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WSWS : News
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: Pakistan
Pakistan intensifies military operations in Afghan border
areas
By Vilani Peiris
4 November 2003
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Responding to pressure from Washington, Pakistan has been engaged
in extensive military operations for the last month to prevent
groups of armed fighters crossing its border into Afghanistan.
Both the US military and the Afghan government had accused Pakistan
of failing to take sufficient measures to prevent anti-US forces
from conducting hit-and-run raids inside Afghanistan.
According to the Pakistani army, the operation resulted in
the capture of 230 so-called Taliban and Al Qaeda suspects during
October and the killing of another 10. Ten troops lost their lives.
The action, which began on October 2, was coordinated with US
occupation forces inside Afghanistan. US helicopter gunships patrolled
the Afghan side of the border to cut off any escape.
General Aurakzai, the Pakistani commander of the border forces,
claims that the military has now secured control of the crossing
points to seven key passes and begun to erect fencing in other
border areas. North Western Frontier Province (NWFP) governor
Syed Iftikhar Hussain Shah announced that 589 posts had been erected
in October to control movement across the border.
Hundreds of Pakistans elite Quick Response Force, backed
by 25 military helicopters, took part in the initial operation.
Thousands of additional troops have been deployed throughout the
border areas to support the extensive intelligence network and
aerial surveillance now in place to prevent cross-border movements.
The Pakistani forces faced tough opposition. The BBC reported
a fierce clash in early October during which 18 Al Qaeda
suspects were arrested and another eight killed. Over the
next week, the military destroyed homes and seized vehicles in
the Afghan border town of Angor Adda, producing what the BBC described
as a mixture of anger and amazement from local tribesmen.
Pakistan insisted that the operation was launched upon
the receipt of credible intelligence about the presence of Al
Qaeda remnants. Pakistani officials are trying to track
down alleged Al Qaeda financier, Egyptian-born Canadian Ahmed
Said Khadr, alias Abu Abdur Rehman, who, they say, may be hiding
in the border areas along with Osama bin Laden and his deputy
Ayman al-Zawahri.
None of the Al Qaeda leaders have been captured and it is by
no means clear who the Pakistani military has been killing and
capturing. According to a government official, Chechens, Uzbeks,
Algerians and some Arab-speaking nationals have been among those
killed or detained. Four detained women and six children were
also of foreign origin. But no evidence has been offered
to support the allegations.
Al Qaeda and Taliban suspects is a blanket term
applied by the US military to the growing armed opposition inside
Afghanistan to the US-backed regime of President Hamid Karzai.
Hostility to the US occupation is particularly intense among the
Pashtun tribes in the impoverished southeast of the country which
have been subject to continuous US military operations for the
last two years.
Pakistan has simply taken over the US designation. The population
on the Pakistani side of the border is also predominantly Pashtun.
Tribesmen have strong ties in both countries and have for decades
moved back and forward across a border arbitrarily drawn by the
former British colonial rulers of India. Many have been involved
in trading and petty smuggling.
Pakistan itself was forced to recognise the special character
of its border areas and to grant a form of political autonomy
to the five million people living in the region. The tribes have
previously functioned under their own councils, courts and legal
system. In fact, Pakistani troops only moved into these areas
under pressure from Washington in December 2001 after the US military
had launched its offensive against the Taliban regime.
The latest Pakistani operation came after US president Bush
bluntly told his Pakistani counterpart General Pervez Musharraf
to stop cross-border infiltration into Afghanistan
during the UN General Assembly in September. An editorial in the
New York Times editorial commented on September 21 that
America must look for ways to reduce its dependence on General
Musharraf.
Musharraf, who is heavily dependent on US financial and political
support, responded almost immediately. Just days after the Pakistani
military launched their operation, two top US state department
officialsRichard Armitage and Christina Roccaappeared
in Pakistan on October 5. After previously expressing reservations
about Musharrafs willingness to tackle the Al Qaeda
and Taliban, Armitage hailed the tremendous effort
now being made.
On October 23-25, Islamabad organised a tour of the frontier
regions for diplomats and officials from 17 countries, along with
journalists, in order to impress on them that Pakistan was taking
action to seal the border. At the major crossing point of Chaman,
Pakistan has set up a gate, a series of checkpoints and is building
new light towers. The military is also constructing a 40 kilometre
long embankment in the same area to prevent border crossings.
In the tribal areas, Pakistani authorities are using threats
and bribes to obtain information about Al Qaeda suspects.
Along with warnings of severe measures for those who refuse to
cooperate, the government promised in late October to provide
grants to uplift the area. It has established 21 medical camps
and five facilities to treat eye diseases and plans to develop
596 kilometres of roads, 18 schools and four colleges.
The facilities are long overdue and have failed to stem the
growing hostility among tribesmen to the military presence and
Pakistans support for the US occupation of Afghanistan.
Two elders told the press that the government had promised schools,
hospitals, water, but none of that has happened. Our pregnant
women are dying on the way to the hospital, our children are studying
under a tree because there is no school.
By acceding to US demands, Musharraf is weakening his own political
position, particularly in the border areas. The two provinces
adjacent to Afghanistanthe North West Frontier Province
and Baluchistanare both ruled by coalitions dominated by
the Mutahida Majilis-e-Amal (MMA)an alliance of six Islamic
fundamentalist parties. Both the MMA and the Pakistan Muslim League
(PML-N) have threatened to launch a political movement in the
tribal areas against the armys operations.
Two years after the US launched its military intervention to
topple the Taliban, Afghanistan is dominated by rival warlords,
tribal leaders and militia groups each seeking carve out their
own sphere of influence. Now the instability induced by the US
actions threatens to spill across the border into Pakistan.
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