistan, give interviews to foreign journalists uttering threats against the US, acquire agricultural land for fruit cultivation and start business ventures for the export of olives and other fruits grown in his orchards in the Jalalabad area of Afghanistan. 

Thus, the Taliban seems to be determined to defy pressure from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia  to  at least control his activities and from the US to hand him over to the US authorities for trial. 

In January every year, the Counter-Terrorism Division of the US State Department prepares and submits to the President its report on the patterns of global terrorism in the previous year, with its recommendations regarding any revisions in the list of State-sponsors of international terrorism. The report with the President’s decision is then placed before the Congress, generally when it re-assembles after Easter. 

An important thrust of this year’s report  is likely to be the activities of Bin Laden from Afghanistan and the Taliban’s support to him. Important questions for presidential decision would be: Should the US declare Afghanistan, whose Taliban Government it does not recognise, as a State-sponsor of international terrorism or should it confine itself to declaring the Taliban as a terrorist organisation without any action against the State of Afghanistan? Should the US, in addition, declare the Markaz and its Lashkar too as terrorist organisations? 

With the recently reported withdrawal of UNOCAL, the US oil company, from the consortium for the construction of an oil and gas pipeline network from Turkmenistan to Pakistan via Afghanistan, a clear-cut US decision on the subject would have been hopefully made easier.

22-1-99 

(The writer is Additional Secretary (Retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and presently Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.)   

      
               
 

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