Showing posts with label TERRORISM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TERRORISM. Show all posts

Friday, March 31, 2017

Meta-Analytic Investigating of the Notion of "Terrorism" (r)

SOURCE:




             Meta-Analytic Investigating 
                                  of
             the Notion of "Terrorism" 
                    Zahed Ghaffari Hashjin PhD, 
      Associate professor in Shahed University, Tehran, Iran                  Corresponding author: Z_ghafari@yahoo.com 

Mohammad Aghaei PhD. Student in the Political studies of The Islamic Revolution of Iran at Shahed University, Tehran, Iran Aghaei_1387@yahoo.com 


Abstract 

During the second half of the twentieth century up until today, the issue of terrorism and how to fight this phenomenon are among the most important priorities of all members of the international community, particularly the countries which have been victims of terrorism and especially the Islamic Republic of Iran which has been one of the biggest victims of terror, in a way that thinkers consider this phenomena among international threats, not in the field of internal affairs.
Due to the importance of this phenomenon, unfortunately, a holistic definition that includes all aspects of this notion has not been provided in the books of scholars and not in international documents, so based on this fact, providing a comprehensive definition that would have included all the notions of terrorism is necessary. The main question of this study is that what are the main components of the notion of terrorism? The presented paper examines these facts by using the "meta-analysis" method and by using the descriptive-analytical approach. This paper concluded that in order to have a comprehensive definition of "terrorism", three basic components of lack of legitimate-defense, security-debugging, and strategy based on violence are required in explaining this idea. 

Keywords: Terrorism, meta-analysis, a comprehensive definition. 



1. Introduction: When we deal with the previous study of notions, we find the history full of terrorist acts, in all these centuries, serious ideological struggles have been going on to clarify the concept of this phenomenon but they did not provide a comprehensive definition of this problem. However, from 1970s onwards, the global efforts were made for this issue but has always been failed due to the ideological and political reasons (Dona, 1987: 1-9). It should be noted that one of the main causes of global firm in dealing with these problems is the lack of a consensus definition which this same problem has created the lack of modular orientation in dealing with terrorism in international level and among the international community members (Muller, 2003: 211-219). In the second half of the twentieth century, scientists have proposed the science of methodology in order to have a better and broader definition and accordingly, it is better to use the particular way that described it as "meta-analysis ". The present paper by using this method, seeks to identify the main components of this phenomenon. 


2. The Theoretical Framework of "Meta-Analysis": 

In the 1970s, the modern European science of methodology  had been dealt with serious challenge and lived in a deep crisis which was as a result of the weakness and inefficiency of traditional methods of that time, because these methods, had put massive problems for researchers (Hunter & Schmidt, 2004: 18). Efforts of methodologists for solving this challenge brought the birth of the meta-analysis. Meta-analysis refers to the research methods that can be gained from viewing the previous research on a particular topic, and investigating the results of their research and finally, the discovery of common ground among the results of conducted studies, in other words, creating consistency and arranging the results of researches on a particular topic, and estimation of the fresh hidden relationships between them (Glass, 1976: 3-8). In the meta-analysis the researchers try to study the previous results of scientific research and then they should evaluate and assess each one of them and after this stage, they try to obtain the comprehensive answer through these studies and evaluations so that to bring together the previous research results and to create consistency among the results of previous research (Hunter & Schmidt, 2004 445).  The main advantage of meta-analysis is its ability to increase the power of the study to achieve new and significant findings and to offer conclusions arising from the collective mind of researchers (Siahpoosh, 2008: 102, quoting from Rezaeian: 2006). It should be noted that in terms of the political science perspective, three types of phenomena can be recognized and separated from each other, the first group is the group of phenomena which have merely material existence, the other group are the phenomena that lack any material aspect, but the third category of phenomena are also reckoning that they not only have material aspect but also have immaterial indicators, (Reiters, 1995: 243), from this perspective, we can put terrorism in the third category, because this unfortunate phenomenon has harsh and intimidating material aspects and non-complex immaterial elements that are needed to be recognized. A variety of studies and research carried out so far in relation to terrorism, each of which has been examined a particular aspect of the issue, this paper is trying to analyze the previous results of studies and by changing and assembling them with each other, could achieve the basic elements of terrorism and create the overall and functional result. 


3. The Concept of Terrorism 3-1: Components and Features of Terrorism: The concept of terrorism is a multilateral issue. In fact, when we examine the concept of terrorism, we find that this phenomenon is composed of several components, that the most important among them are violence, victim, target, motivation, legality, accepting responsibility, the factors of a terrorist act, and audience (Abdullah Khani, 2007: 23-24) But among these factors and components that we reckon for the concept of terrorism, the three factors have got the greatest importance rather than other ones that these three are the victim, the terrorists and the audience (Mohseni, 2011: 205) 

3-2. Different Kinds of Terrorism: Monitoring the various kinds of terrorism has a decisive role in the general understanding of its meaning. One of the most important divisions of terrorism that has been done till now is the division of this concept in terms of geopolitical mode. In terms of geopolitics, we can study terrorism in four different levels: local terrorism, national terrorism, regional terrorism, and global terrorism (Afzal and others, 2011: 112-114). The government's strategy against nowadays’ terrorism must be dealt with places attacked by terrorism which means that the terrorist insurgency can occur at any point, all states should be united with the insurgency and confronted with terrorist destruction, because such a thing is more easily for the governments than the struggling with terrorists and also it is more safer from confronting with the terrorists inside the country's borders (Tuker, 1997: 14-31). 

3-3. Researchers’ Definition of Terrorism: 

Researchers have offered various definitions associated with the concept of terrorism. "Reich" in its definition of the concept of terrorism, stated that terrorism is more likely to occur in democratic societies, and terrorism is fundamentally the spread and promote of a philosophy that opposed to democracy, he said, terrorism is a form of fighting based on ideology that its final goal is to seize political power and business and to get governmental rule (Reich, 2001: 123), in the other definition, they defined terrorism as the use of violence and bloodshed and conducting various threats or planned attacks that have many similarities with guerilla warfare which have no special order ( Whittaker, 2006: 50). When we look at history of terrorism we find that in past, states considered terrorism, as an internal threat, but in the modern age, the issue of terrorism is in the form of international concern (Luck, 2003: 1-2). Through these statements, we understand that nowadays’ terrorism is drastically changing in terms of various ways of conducting terrorist acts and also based on the goals of conducting terrorism acts (Tayeb, 2003: 118). As long as there is not a clear definition of terrorism, is possible that a militant terrorist act of people in some countries can be considered as justice and nationalist movement (Braden and Shelley, 2004: 223). There are definitions of terrorism that focused their gaze at the regional level of terrorism that these people had brought the previously planned use of violence by a state against another country with the aim of creating the fear and panic and violence atmosphere to achieve the political objectives of terror in the definition of terrorism (Rosie, 1987: 7). 



"Habermas", believes that terrorism is necessary consequences and unfortunate implications of modernism, he says in all terrorist acts that have been occurred, three factors are visible: the use of violence, political objectives and intention to create fear among the people (Habermas 2001: 79). 


3-4. UN Definition of Terrorism: 

The issue of terrorism in ancestors of international organizations, was used firstly in 1937 in first article of the convention on the prevention and punishment of terrorism adopted by the "UN", in this convention, terrorism considered as criminal act that takes place against a government and was defined to establish panic and fear among the public, particular individuals or obvious groups of people. After the founding of the United Nations, terrorism issue took into consideration independently for the first time in September 1972 after the hostage-taking of Israeli athletes during the Munich Summer Olympics (Peterson, 2004: 179). In this statement noted that the United Nations is obliged to take action to prevent from terrorism acts and other forms of violence endangering human life and the rights that have been taken away from them for having life or endangering fundamental freedoms of people with risks and also have the duty to study the main factors of this phenomenon and other acts of violence which are rooted from the phenomena such as poverty, frustration, injustice and despair and leads a group of people or even some of their fellows to sacrifice themselves to witness major changes in the world (Bozorgmehri, 2008: 22). The common thread in all of these reports was that the national liberation movements of the issue of terrorism was isolated and was not brought under the heading of terrorism (Peterson, 2004: 197). All United Nations conventions considered terrorism as a serious worldwide threat towards international peace and security (Bozorgmehri, 2008: 21). The problem of terrorism is not defined in the European Convention on fighting terrorism and instead that matter, they refer to instances outside the phenomenon of terrorism: hijackings and taking any action that would jeopardize the security of air travelers, threaten or otherwise violate the life or liberty of individuals which is internationally supported, such as diplomats, hostage situation, the assassination attempt, manifest application and parcel bombs, and finally trying to do one of the above matters and participation in the commission of such acts (Piruzan, 2009) . 


3-5. Analysis of the Proposed Definitions and the Search for Basic Terrorism Components: 

By studying the votes of political science thinkers and searching the definition of the notion of terrorism which is provided in international conventions, and finally by gathering these definitions and discourses we can offer new and appropriate answers to the research question which is questioning that what are the basic elements of terrorism. In fact, by reading these definitions we can define three basic components in relation to terrorism (Afzal and others, 2011: 109) which are as a result of definitions provided by political scientists and international relations or international conventions. These three components must be included in the definition of terrorism and without them understanding the notion of terrorism would not be possible which includes the lack of legitimate defense, security debugging, and strategy based on violence. In fact if we want to offer a conceptual model of the notion of terrorism, we have to offer a  combination of these three components in recognition of the concept of terrorism. This following model clearly explains the matters:    

SECURITY DEBUGGING  plus STRATEGY BASED ON VIOLENCE plus LACK OF LEGITIMATE DEFENCE   gives impetus  to  TERRORISM



The word "violence  " is derived from the Latin root "Vis  ", in fact having strength and force in the commission of acts of violence is very important and in other words having violence and force would play a vital role in conducting violence, to the point that sometimes some social scientists defined violence in terms of an ultimate force and put an emphasis on it (styrene, 2003: 16). In all definitions of terrorism, the acts of violence are known as one of the most original and the most obvious components of terrorist activity as much as if there is not an act of violence, accordingly it is impossible to refer to that single incident as a terrorism act. In the field of "lack of legitimate defense" it is necessary to note that there is fundamental difference between legitimate and non-legitimate defense. In the Charter of the United Nations, the legitimate defense is recognized as one of the inherent right for each country, in fact, if a foreigner wanted to enter a country's borders with aggression and occupation, for the all members of that country, dealing with this person, arresting and deporting him considered as an undeniable right and conclusive matter, and no one  won’t held them for the legitimate defense of their land, because defensing them has legal and legitimate aspects and it is applied in a legitimate way and the issue of legitimate-defense is rooted in natural right of "self-defense" (Bowett, 1958: 48). Based on this provision of the charter of the United Nations was noted above that, it is not right to call terrorist group the "Hezbollah" in Lebanon and the resistance groups in occupied Palestinian in accordance with international standards, because they defense their land against the aliens who fight in aggression and occupation against them to get their land. But terrorists have no such rights because basically they are not rejected form somewhere that intend to recapture it and secondly, that the use of violence by these groups completely lacks legitimacy, because without having any frame, they keep killing accidental victims in the intended community, so the absence of legitimate-defense is one of the terrorism criteria that must be considered. But security-debugging is a very important in terrorism, because terrorists’ secondary purpose of committing terrorist acts aimed at destroying social security, security-debugging is fundamental factor that in all forms of terrorism can be seen and it is necessary to put it in the broader definition of terrorism. Many definitions have been released for security in some definitions, for example, they called it through the opposite concept of security which means insecurity and sometimes security have been defined as the concept of relative freedom from the absence of physical and mental modes that may cause serious damage (Both, 1991 319). But if we pay attention to this issue, we learn more in the sense that this idea with the combination of three factors of land, power and politics is understandable, due to this fact, some experts believe that it is better to consider security as a geopolitical concept (Hafeznia, 2005: 327) .

 4. Conclusion: In today's world, terrorism and how to fight against it are among the most important concerns of all members of the international community, the terrorism which is not placed in the same national level anymore and it is considered as an international phenomenon. Although many efforts had been done to counter terrorism at the national, regional and international level, but none of these efforts had not been successful. One of the main causes of this failure, is the absence of comprehensive and inclusive definition of terrorism, it should be noted that great efforts have been made in line with the definition of the phenomenon, but these studies have been conducted separately and independently and that is why not it could not put all those factors under this concept to accommodate components. This article by utilizing the theoretical framework of analysis, after reviewing and studying the definitions by scholars and international conventions in relation to the notion of terrorism has come to the conclusion that it is necessary for broader definition of the notion of terrorism to pay attention toward three essential elements in the definition of this concept, first factor is conducted to recognize that the most outstanding characteristic of terrorism is the violent strategy of this phenomenon, secondly that generally terrorism is different from what is called legitimate-defense, in other words, the lack of the legitimate defense is second feature of terrorism since the terrorist events lack of any framework of legitimate actions, and thirdly to know that in the definition of terrorism, we should pay attention to the category of security-debugging since in all terrorist events, destroying the security is considered as the terrorist group aims.



References 

Styrene, François (2003), violence and power, translator: Behnam Jafari, Tehran: Foreign Ministry publications.

 Afzali, Rasul, Ansarinejad, Salman, Pouyan, Davood (2011), "Geo-terrorism: geographical approach to terrorism", Journal of Spatial Planning, Volume 15, Number One.

 Braden, Kathleen; Shelley, Fred (2005), inclusive geopolitical, translated by Alireza Farshchi and Hamid Reza manuals, Tehran: high-war period. 

Bozorgmehri, Majid (2008), "UN definition of terrorism: a review of the approval document and the views of experts", Journal of Political Studies, Volume One, Number Two.

 Piruzan, Alireza (2010), "The European Union and the phenomenon of terrorism", a monthly political-economic studies, Year 24, No. 265-266.

 Hafeznia, Mohammad Reza (2006), the principles and concepts of geopolitics, Tehran: Papli Institute of Technology and Amirkabir publications. 


Reich, Walter (2003), the roots of terrorism, translated by Seyyed Hossein Mohammadi Najm, first edition, Tehran: high-war period. 


Rezaeian, Mohsen (2006), "descriptive glossary of meta-analysis", Journal of Medicine, Volume Six, number two. 


Reiters, George (1995), contemporary sociological theory, translation by Mohsen Salaeie, second edition, Tehran: Academic Press.

 Siahpoush, Amir (1998), "Meta-analysis of studies of capital in Iran" culture strategy, the first year, the third number. 


Seyed-Emami, Kavus (2008), Research in Political Science, Tehran: Institute for Social Cultural Studies, Ministry of Science, Research and Technology, and the University of Imam Sadeq (AS). 


Tayyab Alireza (2003), terrorism, history, sociology, rhetoric, law, Tehran: Ney Publishing.

 Abdullah Khani, Ali (2008), Terrorism Studies, Tehran: Abrar Moaser.

 Golshani, Ali Reza; Babanasab, Heydar; Mahmoodabadi Bagheri, Ali (2011), "Nuclear Terrorism: the concept within the framework of the United Nations", Journal of Political and international Studies, Number Nine.


 Mosaffa, Nasrin; Taherkhani, Setare (2012), "the General Assembly of the United Nations and counter-terrorism", Journal of Politics, Volume 41, Number Three.

 Habermas, Jurgen (2001), "Terrorism is a modern phenomenon" reflection journal, Issue 22.

 Both, K (1991), "Security and Emancipation", Review of International Security, Vol.17.

 Bowett, WD (1958), In International Law, Manchester: University of Manchester. 

Dona, MS (1988), International Terrorism: An Introduction to The Concepts and Actors, Maryland: Lexington books. 

Glass, GV (1976), Primary, Secondary, and Meta-Analysis of Research, United States: Educational Researcher. 

Higgins, R (1997), The International Law of Terrorism, London: Rutledge. 

Hunter, J & Schmidt, F (2004), Methods of Meta-Analysis: Correcting Error and Bias in Research Finding, California: Sage Publishing.

 Muller, E. (2003), Trends in Terrorism, Netherlands: Wolters Kluwer.


Peterson, MJ (2004), "Using the Global Assembly" in Boulden, Jane & G.Weiss, Thomas, Terrorism and the UN, United States: Indiana University press. 

Rosie, G. (1987), The Dictionary of International Terrorism, New York: Paragon House. 

Tucker, D. (1997), Skirmished at The Edge of Empire: The United State and International Terrorism, California: Praeger.

 Verma, SK (2000), "Terrorism and International Law", in BPSingh, s., Global Terrorism, Socio-Politico and Legal Dimensions, New Dehli: Deep and Deep Publication.

 Whittaker, JD (2006), Terrorism: Understanding The Global Threat, London: Longman







Wednesday, March 15, 2017

TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN: Terrorist and Extremist Groups of Pakistan

SOURCE:
http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/pakistan/terroristoutfits/group_list.htm

                                TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN


                 (Updated till March 5, 2017)


  

                                                                  Hafiz Saeed 

                                                     

 
                                    CLICK /GOOGLE TO READ  


                       TERRORIST  ORGANIZATIONS  
                                          OF 
                         TERROR IN PAKISTAN


Terrorist and Extremist Groups of Pakistan


Terrorist Groups

Extremist Groups
Domestic Organisations
  1. Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)
  2. Lashkar-e-Omar (LeO)
  3. Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP)
  4. Tehreek-e-Jaferia Pakistan (TJP)
  5. Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi(TNSM)
  6. Lashkar-eJhangvi (LeJ)
  7. Sipah-e-Muhammad Pakistan (SMP)
  8. Jamaat-ul-Fuqra
  9. Nadeem Commando
  10. Popular Front for Armed Resistance
  11. Muslim United Army
  12. Harkat-ul-Mujahideen Al-alami(HuMA)
Trans-national Organisations
  1. Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM)
  2. Harkat-ul-Ansar (HuA, presently known as Harkat-ul Mujahideen)
  3. Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT)
  4. Jaish-e-Mohammad Mujahideen E-Tanzeem (JeM)
  5. Harkat-ul Mujahideen (HuM, previously known as Harkat-ul-Ansar)
  6. Al Badr
  7. Jamait-ul-Mujahideen (JuM)
  8. Lashkar-e-Jabbar (LeJ)
  9. Harkat-ul-Jehad-al-Islami(HUJI)
  10. Muttahida Jehad Council (MJC)
  11. Al Barq
  12. Tehrik-ul-Mujahideen
  13. Al Jehad
  14. Jammu & Kashir National Liberation Army
  15. People’s League
  16. Muslim Janbaz Force
  17. Kashmir Jehad Force
  18. Al Jehad Force (combines Muslim Janbaz Force and Kashmir Jehad Force)
  19. Al Umar Mujahideen
  20. Mahaz-e-Azadi
  21. Islami Jamaat-e-Tulba
  22. Jammu & Kashmir Students Liberation Front
  23. Ikhwan-ul-Mujahideen
  24. Islamic Students League
  25. Tehrik-e-Hurriat-e-Kashmir
  26. Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Fiqar Jafaria
  27. Al Mustafa Liberation Fighters
  28. Tehrik-e-Jehad-e-Islami
  29. Muslim Mujahideen
  30. Al Mujahid Force
  31. Tehrik-e-Jehad
  32. Islami Inquilabi Mahaz


    1. Al-Rashid Trust
    2. Al-Akhtar Trust
    3. Rabita Trust
    4. Ummah Tamir-e-Nau





Tuesday, March 14, 2017

TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN : Pakistan Terror Data Sheets

SOURCE:
http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/pakistan/database/casualties.htm







                      TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN

               

                Pakistan Terror Data Sheets


                   
(Updated till March 5, 2017)




                      CLICK /GOOGLE TO READ  
                                              
                STATE  SPONSORED TERRORIST 
              STATICS OF TERROR IN PAKISTAN





Fatalities in Terrorist Violence in Pakistan 2003-2017
Fatalities in Pakistan Region Wise: 2011-2017, 2017, 2016 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011
Major incidents of terrorist violence in Pakistan
1988-2004 , 2005-2006 , 2007 , 2008 , 2009 , 2010 , 2011, 2012 , 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
Suicide Attacks in Pakistan since 2002
Bomb Blasts: 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014 ,2013 , 2012, 2011, 2010 , 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000
Post 9/11-attacks on Western targets in Pakistan
NATO Related attacks in Pakistan since 2008
Drone attack in Pakistan: 2005-2017
Sectarian Violence in Pakistan since 1989
Sectarian attacks in mosques in Pakistan since 2002
Shia killing Data
Terrorist attacks on Railway in Pakistan
Doctors killed in Pakistan
Lawyers Killed in Pakistan
Attack on Tribal Elders in Pakistan
Terrorist attacks on Journalists in Pakistan
Elections 2013 - Results
Elections 2008 - Results
Elections 2002 - Results

Monday, March 13, 2017

TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN: How Pashtun Insurgency Being Portrayed As Terrorism In Pakistan

SOURCE:
http://www.eurasiareview.com/13032017-how-pashtun-insurgency-being-portrayed-as-terrorism-in-pakistan-oped/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+eurasiareview%2FVsnE+%28Eurasia+Review%29



             TERRORIST STATE PAKISTAN



How Pashtun Insurgency Being Portrayed As Terrorism In Pakistan








Location of Punjab in Pakistan. Source: Wikipedia Commons.


In Pakistan, there are three distinct categories of militants:
[A] the Afghan-centric Pashtun militants; 
[B] the Kashmir-centric Punjabi militants; and 
[C] the transnational terrorists, like al-Qaeda. 

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is mainly comprised of Pashtun militants, carries out bombings against Pakistan’s state apparatus. The ethnic factor is critical here. Although TTP likes to couch its rhetoric in religious language, but it is the difference of ethnicity that enables it to recruit Pashtun tribesmen who are willing to carry out subversive activities against Punjabi-dominated state establishment.
Here, the reader should bear in mind that insurgency anywhere cannot succeed, unless insurgents get some level of popular support from local population. For example: if a hostile force tries to foment insurgency in Punjab, it would not be able to succeed, because Punjabis don’t have any grievances against Pakistan. On the other hand, if an adversary tries to incite insurgency in the marginalized province of Balochistan and tribal areas, it will succeed because the local Baloch and Pashtun population has grievances against the heavy-handedness of Pakistan’s security establishment.
I have knowingly used the term ‘Pashtun tribesmen’ instead of ‘Taliban’ here, because this phenomena of revenge has more to do with tribal culture than religion, per se. In the lawless tribal areas, they don’t have courts and police to settle disputes and enforce justice; justice is dispensed by the tribes themselves: the clans, families and the relatives of the slain victims seek revenge, which is the fundamental axiom of their tribal ‘jurisprudence.’

Notwithstanding, as well informed readers must be aware that military operations have been going on in the tribal areas of Pakistan since 2009; but a military operation – unlike law enforcement or Rangers operation, as in Karachi – is a different kind of operation; it’s an all-out WAR. The Pakistan army surrounds the area from all sides and orders the villagers to vacate their homes. Then the army calls in air force and heavy artillery to carpet bomb the whole area; after which ground troops move in to look for the dead and injured in the rubble of towns and villages.
Air-force bombardment and heavy artillery shelling has been going on in the tribal areas of Pakistan for several years; Pashtun tribesmen have been taking fire; their homes, property and livelihoods have been destroyed; they have lost their families and children in this brutal war, which has displaced millions of tribesmen who have been rotting in the refugee camps in Peshawar, Mardan and Bannu districts since 2009, after the Swat and South Waziristan military operations.
More to the point, excluding religion, all the diverse and remote regions of Asia and Africa that have been beset by militancy share a few similarities: firstly, the weak writ of respective states in their faraway rural and tribal areas; secondly, the marginalization of different ethnic groups; and thirdly, intentional or unintentional weaponization of militant outfits that have been used as proxies, at some point in time in history, to further the agendas of their regional and global patrons. When religious extremism blends with militancy, it can give birth to strands as deadly as the Taliban in Afghanistan, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, Boko Haram in Nigeria and al-Shabab in Somalia.
After invading and occupying Afghanistan and Iraq, and when the American “nation-building” projects failed in those hapless countries, the United States policymakers immediately realized that they have been facing large-scale and popularly-rooted insurgencies against foreign occupation, consequently the occupying military altered its CT (counter-terrorism) doctrines in the favor of a COIN (counter-insurgency) strategy. A COIN strategy is essentially different from a CT approach and it also involves dialogue, negotiations and political settlements, alongside coercive tactics of law enforcement and paramilitary operations on a limited scale.
The goals for which Islamic insurgents have been fighting in insurgency-wracked regions are irrelevant for the debate at hand; it can be argued, however, that if some of the closest Western allies in the Middle East, like Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait, have already enforced Sharia as part of their conservative legal systems and when beheadings, amputation of limbs and flogging of criminals are a routine in Saudi Arabia, then what is the basis for the United States declaration of war against the Islamic insurgents in the Af-Pak, Middle East and North Africa regions, who are erroneously but deliberately labeled as “terrorists” by the Western mainstream media to manufacture consent for the Western military presence and interventions in the energy-rich region under the pretext of the so-called “war on terror?”
Regardless, what bothers me is not that we have not been able to find the solution to our problems, what bothers me is the fact that neoliberals are so utterly unaware of real structural issues that their attempts to sort out tangential problems will further exacerbate the main issues. Religious extremism, militancy and terrorism are not the cause but the effect of poverty, backwardness and disenfranchisement.
Coming back to the topic, the Pashtuns are the most unfortunate nation on the planet nowadays, because nobody understands and represents them; not even their own leadership, whether religious or ethnic. In Afghanistan, the Pashtuns are represented by the Western stooges, like Hamid Karzai and Ashraf Ghani, and in Pakistan, the Pashtun nationalist party, Awami National Party (ANP), loves to play the victim card and finds solace in learned helplessness.
In Pakistan, however, the Pashtuns are no longer represented by a single political entity, a fact which has become obvious after the 2013 parliamentary elections in which the Pashtun nationalist ANP was wiped out of its former strongholds. Now there are at least three distinct categories of Pashtuns:

 [a] firstly, the Pashtun nationalists who follow Abdul Ghaffar Khan’s legacy and have their strongholds in Charsadda and Mardan districts;

[ b ] secondly, the religiously-inclined Islamist Pashtuns who vote for Islamist political parties, like Jamaat-e-Islami and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam in the southern districts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa; and 

 [ c ] finally, the emerging new phenomena, i.e. the Pakistani nationalist Pashtuns, most of whom have recently joined Imran Khan’s PTI in recent years, though some of them have also joined the Muslim League.
Additionally, it should be remembered here that the general elections of 2013 were contested on a single issue: that is, Pakistan’s partnership in the American-led war on terror, which has displaced millions of Pashtun tribesmen. The Pashtun nationalist Awami National Party was routed, because in keeping with its supposedly “liberal” ideology, it stood for military operations against Islamist Pashtun militants in tribal areas; and the people of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province gave a sweeping mandate to the newcomer in the Pakistani political landscape: Imran Khan and his Tehreek-e-Insaf, because the latter promised to deal with tribal militants through negotiations and political settlements.
Although Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif both have failed to keep their election pledge of using peaceful means for dealing with the menace of religious extremism and militancy, but the public sentiment was, and still is, firmly against military operations in tribal areas. The 2013 parliamentary elections were, in a way, a referendum against Pakistan’s partnership in the American-led war on terror in the Af-Pak region, and the Pashtun electorate gave a sweeping mandate to pro-peace political parties against the pro-war Pakistan People’s Party and Awami National Party.
Regarding the Pashtun nationalists’ much-touted victim card, it’s a misconception to assume that Pakistan’s security establishment used Pashtuns as cannon fodder to advance their strategic objectives in the region. The establishment’s support to Islamic jihadists back in the ’80s and ’90s during the Cold War against the erstwhile Soviet Union had been quite indiscriminate. There are as many Kashmir-centric Punjabi militants in south Punjab as there are Afghan-centric Pashtun jihadists in the rural and tribal regions of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province.
The only difference between these two variants of militancy is that the writ of state in Punjab is comparatively strong while in the tribal areas of KP, it is weak; that’s why militancy in KP has mutated into full-fledged Pashtun insurgency. Furthermore, the difference of ethnicity and language between the predominantly Punjabi establishment and the Pashtun insurgents has further exacerbated the problem, and the militants do find a level of popular support among the rural and tribal masses of Pashtun-majority areas.



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