Deccan Chronicle

Raheel’s IMAFT: A self-defeating idea?

- The writer is an alumnus of the National Defence College. The views expressed are personal. Abhijit Bhattachar­yya

When a sitting Prime Minister of Pakistan bars members of his party from commenting or making “any controvers­ial statements” about a former Pakistan Army Chief, Gen. Raheel Sharif, and his appointmen­t as head of a Saudi-led 41-nation Islamic Military Alliance, it calls for a serious look.

This extraordin­ary statement by an incumbent PM about a retired Army Chief understand­ably creates several realistic scenarios. First, some negative comments on Raheel Sharif must have been made by at least some members of Islamabad’s ruling party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Sharif). Second, this certainly didn’t go well with the serving top brass of the Pakistan Army. They must have signalled the civilian PM to rein in his comrades-in-arms, and the Prime Minister had no choice but to succumb, and do as the Army brass wished. Or else! There is every possibilit­y that the military-created trouble would spoil the applecart of the “rarely-surviving-civilianru­ling-class” specimen called the Prime Minister of Pakistan, traditiona­lly more in the news for frequent ousters through (mala fide) military coups than enjoying any real power in contrast to the country’s rough and repressive ruling class alliance, comprising the “ecclesiast­ical-imperial-military” caucus; more often referred to as the trinity of “Allah, America and Army”.

Understand­ably, one of the notable provocatio­ns originated from Sindh governor Muhammad Zubair, who referred to Raheel Sharif as “just another general”, with large chunks of the Pakistani elite criticisin­g the efficacy and wisdom of the retired general joining a foreign military alliance. Technicall­y and legally, though the criticism of Raheel Sharif may be untenable, what could turn embarrassi­ng and difficult for the state of Pakistan is the political fallout. Also, Gen. Raheel too may regret, in retrospect, his unpreceden­ted appointmen­t (purely) on moral and ethical grounds, that may affect the psyche and attitude of future retired Pakistani generals seeking jobs or new careers with foreign forces.

The question here is: where exactly has Raheel Sharif joined and what would be his role? Officially, his new outfit is the “Islamic Military Alliance to Fight Terrorism”, or IMAFT.

Being an inter-government­al counter-terrorist alliance of Islamic countries, it was essentiall­y forged (on December 15, 2016) by Saudi defence minister Mohammad bin Salman Al Saud for military interventi­on against the Islamic State (ISIS) and for other counter-terror actions. The primary objective is to protect Muslim countries from all terrorist groups and terrorist organisati­ons irrespecti­ve of their sect and name.

The key question here is — how will the “objective” to “protect Muslim countries from all terrorist groups and organisati­ons” be achieved? If one sees the reports emanating from the Muslim countries themselves, a grim scenario emerges as at least 12 (Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Somalia, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Yemen) of the 41 nations have serious internal and cross-border terrorism issues. How does IMAFT deal with this? Individual­ly or collective­ly?

Declaring open war or through clandestin­e or some other means? Can it afford to go for a sustained operation or will it be a one-off or sporadic “quick reaction team” op by specialise­d “shock troops”?

Also, what could be the possible political fallout of IMAFT deployment or action in the internal affairs of sovereign nations notwithsta­nding their religious bond? Can a war on terror waged by an “Internatio­nal Islamic Army” on Islamic states turn into a civil war-type scenario as it happened in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Libya and Syria in the aftermath of the US-led internatio­nal security assistance force deployment and devastatio­n? Will IMAFT go the Western way, leaving a trail of havoc, panic, destructio­n and a state of permanent war in the guise of fighting terrorism and terrorists to save Islamic states? Do the present Islamic states sincerely believe the best way to tackle terrorist and terrorism is the Western way? By the combined might of the military?

Should not they realise that whereas the Western-led coalition forces tend to fight their wars (far) away from their home bases, the proposed IMAFT will fight, if they fight at all, as they are likely to be fighting against their own shadow, deep inside their own Islamic territory, they will be inflicting more misery, thereby aggravatin­g and hastening more penury and poverty.

It does seem to this writer that the entire idea of IMAFT, in the guise of an Internatio­nal Islamic Army, is bound to be self-defeating and suicidal. Wars, as far as possible and practicabl­e, should not be fought in one’s own territory, but far away from there.

Seen from another angle, it must be remembered that profession­al armies of modern times usually are not adept in fighting unconventi­onal wars or terror wars which are perceived to have religious fervour and sanctimony from ecclesiast­ical authoritie­s. Hence a religious colour to violence and mayhem-combat organisati­on would always constitute a serious internal challenge to the heterogene­ous command, control, communicat­ions and operations room of a force like IMAFT.

In this context, the two World Wars of 1914-1919 and 1939-1945 come to mind. Although both wars were essentiall­y started and fought by, and between, Christians and Christians, they never got the stamp of “religious” or “terror” conflict. It was simply war. Also, even when the offending agent provocateu­rs of the conflict were Christians, no defending or counter-offending combatant country ever saw it as “religious terror”.

Let us now go back and recall the “preconditi­ons” stipulated by Raheel Sharif, commander of the 41-nation IMAFT: “that Iran be included in IMAFT; that he will not be under anyone’s command; and that he would be an arbitrator to promote greater harmony in the Muslim world”.

Seen from every, angle Raheel Sharif has failed to fulfil his wishes. He seems to have either been oblivious of his status as a retired soldier, or had convenient­ly forgotten that he was bound to be under the Saudi King, under whom falls the sacred shrines of Islam, and who had conceived the idea of IMAFT. Second, the exclusion of Iran is surely a potential sore point for IMAFT. And finally, Raheel Sharif must have understood by now that even if he is a much-respected soldier back home, he can’t be a modernday 21st century Khalifa commander of the 41-nation IMAFT, even though it has been constitute­d to fight its own religious brethren owing to maladminis­tration and inequality and the inability of certain nations to stand on their own feet.

It is one thing to dream of being an “arbitrator to promote greater harmony in the Muslim world”, but it is another aspect of harsh reality which stands amid the depleting resources of raw material in a shrinking world of globalisat­ion, liberalisa­tion and privatisat­ion. In today’s world, any war is a war of economics, for resources, and that includes the war on terror.

A religious colour to violence and mayhemcomb­at organisati­on would always constitute a serious internal challenge to the heterogene­ous command, control, communicat­ions and operations room of a force like IMAFT

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