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Released Bin Laden documents show frustration, friction with Iran, U.S. anti-terrorist center study says

May 3, 2012 in 2012, 9/11, Al Qaeda, America, Bin Laden, FBI, Homeland Security, Iran, Law Enforcement / Terrorism, Middle East, Muslims, New York, NYPD, Pakistan, Radical Islam, Taliban, Terrorism

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WASHINGTON (AP) — In letters from his last hideout, Osama bin Laden fretted about dysfunction in his terrorist network and crumbling trust from Muslims he wished to incite against their government and the West.

A selection of documents seized in last year’s raid on bin Laden’s Pakistan house was posted online Thursdayby the U.S. Army’s Combating Terrorism Center. The documents show dark days for al-Qaida and its hunkered-down leader after years of attacks by the United States and what bin Laden saw as bumbling within his own organization and its terrorist allies.

“I plan to release a statement that we are starting a new phase to correct (the mistakes) we made,” bin Laden wrote in 2010. “In doing so, we shall reclaim, God willing, the trust of a large segment of those who lost their trust in the jihadis.”

Until the end, bin Laden remained focused on attacking Americans and coming up with plots, however improbable, to kill U.S. leaders. He wished especially to target airplanes carrying Gen. David Petraeus and even President Barack Obama, reasoning that an assassination would elevate an “utterly unprepared” Vice President Joe Biden into the presidency and plunge the U.S. into crisis.

But a U.S. analysts’ report released along with bin Laden’s correspondence describes him as upset over the inability of spinoff terrorist groups to win public support for their cause, their unsuccessful media campaigns and poorly planned plots that, in bin Laden’s view, killed too many innocent Muslims.

Bin Laden’s inner circle also was frustrated when, in 2010, attention in the U.S. shifted to the weak economy without apparently crediting al-Qaida for the economic damage that terrorist attacks had caused. “All the political talk in America is about the economy, forgetting or ignoring the war and its role in weakening the economy,” his spokesman, Adam Gadahn, wrote.

Al-Qaida’s relationship with Iran, a point of deep interest to the U.S. government, was rough, judging from the documents. After the U.S. invaded Afghanistan in 2001, some top al-Qaida operatives and their families fled to Iran, where authorities there put them under house arrest. Over the years, Iran has released some, including members of bin Laden’s family. Still, others remain.

Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, who became al-Qaida’s No. 2 after bin Laden’s death, complained bitterly about dealing with the Iranians and their Byzantine methods of negotiating. Al-Rahman was later killed in a U.S. drone strike.

“The criminals did not send us any letter, nor did they send us a message through any of the brothers,” al-Rahman wrote. “Such behavior is of course not unusual for them; indeed, it is typical of their mindset and method. They do not wish to appear to be negotiating with us or responding to our pressures.”

Bin Laden himself wrote that “controlling children” was one of the keys to hiding in cities, as he did for years while U.S. forces searched Pakistan’s rugged frontier. He encouraged his followers in hiding to teach their children the local language and not let them out of their homes “except for extreme necessity like medical care.”

The correspondence suggests that al-Qaida carefully monitored U.S. cable news networks and generally didn’t like what it saw. “We can say that there is no single channel that we could rely on for our messages,” Gadahn wrote, although he described ABC as “all right, actually it could be one of the best channels as far as we are concerned.” He complained that Fox News “falls into the abyss, as you know, and lacks neutrality.” CNN, he said, “seems to be in cooperation with the government more than the others except Fox News, of course.”

Gadahn suggested sending videos of bin Laden’s remarks to all the U.S. news networks — except Fox News. “Let her die in anger,” he wrote.

The correspondence includes letters by then-second-in-command Abu Yahya al-Libi, taking Pakistani offshoot Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan to task over its indiscriminate attacks on Muslims. The al-Qaida leadership “threatened to take public measures unless we see from you serious and immediate practical and clear steps towards reforming (your ways) and dissociating yourself from these vile mistakes that violate Islamic Law,” al-Libi wrote.

Apparently bin Laden was not made of aware of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan’s planned bombing of Times Square in New York in May 2010. But he expressed disappointment that Faisal Shahzad didn’t manage to pull off the attack after the bomb failed to detonate. Shahzad was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for the attempted attack.

Bin Laden also warned the leader of Yemeni AQAP, Nasir al-Wuhayshi, against attempting a takeover of Yemen to establish an Islamic state, instead saying he should “refocus his efforts on attacking the United States.”

And he seemed uninterested in recognizing Somali-based al-Shabab when the group pledged loyalty to him because he thought its leaders were poor governors of the areas they controlled and were too strict with their administration of Islamic penalties, like cutting off the hands of thieves.

Nothing in the papers that were released points directly to al-Qaida sympathizers in Pakistan’s government, although presumably such references would have remained classified. Bin Laden described “trusted Pakistani brothers” but didn’t identify any Pakistani government or military officials who might have been aware of or complicit in his hiding in Abbottabad.

It wasn’t immediately clear how many of bin Laden’s documents the U.S. was still keeping secret. In a note published with the 175 pages in Arabic that were released Thursday along with English translations, retired Gen. John Abizaid said they probably represent only a small fraction of materials taken from the compound in the U.S. raid that tracked down and killed bin Laden in May 2011. The U.S. said the documents span September 2006 to April 2011.

The report said the Special Operations troops in the bin Laden raid were trained to search the home afterward for thumb drives, printed documents and what it described as “pocket litter” that might produce leads to other terrorists. “The end of the raid in Abbottabad was the beginning of a massive analytical effort,” it said.

It said the personal files showed that, during one of the most significant manhunts in history, bin Laden was out of touch with the day-to-day operations of various terrorist groups inspired by al-Qaida. He was “not in sync on the operational level with its so-called affiliates,” researchers wrote. “Bin Laden enjoyed little control over either groups affiliated with al Qaida in name or so-called fellow travelers.”

By Peter Zicari, The Plain Dealer
KIMBERLY DOZIER, AP Intelligence Writer. Associated Press writers Adam Goldman and Matt Apuzzo contributed to this report.

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US warns terrorists could avenge bin Laden on anniversary of his death

April 26, 2012 in 2012, 9/11, Al Qaeda, America, Bin Laden, European, FBI, Homeland Security, Islamic, Law Enforcement / Terrorism, Middle East, Pakistan, Radical Islam, Taliban, Terrorism

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WASHINGTON — Just days before the one-year anniversary of Osama bin Laden’s death, US authorities are warning that while there is no specific, credible threat to the US homeland they remain concerned “lone wolf” terrorists could use the date to avenge the former al Qaeda leader.

In an intelligence bulletin issued late Wednesday, the FBI, Department of Homeland Security and US Northern Command note that terrorist groups such as al Shabaab in Somalia, northern Africa’s al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and the Pakistani Taliban have called for revenge against the United States for killing bin Laden during the May 1, 2011 raid on his hideout in Pakistan.

The bulletin says al Qaeda or its affiliates would view an attack “on this anniversary as a symbolic victory,” especially in the wake of losses suffered by al Qaeda through US drone attacks and other efforts overseas.

In addition, according to the bulletin, authorities remain concerned that so-called “lone wolf” extremists not already identified “will execute attacks with little or no warning on or about the anniversary of bin Laden’s death.”

A report issued Wednesday by the European Union, looking at how terrorism has changed in Europe over the past year, seems to concur, saying the “threat has evolved” since the deaths of bin Laden and other terrorist leaders.

“Lone actors or small EU-based groups are becoming increasingly prominent, as is the internet as a key facilitator for terrorism-related activities,” Interpol’s EU Terrorist Situation and Trend Report says.

“Al Qaeda’s call for individual violent jihad through the execution of small-scale attacks may result in an increase in such attacks. The more al Qaeda’s core is under pressure, and the more difficult it becomes to prepare large-scale attacks, the more al Qaeda will try to recruit individual supporters in the West to plan and execute attacks.”

The EU report cites a “solo terrorist” of Moroccan descent, who adhered to al Qaeda ideology and was arrested in August 2011 for “planning to poison the water supplies of tourist locations in Spain, in retaliation for the death of bin Laden.”

As for the US government bulletin issued Wednesday, it cites al Qaeda’s fixation since at least 2010 with launching attacks on symbolic dates.

In addition, the bulletin suggests recent controversies over the desecration of bodies in Afghanistan and the burning of Korans could further inflame passions among extremists.

Nevertheless, the bulletin says authorities “continue to asses that operational readiness remains the driving factor behind the timing of al Qaeda attacks,” and authorities do not expect jihadist messages online calling for revenge “to accelerate or motivate attack plotting.”

“We have not detected signs of homeland plots by [known] groups in the intervening months” since bin Laden’s death, the bulletin reads.

FOX NEWS/NEWSCORE To read more, go to Foxnews.com

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Soldier’s Killing Spree Likely to Incite Violence

March 15, 2012 in 2012, America, Homeland Security, Iran, Islamic, Middle East, Military, Muslims, Radical Islam, Taliban, Terrorism, war

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NATO’s International Security Assistance Force has confirmed that an American soldier recently turned himself in, and admitted to leaving his base in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province and went on a rampage from house to house in villages adjacent to his base, killing 16 Afghan people in their homes.

Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai immediately demanded an explanation from the United States, for the senseless killing of 16 people, including nine children and three women, while the Afghan parliament, demanded a public trial for the suspect, adding new tensions to a relationship that was already severely strained.

While the motive for this atrocity is unclear, there is speculation that the soldier, who had served three tours in Iraq and was on his first deployment in Afghanistan, might have suffered a mental breakdown. Regardless remember that extremists are masters of using major news events and controversies for recruiting, and as justification for their violent actions. After the incident the Taliban released a statement claiming that 50 people had been killed, calling U.S. forces “sick-minded American savages and they would mete out punishment for the “barbaric actions.” Analysts have long warned that the radical Islamist militia, regularly exaggerates casualty figures, a fact coupled with this appalling occurrence is likely to further inflame tensions in the area and beyond.

Be aware that this tragic incident comes on the heels of the killing of six NATO service-members by Afghans in response to the burning of Korans by American troops last month, potentially adding another chapter bloody story line again proving that radical Islam poses a challenge in the modern world, which is like that of no other radical religious movement. Despite the myriad terrorist plots executed and thwarted over the last few years, and the warped belief that there is a united Islamic movement hostile to everything we value, we must understand that most Muslims are not terrorist sympathizers, but recent events and history offer proof that there are radical Islamic elements within their ranks that pose a danger to our security, demanding vigilance, resources, and in some instances, military action. Remember that some time ago, the repercussions from a cartoon controversy led to protests across the Muslim world, some of which escalated into violence resulting in a total of more than 100 deaths, and setting fire to the Danish Embassies in Syria, Lebanon and Iran. In addition consider of the plight of Ayaan Hirsi Ali a 40-year-old Somali immigrant, former Muslim, survivor of child genital mutilation, and author of books critical of Islam. She now lives her life in constant fear due to multiple death threats.

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Baby-Faced Bombers

February 27, 2012 in America, Bomb, Explosive, Law Enforcement / Terrorism, Middle East, Obama, Pakistan, Palestine, Taliban, Terrorism

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Afghan police recently arrested four suspected insurgents in the process of smuggling 41 children to Pakistan from eastern Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

According an Interior Ministry spokesperson, the insurgents were planning on using the children said to be between 6 and 11 years of age, as suicide bombers, saying: “We strongly believe that the children were being taken to Pakistan to be trained, and brainwashed then sent back as Afghan enemies.”

Children are supposed to dream of a better future and enjoy innocence and happiness, but some extremists organizations are using religious or nationalist incitement to convince children to perpetrate terrorist attacks telling them they will enjoy a life of happiness after death.

This is not an isolated incident, in 2009 Pakistani officials issued a warning that a Taliban leader, was buying children as young as 7 to serve as suicide bombers in the growing spate of attacks against Pakistani, Afghan and U.S. targets. And although most Palestinian armed groups claim to disavow the use of children in military activities, more than 10 children have carried out suicide attacks in Israel and the Occupied Territories since October 2000.

Consider that suicide bombing is becoming more popular with insurgents attempting to meet the massively intensified NATO campaign with their own surge of violence. Furthermore, Bruce Riedel, the man who chaired a review of Pakistan-Afghanistan strategy for President Obama said it best when he commented on the subject saying: “Using child suicide bombers is the grim reality of the Taliban Frankenstein that now threatens to overwhelm the Afghan and Pakistani states.”

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Officials Hope Friday Prayers Do Not Include More Koran Burning Backlash

February 24, 2012 in America, Islamic, Middle East, Military, Muslims, Pakistan, Taliban, war

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On its site shahamat-english.com, the Taliban had urged Afghan security forces to “turn their guns on the foreign infidel invaders.” It seems to be working, in an apparent backlash over the recent burning of Korans at a U.S. military base in Afghanistan, an Afghan solider turned his gun on his allies, shooting and killing two U.S. troops and injured four others.

The attack occurred the eastern Ningarhar province, along the border with Pakistan, but was not the only violence that resulted from the accidental destruction of Islamic religious material. There were many bloody protests over the incident.

In addition Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai who had earlier said a U.S. officer “ignorantly” burned copies of the Koran, now wants NATO to put on public trial those who burned copies of the Koran, and publically punish the perpetrators.

Consider that there have been numerous violent anti-U.S. protests in Afghanistan, since US military personnel accidentally “improperly disposed” of religious materials, including Koran’s (Muslim holy books), at Bagram airfield, but security officials are deeply concerned what may occur after Friday prayers, because Friday is the holy day in the Muslim week, a day that protests are typically much larger. This is because thousands of Muslim faithful gather at Mosques and as the men flood out of mosques they often converge in cities and towns in protest.

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Taliban Will Control Afghanistan With Support From Pakistan, Says Leaked Report

February 1, 2012 in 2012, Al Qaeda, America, Pakistan, Taliban, Terrorism

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KABUL, Feb 1 (Reuters) – The U.S. military said in a secret report the Taliban, backed by Pakistan, are set to retake control of Afghanistan after NATO-led forces withdraw from the country, raising the prospect of a major failure of western policy after a costly war.

Lieutenant Colonel Jimmie Cummings, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, confirmed the existence of the document, reported by Britain’s Times newspaper and the BBC. But he said it was not a strategic study.

“The classified document in question is a compilation of Taliban detainee opinions,” he said. “It’s not an analysis, nor is it meant to be considered an analysis.”

Nevertheless, it could be interpreted as a damning assessment of the war, now dragging into its eleventh year and aimed at blocking a Taliban return to power.

It could also be seen as an admission of defeat and could reinforce the view of Taliban hardliners that they should not negotiate with the United States and President Hamid Karzai’s unpopular government while in a position of strength.

The U.S. military said in the document Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) security agency was assisting the Taliban in directing attacks against foreign forces.

The allegation drew a strong response from Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit. “This is frivolous, to put it mildly,” he told Reuters. “We are committed to non-interference in Afghanistan.”

The Times said the “highly classified” report was put together by the U.S. military at Bagram air base in Afghanistan for top NATO officers last month.

Large swathes of Afghanistan have been handed back to Afghan security forces, with the last foreign combat troops due to leave by the end of 2014.

But many Afghans doubt their security forces will be able to take firm control of one of the world’s most volatile countries once foreign combat troops leave.

The document may leave some policy makers in Washington wondering whether the war was worth the steep cost in human lives and funding.

As of late January, 1,889 U.S. soldiers had been killed in Afghanistan in a conflict launched after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks that has drained almost half a trillion dollars from U.S. coffers.

“The unfortunate reality is that this is a failure of the allied strategy in Afghanistan. They have not been able to achieve the goals they set out to achieve,” said Mahmud Durrani, a former Pakistan army general and ambassador to Washington.

Fresh accusations of Pakistani collusion with the Taliban will likely further strain ties between Western powers and Islamabad, which has long denied backing militants seeking to topple the U.S.-backed government in Kabul.

Critics say Pakistan uses militant groups as proxies to counter the growing influence of rival India in Afghanistan. The belief that Pakistan supports the insurgents is widely held in Afghanistan.

“It is obvious that the Taliban get support from Pakistan, but I don’t think that as soon as foreign troops leave they will return to power,” said Afghan telecommunications worker Farid Ahmad Totakhil.

“It would be a mistake now for the international community to leave Afghanistan, and drop us in a dark ocean,” he said.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar was visiting Kabul on Wednesday on a mission to repair strained and to meet Karzai to discuss possible peace talks with the Taliban.

TURBULENT HISTORY

Pakistan is reviewing ties with the United States which have suffered a series of setbacks since a unilateral U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil in May last year humiliated Pakistan’s powerful generals.

A Nov. 26 cross-border NATO air attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers deepened the crisis, prompting Pakistan to close supply routes to NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Pakistan is seen as critical to U.S. efforts to stabilise Afghanistan, a feat one foreign power after another has failed to accomplish over the country’s turbulent history.

Islamabad has resisted U.S. pressure to go after insurgent groups like the Taliban and the allied Haqqani network, and argues Washington’s approach overlooks complex realities on the ground.

Pakistan says the United States should attempt to bring all militant groups into a peace process and fears a 2014 combat troop exit could be hasty, plunging the region into the kind of chaos seen after the Soviet exit in 1989.

“They don’t need any backing,” Pakistani Senator Tariq Azim, a member of the Senate’s Defence Committee, told Reuters, referring to the Taliban.

“Everybody knows that after 10 years, they (NATO) have not been able to control a single province in Afghanistan because of the wrong policies they have been following,” he said.

Pentagon spokesman George Little said: “We have long been concerned about ties between elements of the ISI and some extremist networks.”

The document’s findings were based on interrogations of more than 4,000 Taliban and al Qaeda detainees, the Times said, adding that it identified only few individual insurgents.

Despite the presence of about 100,000 foreign troops, violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since the Taliban were ousted by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001, according to the United Nations.

The Taliban announced this month they would open a political office in the Qatari capital, Doha, to support possible peace talks with the United States.

But there has also been talk of efforts to hold separate negotiations in Saudi Arabia because Karzai fears his government could be sidelined by U.S. talks with the Taliban.

The U.S. military report could boost the Taliban’s confidence and make its leaders less willing to make concessions on key demands for a ceasefire and for the insurgency to renounce violence and break ties to al Qaeda.

A Taliban spokesman rejected on Wednesday a U.S. demand for a ceasefire as a condition for peace talks, but he would not comment on the report.

“Our struggle and jihad will continue until we have installed a complete Islamic government in Afghanistan, regardless of the year 2014 or 2015 when the foreign troops say will leave Afghanistan,” said the militant spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi.

Hoping to gain credibility with a population still haunted by memories of the Taliban’s harsh rule from 1996-2001, the group has tried to improve its image as its fighters battle NATO and Afghan forces.

The Times said the document suggested the Taliban were gaining in popularity partly because the austere Islamist movement was becoming more tolerant.

Prominent Pakistani security analyst Imtiaz Gul described the report as alarmist, saying Afghan security forces backed by the international community would resist any Taliban takeover.

“This is simply preposterous to propagate this theory,” he said.

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LASHKAR-E-TAIBA: A THREAT BEYOND THE INDIA-PAKISTAN EQUATION- By A. S. Sekhon

October 3, 2011 in Al Qaeda, India, Pakistan, Taliban

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“In my judgment, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) today remains—after al-Qaeda—the most important terrorist group of global reach operating from South Asia. Like al-Qaeda, LeT too has a universalist ideology focused on establishing a universal Islamic Caliphate through the instrument of jihad, but unlike al-Qaeda, which is truly a stateless terrorist organization, LeT remains primarily Pakistani in its composition, uses Pakistani territory as its primary base of operation, and continues to be supported extensively by the Pakistani state, especially the Pakistani Army and its Directorate, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).”

I believe Mr. Tellis’ statement is accurate. Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), “Army of the Pure,” is the military wing of the Markaz Dawat ul-Irshad (MDI), the center for proselytization and preaching, which was established during the 1980s.2 It is an entity that remains closely linked, unfortunately, with the ambitions of senior people in the Pakistani government.

IDEOLOGY AND AMBITION

MDI is affiliated with Ahl-i-Hadith, a way of life based on the traditions of the prophet Mohammad. It is against all “unlawful innovations” like Sufism and “imitations” of the traditional schools of Islamic jurisprudence and attempts to refashion the worldwide Muslim community in the mold of the companions of the prophet.

The decade of the 1980s saw an overlap of two important drives in the region that were to leave a lasting shadow on the years that followed. First, of course, was the “jihad” against the Soviets in Afghanistan that caught the imagination of some Muslim groups from far-off regions, such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Chechnya, Yemen, and others, to converge together to fight. Second was the Islamization drive undertaken by General Zia-ul-Haq to transform Pakistan into an “Islamic State” based on shariah law. Widespread growth of madrassas (religious schools) was soon to become breeding ground for young minds to be transformed into fanatic fighters ready to take on the designated enemies of Islam.

After the Soviets withdrew in defeat, LeT was re-targeted against India in support of operations over contested territory. However, LeT’s ideology goes beyond merely challenging India’s control of the states of Jammu and Kashmir. According to Professor Hafeez Saeed (LeT leader), the purpose of this jihad is to carry out a sustained struggle for the dominance of Islam in the entire world and to eliminate “evil forces” and the ignorant.3 He considers India, Israel, and the United States to be his prime enemies and has threatened to launch Fedayeen (suicide) attacks on American interests as retaliation for ongoing international counter-terrorism operations.

US officials appear to view LeT as less threatening than al-Qaeda despite knowing the links between these groups. For instance, the shoe bomber Richard Reid apparently trained at an LeT camp in Pakistan, and one of the London subway bombers Shazad Tanweer spent time in an LeT camp in Muridke, Pakistan.4 LeT links to al-Qaeda go back even further, however. In 1998 LeT signed Osama bin Laden’s fatwa for Muslims to kill Americans and Israelis.5 Revelations from the recent investigation and trial of David Headley in the United States reveal that LeT (in coordination with the Harkat-ul-Jihadi-al-Islami) planned to attack the US embassy and Indian High Commission in Bangladesh around the one-year anniversary of the 2008, Mumbai attacks.6

Involvement of LeT in Afghanistan has increased in recent years as the Taliban started regaining influence in that country. LeT has supported insurgents by recruiting, training, and housing fighters and facilitating their infiltration into Afghanistan from the tribal areas of Pakistan. LeT also helped al-Qaeda by recruiting men from the Jalozai refugee camp in Peshawar for training at al-Qaeda camps to become suicide bombers.7 Professor Saeed was at the forefront in leading prayers after the killing of Osama bin Laden and fomenting anti-American sentiment among people in the heartland of Pakistan.

PRESENT

The radicalization of Pakistani society, which started during General Zia-ul-Haq’s rule in the 1980s, may be beginning to haunt Pakistan. Widespread intolerance for any divergent point of view is manifest. The murder of Mr. Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab province, during broad daylight on January 4, 2011, by his bodyguard,8 and the killing of another minister, Mr. Shahzad Bhatti,9 the only Christian minister in Pakistan, on March 2, 2011, who had aired his views against blasphemy laws, are cases in point to the extent of the radicalization in Pakistan, especially in the heartland.

Mobs demonstrating on the streets after each event related to US counter-terrorism action should be a cause for concern. Many terrorist groups operate from the soil of Pakistan. Jaish-e- Mohammad, Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, Afghan Taliban, Haqqani Group, or LeT may have ideological differences, but they have two things in common. First, they are all anti-American, and second, they are supported by Pakistan’s intelligence services, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), in some fashion. I believe that a dual-purpose strategy adopted by Pakistan to use these groups against the United States and Afghanistan on one side and against India toward the east is sustaining these relationships.

Pakistani authorities have shown a halfhearted desire to move against operatives of LeT despite clear evidence from the 2008, Mumbai attacks’ investigations and revelations during the David Headley and Tahawar Hussein Rana trials in Chicago.10 It is all too clear that despite repeated requests from the United States, Pakistani authorities are not prepared to relinquish the leverage of using groups like LeT to pursue their agendas.

This scenario is particularly evident in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region where Pakistan has shown reluctance to move against groups such as the one led by Haqqani in North Waziristan or the Quetta region where senior Taliban leaders are known to be enjoying similar comforts under the patronage of authorities as was enjoyed by Osama bin Laden in Abbotabad close to the Pakistan Military Academy at Kakul. Another matter of grave concern is the evidence of the infiltration of radical/militant elements into governmental institutions in Pakistan.

The successful attack on the Pakistani naval installation at Mehran on May 22, 2011, with apparent inside help,11 is a case in point. The recent arrest of Brigadier Ali Khan and two other officers of the Pakistan Army on June 21, 2011, for their suspected links with terrorists show the extent of such infiltration. We need to remember that control of Pakistan’s strategic weapons, including nuclear weapons, lies with the army.

THREAT ASSESSMENT

The United States appears to have begun taking terrorism seriously only after facing direct attack from al-Qaeda in the form of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the twin towers. I believe that the United States failed to sufficiently appreciate the epicenter of terror that has always been in the Af-Pak region and erred when it hesitated to aggressively pursue fleeing terrorists into Pakistan in 2003. Perhaps nonoperational reasons overshadowed tactical exploitation.

Although it appears that LeT generally refrains from directly targeting Americans, the killing of US citizens in Mumbai being an exception, it has the potential of posing a significant threat to US interests in the long term.

The events that unfold in Afghanistan will have lasting impact on the strategic environment in South Asia and Central Asian Republics where the United States has long-term interests. A clear victory for the United States in Afghanistan now seems unlikely. A stalemate in a conflict between a superpower and loosely affiliated militant groups with limited military equipment at their disposal would be considered a victory for the latter. Based on announcements of phased troop withdrawal by President Barack Obama, it seems that the Muslim militant groups, such as the Taliban (supported by other groups and elements in ISI), can look forward to forcing a second superpower to leave Afghanistan under disadvantaged circumstances. This would certainly give a boost (in global perception) to the operational viability of violent jihad for achieving goals and a similar boost to groups like LeT who have been openly advocating action against US interests.

LeT draws its rank and file mainly from the Pakistani state of Punjab. Pakistan’s politics, government, military, and other institutions are dominated by the Punjabi elite. Punjabis as a group are holding prominent places of authority in the Pakistani military hierarchy and important institutions. Pakistan is a proven nuclear power with its arsenal increasing with each passing year. How safe are Pakistan’s nuclear weapons? In the words of Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy, who teaches physics at Islamabad’s government-run Quaid-i-Azam University, Pakistan’s establishment lacks the ability to keep its nuclear weapons safe (claims to the contrary made by the Pakistan Army notwithstanding). Hoodbhoy says, “It seems to me that the Pakistan Army is playing with fire. It knows that these nuclear weapons are ultimately in the hands of their own people and their own people have been affected by decades of radicalization. They may claim that they have personnel reliability tests, but I do not believe that answering questions on a form may indicate his [true] intentions.”

In recent times, we have seen the infiltration of radicals into the ranks of the army. Militants have even targeted the Police Training Academy in Lahore12 and Pakistan Army General Headquarters on March 30, 2009,13 and October 10, 2009, 14 respectively, with inside assistance.

I believe that we can conclude the following:

1. The Punjabi population has immense influence in the government and the army in Pakistan.

2. LeT draws its rank and file, and support from Punjab, though some elements from Sindh and North- West Frontier Province are also there.

3. LeT has strong bonds with the Pak army, especially the ISI, and continues to enjoy its patronage because LeT has proven itself to be an important instrument to pursue Pakistani interests through terrorist pressure against India.

4. Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are as safe as Pakistan’s credibility in terms of its claims to participate sincerely in the war against terror.

5. Pak military installations and their leadership are vulnerable to infiltration by radical elements. LeT has remained close to authorities and therefore has the right contacts to arm itself and the militant Islamic supremacists in pursuit of their global agenda.

CONCLUSION

LeT and the strategic actions Pakistan has demonstrated are difficult to separate since they are complementary. LeT was born in Pakistan, and draws manpower, official patronage, and apparently operational directions from individuals in authority in Pakistan; the two are intertwined. LeT has continued to remain openly anti- America in its outlook.

LeT’s support for the groups fighting US forces in Afghanistan is well known. As al-Qaeda operatives fled across the Pak Afghan border in October 2001 and US forces began destroying the jihadi training camps in Afghanistan, LeT was the primary jihadi group to escape the Pakistani crackdown with its camps intact. From October 2001 through 2003/ early 2004, LeT served as a major provider of military training for jihadi actors in the region.5 The group has enjoyed immunity of action on account of an apparent dual-purpose policy adopted by Pakistan. Given the radicalization of Pakistan’s population, the country’s vulnerability as a state (whose economy is a mess and major tracts of territory are out of effective control), LeT is a coherent group with widespread support amongst the people of Punjab and could become an increasing menace in years to come.

I continue to hope that the United States will apply pressure with whatever means are available upon Pakistani authorities to dismantle the infrastructure supporting organizations like Lashkar-e-Taiba and encourage that nation to take steps to de-radicalize the radicalized by moderating its education institutions.

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