Terrorism Review

ghazi52

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‼️From January 1 to May 7, 2024, #Pakistan Security Forces conducted 𝟏𝟑,𝟏𝟑𝟓 counterterrorism operations, resulting in the elimination of 𝟐𝟒𝟎 𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐫𝐨𝐫𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐬 and the 𝐜𝐚𝐩𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝟑𝟗𝟔, including 𝟏𝟗 𝐇𝐢𝐠𝐡 𝐕𝐚𝐥𝐮𝐞 𝐓𝐚𝐫𝐠𝐞𝐭𝐬.

▪️Sadly, these operations have also led to the loss of 2 officers and 60 soldiers.

▪️Security Forces are carrying out over 100 counterinsurgency operations each day.
 

CTDs lack clarity on militant groups’ dynamics, operational strategies: report

Iftikhar A. Khan
May 15, 2024

CTDs lack clarity on militant groups’ dynamics, operational strategies: report

ISLAMABAD: Provincial counterterrorism departments (CTDs) lack clarity on militant groups’ dynamics, connections and operational strategies, apart from facing issues related to coordination, funding and intelligence gathering.

While CTDs have established their own specialised intelligence units and analysis wings to study militant behaviour, they often lack skills to process data effectively and remain largely dependent on premier intelligence agencies.

These were some of the key findings of the research report, ‘Pakistan’s Evolving Militant Landscape: State Responses and Policy Options’, released by Islamabad-based think tank Pak Institute for Peace Studies (PIPS) on Tuesday.

The report says that funding issues plague CTDs except in Punjab, whose counterterrorism department has adequate funding.

It recommends Pakistan establish a robust implementation mechanism for national extremism and security policies, including the revised National Action Plan (NAP).

The study says Pakistan should pursue critical shifts in foreign policy, prioritising peace with neighbouring countries like Afghanistan and India. Talking about the security problems, it says that the deteriorating bilateral relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan, coupled with a lack of meaningful state-to-state engagement, pose significant challenges for the former in addressing terrorist violence and border insecurity.

The report points out that the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) issue has emerged as a major source of tension between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The data suggests that Pakistan’s decision to repatriate illegal Afghan refugees was influenced by the Afghan Taliban’s apparent indifference towards TTP attacks within Pakistan.

“Ultimately, resolving bilateral challenges hinges on Pakistan’s sustained engagement with the Taliban-led interim government in Kabul,” the report said, adding that the civilian government must take ownership of the Afghan policy, with input from both parliament and security agencies.

The research notes that there was a need for a multi-dimensional and all-inclusive approach to address the complexities of Pakistan’s extremism challenge.

To deal with the problem of unrest in Balochistan, the report recommends that there is a need to reduce the appeal of insurgent ideology and causes among the Baloch people, and that can be done by winning the hearts and minds of the people.

As the Baloch insurgents and even the TTP tend to exploit the issue of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in the province to win public support and recruits, the government needs to evolve a plan or policy to manage this particular issue amicably and in accordance with the law so that people do not fall for militants’ narratives.

Since August 2021, Pakistan has experienced a significant surge in terrorist attacks and consequent casualties, says one of the findings. Terrorist violence has been rapidly increasing and intensifying in various parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan provinces, with several major attacks also reported in Punjab and Karachi, says another finding.

“Experts believe that Pakistan’s counterterrorism and extremism frameworks are outdated, failing to address evolving threats. Despite successful operations from 2009 to 2019, violence reduction led to complacency, allowing radicalisation to persist and threats to mutate,” it added.

The report says no one has yet claimed responsibility for the heinous attack resulting in the tragic deaths of five Chinese nationals and their Pakistani driver in the Besham area of Shangla on March 26, 2024.

The report went on to say that firstly, in the wake of recent tensions sparked by Pakistani airstrikes against TTP and affiliates’ hideouts in Afghanistan, it was widely anticipated that the TTP would retaliate with a major, high-profile attack within Pakistan. Indeed, targeting Chinese nationals in Pakistan invariably elevates the profile of an attack and thrusts the issue into the international spotlight, thus bringing more pressure on Pakistan.

Secondly, the TTP’s denial lacks credibility, given its recent pattern of avoiding claims for attacks perpetrated by itself or its affiliates, including Tehrik-e-Jihad Pakistan, Ansar al-Jihad, and the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group.

Thirdly, the entire area where the attack occurred (Kohistan and Swat) falls under the influence of the TTP and its affiliates, making it challenging for other groups to operate and organise logistics for such a significant attack. Finally, the TTP remains a key ally of anti-China groups such as TIP and Uyghurs, further underscoring its potential involvement.

However, it may never claim such attacks due to possible pressure from the Afghan Taliban government, which may not be able to annoy China because of the diplomatic and economic support the latter has been extending to Afghanistan.

The second scenario involves the potential involvement of IS-K, which has been actively seeking to solidify its presence and operations in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia, and beyond in recent times, the PIPS report added.

Published in Dawn, May 15th, 2024
 

Advanced combat strategy thwarts militant attacks, says Peshawar SSP operations

APP
May 7, 2024

PESHAWAR: Senior Superintendent of Police (Operations) Kashif Zulfiqar said here on Monday that advanced combat strategy by police, especially intensification of intelligence-based operations, and use of modern equipment not only thwarted armed attacks but also compelled militants to retreat.

Talking to journalists during his visit to Peshawar Press Club on Monday, he said that security operations in merged districts and use of modern gadgets by militants were casting an impact on law and order in the provincial metropolis.

However, he said that by adopting an advanced strategy of increasing intelligence-based operations and equipping police with modern weapons, the attacking militants were forced to retreat.

Mr Zulfiqar said that a recent attack by a large number of militants on Jumma Khan post near Nasir Bagh area was effectively repulsed. He stressed the need for enhancing police infrastructure to match the city’s expanding population and area.

Kashif Zulfiqar says modern gadgets provided to police force

He said that the ongoing endeavours would bolster professional training, equip officers with modern weapons and augment manpower for effective policing. “There is also a need to raise security divisions for countering hardcore militants,” he added.

The SSP said that majority of police personnel were recruited to perform duty at police stations and had fewer capabilities of fighting with hardened criminals, who were also equipped with modern weapons. He said that morale of police was very high as they performed duty day and night amid heightened threats of attacks from militants, especially in suburban areas.
 
522 TS eliminated 🗡️

522 terrorists have been neutralized in 5 months in the year of 2024..

♦️January......... 107
♦️February........ 75
♦️March ............78
♦️April .............130
♦️ MAY............ 132
 

How a politically polarised Pakistan can achieve its goal of defeating TTP and Al Qaeda

Tackling the lethal troika

Tariq Parvez
June 14, 2024

NOOR Wali Mehsud, ameer of the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan, stated recently that their ‘jihad’ against Pakistan had entered a “decisive phase”. He expressed the determination to “liberate their lands and enforce the divine laws therein”.

Mehsud’s newfound confidence is due to the provision of a sanctuary in Afghanistan by the Afghan Taliban government, as well as the commitment of the Afghanistan-based Al Qaeda, to mentor the TTP in carrying out its terrorist campaign in Pakistan. Pakistan must immediately review its strategy of tackling this security challenge from the lethal troika, which is more experienced, committed and battle-hardened today than ever before.

To prepare for war, Sun Tzu states “of supreme importance … is to attack the enemy’s strategy”. It follows that Pakistan’s main goal in defeating the TTP should be to proactively neutralise its anticipated terrorism strategy. This is best achieved by basing our national response on four pillars: creating an environment in Pakistan conducive to an effective national counterterrorism (CT) effort; an external dimension in targeting the use of Afghanistan as a sanctuary by the TTP/ Al Qaeda; sustained and coordinated kinetic measures; and a holistic plan for comprehensive, well-resourced, non-kinetic measures.

It might be a cliché to state that a poor and divided nation is likely to find it difficult to counter a serious challenge to its security. But sadly, that is what Pakistan looks like today. The political polarisation is unprecedented, economic conditions are dire and getting worse, and social cohesiveness is at its lowest. All this saps resolve and the capability to fight terrorism.

Therefore, the essential starting point for Pakistan in its war against the lethal troika is to set its own house in order by resolving its political polarisation, alleviating the common man’s economic woes, and moving towards building a more cohesive society through a government trusted by its citizens, and by improving the rule of law, adherence to fundamental rights, and accountability.

The second pillar — the external dimension — is crucial because the centre of gravity of the revived TTP and Al Qaeda is their sanctuary in Afghanistan. To make this sanctuary restrictive for the terrorist groups, we need to engage with the Afghan government at three levels — bilateral, regional and global.

Bilaterally, a nuanced approach should be adopted to make it more beneficial for the Taliban to restrict the activities of the two terrorist groups on their soil. Regionally, it should be stressed that the groups’ revival in Afghanistan poses a threat to regional security. We can use the forum of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, which has a CT mandate implemented through the Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure. Globally, Pakistan can use different fora like the UN to keep the world updated about the implications of TTP/ Al Qaeda sanctuaries in Afghanistan for global security.

The essential starting point for Pakistan is to set its own house in order.

It is pertinent to point out that while sanctuary in Afghanistan is an asset for the TTP/ Al Qaeda, it is also a constraining factor, because in the 2020 Doha accord, the Taliban had committed to not allowing their territory to be used for terrorism against any other country. It follows that a primary goal of the two groups would be to capture some territory in Pakistan and proclaim that they were not based in Afghanistan. To defeat this strategy, we should give the highest priority to preventing the TTP from capturing territory in Pakistan, particularly along the Afghan border.

As regards the third pillar, kinetic measures are an essential part of the CT toolkit. But we need to analyse why the military operations in ex-Fata and Swat, which successfully subdued the TTP from 2014 to 2020, could not prevent the group’s revival from 2021 onwards. One factor was the US withdrawal from Afghanistan. The other was our inability to realise that military operations, to be effective in the long term, have to go hand in hand with capacity building of local police and other civilian departments, so that in due course, when the military withdraws or takes a back seat, the civilian departments are capable of taking over.

Coming to the fourth pillar, if the capacity-building of state institutions for combating terrorism is important, no less crucial is the building up of the resilience of society to counter the terrorist threat. We witnessed how the people of Swat forced the TTP to withdraw again to Afghanistan in 2022. This resilience of the people against violent extremism must be expanded and strengthened. It can best be done by non-kinetic measures.

While there is a wide array of non-kinetic measures recommended by the UN for countering terrorism and preventing violent extremism, four areas deserve more attention in Pakistan — increasing socioeconomic opportunities, reducing political marginalisation, improving governance and neutralising social networks that propagate violent extremism. Being the front-line province, KP deserves the highest priority in terms of allocation of resources, both for CT and PVE. In this regard, Pakistan can learn from international initiatives like the EU’s Radicalisation Awareness Network.

The above-mentioned measures have been suggested earlier also, but are rarely implemented. This can be broadly attributed to 1) lack of political ownership of the national CT/ PVE effort, 2) the perception that national security is the military’s domain, with nominal input from civilians, and last but not the least, 3) non-allocation of required resources to civilian institutions.

To address these, an essential step is to civilianise the concept of national security, with the military playing a supportive role. Else, this vicious cycle of terrorism, military operations, dislocation of terrorists, peace accords and then terrorists’ revival shall continue.

It is time we realised that in CT, which Rupert Smith defines as a “war amongst people”, the military’s utility is critical but limited and is likely to be short-lived, unless the political, economic and governance dimensions are simultaneously addressed. For that, we need civilian supremacy in CT/ PVE decision-making. The future of our success against the Afghanistan-based lethal troika depends on whether we learn this lesson or not. The choice is ours.

The writer is a former police officer who was Nacta’s first national coordinator.

Published in Dawn, June 14th, 2024
 

TTP: growing belligerence


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EDITORIAL:

As the security forces carry out intelligence-based counter terrorism operations in the tribal districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), terrorists are increasingly using improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Some soldiers were on way to Kaichi Kumar area in Lakki Marwat on Sunday when an IED exploded near their vehicle.


A statement by the military’s media wing, ISPR, said a captain and six personnel embraced martyrdom in the blast, adding that “sanitization of the area is being carried out to eliminate any terrorists present in the area, and perpetrators of this heinous act.” This is the second such attack in the current month. On June 1, three soldiers lost their lives and four others were injured in an IED blast in a Bannu area bordering the North Waziristan tribal district.

Counter-insurgency operations are achieving major successes against the faceless enemy. But the terrorists and their handlers in Afghanistan remain a clear and persistent threat to peace security in this country. Their host and sympathizer, the interim Afghan government, refuses to listen to Islamabad’s repeated requests to take action against TTP (Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan) and all other terrorist groups, deny them the use of Afghan soil for launching cross-border attacks or hand them over to Pakistan.

Where all our efforts have failed China, with which the Kabul government is eagerly developing economic and diplomatic relations, may be able to persuade the Afghan Taliban to rein in their TTP ideological brothers. Meanwhile, hundreds of TTP militants who were allowed to return under a dubious agreement, brokered by the Afghan Taliban, are causing trouble.

They were supposed to lay down their arms and integrate into this society. Instead, they started fighting the state. Affirming that nasty reality, a report the UN Monitoring Team recently submitted to the UN Security Council said the TTP had established a new base in KP in mid-2023.

These terrorists have also activated their local sleeper cells and other adherents. Little surprise then that attacks on the security forces as well as the police have escalated. These terrorists can prolong the conflict, but are no match for the state power. It may take some time, but ultimately they will be defeated.

Kinetic operations are not a long-term solution, though. Militant groups also attract young unemployed people from disadvantaged backgrounds with chances of earning a livelihood. Here is an example.

Last month, after uncovering a nexus between militants and drug smugglers in Jamrud area of Khyber district, a police officer disclosed that to generate funds for itself the TTP had recruited 250 men (in just that one area) for distribution of drugs smuggled in from Afghanistan as well as to extort money from people.

Those young men were trained to kill those obstructing the activity. They could also be used to plant IEDs. For sustainable peace, socio-economic development schemes must get serious attention.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2024
 

Pakistan launches ‘Operation Azm-e-Istehkam’ to eradicate terrorism​

Operation will bolster army’s renewed and vigorous efforts with full support from all law enforcement agencies

Khalid Mehmood
June 22, 2024

apex committee of national action plan meeting is being chaired by prime minister shehbaz sharif on saturday june 22 2024 photo pid


Apex Committee of National Action Plan meeting is being chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday, June 22, 2024. PHOTO: PID

The Apex Committee of National Action Plan, chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, has approved “Operation Azm-e-Istehkam” to eliminate terrorism and extremism across the country.

The meeting, held in Islamabad on Saturday, included key federal cabinet members such as the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Defence Minister, Interior Minister, Finance Minister, Law Minister, and Information Minister.

Chief ministers from all provinces and Gilgit-Baltistan, services chiefs, provincial chief secretaries, and other senior civilian, military, and law enforcement officials also attended.
 
 
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Who is the enemy
Are they Pakistanis
Who funds them.avd equips them.
Their numbers
Their goal agenda etc
 
 
Free Imran Khan , and Political workers , and correct the stealing of Seats in election

I am sure there will be Istehqam

Can't subjugate 220 Million people trying to control 200-300 odd people

KPK province has rejected any Military action inside KPK
 
Shershah suri شیرشاہ سوری
https://x.com/realshershahsur
@realshershahsur

Lashkar-e-Taiba,
Hizbul Mujahideen,
Sipah Sahaba,
Al-Badr Mujahideen,
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi,
Jamaat-ud-Dawa,
Jaish-e-Mohammed,
Lashkar-e-Islam,
Ansar-e-Islam and Kazai,
and dozens of other terrorist organizations are still there.
:
8:05 AM · Jun 25, 2024
 

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