South China Morning Post

‘MASSIVE WAVE’ OF VIOLENCE FEARED

Islamabad on alert as Taliban movement orders militants to launch nationwide campaign of terror attacks after ending six-month ceasefire

- Tom Hussain

Pakistan is preparing a counterter­rorism offensive amid an expected massive wave of violence after the country’s Taliban movement called off a shaky sixmonth ceasefire and ordered its militants to launch a nationwide campaign of attacks, analysts said.

If the ceasefire is not restored by last-minute diplomacy between Islamabad and the Afghan Taliban regime – which has mediated talks with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) – “the official end of the ceasefire will result in an uptick of violence in Pakistan”, said Abdul Basit, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore.

The last counterter­rorism effort was launched in 2014, when some 6,000 militants were forced to flee to neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n.

Pakistan’s state minister for foreign affairs Hina Rabbani Khar flew to the Afghan capital Kabul yesterday to pursue a broad agenda including “regional security”, a spokesman in Islamabad said.

Pakistani media, quoting anonymous sources, reported the minister would discuss a proposed plan for cooperatio­n on counterter­rorism between Kabul and Islamabad – including measures such as preventing TTP incursions into Pakistan.

Basit expected the TTP to adopt a “no holds barred approach” to terrorist attacks in Pakistan, necessitat­ing the expensive military-led counterter­rorism campaign – something Islamabad desperatel­y sought to avoid by having the Afghan Taliban host negotiatio­ns which yielded the TTP ceasefire in June.

More than 70,000 people were killed and tens of billions of dollars in economic losses were sustained during the war against the TTP and its al-Qaeda allies between 2007 and 2015.

Islamabad-based analyst Saifullah Mahsud said the TTP would seek to back up their ceasefire cancellati­on by carrying out attacks over as wide a geographic­al area of Pakistan as possible. Mahsud believes most of the violence is expected to take place in the tribal districts of northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province which border Afghanista­n.

But the TTP would also “want to make a statement”, Mahsud said, by carrying out a high profile attack either against an army installati­on or a crowded public venue in the northwest city of Peshawar or the capital Islamabad.

Popular political leaders would also be in the TTP’s cross hairs, he said.

Sensing trouble, most of the population of the tribal district of South Waziristan – expected to be a focal point of Pakistan’s anticipate­d counterter­rorism campaign – had completed seasonal migrations to their winter homes in adjacent areas earlier than usual, said Mahsud, who is president of the Fata Research Centre, a think tank focused on the restive tribal districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a.

Since August, the TTP has carried out practicall­y daily attacks against Pakistani security forces and police seeking to intercept them.

By timing the end of the ceasefire on Monday, analysts said the TTP was trying to exploit the political instabilit­y prevalent in Pakistan since former prime minister Imran Khan’s government was sacked in a parliament­ary no confidence vote in April.

After ending a two-month long protest march on Saturday, which failed to pressure the government into calling a snap election, Khan said he would try to force the administra­tions in two of Pakistan’s four provinces which his PTI party controls – including Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a – to dissolve their assemblies.

Basit said the TTP was also looking to pressure the new chief of staff of Pakistan’s powerful army, General Asim Munir, to retain its policy of seeking a negotiated solution with insurgents, rather than fighting them.

“One needs to see how quickly a government which is struggling to govern, and a military which is transition­ing, will deal with the situation,” Basit said.

Islamabad’s problems are “further compounded” by its deteriorat­ing ties with the Afghan Taliban regime over its refusal to restrict the TTP as Pakistan had expected after enabling its victory in the Afghanista­n war, he said.

“There needs to be greater clarity on where the Pakistan army’s policy on counterter­rorism stands because they initiated the peace talks which have now collapsed,” Basit said.

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