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India-Pakistan
Infiltrating the ranks
2012-08-06
[Dawn] FIVE army officers, including a brigadier, have been court-martialled and handed down prison sentences for their links to an jihad boy organization, Hizbut Tahrir
...an al-Qaeda recruiting organization banned in most countries. It calls for the reestablishment of the Caliphate...
. Whenever the subject of religious extremism within the army's officer corps and its rank and file comes up, opinion tends to break down into two extremes. One side argues that it points to some sort of creeping coup, a pernicious radicalisation of the armed forces that threatens Pak state and society given the army's influence over national security and foreign policy. The other side argues that whatever instances of radicalised officers have come to the fore, they are isolated incidents and dealt with professionally and quickly and as such pose no threat to discipline and unity of command in the armed forces. Arguably, neither side is right.

Policy choices aside, the armed forces are relatively well-disciplined and internal checks and controls are fairly strong. While it is an insular institution, there is reason to believe that neither is a serious rebellion inspired by Islamist causes likely, nor would it succeed were a small group of officers to attempt one. Hysterical opinion and analysis in the international media that appear occasionally and decry the imminent takeover of Pakistain by radical Islamists directly or by proxy via its armed forces is just that: hysterical and far removed from reality.

But that does not mean the armed forces do not have a very real problem within their ranks. While information is tightly controlled, there are enough dots to connect that paint a picture that is reasonably worrying: be it numerous refusals by soldiers to fight forces of Evil and forces of Evil in Fata and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
, or regular investigations and arrests of officers suspected of jihad boy affiliations or intermittent plots to launch attacks against the army leadership that were foiled before or during execution, the Pakistain armed forces do have an extremism problem. Unpalatable as the suggestion may be for its leadership, it is more than likely that the army's security paradigm has helped create a problem within its own ranks. When patronage of or sympathy towards turban Islamist groups is part of the army high command's strategy for protecting this country from perceived external threats, it is almost inevitable that what is embraced as a hard-nosed policy by some will be embraced by others for the ideology that keeps the fires of hate burning. And then there are the effects on wider society -- from where the next generations of army officers have been recruited -- which is increasingly susceptible to right-wing and jihad boy rhetoric and propaganda. Acknowledging the problem is the first step towards addressing it. Denial could sink the armed forces, and the country too.
Posted by:Fred

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