The writer is a security analyst.
The writer is a security analyst.

THE potential gravity of the militant Islamic State (IS) group’s threat has only just begun to dawn. The recent spate of terrorist attacks across the world — unleashed by IS-inspired or affiliated individuals and groups — indicate that most assessments downplayed the threat it poses as a global terrorist outfit.

IS is operating both on the ground and in cyberspaces. In cyberspaces, it is infecting the minds of Muslim youth with violent Islamist ideology while exploiting their socio-cultural and psychological confusions, thereby inspiring them to perpetrate violent acts. On the ground, it is not only challenging powerful nations and security establishments but also other militant groups by encroaching on their territories.

IS has proved all those states, that considered themselves immune to its influence and terror, wrong. Bangladesh is among the most recent examples where an IS-linked terrorist attack gave the government a reality check regarding the group and its potential threat. Afghanistan, also, could not identify and analyse the IS threat separately from its existing Taliban insurgency. At times, Afghan officials were happy with the confrontation between IS-affiliated militants and the Afghan Taliban. However, the recent IS-claimed attack against Hazaras in Kabul proves that the group can inflict more horror on the country than the Taliban.

IS has declared war. It has kept nothing in the dark like its predecessor Al Qaeda and is continuously giving advance notice. It has long been predicted, through assessments of IS communications, that the group was planning a campaign to weaken regional power centres — including in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, and Egypt. It was also forecasted that, in 2016, IS could announce new global affiliates elsewhere in Bangladesh and Southeast Asia.


We can’t ignore the threat of IS in South Asia, which requires a broad strategy and cooperation.


Bangladesh still seems to be denying the fact that international terrorist groups have primed their society to the extent that their recruits include the youth of power elites. Their government uses arguments similar to those often used by Pakistani authorities to deny the IS presence in the country. Both governments appear reluctant to admit that local groups and individuals can form chapters of IS or Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent.

Afghanistan’s case is more significant because a state that has been facing militancy for decades now failed to foresee and evaluate the real threat of IS in their country. While Afghanistan has a tendency to externalise the Taliban problem, that it would do the same with IS surprised many.

US-based counterterrorism expert, William McCants, divides IS governorates into three categories: statelets, insurgencies and terrorist organisations. He considers IS chapters in Libya and Afghanistan as statelets outside those in Syria and Iraq. Although the IS Khorasan chapter in Afghanistan controls a limited area in Nangarhar, the group is trying to infiltrate territories where the Taliban have control or are expanding. It appears that, in Afghanistan’s case, this is why IS have adopted the characteristics of a jihadist statelet. It is not only following the Taliban’s footsteps, it is also chasing them across the country. Recent developments indicate that IS-inspired Jundullah, a breakaway faction of Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), is gaining ground in Kunduz and Takhar — provinces where the Taliban are trying to increase their influence. To this end, they are recruiting non-Pakhtun commanders.

Dispatches from Afghanistan Analysts Network, an independent research group, indicate that while IS attempts to expand beyond Nangarhar have been unsuccessful thus far, attempts are ongoing. One dispatch mentioned that ‘IS inspiration’ is the more important and dangerous factor to consider.

Initially, IS showed its presence in Helmand, Farah and Logar provinces respectively, and then in Nangarhar and Zabul. The Nangarhar chapter also comprised Pakistani militants who fled from Khyber, Mohmand, Orakzai and Bajaur agencies in Fata after military operations were launched. This migration started in 2010.

However, the infiltration of Pakistani militants in Nangarhar was ignored by Afghan security agencies, who saw these militants as strategic assets against Pakistan. According to an Afghanistan Analysts Network report, Lashkar-i-Islam, a Pakistani group based in Khyber Agency and implementing partner of IS in Nangarhar, displayed its black flag in the area long before IS hoisted a flag of the same colour with different symbols and slogans. The report claims that government support for Lashkar-i-Islam was an open secret.

This once again proves that militants are more opportunistic and smarter than those who use them as proxies. The Afghan security agencies were under the illusion that such activities would remain confined to Pakistan. This is how they tolerated these Pakistani militants, even after the latter transformed into IS fighting machines. In June 2015, these fighting machines turned their sights towards Afghanistan, forcing the Afghan security forces to take action against them.

Interestingly, the Taliban learned the same lesson in the case of dealing with IMU militants in Zabul province. IMU, once a strategic asset of the Taliban for making interventions in northern parts of Afghanistan, turned against them, and bloody clashes between the two ensued.

Another issue that both Afghanistan and Pakistan ignore is militants’ sectarian credentials, which can help assess the human resources and operational strength of militants. The Nangarhar chapter has the support of Salafi militants from Kunar province, but its real strength is the Pakistani militants. The Salafi factor is important in Nangarhar; most Pakistani militants based there were Salafists or converted to Salafism later. The Taliban and IS confrontation also exposes the Salafi and Hanafi sectarian divide within their ranks. The former IS head, Hafiz Saeed, was also a follower of the Salafi school of thought. IS-affiliated terrorist cells identified thus far had similar sectarian credentials. That provides a context for law-enforcement agencies to consider while taking pre-emptive measures.

The emergence of IS in Bangladesh, the changing character of the group in Afghanistan, and its potential to inspire many in Pakistan, requires a broad strategy beyond blame games and traditional security approaches. IS in the region has local characteristics but is connected with a group that has global ambitions. Can South Asian nations adopt a model of ‘thinking globally, acting locally’?

The writer is a security analyst.

Published in Dawn, July 31st, 2016

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