Pakistan’s
Jihad Culture
Columnist Jessica Stern who has good experience in this region wrote
this on the INTERNET and allowed us to reproduce it in DJ.
Free Agents
This spring the US State Department reported that South Asia has replaced
the Middle East as the leading locus of terrorism in the world. Although
much has been written about religious militants in the Middle East and
Afghanistan, little is known in the West about those in Pakistan — perhaps
because they operate mainly in Kashmir and, for now at least, do not
threaten security outside South Asia. General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s
military ruler, calls them “freedom fighters” and admonishes
the West not to confuse jihad with terrorism. Musharraf is right about
the distinction — the jihad doctrine delineates acceptable war
behaviour and explicitly outlaws terrorism — but he is wrong about
the militant groups’ activities.
Both sides of the war in Kashmir —the Indian army and the Pakistani “mujahideen” — are
targeting and killing thousands of civilians, violating both the Islamic “just
war” tradition and international law.
Pakistan has two reasons to support the so-called mujahideen. First,
the Pakistani military is determined to pay India back for allegedly
fomenting separatism in what was once East Pakistan and in 1971 became
Bangladesh.
Second, India dwarfs Pakistan in population, economic strength, and military
might. In 1998 India spent about two percent of its $469 billion.
GDP on defence, including an active armed force of more than 1.1 million
personnel. In the same year, Pakistan spent about five percent of its
$ 61 billion GDP on defence, yielding an active armed force only half
the size of India’s. The US government estimates that India has
400,000 troops in Indian-held Kashmir — a force more than two-thirds
as large as Pakistan’s entire active army. The Pakistani government
thus supports the irregulars as a relatively cheap way to keep Indian
forces tied down.
What does such support entail? It includes, at a minimum, assisting the
militants’ passage into Indian-held Kashmir. This much Pakistani
officials will admit, at least privately. The US government believes
that Pakistan also funds, trains, and equips the irregulars. Meanwhile,
the Indian government claims that Pakistan uses them as an unofficial
guerrilla force to carry out “dirty tricks,” murders, and
terrorism in India. Pakistan, in turn, accuses India’s intelligence
service of committing terrorism and killing hundreds of civilians in
Pakistan.
Pakistan now faces a typical principal-agent problem: the interests of
Pakistan (the principal) and those of the militant groups (the agent)
are not fully aligned. Although the irregulars may serve Pakistan’s
interests in Kashmir when they target the Indian army, they also kill
civilians and perform terrorism in violation of international norms and
law. These crimes damage Pakistan’s already fragile international
reputation. Finally, and most important for Pakistanis, the militant
groups that Pakistan supports and the Sunni sectarian killers that Pakistan
claims it wants to wipe out overlap significantly. By facilitating the
activities of the irregulars in Kashmir, the Pakistani government is
inadvertently promoting internal sectarianism, supporting international
terrorists, weakening the prospect for peace in Kashmir, damaging Pakistan’s
international image, spreading a narrow and violent version of Islam
throughout the region, and increasing tensions with India — all
against the interests of Pakistan as a whole.
Pakistan, Taliban-Style?
The war between India and Pakistan over the fate of Kashmir is as old
as both states. When Pakistan was formally created in 1947, the rulers
of Muslim-majority states that had existed within British India were
given the option of joining India or Pakistan. The Hindu monarch of the
predominantly Muslim state of Jammu and Kashmir chose India, prompted
partly by a tribal rebellion in the state. Pakistan responded by sending
in troops. The resultant fighting ended with a 1949 ceasefire, but the
Pakistani government continued covertly to support volunteer guerrilla
fighters in Kashmir. Islamabad argued then, as it does now, that it could
not control the volunteers, who as individuals were not bound by the
ceasefire agreement. (On the other hand, Maulana Abul A’la Maududi,
the late founder of the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, argued that as
individuals, these “mujahideen” could not legitimately declare
jihad, either.)
Pakistani officials admit to having tried repeatedly to foment separatism
in Kashmir in the decades following the 1948 ceasefire. These attempts
were largely unsuccessful; when separatist violence broke out in the
late 1980s, the movement was largely indigenous. For their part, Indian
officials admit their own culpability in creating an intolerable situation
in the region. They ignored Kashmir’s significant economic troubles,
rampant corruption, and rigged elections, and they intervened in Kashmiri
politics in ways that contradicted India’s own constitution. As
American scholar Sumit Ganguly explains, the rigged 1987 state-assembly
elections were the final straw in a series of insults, igniting, by 1989,
widespread violent opposition. By 1992, Pakistani nationals and other
graduates of the Afghan war were joining the fight in Kashmir.
What began as an indigenous, secular movement for independence has become
an increasingly Islamist crusade to bring all of Kashmir under Pakistani
control. Pakistan-based Islamist groups (along with Hizb-ul-Mujahideen,
a Kashmir-based group created by Jamaat-e-Islami and partly funded by
Pakistan) are now significantly more important than the secular Kashmir-based
ones. The Indian government estimates that about 40 percent of the militants
in Kashmir today are Pakistani or Afghan, and some 80 percent are teenagers.
Although the exact size of the movement is unknown, the Indian government
estimates that 3,000 to 4,000 “mujahideen” are in Kashmir
at any given time.
Whatever their exact numbers, these Pakistani militant groups — among
them, Lashkar-i-Taiba and Harkat-ul-Mujahideen — pose a long-term
danger to international security, regional stability, and especially
Pakistan itself. Although their current agenda is limited to “liberating” Kashmir,
which they believe was annexed by India illegally, their next objective
is to turn Pakistan into a truly Islamic state. Islamabad supports these
volunteers as a cheap way to keep India off balance. In the process,
however, it is creating a monster that threatens to devour Pakistani
society. Schools of Hate
In Pakistan, as in many developing countries, education is not mandatory.
The World Bank estimates that only 40 percent of Pakistanis are literate,
and many rural areas lack public schools. Islamic religious schools — madrasahs — on
the other hand, are located all over the country and provide not only
free education, but also free food, housing, and clothing. In the poor
areas of southern Punjab, madrasahs funded by the Sunni sectarian political
party Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) reportedly even pay parents for sending
them their children.
In the 1980s, Pakistani dictator General Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq promoted
the madrasahs as a way to garner the religious parties’ support
for his rule and to recruit troops for the anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan.
At the time many madrasahs were financed by the zakat (the Islamic tithe
collected by the state), giving the government at least a modicum of
control. But now, more and more religious schools are funded privately — by
wealthy Pakistani industrialists at home or abroad, by private and government-funded
non-governmental organizations in the Persian Gulf states and Saudi Arabia,
and by Iran. Without state supervision, these madrasahs are free to preach
a narrow and violent version of Islam.
Most madrasahs offer only religious instruction, ignoring math, science,
and other secular subjects important for functioning in modern society.
As Maududi warned in his 1960 book, First Principles of the Islamic State, “those
who choose the theological branch of learning generally keep themselves
utterly ignorant of [secular subjects, thereby remaining] incapable of
giving any lead to the people regarding modern political problems.”
Even worse, some extremist madrasahs preach jihad without understanding
the concept: They equate jihad - which most Islamic scholars interpret
as the striving for justice (and principally an inner striving to purify
the self) — with guerrilla warfare. These schools encourage their
graduates, who often cannot find work because of their lack of practical
education, to fulfil their “spiritual obligations” by fighting
against Hindus in Kashmir or against Muslims of other sects in Pakistan.
Pakistani officials estimate that 10 to 15 percent of the country’s
tens of thousands of madrasahs espouse such extremist ideologies.
Pakistan’s interior minister Moinuddin Haider, for one, recognizes
these problems. “The brand of Islam they are teaching is not good
for Pakistan,” he says. “Some, in the garb of religious training,
are busy fanning sectarian violence, poisoning people’s minds.” In
June, Haider announced a reform plan that would require all madrasahs
to register with the government, expand their curricula, disclose their
financial resources, seek permission for admitting foreign students,
and stop sending students to militant training camps.
This is not the first time the Pakistani government has announced such
plans. And Haider’s reforms so far seem to have failed, whether because of the
regime’s negligence or the madrasahs’ refusal to be regulated,
or both. Only about 4,350 of the estimated 40,000 to 50,000 madrasahs in Pakistan
have registered with the government. Some are still sending students to training
camps despite parents’ instructions not to do so. Moreover, some chancellors
are unwilling to expand their curricula, arguing that madrasahs are older than
Pakistan itself — having been “designed 1,200 years ago in Iraq,” according
to the chancellor of the Khudamudeen madrasah. The chancellor of Darul Uloom
Haqqania objects to what he calls the government’s attempt to “destroy
the spirit of the madrasahs under the cover of broadening their curriculum.”
Mujibur Rehman Inqalabi, the SSP’s second in command, told me that Haider’s
reform plan is “against Islam” and complains that where states
have taken control of madrasahs, such as in Jordan and Egypt, “the engine
of Jihad is extinguished.” America is right, he said: “Madrasahs
are the supply line for jihad.” Jihad International, Inc.
If madrasahs supply the labour for “jihad,” then wealthy Pakistanis
and Arabs around the world supply the capital. On Eid-ul Azha, the second most
important Muslim holiday of the year, anyone who can afford to sacrifices an
animal and gives the hide to charity. Pakistani militant groups solicit such
hide donations, which they describe as a significant source of funding for
their activities in Kashmir.
Most of the militant groups’ funding, however, comes in the form of anonymous
donations sent directly to their bank accounts. Lashkar-i-Taiba (“Army
of the Pure”), a rapidly growing Ahle Hadith (Wahhabi) group, raises
funds on the Internet. Lashkar and its parent organization, Markaz ad-Da’wa
Wal Irshad (Centre for Islamic Invitation and Guidance), have raised so much
money, mostly from sympathetic Wahhabis in Saudi Arabia, that they are reportedly
planning to open their own bank.
Individual “mujahideen” also benefit financially from this generous
funding. They are in this for the loot, explains Ahmed Rashid, a prominent
Pakistani journalist. One mid-level manager of Lashkar told me he earns 15,000
rupees a month — more than seven times what the average Pakistani makes,
according to the World Bank. Top leaders of militant groups earn much more;
one leader took me to see his mansion, which was staffed by servants and filled
with expensive furniture. Operatives receive smaller salaries but win bonuses
for successful missions. Such earnings are particularly attractive in a country
with a 40 percent official poverty rate, according to Pakistani government
statistics.
The United States and Saudi Arabia funnelled some $ 3.5 billion into Afghanistan
and Pakistan during the Afghan war, according to Milt Bearden, CIA station
chief in Pakistan from 1986 to 1989. “Jihad,” along with guns and
drugs, became the most important business in the region. The business of “jihad” — what
the late scholar Eqbal Ahmad dubbed “Jihad International, Inc.” — continues
to attract foreign investors, mostly wealthy Arabs in the Persian Gulf region
and members of the Pakistani diaspora. (As World Bank economist Paul Collier
observes, diaspora populations often prolong ethnic and religious conflicts
by contributing not only capital but also extremist rhetoric, since the fervour
of the locals is undoubtedly held in check by the prospect of losing their
own sons.)
As the so-called jihad movement continues to acquire its own financial momentum,
it will become increasingly difficult for Pakistan to shut down, if and when
it tries. As long as “Jihad International, Inc.” is profitable,
those with financial interests in the war will work to prolong it. And the
longer the war in Kashmir lasts, the more entrenched these interests will become. Addicted to Jihad
As some irregulars are financially dependent on what they consider jihad,
others are spiritually and psychologically so. Many irregulars who fought
in Afghanistan
are now fighting in Kashmir and are likely to continue looking for new “jihads” to
fight - even against Pakistan itself. Khalil, who has been a “mujahid” for
19 years and can no longer imagine another life, told me, “A person addicted
to heroin can get off it if he really tries, but a mujahid cannot leave the
jihad. I am spiritually addicted to jihad.” Another Harkat operative
told me, we won’t stop — even if India gave us Kashmir. ... We’ll
[also] bring jihad here. There is already a movement here to make Pakistan
a pure Islamic state. Many preach Islam, but most of them don’t know
what it means. We want to see a Taliban-style regime here.
Aspirations like these are common among the irregulars I have interviewed over
the last couple of years.
The ‘jihad” movement is also developing a spiritual momentum linked
to its financial one. Madrasahs often teach their students that jihad — or,
in the extremist schools, terrorism under the guise of jihad — is a spiritual
duty. Whereas wealthy Pakistanis would rather donate their money than their
sons to the cause, families in poor, rural areas are likely to send their sons
to “jihad” under the belief that doing so is the only way to fulfil
this spiritual duty. One mother whose son recently died fighting in Kashmir
told me she would be happy if her six remaining sons were martyred. “They
will help me in the next life, which is the real life,” she said.
When a boy becomes a martyr, thousands of people attend his funeral. Poor families
become celebrities. Everyone treats them with more respect after they lose
a son, a martyr’s father said. “And when there is a martyr in the
village, it encourages more children to join the jihad. It raises the spirit
of the entire village,” he continued. In poor families with large numbers
of children, a mother can assume that some of her children will die of disease
if not in war. This apparently makes it easier to donate a son to what she
feels is a just and holy cause.
Many of these families receive financial assistance from the militant groups.
The Shuhda-e-Islam Foundation, founded in 1995 by Jamaat-e-Islami, claims to
have dispensed 13 million rupees to the families of martyrs. It also claims
to provide financial support to some 364 families by paying off loans, setting
them up in businesses, or helping them with housing. Moreover, the foundation
provides emotional and spiritual support by constantly reminding the families
that they did the right thing by donating their children to assist their Muslim
brethren in Kashmir. Both Lashkar-I-Taiba and Harkat have also established
charitable organizations that reward the families of martyrs — a practice
common to gangs in inner-city Los Angeles and terrorist groups such as al Qaeda
and Hamas.
Although these foundations provide a service to families in need, they also
perpetuate a culture of violence. Bad Boys
The comparison to gangs and terrorist groups is particularly apt because
the irregulars often hire criminals to do their dirty work — and sometimes
turn to petty or organized crime themselves. Criminals are typically hired
to “drop” weapons and explosives or to carry out extreme acts of
violence that a typical irregular is reluctant or unable to perform. For example,
members of the Dubai-based crime ring that bombed the Bombay stock exchange
in March 1993 later confessed that they had been in Islamabad the previous
month, where Pakistani irregulars had allegedly trained them to throw hand
grenades and fire Kalashnikov assault rifles. Law-enforcement authorities noted
that the operatives’ passports contained no Pakistani stamps, suggesting
the complicity of the Pakistani government.
Criminals joining supposed jihad movements tend to be less committed to the
group’s purported goals and more committed to violence for its own sake — or
for the money. When criminals join private armies, therefore, the political
and moral constraints that often inhibit mass-casualty, random attacks are
likely to break down. Criminal involvement in the movement also worsens the
principal-agent problem for Pakistan: pure mercenaries are even harder to control
than individuals whose goals are at least partly aligned with those of the
state. Exporting Holy War
Exacerbating the principal-agent problem, Pakistani militant groups
are now exporting their version of jihad all over the world. The Khudamudeen
madrasah,
according to its chancellor, is training students from Burma, Nepal, Chechnya,
Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Yemen, Mongolia, and Kuwait. Out of the 700 students
at the madrasah, 127 are foreigners. Nearly half the student body at Darul
Uloom Haqqania, the madrasah that created the Taliban, is from Afghanistan.
It also trains students from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Russia, and Turkey,
and is currently expanding its capacity to house foreign students from
100 to 500,
its chancellor said. A Chechen student at the school told me his goal when
he returned home was to fight Russians. And according to the US State Department,
Pakistani groups and individuals also help finance and train the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan, a terrorist organization that aims to overthrow
secular governments
in Central Asia. Many of the militant groups associated with radical madrasahs regularly
proclaim their plans to bring “jihad” to India proper as
well as to the West, which they believe is run by Jews. Lashkar-i-Taiba
has announced its plans to “plant Islamic flags in Delhi, Tel Aviv,
and Washington.” One of Lashkar’s Web sites includes a list
of purported Jews working for the Clinton administration, including director
of presidential personnel Robert Nash (an African American from Arkansas)
and CIA director George Tenet (a Greek American). The group also accuses
Israel of assisting India in Kashmir. Asked for a list of his favourite
books, a leader of Harkat recommended the history of Hitler, who he said
understood that “Jews and peace are incompatible.” Several
militant groups boast pictures of burning American flags on their calendars
and posters.
Internal Jihad
The “jihad” against the West may be rhetorical (at least
for now), but the ten-year-old sectarian war between Pakistan’s
Shi’a and Sunni is real and deadly. The Tehrik-e-Jafariya-e-Pakistan
(TJP) was formed to protect the interests of Pakistan’s Shi’a
Muslims, who felt discriminated against by Zia’s implementation
of Sunni laws governing the inheritance and collection of zakat. Iran
helped fund the TJP, probably in hopes of using it as a vehicle for an
Iranian-style revolution in Pakistan. Five years later, Haq Nawaz Jhangvi,
a Jamaat-ul-Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) cleric, established the SSP to offset
the TJP and to promote the interests of Sunni Muslims. The SSP was funded
by both Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Since then, violent gangs have formed
on both sides.
After Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni sectarian gang, attempted to assassinate
then Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif in early 1999, Sharif proposed
to expand the special military courts that try terrorist crime from Karachi
to the rest of the country, Pakistan’s Supreme Court later deemed
the special courts unconstitutional. Musharraf has continued Sharif’s
attempt to rein in the terrorist groups by implementing, among other
things, a “deweaponization” plan to reduce the availability
of guns to sectarian gangs and criminals.
The problem for Musharraf is that it is difficult to promote the “jihad” in
Kashmir and the Taliban in Afghanistan without inadvertently promoting
sectarianism in Pakistan. The movements share madrasahs, camps, bureaucracies,
and operatives. The JUI, the SSP’s founding party, also helped
create both the Taliban and Harkat, Deobandi madrasahs issue anti-Shi’a
fatwas (edicts), and boys trained to fight in Kashmir are also trained
to call Shi’a kafirs (infidels). Jaesh-e-Mohammad, an offshoot
of Harkat and the newest Pakistani militant group in Kashmir, reportedly
used SSP personnel during a fundraising drive in early 2000. And the
SSP’s Inqalabi, who was recently released after four years in jail
for his alleged involvement in sectarian killings, told me that whenever “one
of our youngsters wants to do jihad,” they join up with the Taliban,
Harkat, or Jaesh-e-Mohammad — all Deobandi groups that he claims
are “close” to the SSP.
Sectarian clashes have killed or injured thousands of Pakistanis since
1990. As the American scholar Vali Nasr explains, the largely theological
differences between Shi’a and Sunni Muslims have been transformed
into full-fledged political conflict, with broad ramifications for law
and order, social cohesion, and government authority. The important Pakistani
government has essentially allowed Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shi’a
Iran to fight a proxy war on Pakistani soil, with devastating consequences
for the Pakistani people. Whither Pakistan?
Pakistan is a weak state, and government policies are making it weaker
still. Its disastrous economy, exacerbated by a series of corrupt leaders,
is at the root of many of its problems. Yet despite its poverty, Pakistan
is spending hundreds of millions of dollars on weapons instead of schools
and public health. Ironically, the government’s “cost-saving” measures
are even more troubling. In trying to save money in the short run by
using irregulars in Kashmir and relying on madrasahs to educate its youth,
Pakistan is pursuing a path that is likely to be disastrous in the long
run, allowing a culture of violence to take root.
The United States has asked Pakistan to crack down on the militant groups
and to close certain madrasahs, but America must do more than just scold.
After all, the United States, along with Saudi Arabia, helped create
the first international “jihad” to fight the Soviet Union
during the Afghan war. “Does America expect us to send in the troops
and shut the madrasahs down?” one official asks. “Jihad is
a mindset. It developed over many years during the Afghan war. You can’t
change a mindset in 24 hours.”
The most important contribution the United States can make, then, is
to help strengthen Pakistan’s secular education system. Because
so much international aid to Pakistan has been diverted through corruption,
both public and private assistance should come in the form of relatively
non-fungible goods and services: books, buildings, teachers, and training,
rather than money. Urdu-speaking teachers from around the world should
be sent to Pakistan to help. And educational exchanges among students,
scholars, journalists, and military officials should be encouraged and
facilitated. Helping Pakistan educate its youth will not only cut off
the culture of violence by reducing ignorance and poverty, it will also
promote long-term economic development.
Moreover, assisting Pakistan will make the world a safer place. As observers
frequently note, conflict between India and Pakistan over Kashmir is
one of the most likely routes to nuclear war in the world today. The
Pakistani militants’ continued incursions into Indian-held Kashmir
escalate the conflict, greatly increasing the risk of nuclear war between
the two countries.
Although the United States can help, Pakistan must make its own changes.
It must stamp out corruption, strengthen democratic institutions, and
make education a much higher priority. But none of this can happen if
Pakistan continues to devote an estimated 30 percent of its national
budget to defence.
Most important, Pakistan must recognize the militant groups for what
they are: dangerous gangs whose resources and reach continue to grow,
threatening to destabilize the entire region. Pakistan’s continued
support of religious militant groups suggests that it does not recognize
its own susceptibility to the culture of violence it has helped create.
It should think again. |