Doctrine of jihad and terrorism
By Kunwar Idris
INDIA’S foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee is keeping all “options open” to deal with the Mumbai terrorists if Pakistan doesn’t. His prime minister, Manmohan Singh, has ruled out war as an option. This should leave Pakistan guessing as to what lies ahead.
The best from Pakistan’s standpoint would be for the two countries to jointly examine the evidence gathered by India with the help of international experts in terrorism. The worst could be that India from its own territory launches missiles directed at what it perceives to be the base, or bases, from which the Mumbai attackers came. Short of missile strikes India may choose to bring its troops to the border compelling Pakistan to withdraw its own from the northwest fighting insurgents allegedly backed by India. Further, India could also go to the United Nations seeking economic or other sanctions against Pakistan.
It is for Pakistan to act now before India exercises an option of its own choosing. Surely the current war of words in which India wants Pakistan to come down hard on the sponsors of the Mumbai terror attack while Pakistan asks for proof before it does is not going to last long. The ruling Congress coalition is bound to lose ground in the forthcoming elections if it doesn’t act fast and tough to pacify an outraged public.
It is also in Pakistan’s interest that the existing tense stalemate is not prolonged. In such a situation of organised crime evidence is hardly ever of a quality that can stand the test of judicial scrutiny. Pakistan itself found no credible evidence in any of the two attacks on Benazir Bhutto though thousands of witnesses and security and intelligence men were around on both occasions.
Thus it is safe to assume that India too has found none (barring the confession of the sole surviving attacker obviously made under duress) which it could profitably share with the authorities here or with the Interpol. Hence all the emphasis on bellicose rhetoric.
If the Mumbai terrorists indeed came from Pakistan the joint investigation may well provide a lead to numerous terrorist attacks that Pakistan itself has suffered.
Dr Manmohan Singh was heard saying the other day that Pakistan must destroy the infrastructure of terror of which it is aware and should need no evidence. His reference was obviously to the Lashkar-i-Taiba which, as The Economist put it, “was founded with support from the army’s Inter Services Intelligence Agency. For two decades as the army’s proxy, it has waged an insurgency in India-held Kashmir…. Though the ISI appears to have cut back its ties to [the Lashkar] since it was banned its armouries and military training camps in Pakistan-held Kashmir have remained in place”.
This indeed is the central issue. India, perhaps, has no proof except its suspicion that the Mumbai attack was masterminded by the people known to the ISI if not backed by it. And that was the reason it felt so sore when Pakistan’s prime minister having agreed, at the spur of the moment, to send the ISI chief to India retracted because of higher counsels. The critical question now is how to satisfy India that the Mumbai attack was not organised by the ISI.
Commonsense suggests that even if armouries and training camps do exist somewhere, the attack on the Mumbai hotels in no manner could help the insurgents, or freedom fighters, of Kashmir. To the contrary, a large and peaceful turnout at the recent polls to an extent may have been the result of revulsion caused by the massacre in Mumbai.
The infrastructure of terror that Dr Manmohan Singh has in mind was perhaps the alleged camps in Azad Kashmir and not Jamaatud Dawa’s establishment at Muridke near Lahore which the government has closed down. That could be described as an academic citadel of jihad but not a centre for training in warfare.
If guerilla fighters are indeed training anywhere in Kashmir with or without the support of the ISI, Pakistan would do well to close down their camps. The 60 per cent turnout at the polls (except in Srinagar where it was much less) is as obvious an indication as could be that after long years of defiance and oppression the people of Kashmir have determined that the ballot, and not the bullet, is the right and safer course to secure their rights and freedom.
It has not been possible to liberate Kashmir by waging wars because India is a bigger military power, nor by covert support to the freedom fighters for they could not contend with an occupation army of half a million. The public opinion in Pakistan now stands reconciled to the sad fact that Kashmir cannot be made a part of Pakistan either through a plebiscite or military victory. Above all, and conclusively, the people of Kashmir too have made it clear that they want azadi, or independence, and not accession to Pakistan. So if there is still some kind of establishment in Azad Kashmir that assists the diminishing number of armed fighters in the Valley it should be disbanded.
Pakistan has come to be known as the world centre of terrorism. Efforts are afoot to declare it a pariah state because the doctrine of jihad forms the crux of the lessons imparted in its 16,000 or so madressahs and is also ceaselessly preached from the platforms of scores of religious parties and pulpits of countless mosques.
The emphasis in all this incessant teaching and preaching is on the armed version of jihad. Neglected, or not highlighted, is the true spirit of the doctrine that lies in striving for nearness to God and to conquer adversity through reason — by winning hearts and not by breaking heads. Sword, now gun, is to be raised against the enemy only in the event of excessive oppression. In the time of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) Muslims did not retaliate when stoned or even killed, all wars then fought were in self-defence.
The world, not India alone, will keep accusing Pakistan of spreading terror, while Pakistan itself will remain a prime victim of terrorism so long as the ideologues keep projecting the secondary but violent concept of jihad and, at the same time, the constitution and laws of the land discriminate against citizens on grounds of faith. Dr Manmohan Singh is right but the infrastructure that Pakistan has to dismantle is ideological.
kunwaridris@hotmail.com

