Is it not ironic that two very similar insurgencies have
simultaneously been going on in Pakistan for the last several years: the Baloch
insurgency in the Balochistan province and the insurgency of the Pashtun
tribesmen in the tribal areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering the US-occupied
Afghanistan.
While the Pakistani neoliberal elites fully sympathize with
the oppressed Baloch nationalists, when it comes to the Pashtun tribesmen, they
are willing to give Pakistan’s security agencies a license to kill, why? It’s
simply because the tribal Pashtun insurgents use the veneer of religion to
justify their tribal instinct of retribution.
The name Islam, however, is such an anathema to the core
neoliberal sensibilities that the elites don’t even bother to delve deeper into
the causes of insurgency and summarily decide that since the Pashtun tribesmen
are using the odious label of the Taliban, therefore they are not worthy of
their sympathies, and as a result, the security establishment gets a carte
blanche to indiscriminately bomb the towns and villages of the Pashtun
tribesmen.
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 army surrounds the insurgency-wracked 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 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.
I have knowingly used the word ‘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, the tribesmen don’t
have courts and police to settle disputes and enforce justice; justice is
dispensed by tribes themselves; the clans, families and relatives of slain
victims seek revenge, which is the fundamental axiom of their tribal
‘jurisprudence.’
It’s worth noting here that there are three distinct
categories of militants operating in Pakistan: the Afghanistan-focused Pashtun
militants; the Kashmir-focused Punjabi militants; and foreign transnational
terrorists, including the Arab militants of al-Qaeda, the Uzbek insurgents of
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and the Chinese Uighur jihadists of the
East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM). Compared to tens of thousands of native
Pashtun and Punjabi militants, the foreign transnational terrorists number only
in a few hundred and are hence inconsequential.
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 the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) like
to couch their rhetoric in religious terms, but it is the difference of
ethnicity and language that enables them to recruit Pashtun tribesmen who are
willing to carry out subversive activities against the Punjabi-dominated state
apparatus, while the Kashmir-focused Punjabi militants have by and large
remained loyal to their patrons in the security agencies of Pakistan.
Although Pakistan’s security establishment has been willing
to conduct military operations against the Pakistani Taliban (TTP), which are
regarded as a security threat to Pakistan’s state apparatus, as far as the
Kashmir-focused Punjabi militants, including the Lashkar-e-Taiba and
Jaish-e-Mohammad, and the Afghanistan-focused Quetta Shura Taliban, including
the Haqqani network, are concerned, they are still enjoying impunity because
such militant groups are regarded as ‘strategic assets’ by Pakistan’s security
agencies.
Notwithstanding, 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 Washington’s stooges, like Hamid Karzai and Ashraf
Ghani, and in Pakistan, the Pashtun nationalist party, the 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 became 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: firstly, the Pashtun nationalists who follow Abdul Ghaffar Khan’s
legacy and have their strongholds in Charsadda and Mardan districts; secondly,
the religiously inclined Islamist Pashtuns who vote for Islamist political
parties, such as Jamaat-e-Islami and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam in the southern
districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa; and thirdly, the emerging new phenomena, the
Pakistan nationalist Pashtuns, most of whom have joined Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
(PTI) in recent years, though some have also joined Nawaz Sharif’s Muslim
League.
It would be pertinent to mention here that the general
elections of 2013 were contested on a single issue: 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 interventionist” 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 Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf,
because the latter promised to deal with tribal militants through negotiations
and political settlements.
Although both Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif failed to keep
their election pledge of using peaceful means for dealing with the menace of
religious extremism and militancy, the public sentiment has been 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.
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