South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no. 228

17. 04. 2001

  

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AFGHANISTAN: PAKISTAN'S BLACK HOLE 

by B.Raman

In a special issue brought out in 1988 on the state of affairs in the Northern Areas (NA) of Pakistan (Gilgit and Baltistan), the "Herald", the prestigious monthly journal of the "Dawn" group of Karachi, had described the NA as the world's last colony.

Thirteen years later, the world has two colonies today ---the NA and the Taliban-controlled area of Afghanistan--both colonised and ruled by Pakistan's military- intelligence establishment.

While the NA is ruled directly by this establishment, the Taliban-controlled Afghan territory, constituting about 90 per cent of the area of the country, is ruled indirectly through the Taliban, an organisation of about 50 Mullahs or clerics, most of whom are in their late 20s or early 30s except its Amir, Mullah Mohammed Omar, who is believed to be about 40 years old.

Certain common characteristics define these Mullahs:

* Many of them, though stated to be Kandahari Pakhtuns, feel more comfortable talking in Urdu, the Pakistani official language, than in Pushtoo, their mother tongue, or Dari or Farsi, taught in the schools of Afghanistan before 1992 and used for official purposes by the then Government of the country.  This is attributable to the fact that they were either born in Pakistan or grew up there.

* None of them except the Amir distinguished themselves in the jehad against the troops of the erstwhile USSR and of the then President Najibullah before 1992.  Accounts by Taliban spokesmen and its supporters in Pakistan project the Amir as having played a legendary role in the jehad against the Soviet troops, during which, according to them, he lost an eye.  However, these accounts are unverifiable and his detractors allege that he actually lost his eye as a child while playing with other children in Quetta.

* Many of them started their career as clerics in Pakistan Army units.  The late Zia-ul-Haq, a devout Deobandi, had a large number of clerics inducted into the Education Department to teach the Holy Koran and the Arabic language to school students and in Army units to teach the Holy Koran and to conduct the daily prayers.  This policy was continued by the subsequent civilian Governments too under pressure from the military- intelligence establishment and the religious parties.  Thus, even before their capture of power in Kandahar, Herat, Jalalabad and Kabul between 1994 and 1996, many of these clerics had a long history of association with Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment, having been paid Government servants of Pakistan.

* Having spent practically all their lives in Pakistan, few of them knew Afghanistan outside Kandahar before they were placed in power by Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment.  Though the presently Kandahar-based Mullah Mohammed Omar, the Amir, is now projected as the supreme religious and political leader of the country, he had never been to even Jalalabad, not to talk of Kabul.  His knowledge of the world was restricted to Quetta, Peshawar and Kandahar.

* Never having fought before 1994, few of them had any military experience and hardly ever having lived in the country before 1994, none of them had any political and administrative acumen.  The post-1994 battles, which led to the Taliban ostensibly assuming control over 90 per cent of the country's territory, were largely waged by militias, consisting of Pakistani servicemen and ex-servicemen, trained jehadists of Pakistan's Islamic parties and the dregs of Najibullah's army and of the various Pakhtun-dominant Mujahideen groups, which had distinguished themselves in the battles against the Soviet troops in the 1980s.  Since the Taliban has had no experience of running the administration, the administrative chores in the capital Kabul and in the rest of the country are largely performed by retired Pakistani civil servants assisted by the dregs of the civil administration of Najibullah.

There has been a clear division of responsibilities between the clerics of the Taliban on the one side and the serving and retired public servants of the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment and civilian Government services on the other. While retaining a strict control over political, military and administrative affairs, Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment has left considerable autonomy of functioning to the Taliban in religious matters.

As a result, the obscurantist fervour of the Taliban has assumed an autonomous momentum of its own as was seen in its suppression of the political, economic and social rights of women, its export of terrorism in the name of jehad to the Central Asian Republics (CARs), Chechnya and Dagestan in Russia and even Xinjiang in China, much to the discomfiture of Pakistan, and its recent destruction of the Buddha statues of Bamiyan.

The Taliban rejects foreign allegations that it is running training camps for Islamic terrorists in its territory.  It does admit, however, that there are camps where Muslims from different nations study the Holy Koran and the Sharia, learn to live, work and eat together and are trained in the use of weapons of self-defence so that they could protect themselves and their religion.  It compares such camps to the Israeli kibbutz and criticises what it describes as the hypocrisy of the non-Islamic world in accepting the kibbutz as legitimate centres for community living and self-defence, but denouncing similar camps in its territory as terrorist training camps.

It does not deny that Osama bin Laden, reportedly related by marriage to the Amir, has been given sanctuary and hospitality in its territory.  It points out that the decision to let him come and live in Afghan territory was taken by the Burhanuddin Rabbani Government, in consultation with the Benazir Bhutto Government, before it captured Kabul in September, 1996, and criticises the US for campaigning against the presence of bin Laden only after the fall of the Rabbani Government.  It asserts that it keeps a tight watch over his activities to prevent him from indulging in terrorism and is prepared to hand him over for a trial only if the trial is to be held according to the Sharia in an Islamic country.

The Taliban's obscurantist fervour is now threatening to infect the civil society in Pakistan itself, aggravating the sectarian divide between the Sunnis and the Shias and the medievalisation and the warlordisation of the die-hard Islamic elements, particularly in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP).  This has consequently given rise to the oft-expressed fears of a possible Talibanisation and medievalisation of Pakistan itself.

Pakistan is not the first country to be affected by the contagion of Islamic fundamentalism.  Many other Islamic countries had earlier seen the rise and, sometimes, even triumph of fundamentalist elements.  But, what distinguishes Islamic fundamentalism in Pakistan from that in other countries is the irrational mindset of those in the forefront of the fundamentalist drive.

This irrational mindset, totally at variance with the teachings of Islam, is seen in their words and actions such as their emphasis on the religious duty of the Muslims to acquire weapons of mass destruction (WMD) not only to defend the Islamic State of which they form part, but also their religion, their oft-expressed willingness to consider using WMD, if necessary, to defend Islam, their chattelisation of women etc.

The Pakistani madrasas, which have been the breeding ground of this religious irrationality, had infected the clerics too, whom Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment had constituted into the Taliban.  The establishment turned a blind eye to it in its eagerness to use the Mullahs to assume control over Afghanistan, but today its folly is threatening to come home to roost.

The recent action of the Taliban in dynamiting the statues of the Buddha in Bamiyan is but one more expression of this irrationality inherited by the Mullahs of the Taliban from their mentors and masters in Pakistan.  Earlier, they enslaved the women of Afghanistan in the name of Allah, looted the Buddhist cultural treasures in the Kabul museum in 1996 in the name of Allah, massacred the Uzbecks of Mazar-e-Sharif and the Shias of Bamiyan in the name of Allah and have now sought to destroy Allah Himself or rather a manifestation of Allah in the name of Allah.

The destruction of the statues of the Buddha was not the first act of cultural and religious vandalism in Afghanistan that is a veritable Pakistani colony.  An equally outrageous act of vandalism was seen after Najibullah was overthrown in April 1992 and after the Pakistani led and staffed militias captured Kabul in September, 1996.

In April 1992, after the Mujahideen captured power in Kabul, Lt.Gen. (retd) Hamid Gul, Ms.Benazir Bhutto's Director-General of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in her first tenure, Lt.Gen. (retd) Javed Nasir, DG, ISI, under Mr.Nawaz Sharif, and many other senior officers of the military- intelligence establishment rushed to Kabul to take possession of the Soviet-supplied Scud missiles from the armoury of the fallen Najibullah's army.  After doing so, they helped themselves to whatever Buddhist artifacts they could lay hands on in the Kabul museum.

Those left behind by them were loaded into Pakistani army trucks by Pakistani military and intelligence officers in September 1996 and shifted to Pakistan for being sold to international art smugglers.

Major-General Naseerullah Babar, Ms.Benazir Bhutto's Interior Minister, and Gen. Pervez Musharraf, her Director-General of Military Operations (DGMO), justified the shifting of the artifacts to Pakistan by saying that they would be kept in the safe custody of the Pakistan Government and restored to Afghanistan once the fighting ended and a Government enjoying the support of all ethnic groups was set up in Kabul.

International media and public opinion closed their eyes to this cultural vandalism reminiscent of the vandalism perpetrated by the Nazis in the occupied territories during the World War till the "Guardian" of the UK and the "Sydney Morning Herald" of Australia exposed it in articles published last year.

Against this background, the absence of feelings of outrage in large sections of Pakistani society and in the regime itself and the muted reactions of Gen.Musharraf, the self-styled and self-exalted Chief Executive of Pakistan, over the destruction of the Buddha statues should not be a matter of surprise.

What should be a matter of surprise and concern to all right-thinking persons is that after the initial expression of outrage, the rest of the world seems to be trying to rationalise, in retrospect, the Taliban's act of vandalism with the argument that the isolation of the Taliban and the lack of engagement with it might have contributed to its outrageous act.

This is exactly what Pakistan and the Taliban want the world to believe.  During a visit to the US in March, Syed Rahmatullah Hashemi, a senior representative of the Taliban designated as the roving Ambassador, projected the Taliban's action not as an act of irrationality, but as an act of rage over the refusal of the UNESCO and some Western Governments to permit the Taliban to use for drought relief the funds sanctioned by them for repairing the war-damaged statues of the Buddha.  A similar argument is being peddled by Pakistan's military- intelligence establishment.  It would be a great tragedy for the civilised world were the Taliban and Pakistan to escape the consequences of this despicable act.

It needs to be underlined here that for the last two years the Taliban's religious shoora had been debating the necessity and the advisability of destroying the statues.  While all the members were agreed that these statues had no place in an Islamic society, some Mullahs, with greater exposure to the outside world than the rest, argued against their destruction lest it further isolate the Taliban.  By February last, this minority view could no longer prevail.

Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment, which tightly controls the Taliban administration and its intelligence agency, would have been aware of this debate and of the final decision to dynamite the statues.  If Gen.Musharraf had wanted, he could have prevented it, but he chose not to intervene lest, by doing so, he antagonised the jehadi parties in Pakistan.

Though many US analysts project Gen.Musharraf as a liberal-minded Muslim, throughout his career he was known for his proximity to the Islamic religious parties, a proximity which was strengthened during the Afghan war of the 1980s.  Since coming to power in October, 1999, he has shown himself to be amenable to pressure from the Islamic parties and has been conceding, one after the other, their demands.  Even independent Pakistani analysts say that the religious parties have won more concessions from the General during his first 18 months in office than they could during the first 18 months of Zia.

The Pakistan Army in general and Gen.Musharraf, in particular, look upon the role of the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment in contributing to the defeat of the Soviet troops before 1988, to the overthrow of Najibullah in 1992 and to the capture of the control of large areas of Afghanistan through the Taliban post-1994 as a major success story, which, in their perception, has restored the morale of the establishment shattered by the defeat in the then East Pakistan in 1971.  They hailed the perceived success in Afghanistan as the triumph of their long pursued quest for a strategic depth in that country which could be exploited to their advantage in the event of another military conflict with India.

While increasing sections of Pakistani civil society have started worrying that the so-called strategic depth is inexorably turning into a strategic black hole from which Pakistan may have difficulty in extricating itself, if it does not do so immediately, the military-intelligence establishment has been living in a make-believe world of its own, as it did in East Pakistan in 1971, thinking that its policy has started paying dividends.  It has been blind to the creeping deleterious effects of its involvement in Afghanistan on Pakistan's own future as a nation.  Among such effects are:

* Pakistan's continuing diplomatic isolation.

* Its serious economic difficulties to which its involvement in Afghanistan too has contributed considerably.  In an article in the "Nation" of December 29, 2000, Mr.Ahmed Rashid, the well-known Afghan expert of Pakistan, described the economic price being paid by Pakistan for its involvement in Afghanistan as follows: " The present Taliban war budget is estimated to be around US 100 million dollars.  Of that, 60-70% is derived from the revenues of the smuggling trade, some 30-40% from the drugs trade and about 5-10 % from direct financial aid.  Pakistan has been paying some US 10 million dollars a year for the salaries of Taliban administrators in Kabul and other aid, while until 1998 Saudi Arabia was also a major financial contributor.  Terrorist groups also help fund the Taliban.  Bin Laden funds an Arab brigade and helps fund Taliban offensives against the Northern Alliance.  Pakistan and recently Turkmenistan provide other indirect aid such as fuel, technical help in maintaining airports and aircraft, restoring electricity in major cities, road construction and military supplies to keep the Taliban war machine functional."  This estimate does not include the pay and allowances of the serving and retired Pakistani military and civilian officers serving in the Taliban-controlled territory which are directly paid to them by the Islamabad Government and incorporated in the budget of the General Administration Department of the Pakistan Government.

* Aggravation of sectarian clashes in Pakistani territory, with the Sunni terrorist groups operating from sanctuaries in Afghanistan, with the complicity of the anti-Shia elements in the Taliban.

* Dangers of a possible Talibanisation of the Pakistani society.

* The setback to Pakistani hopes of emerging as the gateway to the external trade of the Central Asian Republics and of benefiting from energy supplies from the Central Asian Republics.

* Setback in relations with Iran.

Despite the active involvement of serving and retired Pakistani military personnel in the militias, the Taliban has not so far been able to overwhelm the militias of the Northern Alliance led by Ahmed Shah Masood and dislodge them from the 10 per cent of the territory of the country controlled by them.  Though much inferior in numbers and poor in equipment, the militias led by Ahmed Shah Masood have been fighting an intrepid war of attrition and making the Taliban militias bleed.

What stands in the way of their reversing the Pakistani colonisation of the rest of Afghanistan is the lack of support from the Pakhtuns of southern Afghanistan.  It would be incorrect to view the entire Pakhtun population of southern Afghanistan as supporting the Taliban.  There are undercurrents of anger against the Taliban amongst the Pakhtuns which manifested themselves in at least one abortive attempt to overthrow the Taliban after the US bombing of the terrorist training camps in October, 1998, and a failed attempt to assassinate Mullah Omar in Kandahar in August 1999, by exploding a car laden with explosives outside his house.  Some of his relatives were killed, but the Amir himself escaped.

The angry sections of the Pakhtuns are reluctant to co-operate with the Northern Alliance, which consists largely of the Tadjiks and other non-Pakhtun ethnic minorities. They do not want to be projected by the Taliban and its Pakistani masters as traitors to their community.

Pakistan's military-intelligence establishment controls effectively not only the Taliban militias, but also the newly-established intelligence agency of the Taliban, as the successor to the Khad, whose headquarters are established in Kandahar.  It is believed that Qari Ahmadullah, who was heading the newly-established Taliban intelligence agency and was designated as the Minister for Security, is actually an officer of the ISI of Pakistan who works in the Taliban under the cover of a Mullah.  He used to work in the Afghan Division of the ISI under Lt.Gen. Mohammed Aziz, former Deputy Director-General of the ISI before March, 1999, who subsequently became the Chief of the General Staff (CGS) and is now one of the two Corps Commanders in Lahore.

Through its control of the intelligence agency of the Taliban, the ISI has been able to detect in advance and frustrate the efforts of the anti-Taliban sections of the Pakhtuns to organise themselves and rise against the Amir.

In the absence of support from the Pakhtuns, the Northern Alliance is thus not in a position to reverse the Pakistani colonisation and restore the lost independence of Afghanistan, but it has been able to make the Pakistani involvement a costly adventure for Pakistan as a nation.

It is said that growing sections of Pakistan's civilian bureaucracy, particularly those in the Foreign Office and in the economic Ministries, are convinced that the Afghan involvement is proving to be counter-productive and that Pakistan's economy would never be able to come out of its present comatose state and the Pakistan State would never be able to come out of its diplomatic isolation unless and until the military-intelligence establishment's involvement in Afghanistan and its use of the Taliban is ended.

During a conference of Pakistan's regional Ambassadors held in Islamabad earlier this year, most of the Ambassadors, including, surprisingly, Mr.Riaz Khokkar, its Ambassador in Beijing, known as a hawk, were reported to have strongly called for a re-consideration of the Afghan policy, but their advice was rejected by Gen.Musharraf and his Corps Commanders.  Lt.Gen. Mahmood Ahmad, DG of the ISI, was reported to have told the Ambassadors: " I have no doubt in my mind that Pakistan's policy will prevail because Allah is on our side."

This is typical of the wishful-thinking mindset, which prevails even amongst those senior officers of the military, not generally identified with the religious fanatics.  This mindset makes them believe that Allah is on the side of Pakistan, whether it be in Jammu & Kashmir or in Afghanistan or in dealing with their economy and that what they lack in intelligence, perspicacity and vision, they could make up by invoking the name of Allah to convert failures into successes.

It is in India's national interest that the independence of Afghanistan be restored as early as possible, that the country be again united under an enlightened leadership and that the medieval Taliban is consigned to the dustbin of history.  Before 1992, India has had a long history of warm friendship with the people and leadership of Afghanistan.  The leaders of all the ethnic groups felt more comfortable with India than with Pakistan or even with the erstwhile USSR.  They used to come to India for rest and recreation and for their medical treatment.

Large sections of the non-establishment Pakhtuns of the NWFP and Balochistan, who opposed the partition of India in 1947, always looked up to India for inspiration and many of their leaders nursed warm ties of personal friendship with the leaders of the Congress (I), whom they or their parents had known from the days of the independence struggle.  The present new generation of Congress (I) leaders has not taken interest in nursing these ties and the other political parties, including the present ruling coalition, have not been able to cultivate and sustain such ties of friendship with the Pakhtuns.

If India has to play its due role in restoring the independence of Afghanistan, it has to interact closely not only with the leaders of the Northern Alliance and provide them with the required political, moral and diplomatic support, but also with those Pakhtun leaders, who have been unhappy with the Pakistani colonisation through the Taliban.  There has to be a comprehensive, well-thought-out, consistent Afghan policy worked out and implemented by the Government .

Any policy towards the restoration of the independence of Afghanistan is unlikely to succeed in the present unipolar world order without the support of the US.  Even though the new Bush Administration has reiterated its adherence to the Clinton Administration's policy towards the Taliban, which culminated in the imposition of sanctions by the UN, there are some indications that once the Administration settles down, there could be a review of the policy.

It is believed that the officials of the Bush Administration are worried over the delay in the implementation of the plans for the exploitation of the energy resources of the Central Asian Republics and for the entry of these resources into the world market.  They would prefer that these resources exit the Central Asian Republics through Afghanistan and Pakistan rather than through Russia or Iran, which would not be possible until the fighting is ended in Afghanistan.  It is in this context that a debate is likely as to whether the new Administration should follow a tougher policy in order to induce the collapse of the Taliban or a softer policy of more engagement in the hope of thereby moderating the behaviour of the Taliban and bringing it into the international mainstream.

The policy outcome of this debate could have an important influence on the fortunes of the Northern Alliance and on the effectiveness of India's Afghan policy.  A more intensive and sustained interaction with officials of the Bush Administration on this issue is, therefore, advisable. 

Note: Based on a talk delivered by the writer at the India International Centre, New Delhi, on April 14,2001.

( The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com

 

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