While the international Jihadi brigades
were regrouping in Afghanistan and Pakistan throughout the 1980s, the
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Directorate was staffed by
religiosity-enthused personnel who were the direct handlers of the Afghan Jihad
and no different in their thinking from the international Jihadis. When they
launched the forward strategy in the Central Asian regions of the Soviet Union
to orchestrate the defeat of the Red Army in Afghanistan in 1986, the
centrifugal force was again this saying of the Prophet Muhammad, with the
strategy underscored that Afghanistan was to be the main battlefield and
Pakistan’s tribal areas the strategic backyard of the Muslim resistance. From
there the theatre of war was to branch out into Central Asia, India, and
Bangladesh. The ISI moulded the whole theatre of war and oriented volunteer
groups accordingly. The organisation known as Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami came
into existence with the help of the Pakistani military apparatus. Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami
was the first Pakistani Jihadi organisation, and was formed in 1984. It hailed
from the Deobandi school of thought. It used to recruit youths for the Jihad
against the Soviets. The premier Islamic party of the country, Jamaat-e-Islami,
was already very active in the recruitment of Pakistani volunteers and sending
them for the Jihad. Actually, the raising of human resources was not an issue
for the Jihad against the Soviets, as there was already a very powerful
indigenous Afghan resistance movement which did not really require any external
fighters to assist it. The real motivation behind the formation of Harkat-ul
Jihad- i-Islami was to draw out the boundaries of the theatres of war—beyond
Afghanistan—in the Central Asian Republics and in India. It was pure
coincidence that after 9/11, first the Pakistani military establishment’s ‘strategic
depth’ pattern in Afghanistan and then the whole Jihadi network which the
Pakistani intelligence apparatus had set up through the Harkat-ul
Jihad-i-Islami slipped from the ISI’s hands and fell into the lap of Al-Qaeda.
From then on Al-Qaeda used both the Afghan theatre and the Jihadi network to
define the boundaries of the theatres of war according to its own perspective
and strategic direction.
The network of Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami
had emerged from Deobandi Islamic seminaries. Its commanders were educated in different
Deobandi schools, which were also their main recruitment grounds. The Deobandi
school of thought has always been the most influential political, religious,
and Sufi school of South and the Central Asia. Although the Darul Uloom Deoband
(an Islamic school) was founded in 1879 by Maulana Qasim Nanoonthvi in the
district of Saharanpur Uttar Pradesh (India), it was actually a deep-rooted religious,
Sufi, and political legacy of Central Asian Naqhsbandi Sufi order adopted by
various South Asian Muslim reformists. These included Mujadid Alf Sani
(1564-1624), Shah Waliullah 1703-1762), and Shah Waliullah's grandson, Shah
Ismail (1779-1831). Sheikh Ahmed Sarhendi, better known as Mujadid Alf Sani—which
means a reformist for next ten centuries-inspired strict monotheist Islamic
values against the Mughal emperor Akbar’s secular order of Din-e-Ilahi, to
force the Mughal dynasty to revert back to the Islamic system. The hardline
Sunni orthodox Mughal ruler, Aurangzeb Alamgir, is said to be the byproduct of
Sarhendi’s teachings. Similarly, with the rise of the Hindu Marathas and the
decline of the Mughal Empire, Shah Waliullah appeared on the horizon. Shah Waliullah,
a Naqshbandi Sufi like Sarhendi, continued the legacy of Sheikh Ahmad and
through his writings, pointed out the faultlines in the social, political,
educational, economic, and spiritual orders which had caused of the decline of
Muslim rule in India. Shah Waliullah’s influence ran through the whole region
from Central Asia to South Asia, and that is why when he wrote a very detailed letter
to Ahmad Shah Abdali (a warlord from Kandahar) asking him to give up his life of
ease and fight against the Maratha dynasty, Abdali invaded India and ransacked
the Maratha dynasty.
Shah Waliullah’s teachings were carried
forward by his son Shah Abdul Aziz and grandson, Shah Ismail, the ideologue of
the pioneering Jihadi movement in South Asia in the beginning of the 19th
century. This influence of the Shah Wali Ullahi family thus laid the foundation
of the Darul Uloom Deoband. The Darul Uloom Deoband was a trustee of Shah
Waliullah and his family's legacy and promoted madrassas (schools of Islamic
learning) across the whole of South Asia. It also promoted the different Sufi
orders of Qadri, Chushti, Suharwardi, and Naqshabandi. The majority of Sufi
Khaneka in the extended South and Central Asian region are affiliated with the
Deoband School of thought. Last but not the least, this school of thought was
the flag bearer of all the Jihadi movements from the19th century onwards, such
as the Syed Ahmed Brelvi, the Faraizi movement, and the Reshmi Romal movement
(the twentieth-century silk handkerchief movement), leading into the 21st century
Taliban movement. The Darul Uloom Deoband launched the movement of religious education
through a trained faculty, and promotes a network of Islamic seminaries from
the Northern Caucasus and Central Asia to Bengal and Myanmar. The political map
of the whole region changed in the twentieth century as the Caucasus and
Central Asian areas were occupied by the former Soviet Union, while some areas were
captured by communist China, both of which banned religious education. However,
the migrant Central Asian Muslims in northern Afghanistan, including Badakshah,
Balkh, Maza-e-Shareef, and Takhar, retained their old religious linkages. The
Darul Uloom Deoband school of thought was the major academic influence under
which scattered Central Asian religious and Sufi orders were united. It also
trained Muslim academics in India and sent Muslim scholars back to Afghanistan,
where they built large and small madrassas to revive old religious values, Sufism,
and politics.
After the partition of British India,
several leading religious scholars of the Darul Uloom Deoband came to Pakistan
and established Islamic seminaries there, such as the Jamiatul-Uloomul Islamia in
Binori Town, the Darul Uloom in Karachi, and the Jamia Ashrafia in Lahore. The
International Islamic University founded in the late 1970s in Islamabad was
also influenced by the Deobandi school of thought. These religious schools
became centers of learning for the whole region, and Muslims of Uzbek, Tajik,
and Turkoman origin who had fled the Soviet Union because of its religious
restrictions, as well as Muslims from the Chinese province of Xinjiang, and from
Myanmar and Bangladesh, migrated to the Islamic republic of Pakistan. Some of
them sent their children to the Islamic seminaries of the Deobandi schools
where they were provided with free board and lodging, food, clothing, and
education. Pakistan's intelligence apparatus tapped this network to extend its
reach from Central Asia to Bangladesh through the formation of the Harkat-ul
Jihad-i-Islami of Pakistan. They then tapped these schools as the major source of
recruiting Central Asians to pitch them into proxy wars against the Soviet
Union in the Central Asian Republics and the Caucasus. The Harkat-ul
Jihad-i-Islami simultaneously recruited Pakistanis, Kashmiris, and Bengalis
(Bangladeshis) trained in Afghanistan for ‘bleed India’ operations after the
Soviets had been defeated. However, they soon became too big to be controlled
by Pakistan’s intelligence apparatus. Meanwhile, a network of Muslim students from
Central Asia was being trained for guerrilla operations around the world. These
students were first sent to training camps of organizations which had Tajik and
Uzbek roots, then transferred to Afghanistan for further training in the camps
of Hizb-i-Islami Afghanistan led by Gulbaddin Hikmatyar, and Jamaat-e-Islami
led by Afghanistan's Professor Burhanuddin Rabbani and Ahmad Shah Masoud. These
two major Mujahideen organisations had a sizeable number of commanders in
northern Afghanistan, where a number of students from Pakistani seminaries were
also being prepared by them to mount an insurgency against the Soviets in
Central Asia. Both the Hizb and the Jamaat were ideologically close to Egypt’s Muslim
Brotherhood. They had not only read the revolutionary teachings of Syed Qutb
and Hasan Al-Banna but were also under the influence of ultra-radical Arab
fighters, as most of these Arabs had fought against the Soviets under the
banner of the two Afghan organisations. Muslim Central Asian fighters were
earlier orientated to Deobandi Sufi religious values. Their subsequent
inclusion in Jamaat-e-Islami and Hizb-e-Islami's training camps, and their
interaction with Arab militant camps, familiarized them with Muslim Brotherhood
literature. Those connections actually laid down Al-Qaeda's roots in Central
Asia.
The ISI’s initial target was to tap into
the underground Naqshbandi Sufi movements in then Soviet Muslim territories,
and these students infiltrated Central Asia through Hizb-e-Islami Afghanistan,
Jamaat-e-Islami Afghanistan, and Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami, with the dual tasks
of cultivating the Sufi orders, as well as ordinary Muslims who had continued
practicing Islam despite the repressive Soviet political system. Trained in the
Afghan Jihadi camps, the Central Asian youths connected with the underground
Sufis and prompted them to revolt against the Soviet system for the restoration
of Muslim values. Thousands of Holy Qurans were smuggled into the Central Asian
Republics, together with the literature of the Muslim Brotherhood. These
efforts bore fruit in Central Asia's political arena when the foundations of
the Islamic Renaissance Party were laid in Tajikistan in 1990, and then later
in Uzbekistan and other parts of Central Asia. The establishment of the Islamic
Renaissance Party was a proxy operation against the Soviet Union, backed by the
CIA and perpetuated on the ground by the Saudi and Pakistani intelligence
agencies with the help of Afghan Mujahideen and the Pakistani Jihadi organisations.
But with the seeds of radical Islam planted, matters began to spin out of the
control of these agencies.
The Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and
this further emboldened the Islamic Jihadi movements in Central Asia. The
Uzbeks, Tajiks, Turks, and Chechens who had participated in the Afghan Jihad
went home after the liberation of their territories in September 1991. There
was then a US campaign to promote democracy in the Central Asia Republics, but
the Jihadis rejected the idea of democracy and established underground Islamic
cells aiming to promote Islamic revolution throughout Central Asia. These
Islamic cells were ideologically motivated by Muslim Brotherhood teachings and
initially supported the ideology of Hizbut Tahrir, a non-militant Islamic revolutionary
group which stood for the establishment of a caliphate but through a
demonstration of street power rather than armed militancy. But they later
turned to Akramia, a breakaway faction of Hizbut Tahrir, which believed in
militancy. A sizeable number of Islamic Renaissance Party members also joined
the underground Islamic militant movements. During the Tajikistan civil war in
the early 1990s, underground cells played a significant role. At the height of
hostilities in 1992 most of the people owning allegiance to the Islamic
Renaissance Party and other underground Islamic cells fled to Afghanistan. Jamaat-e-Islami
Afghanistan's commander Ahmad Shah Masoud brought these Islamic groups into his
fold and organized them under the banner of the United Tajik Opposition, which
had regrouped in northern Afghanistan. The husband, of the chief of
Hizb-e-Islami Afghanistan, Gulbaddin Hikmatyar's niece, Humanyun Jarir, played a
major role in sending these volunteers from northern Afghanistan into the
Central Asian Republics to fuel the unrest.
Meanwhile, Central Asian Islamic
militants needed financial backing, which nobody offered except the Arab camps
in Afghanistan. The ideological connection was the persuasion that Osama bin Laden
used, and this was strengthened by the financial support he provided to the
Uzbek, Chechen, Chinese (eastern Turkestani), and Tajik fighters. As a result,
all these factions moved from northern Afghanistan to Kabul and Kandahar under
the Pashtun-dominated Taliban government in Afghanistan. After the US invasion
of Afghanistan, this Central Asian diaspora moved to the Pakistani tribal
areas, mostly to North and South Waziristan. Interestingly, except during the
initial fight after the US invasion of Afghanistan, Chechen, Uzbek, and Chinese
fighters were mostly not used in the Afghan battle. Al-Qaeda deliberately held them
in reserve. The ultimate purpose was to eventually send them back to the
Farghana Valley (the boundaries of which touch almost all of the Muslim
republics of Central Asia, as well as Chechnya and the Chinese province of
Xingjian), and from there expand the war to encompass the whole region.
GHAZWA-E-HIND
By the early 1980s Jamaat-e-Islami’s
Al-Badr camp came under the command of Bakht Zameen Khan, who organised a
network of thousands of Pakistani volunteers to fight against Soviet forces in
Afghanistan. Their main training camps were established in the Afghan province
of Paktia near the Pakistani regions of Parachanar, Khost, and Nangarhar.
Initially the ISI used Al-Badr’s camps to train Kashmiri separatists, and the
largest indigenous Kashmiri organisation, Hizbul Mujahadeen, was raised in
Al-Badr’s Afghanistan camps. However, ISI strategists felt that for the
Ghazwa-e-Hind (the promised ‘Battle for India’) there was the need for a
structure which stood on more solid foundations. Al-Badr camps were run by the
Jamaat-e-Islami, whose men came from a middle-class urban background. They had
been educated in secular schools. They were committed to the cause of Jihad,
but their commitments were unlikely to be lifelong (no more than five years at
best) because of their background, which was part of their being. ISI’s
Ghazwa-e-Hind project required networking not only in Jammu & Kashmir (J &
K) but in the whole of India—and in India’s neighbouring countries like Nepal
and Bangladesh. There was a need for people who came from simple rural
backgrounds with no leanings towards a middle-class ‘upward mobility’
structure. The Harkat-ul Mujahadeen, whose network was governed by the Deobandi
school of thought—from Central Asia to Bangladesh—was therefore thought more
suitable for the Ghazwa-e-Hind operations.
The ISI almost simultaneously opened
theatres of war in Central Asian regions and in J & K in the late 1980s,
when various newly organised Kashmiri organizations including Harkat-ul
Jihad-i-Islami and Hizbul Mujahadeen confronted Indian security forces in J
& K. Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami applied the same strategy in India as it had
earlier applied in Central Asia. India was a far easier place to lay down
networks. Initially the Qadri Sufi order was used as a cover for ISI
activities. One of the top Sufi clerics in Pakistan, Mubarak Ali Shah Gilani,
cooperated with the ISI on that front, and soon an underground network was laid
in India with the help of Sufis, especially in Hyderabad. While Kashmiri
militants escalated hostilities, the Indian underground network was asked to
keep a very low profile. The network was to enhance its activities on the
recruitment front only. Soon the Ghazwa-e-Hind project had reached Uttar
Pradesh, where its target was youths being educated in secular schools. By the
late 1990s, Aligarh University became a hotbed of underground militant
intrigues, but there was not as yet any plan for the launch of real Jihadi
activities in India. Meanwhile, Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami had firmly established
itself in Bangladesh through networks of Deobandi Islamic seminaries. The
purpose, however, was not to disturb the social and political structure of the
country, but to facilitate the future Ghazwa-e-Hind project for a steady supply
line of Muslim fighters from Bangladesh once Jihadi activities had begun in
India. The timeframe was closely linked with the hype on the Kashmiri
separatist movement.
After the death in a C-130 aircraft
crash of Gen Zia-ul-Haq in August 1988 and the formation of a new government
led by the Pakistan Peoples’ Party, the era of Jihadist Generals such as Lt Gen
Hamid Gul in Pakistani military headquarters came towards an end, and
strategies such as Ghazwa-e-Hind transformed into ‘bleed India’ projects became
more of a purely functional proxy operation rather than a deep-rooted Jihadi
perception. Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami was still the favoured network, but in the
late 1990s the Pakistani establishment suddenly stopped pushing Ghazwa-e-Hind.
Instead it dreamed of the creation of a greater Pakistan stretching from
Afghanistan (from a strategic depth angle) to Bangladesh. The Central Asian
module of the military establishment was shelved in the late 1990s. This was
the time when theJihadi elements started looking in another direction, although
still cooperating with the Pakistani military establishment. A hardline
Deobandi Taliban rule in Afghanistan was the great morale booster for Jihadis
reared by Pakistan’s military establishment. But the Jihadis were also closely monitoring
newly emerging equations. The events of 9/1 1 changed the world, as well as the
Jihadi mindset. The ISI’s forward strategyin the 1980s against the Soviet Union
(and against India) was ready to deliver the desired national goals on the
regional strategic front when 9/11 happened in 2001. But, by that time so many
events had taken place that it was Al-Qaeda which benefited from the harvest.
Earlier, thousands of Farghana Valley
fighters of ethnic Uzbek, Tajik, and Turkish origin, along with fighters from
the Chinese province of Xinjiang and the Republic of Chechnya, gathered in an
Afghanistan under Taliban rule. The diaspora from Central Asia and North
Caucasus badly needed money, arms, and training to fuel insurgencies in their
home regions. The Taliban provided them with sanctuaries, but it did not have
enough money to keep its own movement afloat, leave alone fund insurgencies elsewhere.
As a result, dozens of Chechens, Uzbeks, and the Chinese left Afghanistan and
settled in Turkey. Turkey provided them with housing and money, and encouraged
their struggle, although under the strict vigilance of the state’s intelligence
apparatus. That situation was unacceptable to commanders such as Juma Namangani
and Tahir Yaldochiv of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Hassan Mahsum of
the Eastern Turkestan Islamic Party (China), who had progressively lost control
over their men living in Turkey. But they did not have alternative sources of
funding. Al-Qaeda took advantage of this and developed close contact with these
groups. It provided them with money and training. Although there is no proof of
the organisational attachments of these groups with Al-Qaeda, there is no
denying Al Qaeda’s ideological and financial influence over them in the late
1990s. That was the time when the Pakistani Jihadi organisations reared by ISI
became a serious threat to India. According to one estimate, between 1980 and
2000 approximately 60,000 Pakistanis and had been trained in different Afghan
militant camps, and at the time of 9/11, at least 10,000 Jihadis were active
inside J & K (they used to be launched from Pakistan on a rotational basis).
These insurgents not only troubled the 400,000 Indian security forces
(including Indian Army and police forces) but emboldened the Pakistan Army to
orchestrate military adventures like the Kargil Operation in 1999. Militants
also dared to hijack IC-814, took it to Kandahar, and then exchanged the
passengers with their prisoners who were languishing in Indian jails. The
Jihadis also carried out an attack on the Red Fort in Delhi in December 2000
and even planned an attack on the Indian Parliament in December 2001.
Simultaneously, the Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami was gaining a firm foothold in
Bangladesh at the instigation of the ISI to pave the way for the rout of the pro-India
elements there. Harkat carried out an assassination attempt on Sheikh Hasina
Wajid and many of her supporters in 2000. This brought India under so much
pressure that an alliance that supported a coalition with Pakistan won the
Bangladeshi elections in 2001. By the year 2001, strategically speaking,
Pakistan had become the most influential country from Central Asia to
Bangladesh. It was about to translate that for a better bargain with India as
well as Iran and the United States when 9/11 occurred. The entire world changed,
and so did Pakistan's strategic objectives.
On December 23, 2005, retired Captain
Khurram wrote in an e-mail message to me: Dear Dr. Sahib [the Taliban refer to
any person who is reasonably familiar with the English language as Dr, so Khurram
and his friends used to call me Dr because I was an English-language
journalist], Assalam o alaikum. I started reading your articles a couple of
months back and concluded that you are probably amongst those very few analysts
who have real insight into the Pakistani Jihadi cadres. I read your last
article ‘Armed and dangerous: Taliban Gear Up’, and before making any comment.
I would now like to introduce myself. In 2001, I was serving as an assault
commander of the elite anti-terrorist Zarrar Coy from Pakistan’s Special
Service Group (SSG). 9/11 was a strange volcano. It divided people on strong
ideological lines. I was also struck by the Jihadi waves and joined the LeT,
whose training in 1998-1999 was revolutionised by a former Zarrar Coy NCO, who
on retirement, joined this outfit. His specialised urban assault training
proved to be the most important element in the series of fearful LeT Fedayeen
attacks on Indian Army installations. The culmination of those attacks came
with the deadly attack of the Kalu Chak which brought a furious Indian PM Vajpayee
to Jammu beating the war-drum. Shamshad, known as Abu Fahad Ullah, was martyred
in 2000, and suddenly there was a lull and stagnancy in the training of the LeT.
My brother, a former Army Major, hung up his boots right after 9/11. On his
release from service, he joined the LeT. One of my unit officers also followed suit.
I joined the outfit soon after, without caring for the consequences. After one
year all three of us came out of the LeT, dejected after facing the
conspiracies of their leadership. There is enough to say about the extreme
hypocrisy, luxuries, and evils of these so called Pakistani Mujahideen leaders,
but that isn’t the objective of my e-mail to you. The aim of my writing to you
is linked with your article above. Once inside the LeT cadres, I came to know
about their tactics, logistics, and black-market activities. Moreover, I
learned about the difference in the ideologies and tactics of the different
groups, namely Al-Qaeda, Taliban, and the Pakistani Jihadi groups. Terrorism is
my favorite topic. The last time I wrote a feature article on this was in The
Nation on October 31, 2004. It was about the desperate demonstration of the
Chinese hostage rescue. With this background and having studied the tactics of
the Tamil Tigers in depth, I would like to make the following comments: You
have quoted senior Pakistani security officials, on the condition of anonymity,
as saying the Al-Qaeda and Taliban are developing new links with the Tamil
Tigers for logistics support. I would like to add that most of the security
officials in Pakistan do not have any real insight or understanding on/of these
cadres. After 9/11 they have re-moulded the pan-Islamist view of world
domination by the Pakistani Mujahideen organisations into a nationalist outlook
i.e. liberating Kashmir only. The Pakistani organisations were probably the
largest in the world in terms of cadres, logistics, and support base to stop [Mujahideen]
from attacking the US interests, against which they had been raising slogans
for years. To break this tide from joining Al-Qaeda and Taliban inside
Afghanistan was a huge task. The officials can claim some success for this but
the real credit goes more to the corrupt leadership inside organisations,
rather than the security and the intelligence hierarchy. So, at least I do not
believe all they claim. Most of what they say is based on some internet story
or book which they have read about insurgency, or a presentation given by them
in the past to earn an A grade in a compulsory course. Two Tamil Tigers headed
the group responsible for all their big deals—shipments of explosives from
Rubizone Chemicals Ukraine, shipments of LMGs, rounds and guns from Russia,
SAMS [missiles] from Thailand and Burma. They chartered ships in the corrupt
PAN HO LIB [Panama, Honduras and Liberia] territories. They even bribed an
Israeli weapons dealer and diverted a shipment of mortar rounds to their
bastion of Jaffna. They forged end-user certificates and in many cases used the
end-user certificates of third-world armies, e.g. Bangladesh. But all these are
memories of the pre-9/1 1 world, when the US counter-terrorist forces had their
eyes closed. Where have those happy times disappeared after 2001? What to talk
of moving across borders? I know how many obstacles these cadres faced just
moving things from city to city. In the given situation, only the Iraqi Al-Qaeda
had the ability to operate across borders. Taliban, I really doubt. The sudden
upsurge in the Afghan resistance, I feel, is due to the changed policy of Al-Qaeda
to exploit Iranian channels from Iraq. If we look at the chronology of attacks
in Afghanistan, it doesn’t seem that any kind of advanced weaponry is used
anywhere. The changed trend is the adoption of the suicide bombings by the Taliban.
The downing of Chinook and other gunships may be attributed to the RPG fire,
since it has a history. The only possibility of logistically supporting the
Taliban/Al-Qaeda with SAMs is from Iraq via Iran, with Pakistan out, because of
the infiltration of the security agents into these organisations, a fact the Al-Qaeda
has only lately understood. The Tamil Tigers themselves have been searching
hard for the latest weaponry, since the time they were black-listed by
Scandinavia, from the Far East, Central America, West Africa to the jungles of
Jaffna in the post 9/1 1 scenario. The Al-Qaeda/Taliban can do anything—from
killing people to stoning to death, but the one thing they are very strict
about is no hashish, no marijuana! I noticed in my one year with them that
printing fake money and smuggling was their favourite all-time pastime, but
drug-dealing is strictly prohibited through all kinds of ‘Sbaree Fatwas’ issued
by the respected Arab Ulema. Anyhow sir, this e-mail is for the sole purpose of
letting you know that I am a fan of your articles and wanted to give you my
views and bit of personal experience on the topic! I am in the Great Lakes
region and importing rice. But I have learned how the Europeans, Americans, and
the Israelis are robbing the Congo out of its huge mineral wealth including
uranium, which is also an interesting topic! I also lived from 2001 to 2002 in
Sierra Leone, West Africa, as a peacekeeper. Once we entered its diamond-rich
eastern Kono province to find it was completely out of the control of the capital
and the world. How we got weapons back from the rebels, held the elections,
made the government, and finally sent the diamond-rich country back into the
lap of England. This is also an interesting story which demands your attention.
Thanks and wishing you great writings.
Khurram
D R Congo
Captain Khurram came from a Kashmiri
family of the Salafi dispensation. His story is a telling account of how the
infusion of Al-Qaeda’s ideology and Islamic ideas convinced some middle-ranking
officers in the Pakistan Army to become ‘blood brothers’ and adopt successful
war strategies in the South Asian theatre of war. Ritualistically and
otherwise, Khurram was a practicing Muslim. He was clear in explaining his
religious viewpoints and political convictions on contemporary national issues.
This made him particularly popular among his SSG colleagues. When he was
deployed to Sierra Leone in 2001 and 2002 as part of the UN peacekeeping
mission, he was extremely disturbed about the confusion of the local Muslims
there. They were clearly identifiable as Muslims by their names, but they were
totally unfamiliar with the details of their faith and obligations as Muslims.
Khurram built a mosque and a madrassa in Sierra Leone, despite the opposition of
his commander, Brigadier Ahmad Shuja Pasha. (who later became a Lieutenant-General
and the Director-General of Inter-Services Intelligence, ISI). Pakistan’s
policy turnaround on the Taliban after the US invasion of Afghanistan had
disillusioned the whole of the middle cadre of the country’s armed forces. But
unlike his other colleagues, who remained silent critics of the policy, Khurram
and his elder brother Major Haroon Aashik decided to take practical steps to
rectify this. Haroon, an equally competent officer, took early retirement from
the Pakistan Army in 2001 after Pakistan had decided to support the US-led War
on Terror. Khurram left the Army in 2003 on his return from Sierra Leone. Both
brothers then joined the LeT, but soon realised that the LeT was only a civilian
extension of Pakistan’s armed forces.
The events of 9/11 also brought a change
in LeT policies concerning Afghanistan. The LeT advised its cadre to stay away
from Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Haroon and Khurram were not only excellent Army
officers, but also concerned Muslims. Thus this became a bone of contention.
Haroon’s inspiration came from the Salafi school of thought, and was the result
of his reading habits. He extensively read classical Muslim academics like Imam
Ibn-e-Tamiyyah, Ibn-e-Khaldoun, and Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahhab. Among modern-day
Islamic scholars, he studied the works of the Muslim Brotherhood ideologue Syed
Qutb, as well as the founder of the Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan, Syed Abul Ala
Maududi. Additionally, and even after retirement from the Army, Haroon
continued to read up on military strategies in military journals and through
extensive internet surfing. Haroon never kept his criticism of the Pakistan
Army a secret. He was a vocal critic of the country’s armed forces. He visited
his old military comrades frequently and taunted them on their weak Islamic
beliefs, and for serving in Pakistan’s armed forces, which he considered a
continuation of the old British colonial army. He often cited the example of
how the Frontier Corps still showcases its wars against ‘tribal insurgents’
like Haji Saheb Taragzai and the Faqir of Ipi, who had fought against the
British Indian forces before independence. Haroon motivated his former
colleagues to leave the Army, referring to it as a purely mercenary force. He
advised them to do something else for a living. Several of his colleagues took
his advice seriously and left the Pakistan Army. In the meantime, Haroon had
found a new comrade in Commander Muhammad Ilyas Kashmiri, a veteran Kashmiri
fighter, who had been roughed up by Pakistan’s armed forces time and again. He
decided to sever his ties with the Kashmiri struggle and move to North
Waziristan with his family.
Major Abdul Rahman was another officer
who resigned from Pakistan’s armed forces and joined Maj Haroon. Their first
and foremost aim at the time was to go to Afghanistan to fight against the NATO
troops there. Khurram and Rahman then went to the Afghan province of Helmand
and fought against the British troops. Khurram died in the battle in Helmand
province in 2007. Rahman came back alive, but alone. Khurram’s death became a
source of inspiration for both Haroon and Rahman. Haroon was by now seriously
involved in Afghanistan. He saw the death of his brother as martyrdom and
dedicated his life to the Afghan resistance against the NATO forces. By 2006,
Kashmiri was part of Al-Qaeda’s Shura and his 313 Brigade came under Al-Qaeda's
discipline. Soon after, Haroon reduced his business engagements and frequently
journeyed to South and North Waziristan to take part in guerrilla operations
against NATO forces in Afghanistan. Haroon had fought in the Kargil war in 1999
and often cited the cowardice of the Pakistani officers. He was convinced that
the Pakistan Army was incapable of fighting any major battle. Haroon’s exposure
to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda had fired his imagination. The ‘soldier with a
mission’ stood up in him. He engaged in extensive physical training and made
himself super-fit. His relations with Al-Qaeda grew and he soon became part of
its inner circle. The fusion of Al-Qaeda’s ideology and his own commitment and
capabilities as a professionally trained army officer saw him loom large in the
South Asian theatre of war. Haroon began evaluating the Afghan war theatre from
a new perspective. Thousands of brave Taliban, ready to kill or to be killed,
stood before him, but their obsolete guerrilla tactics prevented them from
emerging on top. The Taliban made a successful comeback in 2006 in Afghanistan,
but their casualty rate was very high. At least 2,000 Taliban fighters were
killed in the spring offensive of that year, while NATO’s casualties were less
than 200. Haroon was convinced that if the Taliban clung to old war techniques,
the aerial firepower and military machine of the US would eliminate them by
2008. There was a need to develop novel guerrilla tactics through new schools
of thought with the fighters oriented to new disciplines. Haroon felt that the
Arab guerrilla fighters had a better sense of war than the Taliban but their
ideas were limited. They did not have the capacity to strategise the war to
advantage the Taliban. Rahman and Haroon jointly worked on this. They went to
libraries and studied the most successful guerrilla battles against the United
States in Vietnam. After extensive reading, both concluded that without more
advanced weapons and improved strategy, success in Afghanistan could not be
achieved. Haroon then went to North Waziristan and gave his presentation to
senior Al-Qaeda commanders. He laid out two models of insurgencies, one related
to Vietnamese guerillas operating against the US, and the other to the Tamil
Tigers operating against the government of Sri Lanka.
He advocated that a start be made in the
Afghan provinces of Khost, Paktia, and Paktika, with a three-pronged Tet-type
offensive strategy, similar to the one that Gen Giap had used in North Vietnam
in the 1960s to defeat the US. He proposed that the first phase of operations
involve armed opposition to the NATO forces in these provinces. In the second
phase, the militants would target isolated security posts and military
personnel. Militants would capture and hold these isolated posts for 24 to 48
hours and then melt away. In the third phase, they would spread the insurgency
to urban areas and the federal capital. Haroon emphasized that the central idea
of Gen Giap’s strategy was to catch the enemy by surprise, and he placed
emphasis on the training of select warriors for special operations. They were
to use sophisticated arms acquired by insiders. The Arab militants paid close
attention to Haroon’s presentation and discussed it with regional commanders
such as Sirajuddin Haqqani and Mullah Nazir. (The strategy was later successfully
employed in Pakistan’s tribal areas against Pakistan’s armed forces.) Haroon
developed a ‘guerrilla’ mortar gun of a type available only to some of the
world’s more advanced military forces. The gun was so small it could be hidden
in a medium-sized luggage bag. Unlike the normal mortar gun, the length of
which makes it difficult to hide, this gun could be transported easily. Haroon
also developed a silencer for the AK-47, hitherto available only to a select
few internationally. This became an essential component of Al-Qaeda’s special
guerrilla operations. He then visited China to procure night-vision devices
(NVD). The biggest task was to clear them through the Customs in Pakistan.
Haroon called on his friend Captain Farooq, who was President Musharraf’s
security officer. Farooq went to the airport in the President’s official car
and received Haroon at the immigration counter. In the presence of Farooq,
nobody dared touch Haroon’s luggage, and the NVDs arrived in Pakistan without
any hassle. (Farooq was a member of the Hizbut Tahrir, a fact discovered by the
military intelligence as late as nine months after his posting as Musharraf’s
security officer. After being spotted, he was briefly arrested and then retired
from the Pakistan Army.) Once a level of sophistication had been reached, the
Mujahideen prepared for special operations. The combatants for these operations
all emanated from North Waziristan. An attack on the Serena Hotel Kabul in
January 2008, a Taliban strike on the national day parade in April 2008 in
Kabul, multiple bombing attacks in Khost in May 2009, and an attack on the
Kamdesh US base in Kunar in September 2009, are just a few examples of the
successful guerrilla operations they launched. In most cases, the Taliban
donned Afghan armed forces or Afghan Police uniforms, and in almost every
attack they had insiders providing them with information on the targetted
complexes’ entry and exit points.
Neither Haroon nor Kashmiri favoured
gathering adherents randomly for these special operations. They recruited the
best and most ideologically motivated youths to their 313 Brigade. These youths
were given special guerrilla training, including swimming and karate lessons,
shooting and ambush techniques, and were familiarised with explosive devises as
well as reconnaissance. The 313 Brigade fell strictly under Kashmiri’s control.
The role of Al-Qaeda's Laskhar al-Zil (Shadow Army) was to coordinate with
other groups. Several different groups of the Mujabideen were then inducted
into the Laskhar al-Zil. Haroon had the Taliban widen their war perspectives.
He then presented his most important assessment of future operational procedures
to Kashmiri and Al-Qaeda’s other leaders. This was a comprehensive plan to
sever the NATO supply line of containers from the port of Karachi to
Afghanistan. Of these shipments, 80% go through Pakistan’s tribal area to the
Khyber Agency and 20% use the Chaman-Kandahar route. Haroon next planned a
masterstroke to organise attacks on NATO supplies running through Pakistan into
Afghanistan in January 2008. The focal point was the Khyber Agency. This key
transit point accounted for most of the NATO supplies needed to battle the
Afghan insurgency. Laskhar al-Zil was assigned to execute the plan. Ustad
Yasir, an Afghan, was appointed in the Khyber Agency as the project head. The
chief of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Hakeemullah Mehsud, although then
only an ordinary foot solider, was sent from South Waziristan to coordinate the
action. Al-Qaeda knew that Laskhar al-Zil operations in the Khyber Agency would
not receive any support from the locals as the majority of the population of
the Khyber Agency belongs to the anti-Taliban Barelvi school of thought, which
believes in Sufism. There were several local groups from the Deobandi School (a
pro-Taliban Muslim sect in Pakistan), but they had good relations with the
Pakistan Army and local tribes who stood against creating a law-and-order
situation. Haroon suggested that Laskhar al-Zil establish its sanctuaries in
the neighbouring Orakzai Agency and make Dara Adam Khail its base. His strategy
aimed at pressurising the local tribesmen to remain neutral in the Taliban
attacks on NATO convoys. Future Taliban attacks were then launched from the
Orakzai Agency on a daily basis. Later militants succeeded in establishing
their own strong pockets in the Khyber Agency in 2009-10. Suicide attacks
followed. In one, the warlord Haji Namdar, who had initially been the local
facilitator for attacking the NATO supply line, and who had supported the
Pakistan Army against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda in the Khyber Agency, was
killed. The other powerful warlord of the area, Mangal Bagh, learned from this
lesson and remained neutral. The Taliban attacks rose to the point of Pakistan
having to close its borders several times in December 2008. Haroon next
contemplated widening the attacks on NATO supplies. He was convinced that this
would be the key to NATO’s defeat in Afghanistan. He visited Karachi several
times, and set up efficient teams there to monitor the movement of NATO’s
shipments arriving at the port. These teams were to study how the NATO
shipments were passed on to the various contractors. Each and every detail was
closely examined, including the companies which had the contracts for the
shipments. Several contractors were abducted in Karachi and the rest given
warnings to break with NATO, or suffer the consequences. NATO commanders were
taken aback by these new developments, and more so when in the last months of
2008, the Taliban virtually stopped their attacks across Pakistan and Afghanistan
and shifted their entire focus towards blowing up NATO supply arteries. In
Karachi, most of the contractors had been abducted, or were on the run. At the
Peshawar terminal, almost every other day the Taliban suddenly appeared,
carried out rocket attacks on NATO convoys, and disappeared into the Khyber
Agency. Almost every day 20 to 40 NATO convoys were set on fire or looted.
The Pakistani Taliban released a picture
to the Pakistani press of a US Humvee being used by the Taliban in the Orakzai
Agency. This sent shock waves through Western capitals. The stories published
in the international press of missing NATO aircraft engines said to be in the
possession of the Taliban added to Westerners' concerns. The NATO command
wondered who was guiding the Taliban. The immediate suspect was the Pakistani
military establishment, but there was no hard evidence of this. Western
intelligence fully examined the profiles of all the leading Arab commanders in
North Waziristan and those who had been commanding the Taliban in Afghanistan,
but was unable to track anyone with the required knowledge or skill to
successfully pursue this strategy. The rising shortage of supplies in the
provinces of Helmand, Ghazni, and Wardak seriously affected the patrol
capabilities of NATO forces during the latter months of 2008. In April 2008,
NATO struck a deal with Russia in Bucharest to send its supplies through Russia
and Central Asia. On the sidelines of the 45th Munich Summit in February 2009,
an agreement was simultaneously reached between Iran and United States for Iran
to allow some non-military NATO shipments through the port of Chabahar.
Permission for supplies through Iran, however, was given only to individual
countries like Italy, France, and the United Kingdom - not NATO as a whole. But
neither of these routes proved an economically viable alternative to the Khyber
Agency route, through which 70 percent of NATO supplies still moved.
Haroon wrote me an e-mail after the
Bucharest conference in April 2008, citing Wikipedia. He also sent a map in
another e=mail: A landlocked country, surrounded entirely by other landlocked
countries, may be called a ‘doubly landlocked’ country. A person in such a
country has to cross at least two borders to reach a coastline. There are only
two such countries in the world: Liechtenstein in Central Europe. Uzbekistan in
Central Asia. Uzbekistan has borders with four countries—Turkmenistan to the
southwest, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan to the south and east, with Kazakhstan and
the Aral Sea to the north—that border the landlocked salt-water Caspian Sea,
from which ships can reach the Sea of Azov by using the Volga-Don Canal, and
thus the Black Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, and the oceans. There was no doubly
landlocked country in the world after the 1871 Unification of Germany until the
end of World War-I. This was because Uzbekistan was part of the then Soviet
Union; while Liechtenstein borders Austria, which had an Adriatic coast until
1918. Haroon’s assessment was correct. NATO tried to move its supplies on the
Central Asian routes to northern Afghanistan, but was not able to transport
more than 10 to 15% of its requirements because of the much higher cost of
transportation cost through the ‘doubly landlocked’ region. Pakistan remained
the main supply route.
Maj Haroon was elated. He was playing
the role of a General. This was something he could never have achieved in the
regular Army, given his time of service. He bought a non-custom Pajero off-road
vehicle from North Waziristan at the dirt-cheap price of PKR 125,000 and used
it to travel through North Waziristan to Karachi. When night fell, he stayed in
Army messes in the countryside. Being an ex-Army officer, he was allowed that
facility. He always kept his Army-issued revolver on him with lots of bullets
in case he was obstructed at any checkpoint, but his imposing bearing and
unmistakable military accent in both English and Urdu always prevented this
from happening. With his success in evading identification and capture, he
looked forward to broadening both his, and through him Al-Qaeda’s, network.
Every visit brought forward new comrades. Most of them were from the LeT, a few
from other Jihadi outfits, but there were a number from the Pakistan Army as well.
Through his close connections in the Pakistan Army, Haroon was able to develop
an effective intelligence network. In 2007 he became aware that the US had
taken a new view on the South Asian terror war, and had arrived at the
conclusion that the problem lay in Pakistan. The US did not want a partnership
with the Pakistan Army to defeat the Taliban or Al-Qaeda, it wanted to place US
personnel inside the Pakistan Army to fight it. In 2008 the US took over some
bases in Pakistan in order to launch Predator drone attacks against Al-Qaeda in
Pakistani tribal areas. The same year the US bought land in Tarbela, 20km from
Islamabad, and allocated US$1 billion for the extension of the US embassy in
Pakistan’s capital. Earlier, in 2007, US war contractors had arrived in
Pakistan. They interviewed and selected a group of Frontier Corps personnel to
be trained as a counter-insurgency force. In Pakistan’s ISI, a
counter-terrorism cell was established, with the officers to be trained in the
US. They were to visit the US at regular intervals to allow the US
administration to assess them and their conviction about fighting the War on
Terror. The US establishment focused on making personal contacts at all levels
in the Pakistan Army to set the stage for a conclusive war effort against
Al-Qaeda. Haroon was privy to all of this, and busied himself working on a
strategy to generate a crisis in the Pakistan Army. His avowed aim was to have
the Pakistan Army sever all ties with the US. Using terror tactics was the only
way Haroon knew to jolt the conscience of his former comrades-in-arms. He made
a list of the senior ranking Army officers involved in anti-terror activities,
and decided to make a horrible example of them to deter others from joining the
US. The name of retired Maj Gen Ameer Faisal Alvi came to mind. Faisal had
commanded SSG operations in Angor Ada on October 2, 2003 when 2,500 commandos
had been airlifted into the village of Baghar, located near Angor Ada, with
aerial support from 12 helicopter gunships. According to local residents, some
of the helicopters flew from the Machdad Kot US air base from across the border
in Afghanistan. Witnesses reported that 31 Pakistani soldiers and 13 foreign
fighters and local tribesmen were killed in the action. A large number of
Taliban combatants fled. In that operation several high-profile Al-Qaeda
commanders, including Abdul Rahman Kennedy, were killed. Several others were
arrested and transported to Guantanamo Bay. The attack was burned into the mind
of Al-Qaeda and it mulled over the setback, especially since as, at that time,
there had been no open hostility between it and Pakistan. Tracing the address
of Alvi, who was British-born, was not a problem. After developing personal
differences with the then Chief of the Army Staff, Gen Musharraf, Alvi had been
forcibly retired from the Pakistan Army. After his retirement he worked as the
CEO and Executive Director of Redtone Telecommunication Pakistan Ltd, a private
telecommunications company in Pakistan. On November 19, 2008 while he was on
his way to work, Haroon followed him. His plan was to waylay the retired General
when he slowed down at a speed breaker near the PWD colony in Islamabad, where
the General’s passage would be obstructed by two accomplices. Everything went
according to plan. Haroon jumped out of his car and killed Alvi with his Army
revolver. The murder sent shock-waves through the military rank and file.
Intelligence outfits could read the fine print: both former and serving Army
personnel were to be future targets. But they remained tight-lipped. The murder
of Alvi was not Haroon’s sole mission, he was on the lookout for similar
targets. The killing of the retired Army official was not purely an act of
vengeance, it was to serve as a reminder to the serving military cadre that one
day they too would retire and could suffer a similar fate. However, there was
more to Haroon than being just an assassin. He was rapidly re-organising the aft
cadre of the Jihadis and changing their mindset to fight a more disciplined war
against the US.
The first time I met Maj Haroon was at
his Lahore residence in September 2007. He was clearly a religious person from
his appearance. He had a long beard and wore a prayer cap and the traditional
Pakistani shalwar-qameez (a unisex form of dress similar in manner to the shirt
and pants worn by Westerners). When I met with him later, I found a different person.
He had trimmed his beard, shed some weight, and wore Western attire. But in his
private life Haroon was a devout Muslim. At one time he came to visit me at the
Avari Towers Hotel in Lahore and said his prayers in my room. There were
pictures on one wall of the room, and he covered them all with a sheet as he
considered them prohibited under Islam. Haroon was closely watching
developments in Pakistan. He was in touch with all of his former colleagues in
the armed forces (except those who were part of the military operations), including
a Major General who was the officer commanding the garrison in Peshawar. The General
had tried to reach Haroon many times to condole with him on the death of his
brother Khurram, but Haroon had not responded. Meanwhile Haroon was getting
information on expanding US influence from his old Army colleagues. Being an
avid internet surfer and book reader, he was well-informed about state
apparatus procedures, their manipulations and strategies. He focussed on
altered plans to counter them before the state could use them. He realised that
if the US continued to enjoy the success it had had up till then, Pakistan’s Army
would ultimately have no choice but to bow down to it. The US was already
promoting a role for India in Afghanistan as a countervailing force to Pakistan.
Haroon knew the US was playing on the existing rivalry between India and
Pakistan to encourage Pakistan to engage more fully in the US War on Terror. He
saw this as a carrot-and-stick game aimed at luring the Pakistan Army into the
trap of committing itself to fight the Jihadis. From 2007 onwards, Haroon
worked on a counter-strategy along with his Ameer (commander), Muhammad Ilyas
Kashmiri. The essence of this strategy was to expand the terror war into India.
In the first phase Haroon aimed to conduct a 9/11 type event in India, which he
thought would surely lead India to declare war on Pakistan. Haroon assessed
that once that happened, the Pakistan Army would have no choice but to pull its
troops out of the military operations against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda on its
western front. Haroon assigned Major Abdul Rahman, the close friend and former
colleague of his slain brother Captain Khurram, for the Indian operation.
Rahman was a living encyclopedia on Indian affairs. Haroon then set up an India
cell and worked to expand the network to its maximum limits. Haroon had left
the LeT but was still in touch with its field commanders. He was aware of the
LeT’s strengths and weaknesses. The LeT’s main strength was its connection with
Pakistan’s military establishment and its resources. Its weakness was limited
vision. Haroon would often discuss these aspects with the LeT commanders, who
considered him a totally trustworthy person because he was a Salafi as well as
a retired Army officer. Haroon used his connections for the execution of Al-Qaeda’s
plan. He was aware that in late 2007 the ISI had decided on the launch of a new
uprising inside J & K and LeT was to be used for it. Funds were allocated
and LeT was given the green light by the ISI to launch the operation. That was
the routine proxy war plan. But after the fencing of the LoC, the infiltration
of terrorists into India became difficult. The LeT then had to use the deserted
coastal area of Thatta (in the southern Sindh province of Pakistan) to move its
fighters into India. From there they moved on into J & K.
Haroon met with a LeT commander, Abu
Hamza, and advised him not to waste his time and resources on futile exercises
inside India. He told Abu Hamza that he would draw up a more effective strategy
for the cause. Haroon next turned to his expert on India, Rahman, to brief him
more fully on the country. Rahman had visited India many times. He had
photographs and maps of all the important targets in India. He identified the
areas in Mumbai where Caucasian foreigners lived, like Nariman House and the
Taj Mahal Hotel. Haroon informed Abu Hamza that they would travel on a
Pakistani boat initially and then capture an Indian trawler to land from. He
told Abu Hamza that once they were in position to launch a massive operation it
would force India to the negotiating table to discuss an advantageous settlement
on J & K. Abu Hamza forwarded the plan to the LeT commander-in-chief Zakiur
Rahman Lakhvi, who immediately left for Karachi to organise the operation.
Lakhvi spent two months in preparation before the November 26, 2008 attacks in
Mumbai. He worked night and day to select and train the combatants who were to
carry out the mission. When the selected combatants were thought to be fully
prepared to proceed precisely along the lines of Haroon’s plan, they were
launched. Haroon devised the mechanism of indirect communication for Abu Hamza,
drawing the guidelines for instructions to the infiltrators, which were
conveyed from countries other than Pakistan. The Mumbai attacks stunned the
whole world. The event was a great test for India as the regional superpower.
One of the attackers, Ajmal Kasab, was taken alive, and during his grilling he
told his Indian captors the whole story of how, where, and when he had been
given his training. All links led to Pakistan, and India geared itself for a
limited war on Pakistan, which was to include air strikes on LeT camps in Muzaffarabad,
in PoK, the LeT headquarters in Muridke, in Pakistani Punjab, and its
seminaries in Lahore. This could have been the beginning of a fourth India-Pakistan
war.
Al-Qaeda’s objective in undertaking the
Mumbai 26/11 attack was to provoke a war between Pakistan and India. All
hostilities between the Pakistan Army and the terrorists would then come to a
halt in the Swat Valley in Pakistan’s KPK province, as well as in the tribal
areas of Bajaur, Mohmand, and the two Waziristans. Pakistani Taliban leaders
Mullah Fazlullah and Baitullah Mehsud announced that they would fight alongside
Pakistan‘s armed forces in an India-Pakistan war, and the Director-General of
ISI, Lt Gen Ahmad Shuja Pasha, confirmed this understanding in his briefing to
national and foreign correspondents, when he called Fazlullah and Baitullah
Mehsud Pakistan’s strategic assets. The stage was all set to change the
dynamics of enmity and friend-ship in the region when Washington put its foot
down. Washington hurriedly sent several officials to India and Pakistan to
advise their governments that any war between them would only benefit the
terrosists. Washington assured India that Pakistan would cooperate fully in the
investigation of the Mumbai attacks and arrest those who had been responsible
for their planning. Watching his plan fail, Haroon advised Rahman to use
another approach for the 313 Brigade. LeT structures were now under siege
because of US pressure on Pakistan, and hence of little value. Rahman journeyed
to India again to acquire more information and photograph sensitive installations.
These included India’s nuclear research laboratories in Mumbai and Hyderabad.
He also took photographs of the National Defence College, India’s Parliament
building, and some other high-profile government offices in Delhi. Rahman always
drew up a contingency plan for assaults on different targets. In this case, if
the terrorists were unable to hit India’s National Defense College during the
day when several senior military officials were present, they were instead to
attack the Indian Parliament. Rahman was arrested after a 313 Brigade combatant,
Zahid Iqbal, was picked up by the ISI in Islamabad on July 2009 and identified
him. But as he had not been involved in any terrorist act in Pakistan, he was
released and soon back at work planning the sabotage operations in India using
the 313 Brigade. However, information was leaked to the FBI before he could
proceed with the action, and the entire team, including Rahman, was captured.
In October 2009 a conspiracy was
unearthed in Chicago by the FBI. Two suspects were arrested, David Headley and
Tahawwur Rana. Their interrogations revealed that they had been planning to
attack the National Defence College in Delhi and India’s nuclear facilities.
The Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, which had published allegedly blasphemous
cartoons featuring the Holy Prophet (Peace Be Upon Him), was also on the hit-list.
The conspirators all belonged to Kashmiri’s 313 Brigade. Their affidavit
exposed the roles of Major Haroon and his aide Abdul Rahman in the recruitment
and orientation process. Kashmiri was optimistic about giving India a far
bigger jolt than the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai when I interviewed him on October
9, 2009. “So should the world expect more Mumbai-like attacks?” I asked. “That
was nothing compared to what we have planned for the future,” he replied.
Extracts from the FBI’s affidavit: After
visiting Denmark in January 2009 [David] Headley travelled to Pakistan to meet
with Individual A. During this trip, Headley travelled with Individual A to the
Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA) region in north-west Pakistan and met
with (Ilyas) Kashmiri. Headley returned to Chicago in mid-June 2009. Following
Headley’s return from Pakistan, Headley communicated by e-mail with LeT Member
A regarding the status of the Northern Project. Because LeT Member A responded
that he had “new investment plans”, coded language for the planning of a
different attack, Headley and Individual A began to focus on working with
Kashmiri to complete the attack on the newspaper. In late July 2009. Headley
travelled again to Copenhagen, Denmark, and to other locations in Europe. When
Headley returned to the US, he told a Customs and Border Patrol inspector that
he was travelling on business as a representative of an immigration business.
Headley’s luggage contained no papers or other documents relating to such
business. Following Headley’s return to Chicago in August 2009, Headley used
coded language to inquire of Individual A on multiple occasions whether
Individual A had been in touch with Kashmiri regarding planning for the attack.
Headley expressed concern that Individual A’s communications with Kashmiri had
been cut off. In early September 2009, Individual A called Headley to report
that Kashmiri might be dead. Headley expressed dismay and concern, and said
that Kashmiri’s death means “our company has gone into bankruptcy then,” and
that “the projects and so forth will go into suspension.” Shortly after initial
press reports that Kashmiri had been killed in a drone attack in Pakistan,
Headley and- Individual A had a series of coded conversations in which they discussed
the reports of Kashmiri’s death and the significance of Kashmiri’s death for
the projects they were planning. Individual A sought to reassure and encourage
Headley, telling him, among other things, that “This is business sir; these
types of things happen.” According to the affidavit, Headley also talked about
A’s friend “Harry.” A was Major Abdul Rahman, who was in charge of the India
cell, and Harry, his friend, was Major Haroon.
Before the arrest of Rahman, Haroon had
approached his LeT and Army friends. He convinced them to take part in the
battle against NATO in Afghanistan. He took them to the Pakistani tribal areas
and trained them in modern guerrilla warfare. In a matter of a few years the
313 Brigade came to be held in high regard in Jihadi circles for its expertise
and resourcefulness. However, as more missions appeared on the horizon, more
resources were required. Money had always been lacking for the war, and Haroon
was now facing a situation in which he did not even have enough money to buy fuel
for his car, let alone pay hotel bills during his travels. To keep going, he
sold his Corolla station wagon and resorted to a modest style of living. At one
point he sold his AK-47 silencers in the Dara Adam Khail market, but even that
did not generate enough money. Their monetary situation forced Haroon and
Kashmiri to think of an alternative strategy. This was kidnapping for ransom.
However, they would only abduct non-Muslims. Haroon came to Karachi and
contacted an old army friend, retired Major Abdul Basit. The only help Haroon
sought from Basit was to spy on Satish Anand, a renowned film producer. Satish
is a Hindu, an uncle of the famous Indian actor Juhi Chawla and son of the
renowned film distributor Jagdish Anand. With the information he had received
from Basit, Haroon came back to Karachi and abducted Satish for ransom,
thinking his family to be rich. He took the film distributor to North
Waziristan, only to discover that all the estimates about his money were wrong.
Satish did not have liquid funds. He owned properties but in captivity he could
not sell them. Satish was told to contact his family-members and ask them to
raise a ransom, but it was to no avail. The abductors then made Satish an
offer: they would release him if he embraced Islam. They did not kill Muslims.
Satish embraced Islam and promised to make a documentary on the militants. It
is still a mystery whether or not any money was paid for his release, and if so
how much, but what is true is that Satish came back safely to Karachi and
refused to register any case against his abductors. He was also tight-lipped
about their identities. Haroon was eventually arrested in February 2009 in
Islamabad while he was trying to abduct Sarwar Khan, a member of the Qadyani
sect. (The Qadyanis are considered non-Muslims under Pakistan’s Constitution.)
Several cases, including the murder of Faisal Alvi, were then lodged against
Haroon. Haroon had served under some leading military officers, including the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of the Staff Committee, Gen Tariq Majeed (now
retired), while his brother Khurram had served under the Director-General of
ISI, Lt Gen Shuja Pasha. I am sure that the Pakistan Army command, who knew of
their professional skills, would miss these two brothers, very much like the
Saudi establishment might have missed Osama bin Laden. These are the stories of
Islamists pushed by circumstances onto a particular track, and then
indoctrinated. They then became counterproductive, if not useless, for Muslim
establishments that decide to go along with the US designs of a new world order
in the post-Cold War era.
On March 3, 2009, only a week after
Haroon’s arrest in Islamabad, around ten gunmen attacked a bus carrying the Sri
Lankan cricket team on its way to play in Pakistan’s second largest city,
Lahore. The pattern of the attack suggested that the attackers had no intention
of killing the cricketers, as they sprayed bullets only on the escorting
policemen. When the policemen fled, the gunmen tried to hijack the bus. This
was prevented by the bus driver who kept his wits about him and drove the
vehicle past the gunmen to safety. Six of the policemen escorting the team bus
were killed, and seven crick- etersand an assistant coach were injured in the
attempted hijack. Rocket launchers and grenades were left on the site of
shooting, as were water bottles and dried fruit. Officials said the incident
bore similarities to the deadly November attacks in Mumbai. ISI claimed the
incident was an action taken by militants trained by Haroon, and that the
intention was to capture the cricketers and hold them hostage until they could
be exchanged for the captive commander.
All the Western strategic experts
wondered how Taliban’s rag-tag militia, which was on the verge of collapse, had
in a few short years rehabilitated itself and come up with hugely effective guerrilla
tactics. These strategists wondered how the guerrillas’ skills, which had been
virtually non-existent till 2005, had suddenly transformed. NATO failed to
comprehend that there could be a strategist behind the change. That strategist
was Haroon, who had been shuttling continuously between Pakistan’s tribal areas
in the two Waziristans and Karachi, undetected. In Al-Qaeda circles Haroon is
today held in as high regard as Abu Hafs (killed in 2001) for his military
operations and strategy. While walking on the sandy shores of the Arabian Sea
near my Karachi sea-view residence with Haroon, it was hard for me to believe
that this was the person who had moved the internal dynamics of the war in
South Asia from Afghanistan to India. Like al-Zawahiri, Haroon’s whole life was
the movement. Every part of his mind was focused on formulating a strategy to
win the war against NATO. While walking near Karachi’s Clifton beach he never
once appeared to enjoy or comment on the cool breeze, or the sight of the
awesome waves. Instead his eyes were rivetted on the oil terminal as he pondered
strategies to block NATO’s shipments from the port in Karachi to land-locked
Afghanistan. Haroon shared his thoughts with me every time he came to Karachi
in 2008, when I was living in the city. He said: Dr Saab, the victory of
Khurasan is near. I am certain that if the Mujahideen succeed in severing the
NATO supply-lines from Pakistan by 2008, NATO will be left with no choice but
to withdraw by 2009. And, if the supply-line is cut by 2010, NATO will leave
Afghanistan by 2011. This strategy is of critical importance in this war game.
NATO’s claim of an alternative supply route through Central Asia is a joke. It
is so long and complicated that the economy of the whole of Europe and the United
States would collapse under the financial strain. The only other option is to
move the NATO shipments to Iran. But if you study history, you will see that
relations between the ancient Persian Empire and Roman Empire were strained.
Similarly, in this battle, although Iran facilitated the US invasion of
Afghanistan against the Taliban, it is still looking to defeat America and its
NATO allies. I don’t think that Iran would allow NATO any permanent route for
its supplies through its territory.
Haroon saw the climax of the battle
coming in 2012: This is the time the Mahdi [the ultimate reformist leader] will
make his presence felt. By all the reckonings and the estimates of Muslim
scholars he has already been born. By 2012, he will come forward to command the
Muslim forces in the Middle East and defeat the Western forces led by the Anti-Christ
[Dajjal\. I used to spend hours walking with Haroon on the sea shore in the
evenings, trying to understand the Al-Qaeda perspective on various issues. It
was doubly perplexing for me that while the West doubted the loyalty of the Pakistan
Army in the War on Terror in Afghanistan, believing it to be hand-in-glove with
the Taliban, the Taliban were repeatedly attacking Pakistan’s armed forces,
believing their loyalties were pro-West. Haroon was the perfect source of
enlightenment on this, as not only was he a former officer of the Pakistan
Army, he had also personally served under the command of several leading
Generals, including Gen Tariq Majeed. Haroon said: “Their [the Pakistan Army’s]
support to the Afghan Taliban is purely tactical. It does not come from any
conviction. This kind of support to the insurgencies in neighbouring countries
is given by states for its nuisance value—and to gain influence in the region.
The Pakistan Army also supports LeT, but only as the means of waging a proxy
war against India. India does the same with its fifth columnists in Pakistan.
If the situation changes, the Army will also change its policies on India. For
instance, the ISI used to launch LeT men in Calcutta [India] for acts of
sabotage. These men were always arrested. Some because of their long beards,
some because of the Salafi rituals they practiced, and some because of the
language they conversed in. Whenever they carried out an operation, they were
found and arrested. The Pakistani intelligence agencies wondered why ISI
operations in India were always exposed while Indian proxy operations in
Pakistan never came to light. The reason became clear to them later. The Indian
saboteurs in Pakistan were rarely Indian. The Indian intelligence hired
Pakistanis as their proxies. Pakistan decided do the same, and in 2007 and 2008
it used the Indian underworld to carry out bomb blasts in Delhi and other
places. For the first time the Indian security agencies were clueless about the
origin of the saboteurs. Now Pakistan does not need or want to use the LeT any
more”. “But if that is the case, what prevents Pakistan from completely dismantling
LeT?” I asked. He answered: “They still require LeT for many reasons. First,
after their U-turn following 9/11, Pakistan lost its Islamist allies one by
one. LeT is their only ally in Pakistan. There is one major reason for this.
The Pakistan Army is culturally Punjabi. Approximately 60% of its strength
comes from the rural areas of Punjab. LeT comes from the same background. LeT
is from the Ahle-Hadith school of thought [the South Asian version of the Saudi
Wahhabi school] and in this school of thought khuruj [revolt] is not allowed.
In other words, LeT is a pro-establishment group. The Pakistan Army does not
feel threatened by it.”
Comparison between the various Muslim
societies and the successes or the failures of local insurgency movements was
Haroon’s other favourite topic. “Dr Sahib, Islam is a universal message for all
of mankind, but it does not ignore local themes, culture and traditions,” he
remarked when we discussed the philosophy of Michael Aflaq, the founder of Arab
Baath Party, and how Islam was practiced by Saddam Hussein in both letter and
spirit. “But isn’t it against the basic spirit of Islam to paint this great
religion in a narrow perspective of Arab nationalism, as did Michael Aflaq and
Saddam Hussain?” I argued. He answered: Dr Sahib, there is no denying the fact
that Islam is culturally Arab, but I don’t think that there is any harm if
somebody supports the Islamic state on the basis of Arab nationalism. That
happened in the time of Umar Bin Khattab [the second Muslim Caliph and the
Prophet Muhammad’s companion], when he gained the support of some Iraqi Arab
tribes on the basis of Arab nationalism during the war against the Iranian
imperialism. “Then what do you think of the Muslim Brotherhood, which condemns
Arab nationalism and the Baath ideology?” I asked. “I don't know enough about
their perspectives, but I do believe that in wars for the protection of an
Islamic state, nationalist themes can be used,” Haroon replied. I often
confessed to Haroon that I could not understand the rationale of wars in which
thousands of non-combatants are killed. His answer was: Big causes demand big
sacrifices. History witnesses that innocent people are often killed in wars and
otherwise. In peace they are crushed by the tyrannical systems. Life is only
for those who chose to play an active role on one side of the fence or the
other. The rest are anyway caught in no-man's land.
Haroon is now in Adyala jail,
Rawalpindi. The senior police officer who interrogated him and exchanged notes
with me admitted he was impressed with him, and is at a loss to understand how
Haroon got himself arrested for a crime like abduction for ransom. He quotes
Haroon frequently and is proud he has had the chance to meet such a
revolutionary in his lifetime. He wondered why Haroon’s life is such an
under-reported story. Haroon continues to share his views on the need to defeat
NATO forces in Afghanistan with his interrogators. Sometimes the loneliness and
the emptiness of jail depress him, but his convictions bring him back to the
world, and he lives for another day. His is another story of Al-Qaeda’s One
Thousand and One Nights tales which lead to the promised ‘End of Time’ battles.
Meanwhile his colleagues in Waziristan look forward to his coming back to the
tribal theater of war. They are convinced that his ideas and presence would
lead them to victory.
Al-Qaeda was looking for a person who
was a master of guerrilla warfare with a global perspective, someone able to
think over and above his own personal interests. Once again a crisis in the
Kashmiri militants' camp provided it with an opportunity to benefit and to
breathe its soul into a new order. This came with the attack on the Pakistani
President Musharraf in late 2003, which resulted in a massive crackdown on the
Pakistani Mijahideen fighting for the right for self-determination in J & K.
During the course of investigations, any shred of doubt about a person was
enough to nail anybody connected with Jihadi circles, no matter how
well-connected he was with Pakistan’s military establishment. The supreme
commander of Jaish-e-Mohammad, Abdullah Shah Mazhar, was one of the people
picked by the ISI when it found a person by the name of Asif Chotu financing
the attack. Asif had once been a member of Jaish-e-Mohammad. He later joined
Al-Qaeda. Abdullah Shah Mazhar gave me this account of his days in detention: I
was picked up from Karachi and taken in a vehicle. The last building I saw was
the Sultan Mosque in the Defence Housing Authority. After that I was
blindfolded and taken to a bungalow. I was offered good food and treated with
all good manners. I was asked few questions about Asif and how much I knew of
him, and my possible involvement in attacking Gen Musharraf. I told them
categorically that although Asif and I had studied together in a madrassa, I
knew nothing of his activities, and nor was I involved in his purported plot to
assassinate Gen Musharraf. The military officer told me that I had three days
to think, after which he would hand me over to people who would not be nice to
me. My answer remained the same: I had no idea what Asif Chotu had been up to.
Abdullah said that in next three days he was shifted to another location, which
was a military barracks: Nobody came to see me except for a person who used to
give me food and water. Then one day I was taken to the airport and to another
city, possibly Lahore. There I was not asked a single question. They simply
hanged me from the roof as a butcher hangs a chicken before slaughter—my hands
and legs were tied together with a rope and I was strung up to a roof. Each
muscle and bone of the body cried with pain. After an hour they pulled me down
and then took off my shalwar (Pakistani trousers) and beat me on my hips with a
thin cane. Each hit of the cane ripped off my skin. Throughout this time nobody
spoke to me. When I was near-unconscious, I was shifted to a small cell. After
a few hours a man came, slid the small window in the door open, and asked me to
give him my hand. I gave my hand and he put some ointment into it and told me
to spread the ointment over my wounds. Abdullah said that after this, there was
a brief interrogation session, then he was left in isolation. He was given a
chamber pot to use as a toilet. After six months he was declared innocent. A Brigadier
came to him and tendered his apology for the harsh treatment. He offered
monetary compensation, which Abdullah refused with thanks. Abdullah then
returned to Karachi and became engaged in routine work, without any thought of
revenge. But there were other people like Ibne Amin (real name Bin Yameen) from
Swat who were detained in the same detention cells and refused to forget the
vicious treatment meted out to them. Ibne Amin later became the most
influential Taliban commander in the Swat Valley.
Another person, who, unlike Mazhar,
adopted the path of defiance against the state of Pakistan was Commander
Muhammad Ilyas Kashmiri. His name still terrifies the Indian military
establishment. Among the guerrilla commanders of today’s world nobody has
attained the type of success Kashmiri had as a field commander. His track
record and his complete submission to Al-Qaeda impressed the Al-Qaeda leaders.
He was quickly included in Al-Qaeda’s Sbura and later given command of Al-Qaeda’s
operations. This was Al-Qaeda’s turning point. Al-Qaeda was now able to operate
independently. It gathered together commanders like Qari Ziaur Rahman and
Sirajuddin Haqqani, and its soul shifted into a new organisation, Laskhar
al-Zil. Its best brains, men like Haroon and Ziaur Rahman, were members of
Laskhar al-Zil. Born in Bhimber (old Mirpur) in the Samhani Valley of PoK on
February 10, 1964, Ilyas passed the first year of a mass communication degree
at Allama Iqbal Open University, Islamabad. He did not continue because of his
involvement in Jihadi activities. The Kashmiri freedom movement was his first
exposure in the field of terrorism. Then there was the Harkat-ul Jihad-i-Islami
(HUJI), and ultimately his legendary 313 Brigade. This grew into the most
powerful group in South Asia, with a strongly knit network in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, PoK, India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. According to some CIA dispatches,
the footprints of 313 Brigade are now in Europe, and it is capable of carrying
out the type of attack that saw a handful of terrorists terrorize the Indian
city of Mumbai in November 2008. Little is documented of Ilyas’s life, and what
has been reported is often contradictory. However, he is invariably described
by the world’s intelligence agencies as the most effective, dangerous, and
successful guerrilla leader in the world. Kashmiri left the Kashmir region in
2005 after his second release from detention by the ISI, and headed for North
Waziristan. He had previously been arrested by Indian forces, but had broken
out of jail and escaped. He was next detained by the ISI as the suspected
mastermind of an attack on then-President Musharraf in 2003, but was cleared
and released. The ISI picked Ilyas up again in 2005 after he refused to close
down operations against Jammu & Kashmir. His relocation to the troubled Durand
Line sent a chill down spines in Washington. The US realised that with his vast
experience, he could turn the unsophisticated battle blueprints in Afghanistan
into audacious modern guerrilla warfare. Ilyas’ track record speaks for itself.
In 1994, he launched the Al-Hadid operation in the Indian capital, New Delhi,
to secure the release of some of his Jihadi comrades. His group of 25 included
Sheikh Omar Saeed (the abductor of US reporter Daniel Pearl in Karachi in 2002)
as his deputy. The group abducted several foreigners, including UK, US, and
Israeli tourists, and took them to Ghaziabad near Delhi. They then demanded
that the Indian authorities release their colleagues. Instead the Indians
attacked their hideout. Sheikh Omar was injured and arrested. (He was later
released in a swap deal for the passengers of the hijacked Indian Airlines IC-814)
Ilyas escaped unhurt. On February 25, 2000, the Indian Army killed 14 civilians
in the village of Lanjot in PoK after its SF (Para) forces had crossed the Line
of Control (LoC). They returned to the Indian side and threw the severed heads
of three of them at the Pakistan Army soldiers manning their side. The very
next day, Ilyas conducted a guerrilla operation against the Indian Army in
Nakyal sector after crossing the LoC with 25 fighters from 313 Brigade. They
kidnapped an Indian Army officer and beheaded him. This officer's head was then
paraded in the bazaars of Kotli in PoK.
Ilyas’ deadliest operation took place in
the Akhnoor cantonment in Jammu & Kashmir against the Indian Army following
the massacre of Muslims in Gujarat in 2002. In this, he planned attacks
involving 313 Brigade being divided into two groups. Indian Generals, Brigadiers,
and other senior officials were lured to the scene of the first attack. Two Generals
were injured (in contrast, the Pakistan Army did not manage to injure a single
Indian Army General in three wars), and several Brigadiers and Colonels were
killed. This was one of the most telling setbacks for India in the long-running
insurgency in J & K. With Kashmiri’s immense expertise in India-specific
operations, he stunned Al-Qaeda leaders with the suggestion that expanding the
theatre of war was the only way to overcome the present impasse. He presented
the suggestion of conducting such a massive operation inside India that it
would bring India and Pakistan to war. With that, all proposed operations
against Al-Qaeda would be brought to a grinding halt. Al-Qaeda excitedly
approved the proposal to attack India. Kashmiri then handed over the plan to a
very able former Pakistan Army Major fom the Special Service Group (SSG),
Haroon Ashik, who was also a former LeT commander who was still very close to
LeT chiefs Zakiur Rahman Lakhvi and Abu Hamza. Haroon knew about a contingency
ISI plan for a low-profile routine proxy operation in India through LeT in the
event of an all-out war between India and Pakistan. It had been in the pipeline
for several years prior to 9/11, but the eventual official Pakistan policy was
to drop it. The former Army Major, with the help of Ilyas Kashmiri’s men in
India, hijacked this very ISI contingency plan and turned it into the
devastating attacks that shook Mumbai on November 26, 2008 and brought Pakistan
and India to the brink of war. According to investigations, the attackers travelled
across the Arabian Sea from Karachi, hijacked the Indian fishing trawler Kuber,
killing the crew, then entered Mumbai in a rubber dinghy. The first events took
place at around 20:00 Indian Standard Time (1ST) on November 26, 2008, when ten
Urdu-speaking men in inflatable speedboats came ashore at two locations in
Colaba. They targetted the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, the Leopold Cafe, the
Taj Mahal and Oberoi Trident hotels, and the Jewish Centre in Nariman House.
They held people hostage and then killed them. The drama continued for almost
72 hours. The entire world was stunned by 26/11. It was almost identical to
9/11 in that it aimed to provoke India to invade Pakistan in the same manner as
9/11 prompted the US to attack Afghanistan. The purpose of 26/11 was to
distract Pakistan’s attention from the ‘War on Terror’, thereby allowing Al-Qaeda
the space to manipulate its war against NATO in Afghanistan.
However, the decision-makers in
Washington had read between the lines. They rushed to India and Pakistan to
calm nerves and prevented a war from breaking out. Significantly though, during
the time Pakistan and India stood eye-to-eye, the fighting between Pakistan’s
military and Al-Qaeda militants came to a complete halt. While the sword of an
Indian invasion was hanging over the head of Pakistan, the militants were
saying Qunut-e-Nazla (prayers in days of war) that they would not be forced to
fight against a Muslim army. They prayed that Al-Qaeda and the Pakistan Army
would join and fight India together, instead. Timely US intervention had
prevented this, but while the Pakistan military was readying for a showdown
with India, the terrorists availed themselves of the opportunity to mount
attacks on NATO supply-lines in the Khyber Agency. This left Pakistan with no
choice but to close down the transportation link between Pakistan and
Afghanistan for several days during December 2008. This had a devastating
effect on the NATO forces in Afghanistan, especially those based in the
provinces of Ghazni, Wardak, and Helmand. NATO troops there faced serious fuel
shortages and had to suspend operations. Due to the tense situation on its
eastern borders with India, Pakistan’s participation in ‘Operation Lion Heart’
was tepid, and it was forced to strike a deal with the Pakistani Taliban, on
their terms, in Swat at the beginning of 2009. Several actions followed, including
a new operation in the Swat Valley, operations in South Waziristan and Mohmand,
and the killing of Baitullah Mehsud. But these did not faze the militants.
Their retaliation came in the form of an attack on the GHQ in Rawalpindi on October
10, 2009, and a high-profile massacre of some of Pakistan’s military officers
in Rawalpindi’s military mosque during Friday prayers on December 4, 2009.
TAKFEER AND KHURUJ: AN IDEOLOGICAL THESIS FOR THE
SEPARATION OF ISLAMISTS AND STATES
Do Muslim ruling elites whose external
policies support a non-Muslim government against another Muslim state remain
Muslim according to Islamic tenets? Or are they expelled from Islam? Can an
army comprising Muslim soldiers but committing atrocities against fellow
Muslims who are fighting a war against an invasion by a non-Muslim army be
called Muslim? Do Muslim masses who deny the Muslim political order of a
Caliphate and instead follow Western liberal democracy, monarchy, socialism, or
any other human-made political systems remain Muslim? Or, after adopting any
such non-Islamic political system, are they driven out of the Islamic faith?
Can Muslim individuals or Muslim masses who adopt a Western lifestyle giving up
Muslim rituals still be called Muslim, or are they non -Muslim? There have been
many publications over the past 20 years in which these questions have been
raised and discussed at length. The conclusion arrived at by one strain of this
debate is that barring small clusters in Muslim societies, the majority of the
people who call themselves Muslims have in fact given up Islam. This has not
come from purely academic debate, or sectarian discussion of a particular
clerical order, but is factually the basis of Al-Qaeda’s ideology which today
paradoxically aims at the polarisation of society in the Muslim world and is
strategizing its future struggle in line with that. The continuing debate and
the conclusions reached spring from the rediscovery of a thought process drawn
from classical Islamic academic work on the situations in which the Muslim
world has found itself in the post-Caliphate era. But what brought the matter
to a head was the little publicized siege of the Grand Mosque of Mecca in 1979,
when a small band of Muslims briefly gained control of the commanding mosque to
instigate a rebellion against the Saudi regime. The revolt was brutally crushed
by the Saudi Arabian monarchy, but it fired the imagination of many a Muslim
youth who had gone to fight the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. While fighting
the war against the ‘godless’ Soviets in Afghanistan, their understanding of
the contemporary world sharpened, and their struggle to revive the Muslim
Caliphate intensified, drawing inspiration from the 1979 Mecca siege. Al-Qaeda
ideologues mark this siege as the first true Khuruj (rising against a Muslim
ruler of un-Islamic governance) in the 20th century. Muslim youths drawn into
Afghanistan had already began working on procedures to change the dynamics of
the Muslim world through reading books written by classical Muslim jurists, as
well as modern Muslin academics, and the Mecca siege spurred them on.
After the withdrawal of Soviet Russia
from Afghanistan in 1989, these young militants who had fought in Afghanistan,
laid the foundations for the Al-Qaedatul Jihad, a global Muslim resistance
movement for the liberation of all Muslim-occupied lands from Western presence
and/or influence, for the revival of the Muslim Caliphate. However, they
realized that before the West could be confronted effectively there was need to
ignite controversy over whether contemporary Muslim states should be recognised
as Islamic in their collective thinking and practices. This was the beginning
of Al-Qaeda’s manoeuvres to polarize the Muslim world and then re-structure
Islamic society under the Al-Qaeda umbrella after gaining control of the
resources available to ensure their rise to the helm of affairs in the Muslim
world. Al-Qaeda anticipated three possible results emerging from this
ideological spin:
• Pressure on the ruling Muslim elite,
Muslim armies, and the Muslim masses to break their alliance with the West and
support the Islamists’ cause of a global struggle for the freedom of occupied
Muslim lands and establishment of a Global Caliphate.
• Muslim societies so polarized that
their governments’ support for Western forces against Muslim resistance
movements would weaken and ultimately
become inconsequential.
• Islamist elements of society emerging
victorious and launching a direct confrontation against the West’s hegemony
over the world order for the liberation of Muslim territories through the
establishment of a global Muslim political order under a Caliphate.
Any one of the above mentioned
situations was acceptable to Al-Qaeda. Al-Qaeda sought to bring the
contradictions between Muslim states and societies, and the differences in
their approach to international affairs, under a single dialectic for a common
pattern of struggle, but in fact this dialectical process had emerged as the
natural consequence of situations which had developed in the post-Caliphate
era. The institution of the Muslim Caliphate after 661 AD (when the fourth
Caliph, Ali Bin Abu Talib, was assassinated and the Caliphate became
controversial) was symbolic rather than a model of righteousness. Yet until the
last Ottoman Caliph, it had united Muslims as the vanguard for their collective
interests, especially for the defense of Muslim lands. On the demise of the
Ottoman Caliphate, however, the majority of Muslim states were conquered by
Western powers, and even after they had been liberated, they followed Western
models of governance with their foreign and defence policies subservient and
aligned to Western interests. Although most Arabs welcomed the end of the
Ottoman Caliphate because of its strong
Turkish, rather than Arab, identity, the single largest population of the
Muslim world in British India took exception to the Caliphate’s demise. In that
period Dr Muhammad Iqbal was one of the few who aroused feelings through his
poetry to remind Muslims they were one nation and spelled out resistance
against foreign occupation forces through Jihad. Iqbal also voiced opposition
to a Western form of democracy, even for the modern Muslim state. Islamic
movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood in the Middle East and Jamaat-e-Islami
in South Asia, in the 1920s and 1930s respectively, endorsed Iqbal’s message.
Thus when several Muslim majority states were carved out subsequent to the
Ottoman Caliphate, questions relating to their Islamic identity were raised,
albeit on a milder note than Al-Qaeda’s, with heresy decrees not easily issued.
The founder of Jamaat-e-Islami, Syed Abul Ala Maududi, one of the most
important Muslim ideologues of the Islamic movements in the world at the time,
ruled that: If an Islamic society consciously resolves not to accept the
Sharia, and decides to enact its own constitution and laws or borrows them from
any other source in disregard of the Sharia, such a society breaks its contract
with God and forfeits its right to be called ‘Islamic’.
Ideologues of Islamic movements like
Maududi and Syed Qutb stated unambiguously that Islamic laws should be enforced
in absolute form in Muslim societies, yet their approach was not as direct,
harsh, or as frontal as began after the Mecca siege in 1979. Before this, the
issues facing Islamic movements were the revival of the Muslim political order
with a Caliphate, the imposition of Islamic laws, and the liberation of Muslim
territories from foreign occupation. But the 1979 Egypt-Israel peace agreement
and the subsequent suppression of Palestinians in Jordan and Egypt shook the
Muslim world. Resentment grew as several Muslim countries forged diplomatic
ties with Israel and suppressed Muslim resistance groups, especially after
Saudi Arabia struck a defence agreement with the US in 1990 and invited US
forces into the country. The Saudi government then rounded up all the Muslim
scholars who stood in opposition to this. The climax of the controversy
camewith the US invasion in 2001 of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, which
was recognised by a majority of Muslim scholars as an Islamic state. The US
invasion of Afghanistan was approved by many Muslim countries, including
Afghanistan’s neighbour, Pakistan. The US next invaded Iraq in 2003, and was
supported by Muslim countries like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait, which
further aggravated the situation.
Al-Qaeda never considered Juhayman ibn
Sayf al Otaibi, the leader of famous siege of Mecca on November 20, 1979, as an
ideologue or a leader. Neither did it approve of Muhammad bin abd Allah
al-Qahtani, whom Juhayman declared as al-Mahdi, as the real al-Mahdi, or the
redeemer of Islam. However, this almost forgotten 20th century siege is
accepted by the Al-Qaeda leadership as the event that fired the imagination of
Islamists everywhere and revived the long quiescent Islamic tenet of khuruj
(revolt against a deviant Muslim ruler). Hussein bin Ali, the grandson of the
holy Prophet, launched the first khuruj against the Umayyad ruler Yazid Bin
Mauvya after Yazid took over the Caliphate under a hereditary arrangement,
against the will of the majority of Muslims. The khuruj continued throughout
the periods of the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, but failed to remove the
governments. Al-Qaeda examined a strategy for the breaking of ties between the
West and the ruling Muslim elite in the modern day, and organised a powerful
Muslim backlash against Western culture, civilization, and the West’s influence
in the Muslim world. Although Juhayman’s khuruj was suppressed by the Saudi
regime (with the help of French and Jordanian commandos), this first day of the
14th century of the Islamic calendar marked the revolt as a unique event which
left an indelible imprint on the minds of Muslim militants and reminded them
that Muslim regimes in the post-Ottoman Caliphate era were the first line of
defense of Western interests, and therefore were to be eradicated. The
literature prepared for the revolt against the Saudi regime thus became the basis
of Al-Qaeda’s analysis of the contemporary Muslim world and its relations with
the West, and Al-Qaeda subsequently developed a dialectical process which would
ultimately create the circumstances required for the ‘End of Time’ battles.
The siege, in fact, came at a critical
juncture. This was the period when the writings of Muslim ideologues had
inspired Islamic movements to rear a new generation of young Muslim radicals
divorced from the prevalent orders in nearly every Muslim majority state. These
radicals read Syed Qutb in the Middle East, Syed Abul Ala Maududi in South
Asia, and Dr Ali Shariati in Shiite majority Iran, and although they appeared
divided on the micro-issue of jurisprudence (Shiite, Sunni, and Salafi and Sufi
Islam), neither the ideologues nor their adherents differed on the need for a
united Muslim world. For instance, Syed Qutb was an Egyptian, but he was
impressed by Syed Abul Ala Maududi, a South Asian, and his writings reflect a
strong impression of Maududi’s analysis written in the 1930s and 1940s.
Similarly Dr Ali Shariati, a Shiite from Iran, drew inspiration from Syed
Qutb’s work, as well as from the Indian Sunni Muslim Dr Muhammad Iqbal’s
poetry. At the crossroads of the new Islamic century, these half-century- long
ideological struggles fused into the powerful events in the 20th century, which
actually turned the historical course and jolted the fundamental dynamics of
Muslim-majority states and their foreign policies.
The siege of Mecca occurred between the
Iranian Islamic revolution in February 1979 and the beginning of the Afghan
national Islamic resistance on December 27, 1979, when the then-USSR occupied
Afghanistan. The fusion of all three developments in Iran, Afghanistan, and
Mecca in the same year came at the time of the new Islamic century, and set the
next stage to a point from which the armed struggle in Afghanistan had
attracted Muslim youths from all over the world, while Iran’s Islamic
revolution presented itself as a model anti-Western Islamic government. In short,
by the end of 1979, the world had drastically changed and new forces were
emerging on the international horizon to challenge the Western ‘hegemonic’
order. The catalyst for this change, turning it into a dialectical process, was
the Mecca uprising of 1979. This failed uprising against the Wahhabi Saudi
government simultaneously instigated an academic debate within the circles of
Muslim brigades fighting in Afghanistan about the credibility of Muslim
regimes. These brigades now began to debate whether the incumbent Muslim
governments would promote Islamic values only to the level where those values
would not harm their own interests, leading them to sponsor a disconnect with
Islam while harmonizing with Western interests. The siege of Mecca on November
20, 1979 did not instigate a revolution as the rebels only numbered 400 to 500
and thus did not have the strength to topple the Saudi regime, but it did bring
connecting questions into the foreground. At the same time it established the
intellectual grounds for the next generation of Al-Qaeda activists to
orchestrate the future struggle.
After the failed uprising and subsequent
execution of Juhayman, his Seven Letters, which had been printed and published
in booklet form in 1978, were distributed widely in the Arab world. The basic
tenets of Saba Rasail (the Arabic title) were to model procedures along the
lines of the Prophet Muhammad’s struggle for Islam. This included inviting
people to join Islam, organising them, and then migrating to a secure base to launch
the movement for Islam’s domination. Juhayman traced classical Muslim
literature, which called for the overthrow of corrupt leadership. He believed
that the Muslim leadership should come from the Arab tribe of Quraish and must
be elected by Muslims. He emphasized the practice of the Islamic faith
according to the Quran and the Sunnab (the revelations and practices of the
Prophet Muhammad) and not the rigid interpretations of scholars and their
incorrect teachings. He also advised his followers to move away from the
prevalent socio-political systems and refuse official positions. Juhayman
believed in the advent of the Mahdi (the promised reformer) from the lineage of
the Prophet Muhammad to lead the revolt against corrupt leadership, and
targeted taking Saudi Arabia towards the teachings of Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahhab
(1703-1792), the Muslim scholar who had in fact backed the Al Saud family to
seize control of Hijaz. Wahhab placed particular emphasis on monotheism by
rejecting all the Shiite rituals of worshiping the Prophet Muhammad’s family
members, including Ali, Fatimah, Hassan, and Hussain. Juhayman also condemned
music and television, and last but not least, proposed establishing an Islamic
state in Saudi Arabia which would disclaim all alliances with non-Muslim
states.
Juhayman’s teachings were not new. There
had been hundreds of Muslim organisations in the 20th century that put forward
identical views. What distinguished the Juhayman-led uprising of 1979 from the
other Islamic cleansing movements, however, was that he developed it to the
point of issuing literature, and organised a team before launching his
operation. The Seven Letters were of special interest to young Arab Muslims who
fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Copies were distributed in the Arab
Mujahideen camps and became their most important political guide—as important
as Chairman Mao’s ‘Little Red Book’ for the Communist movement—to prompt
political discourse on affairs in Muslim-majority states. Brought under instant
review were prevalent corruption, non-Islamic practices, and alliances with
Western governments. At the same time, Arab militants were critical of Juhayman
on several counts. For example, they objected to his recognizing Muhammad bin
abd Allah al-Qahtani as al-Mahdi, and criticized his ill-prepared operation,
which had been organised in haste. But it remained a fact that this rebellion,
especially because of its ideological moorings, had a huge impact on Arab
fighters and their future political strategy. The uprising was considered
crucial to highlight the existing contradictions in Muslim societies and thus
heighten polarization in Muslim states.
Palestine has been the main schism
between the West and the Muslim world in the post-Ottoman Caliphate era. It is
at the same time a critical rallying point for Muslims the world over, as
Palestine is considered the second most sacred site in Islam after Hijaz. This
makes it as important a legacy as the Caliphate at the various Islamic forums,
especially the World Islamic Congress (Moatamar Alam-e-Islami), the
Rabita-e-Alam-e-Islami (International Islamic Coordination Committee), and the
Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC). The political and strategic policies
pursued by Arab rulers on the Palestine issue over the years are denounced by
Islamic militants as corrupt for the defeats suffered by the Arabs in
successive Arab-Israel wars, while the peace agreement signed by Egypt with
Israel in 1979, which established diplomatic relations between the two
countries is a festering sore. The militants read these developments through
the prism of Juhayman’s Seven Letters, which denounce the ruling apparatus of
the apostate Muslim-majority states. They then draw out prospective
retaliations against them from the Mecca uprising under kburuj. There has been
a long history of bloodshed between Islamic militants and the rulers of Arab
states. After the Egypt-Israel peace agreement and restoration of diplomatic
ties, a new wave of agitation erupted in Egypt. This was not restricted to a
few events of sporadic violence. The Islamic Jihad of Egypt planned a coup for
the removal of President Anwar Sadat, whom the militants branded an apostate
after he had signed the peace agreement with Israel. The consequential coup
plan included the capture of key strategic points in Cairo and President
Sadat’s assassination. Different cells were assigned to different jobs. But the
reports of the revolt were leaked and hundreds of militants were rounded up
before the coup could be launched. Despite this, a secret cell of the militants
led by Khalid Islamboli killed Sadat during a military parade.
By the mid-1980s the contradictions in
the Muslim world had broadened further. The ruling elite of the Muslim majority
states was Arab nationalist, monarchist, and tilted towards Western models of
governance: dictatorships or democracy. By and large they had lost their charm
with their corrupt practices and bad governance. At the same time, Muslim
groups, who had been badly mauled in the Middle East, and to some extent in South
Asia, regrouped. The Muslim Brotherhood leadership was in exile in Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and UAE, and its middle cadre, comprising astute
professionals such as doctors, engineers, and teachers, migrated to North
America and Europe and began working for the Islamist cause from fresh
perspectives. In Afghanistan Islamic militants were rapidly gaining ground, and
in Pakistan the Islamist Gen Zia-ul-Haq had taken over after executing his
rival, the former Premier Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, in 1979. Zia then proceeded with
the Islamization of the country, and promoted ultra-radical Islamist resistance
factions like Gulbaddin Hikmatyar’s Hizb-i-Islami which had operated in
Afghanistan against the Soviet invasion. Pakistan had been the strategic
backyard of the Mujahideen’s resistance against the Soviets. It now became the
strategic backyard of the militants. Zia established an International Islamic
University in the country, where he invited scholars affiliated with the Muslim
Brotherhood and known to beultra-radical. One of those scholars was Dr Abdullah
Azzam, a Palestinian, who later established Maktab Al-Khidamat, a services
bureau, for the recruitment and deployment of Arab youths in Afghanistan.
By the mid-1980s young Egyptian Arabs
from the Muslim Brotherhood, Palestinian resistance movements, and Muslim
separatist groups from the Philippines as well as Burma (Myanmar), had been
admitted to the International Islamic University for enlightenment on Islam.
Their real objective, however, was to join the circles of Dr Abdullah Azzam and
other teachers in pursuit of an international Islamic struggle against Western
domination. From the Islamic University these students went to Peshawar’s
Services Bureau and then on to the militant camps in Afghanistan. That way thousands
of Muslim youths acquired hands-on training in the art of war, a refined
worldview from the Islamic perspective, and the political strategic insight to
raise the struggle to the next level. In this highly charged ultra-radical
political atmosphere a new generation of radical Muslims were reared. Several
other events then developed on the international front which strengthened the
argument of the militants against the ruling elite in Muslim majority states.
The most important of these was the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990. This
invasion added fuel to the fire. Saudi Arabia sought the help of the US and
deployed US soldiers in Saudi Arabia, fearing a possible Iraqi attack. All the
smaller Arab states, including Kuwait and Jordan, supported the US counter-attack
and invasion of Saddam’s Iraq, and international economic sanctions against his
regime. The US invasion of Afghanistan followed after 9/11, and was supported
by Pakistan through the provision of vital logistic help. This set the stage
for a broadening of the division between the Muslim state apparatus and the
Muslim militants. All of the events from 1979 onwards were being analyzed in
international militant camps in Afghanistan, while the Mecca uprising and the
Seven Letters of Juhayman were the essential components of the analysis on
strategy. However, the analysis was conducted at a different level, as the
militants in Afghanistan were living in a freer environment than Juhayman. They
had a lot more time and space to expand arguments for a full-fledged war
strategy. They had bases, arms, and ammunition, and with these resources their
dialectical process was much more advanced and better thought out than
Juhayman’s. Then their perspective was not restricted to one state. They had
the entire Muslim world in sight for the global battle against the West.
The former USSR had been defeated in
Afghanistan and forced to withdraw its forces in 1989. It left behind a weak
communist government which collapsed in the early 1990s. A Mujahideen
government followed. All of the Muslim radical groups around the world waited
to see what would follow. The world environment was primed for Islamic
radicalism. A new Islamic front, Hamas, was forged in 1987. It resurrected the
Palestinian resistance movement under an Islamic banner. From 1989 onwards,
Islamist factions trained in Afghanistan launched a separatist movement in J
& K. The Abu Sayyaf group, trained in Afghanistan, stirred things up in The
Philippines. Chechen separatists, again trained in Afghanistan, regrouped under
the Islamic flag and resurrected their all but dead separatist movement.
Similar separatist movements sprang up under the green crescent in Eritrea and
Burma. Thousands of youths fell into line over Jihad in Pakistan, India, and
Bangladesh. Within a few years, Islamic seminaries popped up all over Pakistan
and Bangladesh. Students poured in from the newly liberated Central Asian
Muslim majority republics, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Europe. Different Islamic
groups like Hizbut Tehrir surfaced in the Central Asian Republics.
Pakistan, previously a strategic
backyard of the Afghan resistance against the USSR, was the country most
affected by the new wave of Islamism. Islamic seminaries in Pakistan were
traditional, but the new Islamic trends reared a different generation of
students who had been given the opportunity to fight against the Soviets and so
were fully bloodied. These students became the faculty of the Islamic
seminaries and turned the seminaries from seats of Islamic learning into ultra-radical
Islamic nests. One example is the Jamiatul Islamia, Binori Town, in Karachi.
The Binori Town seminary had always been considered one of the most respected
seats of Islamic learning of the Deoband school of thought. It had produced
several leading Islamic jurists and scholars. However, in the 1990s the
seminary became associated with the ultra-radical Islamic thought process. This
was not because it had altered its syllabus, but because some of students from
there had gone to fight against the USSR in Afghanistan and accepted the
influences of students from more radical seminaries present there. Many of
these students later became teachers in the Binori Town seminary and influenced
the minds of their students accordingly. For instance, Mufti Nizamuddin Shamzai
joined the Binori Town seminary as teacher and changed the dynamics of the
seminary, turning it into a Jihadi hotspot. After his assassination in 2004,
the Binori Town seminary once again became a seat of learning rather than a
Jihadi breeding ground. The Jamia Farooqia in Karachi, another top Islamic
seminary, recorded an identical history, as did the Akora Khattak seminary in
the north and other larger or smaller Islamic seminaries around the country.
By 1994, Afghan students in the Islamic
seminaries had taken a firm stand against Afghan warlords and their vandalism
in Afghanistan. By 1996 they had raised the flag of the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan. This upped the radicalization of Islamic seminaries and mosque
networks in Pakistan. However, all these developments from the late 1980s to
the mid-1990s did not necessarily directly benefit Al-Qaeda, albeit they were
there for them to manipulate. Pakistan’s military establishment was quick to
act, and vied for the control over the Afghan Taliban (student militia) and its
government in Kabul. Pakistan’s military establishment then built bridges with
Islamic seminaries, while the ISI assigned special cells to control Jihadi
organisations and streamline their activities exclusively for its ‘bleed India’
plan. Pakistan’s establishment declared Afghanistan to be its ‘strategic depth’
zone, and established training centres for Kashmir-centric separatist groups to
implement its national security agenda.
Iraq’s Saddam Hussein regime, Iran’s
Islamic government, the Syrian government, and the Saudi monarchy all developed
close ties with Palestinian Islamists such as Islamic Jihad and Hamas. The
nexus of Islamic groups and the Muslim countries’ ruling elites, and their
strategy and designs from the developments since the Afghan Jihad against
Soviet Russia, were seen by Al-Qaeda as narrow strategic gains by the ruling
regimes of the Muslim-majority states to consolidate their hold. That situation
necessitated a strategy that would separate all the newly propped-up Islamic
factions from statecraft and bring them under Al-Qaeda. Takfeer (declaring them
apostate) was the best way in which to serve this cause. From the mid-1990s
carefully crafted literature was published and circulated. The basis of this
new literature was classical Islamic concepts based on Quranic teachings, the
Prophet Muhammad’s sayings and practices, and the traditions of the Prophet
Muhammad’s companions. The verdicts and opinions of Muslim academics and
jurists over the last 1,400 years were also taken into account. The literature
applied these concepts to contemporary issues of the post-Ottoman Caliphate
era, analyzing the secular democratization of the Muslim world, the personal
pursuits of monarchial regimes, and their doctrines on the foreign policy
front. Interestingly, and contrary to the literature promoted by the Islamic
movements in the 20th century, whose target audience was the educated urban
youths of the Muslim society, Al-Qaeda’s target audience was not the commoner
but the cadre of society that already practiced Islam. Al-Qaeda worked to
convince these Islamists of the heresy of contemporary beliefs and systems and
the prevalent foreign policies in the Muslim world, and incite them to revolt
against their rulers. At the same time, this new literature did not aim to
promote basic monotheist values in tune with the ritualistic perspectives of
Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahhab, the Muslim scholar from Arabian Peninsula and
ideologue of the House of Al Saud who helped found the Saudi dynasty. Instead,
the new literature developed, combined the ideas of Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahhab
with the thoughts of Ibn Taymiyya (1263-1328), a Muslim academic, reformist,
and the leader of resistance against the Tartar invasion, in a broader
political context. A natural characteristic of the Islamic resistance is that
its strategy and struggle have always been interlinked with ideological
writings. During the Ottoman decline, Muslim intellectuals like Muhammad Abdahu
of Egypt, Syed Jamal al-Din al- Afghani, and Dr Muhammad Iqbal from India,
worked for the promotion of pan-Islamism which gave birth to new Islamic
movements. The literature they produced indirectly turned the cycles of the
events after 50 years of struggle to shape the Islamic revolution in Iran, the Afghan
Jihad, and the Mecca uprising. Similarly, after the decline of the Mughals in
South Asia, the writing of Shah Waliullah (1703-1762) had analyzed the causes
for the social and political decline of the Muslims in South Asia, and now
provided a strong base for Syed Ahmad Barelvi’s revival of the Jihadi movement
against the Sikh dynasty in the Muslim-majority regions of Pakistan’s Punjab
and former North West Frontier Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa).
Shah Ismail (Syed Ahmad Barelvi’s
lieutenant, the grandson of Shah Waliullah, and the ideologue of the movement)
wrote his book, Taqwiyat-ul-Iman, before the battle against the Sikh dynasty.
The book redefined the Islamic faith, culture, and traditions, creating
considerable controversy in a section of the Muslim society at the time it was
written. There was a special reason for writing this book: the Muslims of India
had always been considered as foreign invaders from Central Asia. Their
indigenisation and acceptance began during the Mughal era at the time of the
Emperor Akbar. A newly evolved Hindustani language, Urdu, was introduced beside
Persian. Urdu was influenced by local languages such as Sanskrit. Similarly
Muslims became influenced by the Hindu and Sikh cultures. This influence
penetrated the orders of Muslim minorities, and rituals like the qawwali
(religious song), which was similar to the Hindu bhajans (devotional music),
became part of Muslim tradition. The lines of demarcation in thought and
culture between the Muslims and the other inhabitants of India became thin.
Shah Ismail, the ideologue of the Tehrik-e-Mujahadeen, had to create ground
among the Muslims to fight against the Sikhs. In his book Taqwiyat-ul-Iman he
redefined the faith, negated all the influences which had permeated from Hindu society,
and tried to explain to the Muslims of India how different they were from
Indian society at large. This feeling of distinctiveness has always been
necessary to pitch one nation against the other. Shah Ismail accomplished this
mission by stressing Muslim monotheism in polytheist Hindu India. Through this
strategy he was able to persuade the thousands of irregulars who went to Punjab
to fight against the Sikh dynasty. In pursuit of similar objectives, Al-Qaeda
was no different from past Jihadi movements. Syed Qutb’s literature provided a
base for Al-Qaeda, but before it could initiate its struggle, the flashpoint of
which was 9/11, its ideologues redefined faith. The situation, however, was
different from the time of Barelvi’s movement. The Mughal Empire was close to
collapse at the time—its writ virtually non-existent. Al-Qaeda operates in the
middle of strong states. It follows, therefore, that Al-Qaeda would employ the
tougher tactics of Ibn Taymiyya, a Muslim academic of the 13th century who was the
ideologue and the commander of the Muslim resistance against the Mongols.
Tayamiyya also redefined faith even as he emphasized the monotheist values of
Islam to bring Islamic distinctiveness under the spotlight against Mongol
traditions, to inspire Muslims to fight the Mongol occupation of Baghdad.
Initially Al-Qaeda made use of Muhammad
Bin Abdul Wahhab’s literature with its emphasis on Islam’s monotheist values.
But there was a flaw in Wahhab’s writing, in that while it provided some basic
themes like the concepts of wala wal bara (the benchmark for friendships and
foes—in che context of alliances and treaties with non-Muslims), Wahhab was the
ideologue of the House of Al Saud, which fought against the Muslim Ottoman
Caliphate. Nobody could ignore that fact that Wahhab was used against the
Ottoman Empire to incite the Muslim masses against Sufi-oriented Islam, which
he thought to be close to polytheism. Thus Wahhab, perhaps unintentionally,
facilitated the fall of the Caliphate and paved the way for colonial rule.
Al-Qaeda thus felt the need for a different form of text which would document
Islam’s monotheist distinction from modern secular and/or polytheistic orders
of democracy and monarchy to promote its dialectic in the battle against the
West. This redefinition of the Islamic faith began after the collapse of the
communist regime in Afghanistan. The new literature documented the
distinctiveness of monotheist values against polytheism as well as the secular
Western political order. It aimed at drawing Muslims away from the Western
cultural ethos and values. As a result, polarization was imminent in those
Muslim societies which had been seriously influenced by the West. By the time
of 9/11, which marked the beginning of the war, the foundations of an ideological
perspective for Islamic renaissance had already built through new Al-Qaeda
literature.
9/11 created friction around the globe
and initially divided the world into two camps: those who were with the United
States and those who were anti-US. This divide impacted Muslim societies where
the ruling classes were still close to the West, and after this defining
moment, the Muslim ruling classes and the broad masses stood divided. In the
coming years Al-Qaeda worked to sharpen this divide to pave the way for revolts
in Muslim societies in order to weaken the support of Muslim establishments for
the US war against Al-Qaeda. On the strategic front, Al-Qaeda had successfully
stung the US with 9/11. The US invaded Afghanistan and, according to Al-Qaeda,
the trap was sprung. However, the strategy would have failed had Al-Qaeda not
explored the dialectic of events beyond 9/11, which was to reinforce the
ideological divide in Muslim societies. It embarked on this mission by
enlisting the services of Islamist-minded officers in the armed forces and
influential clerics in the religious parties and religious schools in Muslim
countries. It then looked to gather resources to launch a long war against the
US in Afghanistan. Academics associated with Al-Qaeda-authored literature laid
down the rules of faith and heresy for a Muslim, but there were other brains at
work on the dialectical front. Al-Qaeda aimed at creating a Muslim backlash
against the anticipated Western retaliation to the 9/1 1 attack, but was
equally cognizant of the fact that even in the Muslim world, there would be
divided reactions, because of the political, military, and economic dependency
of Muslim regimes on the West. In countries like Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Pakistan, and Kuwait, this became a flagrant reality. Thus there was never any
belief in the Al-Qaeda camp that once the US reacted to 9/11, pro-Western
Muslim regimes would be able to remain ‘non-aligned’. Al-Qaeda was 100% sure
that once Washington decided on war against Al-Qaeda, the ruling regimes in the
Muslim world would have no option but to align themselves with Washington.
The 9/11 attacks were thus organised for
a particular purpose: to provoke the US and bring it into the Afghan trap. A
Muslim backlash was certain to follow, and eventually this would lead to a
direct confrontation between the West and the Muslim world. Al-Qaeda also
understood that bringing the US war machine into the vastness of the hostile
Afghan mountain wilderness was an imperative. But it was equally aware that this
would not signal victory. Victory against the West required a long struggle,
planning, and a winning war strategy. This in turn would require resources, but
all the known resources were under the control of the West-aligned Muslim regimes.
Therefore the second most important objective of Al-Qaeda’s strategy in the
wake of the 9/11 attack and the retaliation to it was to discredit the ruling
Muslim regimes by bringing up the contradictions inherent in their political
alliances with the West. Once these Muslim regimes’ real allegiance towards the
West was exposed, Takfeer would be the weapon Al-Qaeda employed to isolate them
from the Muslim masses. Sympathetic sections of the armed forces, religious
parties, and Islamic seminaries would then be activated against the ruling
elites and more easily moved to join forces with Al-Qaeda in its fight against
the West globally! Takfeer also aimed at gathering in and employing all of the
Muslim world’s resources against the Western occupation forces. But Al-Qaeda
well understood that it would be a slow and tedious process, and a long-term
academic exercise, to topple the ruling regimes in Muslim-majority states.
Still, the goal was clearly to bring about Islamic revolution and pave the way
for the revival of the Muslim Caliphate to orchestrate the global Jihad. The
struggle for the revival of the global Muslim Caliphate that ran from the 1920s
to the 1970s was the first phase of an ideological movement to purge Western
thought from Muslim minds. However, by the 1970s Islamic revival movements in
Muslim countries had started to succumb to the persuasion of Western
‘democracy’. Earlier, the ideologue of the Islamic movements, Syed Abul Ala
Maududi, had declared democracy the best vehicle for Islamization. He felt that
once the Islamic forces seized power through the electoral process, they would
make fundamental changes in the constitution to enforce Islam, leaving only
Islamists to participate in politics. Thus secular democracy would purged from
the system. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt subscribed to a similar thought
process in the 1970s. The siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1970 ended
this, and revived the ideas of Khuruj (revolt against the deviant Muslim
ruler). This finally matured in 1980s and 1990s in the camps of the militants
of Afghanistan, where the sum of the post-Caliphate-era dialectic was put to
the test. The Egyptian camp comprised those who were both politically and
ideologically motivated. Though most had belonged to the Muslim Brotherhood,
they disagreed with that organisation for its insistence on trying to change
society through the democratic processes and elections. The Afghan Jihad served
to bind the like-minded, many of them doctors and engineers. Others were former
personnel of the Egyptian Army associated with various underground Egyptian movements
like the Islamic Jihad of al-Zawahiri (Osama bin Laden’s deputy). As mentioned
earlier, this group had been responsible for the assassination of President
Sadat in 1981 after he had signed the peace deal with Israel at Camp David. All
were agreed on a single point: the reason for the fall of the Arab nation was
the United States and puppet governments in the Middle East. This Egyptian camp
was in the hands of al-Zawahiri. After Ishaak prayers those assembled would sit
and discuss contemporary issues in the Arab world. It bears repeating that one
of the messages the leaders drummed home was that members should invest their
resources in the armies of Muslim countries, and ideologically motivate the
best brains to be found there.
In the mid-1990s, when then Afghan
President Professor Burhanuddin Rabbani and his powerful Minister of Defence,
Ahmed Shah Masoud, allowed Osama bin Laden to move from Sudan to Afghanistan,
the Egyptian camp drew in several of its better strategists from across the
world to Afghanistan. There they ran maaskars (training camps), studied, and
taught strategy for the future fight. By the time the Taliban had emerged as a
force in Afghanistan in the mid-1990s, the Egyptian camp had settled on their
strategy, underscoring the following two points:
• to speak out against corrupt and
despotic Muslim governments and make them targets, as this would destroy their
image in the eyes of the common people.
• to focus on the role of the United
States, which was to support Israel and tyrannical Middle Eastern countries,
and make everyone aware of this fact.
However, identical ideas had been
projected by the Muslim Brotherhood earlier. The Arab militants in Afghanistan
were reading Syed Qutb’s literature, with his book Milestone featuring
foremost. (Syed Qutb was an ideologue of Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood who was
executed by Nasser’s regime in 1966 for writing rebellious literature including
Milestone.) Also strongly featured were the books authored by Wahhab. Wahhab’s
writings were still the basic source of monotheist Islamic thinking, and while
the militants argued that Muslim regimes like the one in Saudi Arabia were not
abiding by the rules he had laid down for an Islamic state, the bigger problem
was that Wahhab’s books were written during the period of the Ottoman Empire
and were thus less likely to be effective in the 20th century. Similarly, Syed
Qutb’s literature was a fair foundation for revolutionary ideas, but the
militants felt that a redefinition of Islamic thought through new writings was
required to spell out more clearly the distinctions between Islamic and un-lslamic
policies. This would then be presented as the benchmark for future friendships
and enmities, to negate through Takfeer the existing Muslim regimes’ practices
of friendship with the West and enable the new-construct to complement
Al-Qaeda’s strategy as and when the time of an inevitable split in ideas
materialised. After the defeat of the USSR in Afghanistan, the Arab fighters
looked for the leading role in the Muslim world. They started compiling their
thoughts, and ideas and books like Qawaid Al-Takfeer (Rules of expulsion from
Islam) were published in 1994.
Under the Caliphate all Muslims were one
Ummah (nation) irrespective of caste, creed, and ethnicity. The Caliph was the
head of the state. Under that political order, there were only two nations in
the world: Muslims and non-Muslims. The interests of Muslims were as of one
nation and different from other nations in the world. That mindset prevailed in
the Muslim world for over 1,300 years, but broke in 1920s after the complete
collapse of the Ottoman Caliphate. During the decline of the Ottoman Caliphate,
an era of prolonged Western colonialism was begun for the purpose of dividing
Muslim states into several larger or small countries to be governed under the
colonial order. Even after their independence this colonial order persisted.
Muslims were never to be allowed revert to their old political order. In most
of the Muslim countries Western colonial powers like France, England, and Italy
handed over power to leaderships of a Western mindset. As a result, newly
independent Muslim nations adopted systems of governance inspired by Western
political models, whether dictatorial or democratic. By the end of the 20th
century Islamic political orders, in any shape or form, were considered relics
of the past. In the new world order, all countries were to be nation states
founded on the basis of ethnicity. International relations were to be based on
bargains of mutual interests. This new global order drew in subscribers from
the Muslim world. These subscribers to modernism in the Muslim world were
backed by the international community, with the traditionalist Islamists being
labelled as outcasts. Islamic states all the way from North Africa to the
Asia-Pacific compromised and adopted Western democratic practices to remain in
the international political mainstream. However, an influential segment of
Muslim academia continued to believe in the concept of the Caliphate, and
separated itself from the ‘democratic’ content. The siege of the Grand Mosque
of Mecca in 1979 gave them a boost of confidence, and the subsequent Afghan
Islamic resistance movement against the Soviet invasion provided them with the
opportunity to promote a return to the Caliphate. For ten years, the militants
joined in discussions, and compiled thoughts on ways to counter post-Caliphate
‘innovations’. With that a stream of new literature was published in the 1990s,
following the fall of the communist regime and subsequent to the rule of the
Mujahideen government in Afghanistan.
Several issues have confronted the
Muslim world. Amongst them the one that stands out is the Takfeer of others
(declaring people heretic). However, those who do not fulfill the criterion set
by the classical Muslim scholars for (rightfully) casting the verdicts of Takfeer
only follow the paths of the classical Kharijite sect, which emerged at the
time when the Muslim Caliphate was divided between Ali and Mauviya when both
were embattled against each other. The Kharijites emerged in those days and
specified tough and rigid rules to be followed, and denounced both Ali and
Mauviya as heretic and issued a verdict for the killing of both. Kharijites
marked Takfeer on all non-practicing Muslims and those who indulged in
punishable sins, and then waged battle against them. They adopted the belief of
wala and bara (friendship and enmity with anybody should be on the basis of
Islam), and on that basis gave a blanket ruling that a number of conventional
practices were immoral. However, this was not the belief of the majority of the
Prophet Muhammad’s companions who were thetrue flag bearers of the Prophet
Muhammad’s traditions. The Prophet had earlier identified this deviant sect and
warned that they would fight against every Muslim, yet raise no objection to
idol worshippers. The Prophet had said that if such a sect surfaced in his time
he would denounce them as the Nation of Aad (a pre-Islam nation destroyed
because of its sins). A companion of the Prophet later stressed that the sect
(identified by the Prophet) would apply Quranic verses meant for heretics
against true believers. On the one side now we have groups like Kharijites who
would inflate the issue of Takfeer, and on the other there were groups and
sects like the classical sects of Jhmiya and Marjna, who did not believe in
Takfeer at all, and accepted anybody with a Muslim name as a Muslim, even if
they believe in secularism or communism, and mock Islam and Muslims. Such
people, once their national identity cards are issued showing their religion as
Islam, work for anti-Islamic forces, and nobody dares expel them from Islam.
(Abu Baseer al-Tartusi in the Foreword of Qawaid Al-Takfeer)
Sheikh Abd-al Mun’em Mustafa Halima Abu
Basir aka Abu Baseer al-Tartusi is a Syrian Islamist living in London. He has
been described as a ‘primary Salafi opinion-maker’ guiding the Jihadi movement.
His book Qawaid Al-Takfeer is part of Al-Qaeda’s syllabus, and was one of the
first books which laid down the rules of Takfeer and hence Khuruj (revolt
against deviant Muslim establishments). Written in London in 1994, Tartusi’s
book redefines the Islamic faith. It explains the distinction between Islam’s
monotheism and the polytheism of Western philosophies, encompassing Western
democracy, secularism, and secular monarchies which reject any divine guidance
and depend on human-made laws. The book aims to stir up polarization in Muslim
majority states. It declares as Takfeer all the modern political systems in
Muslim-majority states, along with their foreign and the defence policies.
Tartusi goes through all the basic terminologies. For instance al-kufur
(heresy) is defined in the traditional abstract form, but the explanation comes
in the lower-level definitions of kufur akbar (the bigger heresy), kufur amad
(deliberate heresy), kufur takabur (heresy with snobbery), kufur jahud (venom
against Islamic heresy), and kufar tahli (contradicting Quranic orders). He
interprets these categories of heresies in the political context, and discusses
the role of states that are involved in all those heresies and are therefore
not entitled to be called Muslim states or Muslim societies. Similarly, shirk
(polytheism), fisq (debauchery), zulm (injustice and abuse), nifaq (hypocrisy),
zindaqa (irreligion), irtidad (going back from Islam to heresy), hawa (vagary),
mawalat (supports, alliances), and iman (faith) are enumerated, and definitions
of all those Islamic terms are presented in detail, with each aspect explained
in the light of the Quran, the Prophet Muhammad’s sayings, and through the
interpretations of classical Muslim scholars, to connect the dots in the
contemporary world. For instance, he cites Quranic Al-Toba’s verse number 44
and 45 and then presents Ibn Taymiyya’s interpretation: “In this verse God says
to his Prophet that whosoever asks to leave Jihad are not believers, though
this Quranic commandment is for those people who actually sought permission to
leave Jihad. The commandment is harsher on those who abandoned Jihad on their
own without seeking any permission.” Tartusi adds the spice to Taymiyya’s
interpretation in the modern-day world context: what is supposed to be the
commandment against those who are against Jihad? ... the commandments about
those who call the Mujahideen terrorists, criminals, and gangsters .... Those
who put pseudo conditions for waging Jihad, for example, Jihad can only be
waged by the state authority-a state authority which is established on a
democratic system of governance which is itself based on un-Islamic and
ignorant percepts ... undoubtedly these people are hypocrites and deprived of
faith. Those who prevent people from Jihad should make themselves accountable,
restrain themselves from supporting the enemies of God by any mean, whether by
the tongue or by creating obstacles in front of Mujahideen [they must] renew
their faith because if such persons were Muslim (once) now their faith is
damaged. Tartusi’s manual on Takfeer and other literature written in the
mid-1990s and onwards was timely, as the militants were victorious in
Afghanistan against the Soviets and they had bases to operate from. Similar
ideas were developed by Takfeer Wal Hijra, an underground movements organized
in Egypt in the 1960s when Nasser used brute force against the Muslim
Brotherhood and carried out the execution of its leaders and workers. Islamists
were portrayed as villains by the Arab socialist regimes of Syria, Egypt, Iraq,
and Libya. The Islamists then took refuge in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and
sheikhdoms like the UAE and Qatar, and even the United Kingdom and the United
States, but the refuge provided in those places was restricted to living
theree. There was never any question of their being permitted to engage in dialectical
debate. The Mecca uprising in November 1979
popularized ultra-radical thinking which questioned:
• Can a person be called Muslim for
being born into a Muslim family without actually believing in Islam?
• Can a state really called a Muslim
state where the majority of its population has registered itself as Muslim but
politically lives under a non-Islamic constitution?
• Can a state still be called an Islamic
state, when though it practices Islamic ritual, it has effectively become the
most important instrument of non-Muslim forces against the Islamic cause?
The erstwhile ideas that Takfeer Wal
Hijra and other underground Islamic organisations in Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Tunis
and Libya had tried to promote in the 1960s came to new life with the Mecca uprising
in 1979. Coincidentally, the Islamists gained a base to operate from when the
Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan on December 27, 1979 and there was a worldwide
call, led and facilitated by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, to Muslim youths to
join with their Afghan brothers against godless communism. In a matter of few
years, thousands of young Muslims from across the world had established
independent camps to revive a Muslim political order and explore the dialectic
of their struggle in Muslim societies where they aimed to re-organize,
resurrect, and imbue the Islamist core with a new spirit of purpose through a
new thought process. They then sought to establish their nuisance value against
the ruling classes of the Muslim world and force their respective Muslim rulers
to move away from their allegiance to Western societies and governments. The
ultimate purpose of this struggle, however, was and remains a global war
against the West’s presence in Muslim lands, guided by Al-Qaeda. By the time
Tartusi and other Arab authors had compiled books on the modern definition of
faith and heresy, thousands of Muslim youths had journeyed from Pakistan, The
Philippines, Palestine, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and other Muslim
countries to join the Afghan Jihad, and developed anti-American and
anti-establishment views. When, in 1994, these youths either had left or were
about to leave Afghanistan, Qawaid Al-Takfeer provided a very strong
ideological dimension to continue with a post-Afghan-Soviet war struggle.
The Mecca uprising in 1979 was also a
major turning point in the analysis of Muslim societies by various Muslim
reformers in various areas. In the 1,400 years of the Muslim history there were
several occasions when Muslim reformers challenged Muslim establishments on the
ideologies that prevailed in their domains. However after events starting with
the 1979 uprising, continuing to 9/11 and onwards, a unique line was followed
and a unique analysis of the situation was made. It was assumed that all the
Muslim countries in the world were allied with the West and their societies
were operating on non-Islamic beliefs, and they were urged to change their
positions. Those who refused to do so were declared heretics, and war was
declared on them. This was most extreme line ever taken in 1,400 years, ever
since the Islamic faith had been defined from the perspective of contemporary
events and issues. And, with that, the majority of the Muslims living in the
new world order were effectively declared heretics. However, the basics of this
thinking were not alien. It actually reflected an evolving view of new analysis
in the minds of Muslim scholars drawn from a long run of reformist movements
since the advent of Islam. During the time of Umayyad and then the Abbasid
Empire in the Muslim world, following the initial 40-year rule of the Prophet
and his companions, Muslim monarchs had been inclined towards maintaining a
status quo interpretation of Islam. This status quo arrangement was intended to
counter revolutionary interpretations of Islamic laws on emerging issues in
politics, the economy and social life, to enable rulers to manipulate
statecraft in their personal interests. The emergence of the four Muslim
jurists, Imam Abu Hanifa, Imam Shafai, Imam Malik, and Imam Hanbal, at different
periods of the Abbasid Caliphate era aimed to deny this status quo arrangement
to the ruling classes. They worked in their individual capacities, researched
and interpreted new issues despite the opposition of monarchs, and compiled
Islamic laws adapted to contemporary governance needs. Similarly, the promotion
of Greek, Roman, and Eastern philosophies in the Umayyad, Abbasid, and Turkish
empires was a challenge confronting the Muslim intelligentsia. Dozens of
debates on Islamic tenets began in the light of those philosophies. New schools
of thought sprang up in Sufism, heavily blended with ancient Zoroastrian
traditions or Greek philosophies. New Islamic literature surfaced which took in
Greek philosophies. Some Muslim scholars opposed these trends and some favoured
them. As a result, verdicts of heresy were issued randomly and sectarianism
rose sky-high in the Muslim world. Muslim monarchs were the main sponsors and
promoters of these sectarian schisms as they helped them divert the attention
of the masses away from the real issues concerning statecraft and politics. The
renowned Muslim academic and jurist of that time, Imam Ghazali, confronted
these challenges. He documented the spirit of Islamic thought and explained how
it might be at odds with other philosophies. He also sorted out and refined the
issue of heresy as it had developed according to Islamic tenets, so that
Muslims should not unduly issue heresy decrees against each other on sectarian
grounds.
The ideological evolution for the reform
of the Muslim society following the era of the Prophet Muhammad reached its
climax during the invasion of the Tartars, who ransacked the Abbasid Caliphate.
This was the worst period of Muslim history. Muslims had been the dominant
world power, but they faced a sudden fall following the Tartar invasion. The
Abbasid Caliphate was abandoned and so were the Muslim political order, Islamic
laws, culture, and traditions. Everything became subservient to the Tartar
perspective. Different parts of the Muslim world remained free from the
Tartars, but the local rulers did not have the courage to stand up against
them. They were terrified of the Mongol power and its brutalities, and they did
not want to face the fate that had been witnessed in Baghdad, where the people
were ruthlessly butchered and an entire civilization destroyed. This submissive
attitude of the Muslim ruling classes and sections of Muslim society towards
one of the momentous events in Muslim history, which came with the elimination
of the Abbasid Caliphate and the fall of Baghdad, gave birth to a Muslim
resistance movement manned by volunteers. The ideologue and commander of that
Muslim resistance against the Tartars, and their attempted imposition of Tartar
law on Muslim society, was Imam Ibn Tamiyyah (1263-1328). Tamiyyah was
considered the model of ideological resistance in the Muslim world, and his
ideas are still the direct source for Islamic revolutionaries, who for the
first time aggressively practiced the principle of Takfeer to re-organise Muslim
resistance against the Tartars—and against those who, although they claimed to
be Muslims, placed obstacles in the way of the Islamic resistance against the
invaders. Tamiyyah aimed to shock deviants by declaring them non-Muslims, and
he discredited them in front of the common Muslims, so that the Muslim
resistance against the Tartars focused on the expulsion of the Tartars from
Muslim soil. Tamiyyah was a strong critic of the logic of Greek philosophers
like Aristotle. He wrote a critical analysis of their writings and presented a
model of Islamic thought as a plausible counterweight. He drew a comparison
between Islamic thought and the Greek philosophies, and argued for the
superiority of Islam through logic.
Tamiyyah was born at the time the
Tartars had conquered Muslim territories from the Indus River to the River
Tigris. Although the Tartar invaders later accepted Islam, they introduced
their native traditions and cultural arrangements into Muslim society. The
Tartar rulers took complete control over Muslim religious institutions, and the
Muslim religious elite succumbed to their will. They declared Halaku Khan as a
righteous ruler, and issued the verdict that a righteous infidel ruler was
better than a tyrannical Muslim ruler. The newly converted Tartar rulers had
enforced two different laws. Personal laws, like marriages, were interpreted
under Islam, but public laws concerning the economy, politics, and the
judiciary were interpreted under their traditional Yassa code. Tamiyyah
declared that Jihad against the Mongols was obligatory, and based this ruling
on the grounds that the Mongols could not be true Muslims despite the fact that
they had converted to Sunni Islam because they subscribed to human-made laws
(the traditional Yassa code) rather than Islamic law or Sharia, and thus lived
in a state of Jahiliyya, or pre-Islamic pagan ignorance. He simultaneously
refuted many schools of Sufism, calling them un-Islamic. He declared Shiites to
be heretics and fifth columnists against the Islamic Sharia, and advocated
action against them. He announced: “Every group of Muslims that transgresses
Islamic law ... must be combated, even when they profess to subscribe to the
Islamic credo.” His decree of Takfeer went all the way through to the era of
Syed Qutb and on to the ideology of Al-Qaeda.
The Mamluk ruler Nasir Al-Din Qalawun
tried to prevent war against the Tartars and proposed neutrality. Tamiyyah
forced this Muslim ruler of Egypt to fight against the Tartars, and threatened
that if he continued his policy of neutrality and stopped the war against
Tartars, he would launch a revolt against Qalawun himself first, and on
capturing power, he would resume the fight against the Tartars. His were the
first actions of any Muslim academic working on three different fronts as
commander of the resistance, academic, and reformer. Tamiyyah’s mindset
focussed on the struggle against the Tartars, for which he laid ideological
grounds by emphasizing the monotheist values of Islam against the polytheist
values in Mongol culture. And, in emphasizing monotheism, Tamiyyah aggressively
confronted anything and everything he believed to be polytheist, declaring as
heresy even the faith of the Khusrawan-e-Shiites of Lebanon, the Sufi schools
of Asha’ira Jahmiyya, and the Mu’tazila creeds. Al-Qaeda’s interest was in
Tamiyyah’s ideology of resistance. They used Tamiyyah’s work to support their
arguments. The larger part of the Islamic movements of the post-Caliphate
period in the 20th century were the flag-bearers of Tamiyyah’s ideology. The
founder of Jamaat-e-Islami in South Asia, Syed Abul Ala Maududi, and the Muslim
brotherhood ideologue, Syed Qutb, converted Tamiyyah’s teachings into
contemporary Islamic thought. They employed the Jahilliya definition Tamiyyah
had applied to the Greek, Roman, and Tartar philosophies and their traditions
and rules. These 20th century Muslim ideologues extended the same rulings to
encompass socialism, secularism, and democracy. Maududi argued against Western
democracy, socialism, and the Western social system. He had argued for the
Islamic way of life in its entirety. However, he believed in an evolutionary
approach. He did not believe in violence to enforce Islam. He researched and
studied ways whereby the Islamic system would not clash with modern thinking
and institutions. For instance, he approved the adult franchise election system
to enforce Islam and did not insist on the revival of the institution of the
Caliphate. Syed Qutb, on the other hand, while expanding Maududi’s earlier
arguments against Western democracy and socialism, urged Muslim nations to
abandon the West’s social, economic, and political system altogether, and
advocated Islamic revolution.
Al-Qaeda’s ideological discourse starts
with the interpretations of Tamiyyah and ends at Syed Qutb. But after that, it
does not deliver any modus operandi, or any clear policy or guidelines, to
define the onward struggle on contemporary issues. Thus, neither Tamiyyah’s nor
Syed Qutb’s thoughts and ideas fully find expression in AlQaeda’s practiced
philosophy. After the execution of Syed Qutb in 1966, the entire Muslim
Brotherhood leadership was either terminated or put in exile. The lower cadre
of the organisation was dismembered or moved into other underground
organisations. Jamaat-e-Islami, Pakistan and its founder, Maududi, played a
lead role in mediating between Nasser’s government and the Muslim Brotherhood
leadership, and urged the Muslim Brotherhood to follow the election process to
bring change to Egyptian society. From the late 1960s onwards, the Muslim
Brotherhood in the Middle East and Islamic movements worldwide were seen to
have taken to election politics and in that way become part of the
establishment. All this time the Al-Qaeda Muslim radicals operating in
underground organisations in the Middle East were looking for the missing
pieces to fuse their ideology into a movement. The Mecca uprising in November
1979 and the immediate beginning of the Afghan Jihad as a result of the Soviet
Union’s invasion of Afghanistan on December 27, 1979 provided them with the
opportunity. The Mecca uprising set the stage for Khuruj to clearly define that
no matter how much the Saudi monarchy might claim an Islamic identity, since
its foreign policies were attached to Western interests, it was to be seen as
an instrument of Western powers in the region! Its claim of being an Islamic
state was not acceptable. The Afghan Jihad, meanwhile, provided pre-Al-Qaeda
Muslim radicals with the opportunity to establish a base in Afghanistan and an
equally strong base over the border in Pakistan’s tribal territories. From
there Al-Qaeda developed new ideas and strategies through a dialectical
process, first in the tribal areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan, and from there
all across the Muslim world.
The Twin Towers attack on 9/11, 2001
marked the beginning of open hostilities between Al-Qaeda and the West. The US
invaded Afghanistan in October 2001, and by December 2001, the Taliban were
defeated and forced to disperse. Washington announced victory in Afghanistan
and began work towards establishing a democratic government there. The Taliban
and Al-Qaeda then moved to safer places in Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan's
tribal areas, and began preparations for a resistance against the new foreign
occupation forces in Afghanistan. Afghanistan was the main battleground and
Pakistan was to be its strategic backyard. However, the resistance faced
challenges on two fronts: from the foreign occupation forces stationed in
Afghanistan, and the Pakistani security forces, with Pakistan a major ally in
the US-led War on Terror. As a result, Al-Qaeda needed to develop a strategy
that could address both the challenges. The Taliban-led resistance in
Afghanistan began in 2002, but was very weak. Al-Qaeda then prepared the
grounds for its reinforcement, to include new recruitment, training, and
motivation, and a new dialectic to identify the Islamist cadre of Pakistani
society, including Islamic-minded officers in the Army, Jihadi organisations
shaped after the Afghan Jihad against the Soviet Union, Islamist seminaries,
and that section of the masses who truly believed in Islam and would join with
the resistance. In this process Pakistan was classified as Al-Qaeda’s backyard,
and under US pressure, Pakistan was forced to wage a war on Al-Qaeda, which had
expanded the theatre of war so much so that the US would call the war in
Afghanistan its Af-Pak strategy. Al-Qaeda faced an identical situation when the
US invaded Iraq in 2003. Al-Qaeda and the Iraqi resistance faced challenges
from the foreign occupying forces stationed in Iraq, as well as the security
forces of Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Therefore, after the Iraq war in 2003,
Al-Qaeda decided to replicate its Afghan strategy throughout the Muslim world.
As in the case of Afghanistan, Al-Qaeda then made Iraq as a central theatre of
war, and neighbouring countries like Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt,
all allies of the West, were identified as the enemy. As Iraq’s neighbours
these countries were to serve as the strategic backyard of Iraqi resistance, which
led to a serious confrontation between Al-Qaeda and these Muslim-majority
states.
Al-Qaeda next expanded its presence into
Yemen and Somalia, with the aim of severing Western supply lines to the
battlefields. In essence, by 2006 the larger part of the Muslim world had
become the theatre of war. Revolts, clashes, and suicide attacks became
routine. The establishments in the Muslim-majority states could clearly see
that the roots of the problem lay in Iraq and Afghanistan, and although those establishments
were in principle against the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, they were
politically and economically compelled to come out in support of the US.
State-sponsored religious decrees were then issued against rebellions inside
the Muslim-majority states. Religious scholars in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia
held a dialogue with militants and assured them that if they keep their focus
on the US invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan, they would pose no problem to
them, but as countries such as Pakistan, Jordan, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia were
gradually compelled to coordinate with and facilitate the US in its war, they
became a target. Al-Qaeda was not an organisation which would accommodate the
argument that a Muslim-majority state had been ‘compelled’ by a non-Muslim
invading force, and therefore was not ready to allow such a concession. On the
contrary it considered Muslim majority states who supported the West as
heretical and thus enemy states. It carried out more attacks on them than on
the United States and its Western allies. This forced these Muslim majority
states to initiate a debate on the legitimacy of Al-Qaeda for running the
theatres of war in Afghanistan and Iraq. The first round of this ideological
battle began in the Middle East. Nasiruddin al-Albani called the Muslim
radicals Neo-Khawarij—the Muslim sect in early Islamic centuries that had
declared the then Muslim rulers heretic on the basis of their un-lslamic
practices and instigated revolt against them. He said: History repeats itself.
A new generation of Khawarij who have a limited knowledge about Islam has
emerged. They think that rulers do not represent the entire Islamic system.
Therefore, without any consultations with Muslim scholars, jurists, and learned
academics, this new generation have launched an armed rebellion and created
serious chaos and crisis. They have carried out bloodshed in Egypt, Syria, and
Algeria. Earlier, they attacked the Grand Mosque of Mecca [in 1979]. Therefore,
they are the Muslims who oppose the authentic sayings of the Prophet Muhammad
which, except the (classical) Khawarij, every Muslim practices. A Saudi Salafi
scholar expanded on this debate when he was asked whether there were still
people who follow the deviant Muslim sect of Khawarij. He narrates: What else
was the ideology and practice of the Khawarij? It was about declaring Muslims
as heretics, the worst form of which is the killing of Muslims, and using
oppressive tactics against them. The following is the actual belief of the
Khawarij:
•
declaring Muslims as heretics
•
challenging the political order and writ of the state by armed rebellion
•
announcing the killing of Muslims as permissible.
If somebody follows the above mentioned
things he is a Khawaraji, whether he associates himself with that deviant sect
or not. (Sheikh Saleh Bin Fawzan, Rules and regulations of Jihad) Nonetheless,
in the state-sponsored discourse against Al-Qaeda the fact was completely
ignored that Al-Qaeda’s battle in the Muslim-majority states was not the result
of any internal political or ideological conflict. This battle was directly
linked with international relations in which Muslim-majority states stood
beside Non-Muslim occupation forces. This helped Al-Qaeda to develop its
argument of heresy against them. The occupation of Muslim territories such as
Palestine, Iraq, and Afghanistan has been the root cause of the Muslim
insurgency. The reason for the recent troubles in Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Pakistan, and other Muslim countries spins off their support of the West in its
invasion and occupation of countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan.
After 9/11, Pakistan provided bases to
the US for its air strikes against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Pakistan
also provided an inland route for NATO supplies to landlocked Afghanistan. In
addition, Pakistan has arrested several hundred Al-Qaeda members and handed
them over to the US. Jordan, Kuwait, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and even Iran to an
extent provided logistic and intelligence support to the US to dislodge Saddam
Hussein’s government for the US occupation of Iraq. The backlash in Muslim
countries, especially in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, has been enough to
destabilise the ruling regimes in these states. Militants attempted to
assassinate former Pakistan President Gen Pervez Musharraf and former Premier
Shaukat Aziz, and assassinated Pakistan’s pro-Western leader, Benazir Bhutto.
From 2004 to 2006 Saudi Arabia has faced more extreme violence than ever
before. By 2007 the Muslim establishment realized that as long as the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan continued there was no way of stopping Islamist revolts and
rebellions in Muslim countries. To counter this, state-sponsored articles and
television talk shows were arranged in which pundits discussed the key Islamic
principles for a ‘true’ Islamic renaissance. Through these measures, there was
an attempt to establish that in neither Iraq nor Afghanistan was armed
resistance justified. Different scholars cite the following rules from the
Quran and the sayings of the Prophet for a true Islamic resistance:
• There should be an Imam (leader) to
lead the resistance. The Quran narrates “don’t you see a group from the
children of Israel after Moses, and they urged their prophet to appoint a
emperor, so we shall fight for Allah” (Al-Baqara).
• There should be adequate resources for
the battle.
• The Prophet did not allow Jihad (armed
struggle) until he founded a state in Medina and migrated there. Hence no
Islamic resistance is justified before a fort or a state is erected to justify
a struggle.
• The strength of the Muslim army should
not be less than half of the enemy forces.
• Without fulfilling these four
conditions any battle cannot be considered Islamic resistance.
In the most difficult terrain of North
Waziristan is based Abu Amr Abd al-Hakim Hassan, popularly known as Sheikh
Essa, who has been the most visible and accessible Al-Qaeda figure for the
Punjabi, Pakistani Pashtun, and Afghan militants. He believes that all the
Muslim struggles begin with defiance and Takfeer (declaring somebody
non-Muslim) of the established un-Islamic authority, because this clarifies the
rules of the game: who is on whose side in the battle for Islam. Following the
Taliban defeat in Afghanistan in 2001, Al-Qaeda struggled to survive. At the
operational-level Sheikh Essa pioneered the dialectical process in Pakistan in
order to strategize the South Asian theatre of war. That dialectical process
aimed to orchestrate a clash between the secular forces and the Islamists of
Pakistan, to arrive at a point where the Pakistani state apparatus would either
remain completely neutral in the US war in Afghanistan or be forced to support
Al-Qaeda’s resistance against the US. Al-Qaeda’s targets were to gain a
complete hold over two Pakistani provinces, the Khyber Pakhtukhwa (formerly
NWFP) and Balochistan, both bordering Afghanistan, and to fight the NATO
alliance. Sheikh Essa’s 70-year-old body is riddled with injuries. The last one
he sustained was during the Pakistan Army operation in Angor Ada in 2003. He is
known as an ocean of emotions (perhaps the reason for his suffering a stroke in
2007). Essa was the aide of Abdul Qadir ai-Audah, an ideologue of the Muslim
Brotherhood in Egypt. Al-Audah was executed in 1960s by the Nasser regime. The
young Sheikh Essa, a graduate of the College of Commerce in Cairo, then turned
against Egypt’s ruling establishment. He developed theories on the heresy of
Muslim regimes and personally suffered at the hands of the Egyptian government,
but his suffering strengthened his resolve and hatred for the existing rulers
of Muslim countries.
Sheikh Essa was one of the conspirators
in the coup against Anwar Sadat’s government in Egypt in 1980, and after
Sadat’s assassination he was imprisoned. On his release, he was admitted to
Al-Azhar University in Cairo and emerged with a degree in theology. In 1986 he
went to Afghanistan for the Jihad against the Soviets, and remained close to
Abdallah Azzam and Sayyid Imam (aka Dr Fadl). In 1992, he went to Yemen to
teach in religious schools but returned to Afghanistan in 1996 on the Taliban’s
ascendancy to power. When the Taliban regime was defeated by the US in
Afghanistan he migrated to North Waziristan. The ageing factor, coupled with
sciatica (lumbago), may have contributed to Sheikh Essa’s stroke as well.
Sheikh Essa was thus unable to take part in combat operations, but he was the
source of singular inspiration for the youths coming from the tribal areas for
the Jihad. Sheikh Essa was also held in high regard by the militants coming
from the Punjab. They listened to his interpretation of Takfeer, mesmerized.
They read his most famous book, Al-Wala Wal Bar a, “an Islamic benchmark for
friendship and foes”, which laid down some of the rules and paved the way for
the dialectical process in Pakistan, which urged a war between diverse segments
of Muslim society. His book completely rejected democracy as a system because
it brought all political and religious schools of thoughts together and
streamlined the liberal Muslim state which he held in contempt. He believed
that under the democratic form of governance, even if Islamists were to
dominate Parliament, as they do in Turkey, they could not establish the
totalitarian type of governance or system that is the essence of political
Islam. He thus felt that Islam's influence would not transcend borders and
would be restricted to the nation-state’s boundaries, when the call was for a
global Islamic order. His book presents a detailed declaration of heresy for
those who support non-Muslims or an un-lslamic system, and documents the
principles under which Sheikh Essa clearly identified Pakistan as Darul Harb
(an abode of war) because it was supportive of the US war on a Muslim Afghan
army that was fighting against US-led NATO forces.
Soon disgruntled elements of Pakistani
Jihadis, more especially the anti-Shiite Laskhar-e-Jhangvi members including
the brutal Qari Zafar (died 2010) from Karachi, Muhammad Afzal of Khanewal,
Doctor Umar of Kror Lai Essan, Lyah, Faraz Ali Shami of Faisalabad, Shoaib
Ishaq of Faisalabad, Saeed of Jhang, Attock, Doctor Hamid of Lahore,Haji Tariq
of Karachi, Hakeem Tahir Abdullah of Lahore who resides in Attock, Ishtiaq of
Chunian, Sanaullah of Warbarton, Sheikh Nisar of Sotar Mandi, and Iftikhar
Qureshi of Madina Town, Faisalabad, became his disciples. Simultaneously, in
North Waziristan two prominent clerics and commanders, Sadiq Noor and Abdul
Khaliq Haqqani, became his followers. Sheikh Essa raised the question first in
the Pakistani tribal areas: “Is it sufficient to be a born in a Muslim family
or should there be a benchmark on which basis a person, group or country should
be labelled as Muslim or heretic?" He compiled the required standards of
being a true Muslim in his book Al-Wala Wal Bara, which was translated and
circulated around the country. The target audience, however, was not ordinary
commoners but practising Islamists in the country. Sheikh Essa wanted them to
clash with the secularists in the country. He believed in the strategy that the
Pakistan Army had to be won over first, before the war in Afghanistan against
NATO forces could be won. In Al-Wala Wal Bara he cited Ibn-e-Tamiyyah’s
statement: Even when a person is forced into the battlefield against fellow
Muslims it is incumbent on that person that he should not take part in
hostilities against fellow Muslims, no matter if that person risks execution if
he does not obey orders. Similarly, it is completely prohibited for a Muslim to
kill another Muslim no matter how much pressure he might be under.” After
quoting this, Sheikh Essa commented, “It is clear from Ibn-e-Tamiyyah’s
statement that those who side with non-Muslims against the Muslims are heretics
and have no relationship with the Muslim nation. They are fighting for money
and therefore I have no hesitation in declaring them heretics.”
Sheikh Essa’s literature was a
compilation of recognised quotations from the Quran, the sayings of the Prophet
Muhammad, and classical Muslim scholars’ renderings. He applied all of these to
Pakistan’s support for the US-led War on Terror. Sheikh Essa’s eyes were on the
Islamists in Pakistan’s armed forces, religious parties, and the Jihadi
organisations. He was optimistic that once the Islamists in Pakistan were
convinced that Pakistan could no longer be considered an Islamic state while its
rulers were allied to the US war and against the fellow Muslims, a revolt
(Khuruj) would follow, whereupon the militants would receive at least one of
three benefits:
• Pakistan would not be able to support
the US war in Afghanistan.
• Pakistani Islamists employed in the
key strategic positions would turn their resources over to the militants.
• If the Khuruj was successful and
Jihadis seized power, they would make available bases in Pakistan to provide
the best launching pad for a global Jihad against the West.
Sheikh Essa was wanted by all the
intelligence agencies in the country. Being an Arab, although fluent in Urdu
and Pashtu, he could easily be spotted as an Al-Qaeda member. Yet he took the
risk and travelled all the way from North Waziristan to the major Pakistani
cities of Multan, Faisalabad, and Lahore. Sheikh Essa took several copies of
his book along with him when he travelled to Lahore. He met Dr Israr Ahmed (who
died in 2010), an academic who believed in Islamic revolution and the revival
of the Caliphate. He also met with the then chief of Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan,
Qazi Hussain Ahmed, and with the Chief of Laskhar-e-Taiba, Hafiz Muhammad
Saeed. He read out parts of the book and asked whether they were wrong or
right. None of these men rejected the contents. “If all of this is true, why
don't you declare as heretic the Pakistan Army, which undertakes operations in
South Waziristan only because the local tribes are supporting the Muslim
resistance in neighbouring Afghanistan and providing shelters to the Arab
Muslim Mujahideen?” Sheikh Essa questioned. “In principle you are right, but
your theories in the present circumstances would only benefit enemies like
India and America,” Qazi Hussain Ahmed replied. Such responses could not break
the will of Sheikh Essa. He continued his interaction with the top religious
leadership of the country, and this pursuit took him into the heart of the
Pakistani capital city of Islamabad to meet with the prayer leader of
Islamabad’s Central Mosque, more commonly known as the Lal Masjid (the Red
Mosque).
In a modest house attached to the Lal
Masjid, hardly 1.5km away from ISI headquarters, Sheikh Essa raised the same
question again before Maulana Abdul Aziz, the son of the slain Maulana Abdullah
who had actively taken part in the Afghan national resistance against the
Soviets in the 1980s. Aziz was a simple and straightforward man. Sheikh Essa’s
sermon and his book had inspired him. Sheikh Essa was desperately looking to
get Aziz on his side for obvious reasons. Aziz was not an ordinary cleric or
religious scholar. He was a favourite of Pakistan’s military establishment
because he had raised hundreds of young recruits for the Kashmiri insurrection.
Every year Commander Fazlur Rahman Khalil, the head of a Kashmiri Jihadi outfit
Harkat-ul Mujahadeen, came to his door, and within few days of a call by Aziz,
hundreds of youths from the madrassas were readied to join the Kashmiri
struggle. Many of the religious-minded civil and military bureaucrats based in
Islamabad and Rawalpindi used to send their daughters to the women’s Islamic
seminary run by Aziz who, together with his brother Abdul Rasheed Ghazi, headed
a citizens’ rights committee in Islamabad. Unsurprisingly then, Aziz was a
vital asset of Pakistan’s military establishment sitting in the heart of
Islamabad. But Sheikh Essa felt that a revolt, by the Lal Masjid would be the
beginning of the Islamic revolution in Pakistan. “After reading this (Sheikh
Essa’s book Al-Wala Wal Bara) do you still believe that the Pakistan Army is a
Muslim army?” Sheikh Essa asked, while reminding Aziz of his duties as a Muslim
scholar. “If you refuse the call of Takfeer on the Pakistan Army, God will
never forgive you,” Essa emphasized.
Aziz was an emotional person of deep
religious conviction. The call of Takfeer on the Pakistan Army amounted to
losing all his honour, prestige, and connections with Pakistan’s military
establishment. But retaining his closeness with the military despite its
operations against Islamic militants meant discarding his faith. Abdul Aziz
decided to go against the military. Under a pseudo identity he had a letter
posted to his own Darul Ifta (an office for issuing religious decrees) asking
about the faith status of the Pakistan Army after it had mounted an operation
against Muslims in South Waziristan. In response to the query he concluded in a
religious decree: “Pakistani soldiers killed while fighting against the
Mujabideen in South Waziristan do not merit a Muslim funeral or a burial in
Muslim cemeteries.” Aziz issued this fattva (religious edict) in 2004. The
fatwa had a huge impact. Dozens of soldiers in the Pakistan Army defied the
orders of their seniors to fight, and hundreds of officers and soldiers applied
for retirement from service. The situation compelled the Army to surrender and
strike a deal with the militants. The fatwa was the beginning of a new
ideological war between the military and the militants. That ideological war
aimed to discredit the Pakistan Army’s faith and belief, and was more damaging
than its military defeats in the tribal areas. The Musharraf regime had
invested millions of rupees to hire clerics to support Pakistan Army operations
in the tribal areas and to speak against the religious beliefs of the
militants, but the Al-Qaeda ideologues sitting in South and North Waziristan
launched an organised campaign against them. The leader of the Islamic Movement
of Uzbekistan, Qari Tahir Yaldochiv, who was living in exile in South
Waziristan, took the thread from Sheikh Essa and started contacts with Aziz. He
sent Uzbek men to Aziz with written notes appreciating the initiative of his
fatwa against the Pakistan Army. “This is the right time to turn this fatwa
into an organised campaign. Use the network of your madaris [Islamic seminaries]
and urge the talibs [students] and ulemas [scholars] to stand in support of Mujahideen
for the Islamic revolution against this infidel army which helps the American
assaults to continue in Afghanistan,” Tahir urged Aziz in a written note.
Sheikh Essa also advised Aziz that instead of sending youths to Kashmir, he
should encourage them to play a role in the Islamic revolution.
It was April 2007. I was sitting with
Maulana Abdul Aziz on a bedstead woven of jute under a tree in Aziz’s
residential compound adjacent to Lal Masjid. He was instructing the students to
let an Islamic seminary know that he would speak to its students in the
evening. “It has been my routine to address the students at Islamic seminaries
on a daily basis,” Aziz told me. “Maulana, do you want to instigate a Taliban
(student) movement on the pattern of Afghanistan for the enforcement of Islam?”
I asked. “Indeed I do. And this is the only way to protect Pakistan’s
integrity, which is rapidly plunging into chaos and disintegration due to its
ethnic and political polarization,” he replied. Nonetheless, Pakistani
intelligence sources were reporting to the presidency that Lal Masjid was
demanding the enforcement of Islamic Sharia, but in fact it was playing
mind-games under instructions from Al-Qaeda. Whenever the Pakistan Army
launched an operation in South Waziristan, Lal Masjid created some mischief,
which diverted attention from Al-Qaeda’s machinations. The intelligence report
was partially correct. But that was not the only role delegated to Lal Masjid
by Al-Qaeda. Al-Qaeda aimed to promote the Lal Masjid prayer leaders as the
leaders of a movement to reinstate Islam, and through them to use Pakistan’s
Islamic seminaries’ structures. There are approximately 13,500 Islamic
seminaries from the Deobandi school of thought adhered to by the Taliban. They
are situated all across the country and house 1.8 million regular students. Lal
Masjid aimed to use these structures to defy and revolt against Pakistan’s
policies supporting the US-led War on Terror. That is why its leaders were not
primarily interested in the enforcement of Islamic Sharia. Rather, their aim
was to create maximum friction between the Islamists of the country and the
Pakistani establishment, so that the Pakistani establishment would eventually
succumb to pressure and withdraw its support for the War on Terror.
Al-Qaeda thinkers in North Waziristan
wrote and published extensive literature on Takfeer simply to impress academics
like Maulana Abdul Aziz. They did not expect Aziz to pass on those notes in
pure academic form in his sermons, but rather to resort to actions and turn the
Takfeeri ideology into a cogent strategy. From 2004 to 2007—the year when the
Pakistani military establishment finally conducted a crackdown on Lai Masjid—Aziz
continued to issue defiant religious decrees against Pakistan’s military
establishment while carrying out such acts as had never before been practiced
by any Islamic scholar. For instance, Lal Masjid vigilantes started busting
brothels. The Pakistani military establishment advised the Lal Masjid clerics
not to take the law into their own hands, and to let Pakistan’s law-enforcing
agencies carry out crackdowns against them instead. To prove a point the
Pakistani Police carried out massive raids on those guesthouses in Islamabad
that had been supplying prostitutes to their clients. Lal Masjid should have
appreciated these efforts of the administration, but this was not what they
were looking for. Their aim was to undertake more actions to generate friction.
Lal Masjid vigilantes then raided Islamabad’s markets, took obscene movies from
the video shops and burned them. In the meantime, Aziz continued to address
Islamic seminaries all across the country every day. He spoke out against
democracy and Pakistan’s support for the War on Terror and, without fear or
apology, termed the Pakistani style of governance Kufr(heresy) and claimed that
the operations of the Pakistani armed forces against the Pakistani tribes,
Al-Qaeda, and the Taliban, were Kufr too.
What exactly Lal Masjid was up to in the
middle of Pakistan’s capital was beyond the comprehension of almost everybody,
including the top religious leadership of the country. Only Al-Qaeda ideologues
understood the undercurrents and real motives behind the defiance. Pakistani
officials, like the Minister of Religious Affairs, Ejaz-ul-Haq, the son of the
late President, Gen Zia-ul-Haq, visited Maulana Abdul Aziz frequently. This was
not surprising as Aziz’s father, Maulana Abdullah, and Gen Zia had been very close,
and this relation had continued down to their sons. “Maulana, I beg you, please
stop all this. I know it will ultimately cause a serious clash. Iam seeing an
ocean of fire,” Ejaz-ul-Haq was reported to have said as he held Aziz’s feet (a
gesture of humility and submission). Butall his pleas to Aziz failed.
Ejaz-ul-Haq did not have any idea that Aziz was actually aiming to create more
friction to generate fire. He coldly replied that he would not retreat a single
inch from his position.
Religious-minded ministers in the
federal cabinet like Ejaz-ul-Haq and the leader of then ruling Pakistan Muslim
League, Chaudhary Shujaat Hussain, urged Gen Musharraf to make special efforts
to reduce the tensions. The outcome of this was an invitation to Mufti Taqi Usmani,
a renowned Islamic scholar and the spiritual guide of Maulana Abdul Aziz, to
come to Islamabad to pour oil on the troubled waters. Usmani flew from Karachi
and reached Islamabad. “What are you up to?” Taqi asked Aziz. “I want an
Islamic system of life in Pakistan,” Aziz replied respectfully. “But what model
would you follow—the model of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) or your
own?” Taqi inquired. “Of course, the Prophet Muhammad’s model is the only one
to be followed.” Aziz answered. Taqi asked: “Can you please elaborate on the
justification for occupying a children’s library, kidnapping prostitutes,
detaining cops in the mosque, and creating a law-and-order situation in the
city by putting video films on fire? Are there any such instances from the time
of the Prophet Muhammad’s struggle? Did we find such modes of struggle in Salaf
[classical Muslim scholars]? Do you see any difference between a struggle for
the enforcement of Islamic laws and creating chaos in the country?” Aziz put
his head down but did not reply. “Abdul Aziz, I need an answer,” Taqi insisted.
“You are my teacher and my spiritual guide. I do not dare argue with you,” Aziz
said. “Do you then promise me that you will refrain from such practices in
future?” Taqi demanded. “I will continue to practice what I have been doing
because I think that is the right path,” Aziz persisted. “You intend to do this
despite the fact that you don’t have any
justifications for such actions in the Quran and the Sunnah [the
Prophet’s traditions]?” Taqi asked. Aziz was silent. “Abdul Aziz, I hear you
still say to the people that you and I have a relationship of guidance, but I
now tell you this relation no longer exists. Don’t say to the people you take
guidance from me,” Taqi said furiously. This was the biggest punishment any
teacher could have meted out to a disciple, and it meant that Taqi Usmani had
expelled Abdul Aziz from his circle for spiritual guidance. Aziz had tears in
his eyes but remained silent. Taqi did not say another word and went out. Abdul
Aziz did not try to stop him.
The Musharraf administration was then
left with no choice but to play its last card by inviting the prayer leader of
the Mecca Mosque, Sheikh Abdur Rehman al-Sudais, in the hope that his argument would
be respected by the Lal Masjid prayer leader. However, al-Sudais’s meeting with
Aziz also turned out to be an exercise in futility. Finally, Musharraf’s
military regime decided to take action against the Lal Masjid people on its
own. The Rangers and the Police were sent to cordon off the area, and demanded
that the Lal Masjid students and teachers surrender. Maulana Abdul Aziz and his
brother Abdul Rasheed Ghazi refused and delivered fiery speeches in
retaliation. Although there were only 11 AK-47s in the mosque, the prayer
leaders announced to the media over their cellphones that they had guns and
suicide-bombers ready to confront the establishment forces. The military next
sent the chief of the banned Harkat-ul Mujahadeen, Maulana Fazlur Rahman
Khalil, to Lal Masjid as a final effort to win over the clerics. He warned them
that their rants had already brought Lal Masjid into the international
spotlight, and that the military was bound to follow. He emphasized that the
only way to avoid such a military operation was to surrender. He guaranteed
that they would be treated with respect during their arrest, and legal bail
would be arranged for them within a few months. With the noose thus tightened
around Lal Masjid, Maulana Abdul Aziz finally realised that a prolonged stay
would not be possible. He understood that once he had left the place, surrender
for his supporters would be easier and he could still command the movement from
outside. He put on a Burqa (a woman’s complete covering that hides the face as
well as the body) and tried to sneak out of the mosque. But he was spotted by
the law-enforcement agencies, arrested, and humiliated on the state-run
Pakistan Television in the same Burqa. Aziz’s attempt to escape outraged the
Al-Qaeda ideologues in Waziristan. The chief of the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan, Qari Tahir, personally called Abdul Rasheed Ghazi and his deputy
Abdul Qayyum and warned them that as of now they would have to stay till the
last bullet, because that would be the turning point of their struggle, and if they
surrendered so easily in future, the whole Islamic revolutionary movement could
collapse. Ghazi abided by the instructions. He and his accomplices, his mother,
and Maulana Abdul Aziz’s son were killed in a military action that followed. However,
the Lal Masjid operation changed the dynamics of the country forever. It laid
the foundations for a fresh military struggle, the exit of Gen Pervez Musharraf
from power (one of the reasons for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, who had
approved the Lal Masjid killings), and the discrediting of the
religio-political parties of the country (which chose to attend an All Parties
Conference in London instead of pressing to prevent the military operation
against Lal Masjid). Notwithstanding all of this and contrary to the
expectations of Al-Qaeda and Maulana Abdul Aziz, not a single student of the
Islamic seminaries from whom they were expecting a Taliban (student) revolt for
the enforcement of Islam or/and in favour of Lal Masjid stood up—not even the
18 Islamic seminaries in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.
Al-Qaeda did not give up. When the
funeral prayers for the Lal Masjid students and clerics were being conducted,
Al-Qaeda was in communication with its man from the scenic Swat Valley. The Valley
was now in hands of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-Shariat-e-Mohammadi’s Mullah Fazlullah.
Fazlullah was the son-in-law of Maulana Sufi Mohammad, the cleric arrested by
Pakistan’s security agencies for illegally having taken thousand of youths to
Afghanistan to fight against the US invasion in 2001. The little-known Mufti
Aftab was then sent by Al-Qaeda from Miranshah, North Waziristan to guide the
Al-Qaeda man in Swat on how to pursue the pattern and style of the future
struggle. However, the story goes that the purpose of the movement in Swat following
the LaL Masjid massacre was not the establishment of Islamic courts, as
projected, nor was Mullah Fazlullah Al-Qaeda’s real leader there. The real
Al-Qaeda leader was Bin Yameen. People who had spent time with Bin Yameen (also
referred as Ibn-e-Ameen) during his detention in ISI cells or had worked under
his command in Swat, or who had known him from early childhood, agreed on two
things about him: his short temper, which stretched to the limits of madness,
and his strikingly good looks. Bin Yameen was 6 feet 2 inches tall, had a broad
chest, was fair in complexion, and had a full head of hair. His looks were
God’s gift, but his short temper was not inbuilt. Circumstances were
responsible for making an extremely polite young man into an ideological
fanatic. Mufti Aftab used to document reports on Bin Yameen and send them back
to Al-Qaeda ideologues, and they were convinced that in coming years Bin Yameen
would be the man in Swat to create the maximum friction between the state
authorities and the general public. He was expected to take the confrontation
to the level where the Pakistan Army would not be able to provide support to
the US war in Afghanistan. Al-Qaeda’s instructions and Bin Yameen’s fanaticism
worked well together, and turned the movement for enforcing Islamic laws in
Swat into a revolt against the state.
I am not sure whether I should call it
his fate that he was born in Peochar Valley of Swat, the hub of militancy.
Legend has it that in the early 19th century the area was the headquarters of
Syed Ahmad Barelvi, the pioneer of the 19th century Jihad in South
Asia against the Sikh dynasty in Punjab and the northern parts of present-day
Pakistan. Bin Yameen came from Wanai Namal village, in Matta in the Peochar
valley. Born as a Behloolzai, a sub-tribe of the Youzufzai tribe, Bin Yameen
was never the playboy of his village or a poet. He was a school dropout at the
matric (high-school certificate) level. While he was still in his teens he went
to Afghanistan and fought alongside the Taliban against the Northern Alliance
forces of Ahmad Shah Massoud. He was arrested in his first battle and then
spent seven long years in the inhuman jails of the Northern Alliance. Bin
Yameen often remembers how his fellow Taliban detainees died in the jail.
Sometimes he witnessed their swift deaths while they were talking or cooking.
After the Taliban defeat, he was released by the US. But it was not his seven
years in the Northern Alliance jails that had embittered him. After his release
from Panjsheri prison, his manners were still extraordinarily polite. He always
stood up to welcome any guest. The marriage and love life of any Pashtun has
always been a very private business. No Pashtun from a village background would
ever confide in anyone over matters of the heart. But Bin Yameen used to
proudly say that his wife (also his relative) had fallen in love with him and
that before their marriage, when they were only engaged during his prolonged
imprisonment in Afghanistan, all the family members had pressed her to break
her engagement to him and marry somebody else. But against all Pashtun
traditions, the girl defied her family and said that her name wouldbe tied to
Bin Yameen’s forever, whether he lived or died. When Bin Yameen was released
and went back to his village the first thing he did was to marry her, proud
that this was the girl who had steadfastly stood by him despite all the
pressures put on her by her family to forget him. Bin Yameen always said that
all the pain and agony of his days in the Afghan prison disappeared after the
marriage. It was as if nothing had happened. He started his new life with a
loving wife. His wife delivered a son and they moved to Peshawar. Bin Yameen
joined Jaish-e-Mohammad, the militant group later banned by Musharraf’s regime.
Since he was the most knowledgeable person on the Afghan prison system among
them—and there were hundreds of Pakistani prisoners languishing in Afghan jails
following the defeat of Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001—he was placed in charge
of Jaish’s jail affairs. His responsibility was to look after the interests of
those who were in Afghan jails and work for their release.
December 2003, when Musharraf was the
target of two failed assassination attempts, was the major turning point in the
lives of Pakistani Jihadis. They were rounded up like criminals. The state
which had been the main supporter and perpetuator of the Pakistani Jihadis
turned its back on them. Several Jihadis gave up their struggle and several
turned against the state. Bin Yameen was the most prominent of those who came
in the later category. On August 21, 2004 Pakistan’s security agencies raided
Bin Yameen’s house in Peshawar. He was sleeping with his wife. In the next room
were two prominent Jihadis, Asif Chakwali and Mufti Sagheer (now in Adyala jail
in Rawalpindi). Both Asif and Sagheer broke the police cordon and escaped, but
the police who had broken into the house captured both Bin Yameen and his wife
and literally dragged them to their vehicles. Bin Yameen was half-asleep and half
awake, but he saw strangers touching his wife. He attacked them like a wounded
lion. He tried to snatch their guns. It took dozens of security personnel to
overwhelm him. Both his wife and he were imprisoned. Later his wife and son
were released, but Bin Yameen, who had been injured during his transportation,
never forgot the humiliation suffered by his wife at the hands of Pakistan’s
security personnel. He was completely unaware of any plot to assassinate
Musharraf, and during the interrogation refused to answer the questions thrown
at him. In response, he would either spit in the faces of the inquiry officers,
or threaten that on his release he would destroy them and their families. This
resulted in a vicious cycle of torture. His inquisitors hung him upside down
and beat him, but he only yelled one thing in response: “If I stay alive I will
return and avenge all of this.” They tied and shackled him but his rage
remained unabated. After two months of torture and interrogation, the prison
guards and inquiry officers got tired of him and sent him to solitary
confinement in an ISI detention cell, without a police case being presented
against him and without a court trial. He spent two-and-ahalf years in solitary
confinement without further torture or interrogation, but his venom against the
Pakistan Army remained high. His prison guards were used to his verbal assaults
on them and the Pakistan Army, and sometimes retaliated to his threats with
jokes. Just days before his release when he was collecting his clothes and
belongings, a Corporal asked him in a light vein: “But Bin Yameen, what if you
found me walking on the road one day?” Bin Yameen’sface turned red and he said
in a cold voice: “I will slit your throat.”
In an exclusive interview in 2010, a
senior Taliban leader reminded me that North Waziristan’s environment is so
weird it can turn any person into a Takfeeri within 20 days. As soon as Bin
Yameen was released from the ISPs cell, he was summoned to North Waziristan
where his hatred of Pakistan’s military establishment gained ideological
flavour. Mufti Aftab from North Waziristan was Al-Qaeda’s emissary in Swat. He
took Bin Yameen to North Waziristan. For the Al-Qaeda ideologue, Bin Yameen’s
life meant nothing. He was a militant who was born for Islam and would
sacrifice his life for Islam, although his knowledge of Islam was basic. But
his hatred of the Pakistan Army was unbelievable, and this was exactly what
Al-Qaeda was looking for. Bin Yameen was given money and Uzbek and Arab
fighters to set up his own maaskar (training camp). His first task was
essentially simple. He was to hijack the Tekrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
(TNSM) founded by Maulana Sufi Mohammad, after whose detention it was
controlled by Fazlullah. Thousands of people were associated with the TNSM and
committed to the enforcement of Islamic laws in Swat and Malakand divisions.
Bin Yameen was silently planted in this group.
Al-Qaeda was frustrated after the Lal
Masjid operation. Dozens of people had been killed and the most useful Al-Qaeda
asset in Islamabad sacrificed without the main purpose being served: not a
single person stood up in revolt. Maulana Abdul Aziz had been detained and
humiliated. Abdul Rasheed Ghazi and others were buried among tears. This was
when Osama bin Laden put his foot down and appointed an Ameer-e-Khuruj
(commander for revolt) in Pakistan. This was Abdul Hameed, alias Abu Obaida
al-Misri. Bin Laden instructed him to organise a revolt in the country as soon
as possible, and Al-Qaeda urged its Middle Eastern donors to arrange funds on
an urgent basis. When these funds were received they were hurriedly distributed
amongst all the Al-Qaeda associates, including Baitullah Mehsud and Bin Yameen.
Targets were then identified to stir up maximum friction in the country, with
the aim of making the state ungovernable. One of the targets was Benazir
Bhutto, the only politician in the country to have supported the Lal Masjid
operation. However, for a prolonged engagement against the Pakistan Army, a
revolt in the Swat Valley (400km away from Pakistan's federal capital,
Islamabad) was essential. Immediately after the Lal Masjid operation, Al-Qaeda
mobilised its cadre to provide the logistics for a revolt in Swat. This came on
the third day after the burial of Lal Masjid’s dead.