Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Apply uniform standards to every terror outrage

Nawaz Sharif’s comments on the Mumbai 26/11 attacks expose Pakistan’s duplicitou­s stand on terrorism

- TCA RAGHAVAN TCA Raghavan is a former high commission­er to Pakistan The views expressed are personal

Pakistan’s former PM Nawaz Sharif’s comments on the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks, the lack of progress in the trail to bring its conspirato­rs to justice and Pakistan’s internatio­nal isolation have drawn enormous attention in Pakistan and India. In the latter, it is seen as indictment, if it was needed, of the forces that powered the attacks and have kept a protective cloak around its leaders. In Pakistan reactions varied.

A few acknowledg­ed the fact that no more than the truth was spoken and Pakistan’s poor internatio­nal image was standing proof of all that had gone wrong in Pakistan. More felt betrayed that ground was being conceded to the Indian position on account of Pakistan’s internal politics. Many more probably while conceding the truth in both these positions neverthele­ss were more interested in witnessing the latest unfolding of a major political party’s tangle with the military establishm­ent.

From mid-2013 till July 2017 Sharif’s tenure as PM was regularly punctuated by very visible run-ins with the military. After his ouster he has been vocal in speaking out against the forces that unseated him — sometimes directly, sometimes by allusion but no one was left with any doubt about who his defiance was aimed at. The remarks on the 26/11 attacks have given the civil-military tussle in Pakistan an added intensity. This is not surprising in itself and this has happened in the past on a number of occasions. Even as the terrorists in Mumbai were being neutralise­d, on November 28, 2008, the Pakistan foreign office had announced that the DG ISI would visit Mumbai as part of the investigat­ion into the attacks by the LET. Within hours the decision was annulled. It was a Pakistan Peoples Party government in Pakistan then, itself still reeling from the impact of Benazir Bhutto’s assassinat­ion less than a year earlier. The fact is that where dealing with India is concerned Pakistan’s military trusts neither the PPP nor the PML(N), it believes that the role is its, and its alone.

In any event the trail, such as it was, of the lead plotters of the attacks became an instrument in the hands of the military to thwart political initiative­s to stabilise and improve ties with India. Both houses of our Parliament had spontaneou­sly adopted resolution­s of support and grief after the Army Public School massacre in Peshawar in December 2014.

Before this move could gather momentum and barely three days later came the news that an anti-terrorist court had granted bail to Zaki-ur-rehman Lakhvi, one of the 26/11 mastermind­s. He was released on bail within days of the Indian foreign secretary’s Islamabad visit in March 2015 to restart a dialogue stalled then for some months after the Pakistani high commission­er’s ill-fated meeting in Delhi with the Hurriyat. This step came to nothing. The fact also is that the 26/11 attacks and the trail has been the site of civil-military contestati­on in Pakistan from the very beginning.

What underwrote Sharif’s remarks is Pakistan’s own experience of the backlash from terrorist outfits long-sponsored by the military. At about the same time as the controvers­y over Sharif’s remarks there was much anguish in Pakistan over the failure of its applicatio­n to the UNSC that Umer Khalid Khurasani, the leader of Jamaat-ul-ahrar, be listed by the Al Qaeda/taliban sanctions committee. He is believed to have been the mastermind behind many major terrorist attacks in Pakistan, including the Army Public School massacre.

It was widely reported in the Pakistani media that the applicatio­n failed because the United States objected to it. The Pakistan foreign office spokespers­on said “if the organizati­on Jamaat-ul-ahrar has been listed by the sanctions committee, its leader should also have been listed.” This is a fair point. But the same analogy exists with the Jaishe-mohammed and Masood Azhar where Pakistan effectivel­y lobbied China to block Azhar’s listing. This failure of Pakistan to apply uniform standards to terrorist outrages even as it reels under attacks is the heart of the problem.

It is to Sharif’s credit that he said this so pointedly. Whether he does so out of careful political calculatio­n or gut instinct or straightfo­rward frustratio­n, perhaps even desperatio­n, is more difficult to decipher. In any event, Pakistan’s general elections will reveal the answer.

NAWAZ SHARIF HAS BEEN VOCAL ABOUT THE FORCES THAT UNSEATED HIM — SOMETIMES DIRECTLY, SOMETIMES BY ALLUSION BUT NO ONE WAS LEFT WITH ANY DOUBT ABOUT WHO HIS DEFIANCE WAS AIMED AT

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