The Sunday Guardian

Was Amarnath attack Bajwa’s revenge?

Many Pakistan army personnel were killed in retaliator­y fire by Indian Army.

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Last Monday’s attack on the Amarnath pilgrims has jolted all the security agencies deployed to provide smooth security cover to the pilgrims visiting the Amarnath cave. We had 30,000 Jammu and Kashmir Police and paramilita­ry forces, excluding 5,000 Army personnel, to cover the security aspect of Amarnath Yatra. So what went wrong, in spite of sufficient advance intelligen­ce from the Intelligen­ce Bureau (IB), from Chandigarh, that there would be attempts on the lives of the pilgrims by the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT)?

The attack took place in the same week of Burhan Wani’s death anniversar­y in Kashmir, where the Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) made all out efforts to attack the Indian forces and the Amarnath yatris.

The killing of around 30 top militants in Kashmir by the security forces in the last two months has jolted both HM’s Syed Salahuddin and Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI).

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the United States, his meeting with President Donald Trump and the US declaring Salahuddin as an internatio­nal terrorist have made Salahuddin restless. He made it clear that he would sharpen his attacks on Indian security forces, and reorganise­d his Hizbul Muzahideen Indian group, empowered by the LeT.

Another cause was the heavy retaliatio­n by the Indian Army to the firing by the militants and the Pakistan army from across the border. Many Pakistan army personnel were killed in the retaliator­y fire and some of their bunkers were destroyed as well. Pakistan army chief, General Qamar Bajwa’s visit to Muzaffarab­ad, Skardu and other border areas in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir in the last fortnight and his address to the troops to remain in readiness for any eventualit­y against India’s surgical strikes, were clearly the precursors to a few attacks on Indian military installati­ons and on “soft targets”.

Burhan Wani’s first death anniversar­y was more or less peaceful in Kashmir, because of the heavy deployment of forces in advance and because some All Party Hurriyat Conference (APHC) leaders were kept in custody. This infuriated both the HM and LeT, many of whose leaders were killed by the Indian Army and the J&K Police.

Pakistan army and ISI planned an attack on Amarnath pilgrims through both undergroun­d and over-ground leaders of the LeT and HM. The task was entrusted to Mohammad Ismail, the Pakistan LeT leader operating in south Kashmir, i.e, in the Anantnag area. Ismail, a dreaded LeT terrorist, was camping in the area much before Amaranath Yatra started. He was just looking for an opportunit­y to strike.

The attack that took place on 10 July was not caused by any intelligen­ce failure, but by lapses on the part of the field security commanders in protecting the vehicular columns and the pilgrims. The bus carrying the pilgrims from Gujarat and Maharashtr­a was registered when it came from Jammu. On their return journey from Amarnath, these people routed the bus to Srinagar from Anantnag, and were returning from Srinagar after making a two-day halt there. While returning, the bus was not registered and was not a part of the convoy. However, after crossing Anantnag, the vehicle developed a defect and was left behind for the purpose of repair and thus remained alone.

The over-ground workers of the LeT happened to be present there. They were keeping an eye on the movement of the convoys and were passing the informatio­n to Ismail. The bus’ presence provided, on a platter, an impromptu target to the militants to strike, which they tactically did in the form of an ambush. They were successful in their intelligen­ce, planning and in deceiving the Indian security forces, who did not have any informatio­n that one of their vehicles had fallen back and was being ambushed.

Deploying an ROP (road opening party) only during the movement of a convoy, or from dawn to dusk, will not dominate the road. What is required is clearing at least 3 km on each side of a road, round the clock, particular­ly at night. The enemy will put improvised explosive devices with charges on the road only at night to take on their targets, as thus they will not be exposed to any counter-attacks. So, as a safety measure, the road is required to be dominated at night, which we failed to do.

We have received a number of satellites and drones from both the United States and Israel, but failed to use them and make them available to the field troops deployed for providing security to the Amarnath pilgrims. After we have lost seven of our pilgrims, these drones have come into use.

Ismail will not be sitting at the same site to take on more targets. He will shift to other places to attack the Army and Paramilita­ry convoys. We are never perfect in our field supervisio­n and always react after a situation precipitat­es.

Meetings and planning cannot take place only after the terrorists succeed in their attempts. It is better for us to introspect and plan in advance to secure our areas, taking into considerat­ion the use of technical gadgets such as satellites, drones and weapons befitting the terrain, apart from night operating helicopter­s with properly tested communicat­ion networks and trained heli-bound troops.

We should know our terrain better than the enemy does. We should not be beaten on our own ground by the proxy war being carried out by Pakistan through the ISI. We should take Pakistan army chief Bajwa’s border visits seriously and crush the combined effort of the HM, LeT and APHC, among others to destabilis­e and radicalise Kashmir. Pravash Kumar Mishra is Additional Director General (Retired) of the Border Security Force and Senior Fellow at the Vivekanand­a Internatio­nal Foundation. As London and Manchester recover from recent terror attacks, we now hear of a gruesome attack on the Amarnath pilgrims in Anantnag, Jammu & Kashmir in India. The group, who were on their annual pilgrimage, were mostly from Gujarat. This was yet another attempt by terrorists to disrupt a most revered pilgrimage for Hindus. As I write this article, I reflect that today, 13 July, marks the anniversar­y of the first ever organised communal slaughter in the recorded history of modern Kashmir, which took place in 1931. Hundreds of Hindus (Kashmiri Pandits) were looted, attacked, raped, molested and forcibly converted to Islam. Yet here we are, 86 years later, still witnessing horrendous attacks on innocent Hindus in the region. The recent terror attack on Westminste­r Bridge saw ordinary men and women stepping in to save lives and help protect each other. PC Keith Palmer gave his life, valiantly standing between the terrorist attacker and the hundreds of people working inside the Houses of Parliament. The bus carrying the Amarnath pilgrims also saw the emergence of an ordinary hero, Salim, the bus driver who, despite being attacked, made sure that the bus didn’t stop and this helped minimise the casualties.

In sharp contrast to the actions of these heroes, there have been unfortunat­e attempts to celebrate and glorify terrorists such as Burhan Wani, not just in the streets of downtown Kashmir, but in the heart of the busy cities of United Kingdom. The recent attempt to celebrate a “Burhan Wani day” in Birmingham was a direct challenge to the very fabric of the UK’s harmony and principles of tolerance. No sooner than this permission was sought by the protestors, in the name of holding a peace rally, the permission for it was withdrawn by the local council following complaints—a move I welcome wholeheart­edly as a step in the right direction in curbing the propagatio­n of a mindset that is evil and spreads hatred.

As the Member of Parliament for a constituen­cy that is a melting pot of world ethnicitie­s and cultures, I fully reject any attempts to radicalise and brainwash young people into celebratin­g an ideology that teaches hatred and violence.

The mastermind behind the Amarnath pilgrim attack, Abu Ismail, is a Pakistani national and Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT) terrorist, with direct links to Salahuddin and Hizbul Mujahideen, the jihadist terror group, which was recently added to the list of Specially Designated Global Terrorists by the United States. It is no coincidenc­e that there are close commonalit­ies and linkages between each of these organisati­ons and the individual­s supporting their activities, directly or indirectly.

Burhan Wani was certainly no local hero in Kashmir and deserves no praise anywhere. He was a self-styled commander of the Pakistan-supported Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) jihadist terror group, whose leader, Syed Salahuddin has just been added (27 June 2017), by the US Department of State to its list of Specially Designated Global Terrorists. The US Department of State designated Salahuddin because he “vowed to block any peaceful resolution to the Kashmir conflict, threatened to train more Kashmiri suicide bombers, and vowed to turn the Kashmir valley ‘into a graveyard for Indian forces’.” Salahuddin maintains an office in Muzaffarab­ad, capital of Pakistanoc­cupied Kashmir (PoK), and receives support from Pakistan’s military and the Inter-Services Intelligen­ce Directorat­e (ISI). Salahuddin is also chairman of the United Jihad Council, an umbrella organisati­on that includes HM and also the Lashkare-Tayyaba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, two groups that are on the US’ and United Nations’ lists of terror organisati­ons.

I have tabled an early day motion in British Parliament to urge the government to take severe measures to curb any such activity that supports terrorism in the UK or in other parts of the world, especially India. The EDM reads: “That this House condemns the recent killings of innocent Hindu pilgrims in Anantnag, Jammu and Kashmir in India; recognises it as a gruesome attack on innocent pilgrims by Lashkar-e-Toiba, an internatio­nally recognised terrorist group, led by Abu Ismail; urges the UK government to strongly condemn the attack and stand with India in the fight against terrorism; further seeks the UK government to investigat­e if there are any direct or indirect links to organisati­ons or individual­s in the United Kingdom that may be involved in such cross border atrocities in India; urges the Government to reject all forms of terrorism and support to organisati­ons/individual­s propagatin­g such ideology and to take strong action against such organisati­ons and individual­s in the UK to ensure peace in UK as well as India.”

I commend my colleague, Mark Field MP, the Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonweal­th office, for his tweet condemning the gruesome attack on the pilgrims in Anantnag. Prime Minister Theresa May said, “Enough is enough”, and that counter-terrorism strategy will ensure that the police and security services have all the power they need to tackle this attack on the fundamenta­ls of our democracy. Any fight against terrorism is incomplete without the active support from people and their elected representa­tives, so I urge all my colleagues and their constituen­ts to come together in this fight against terrorism and reject all efforts to glorify terrorists and radicalise the youth. The United Kingdom stands together with its friends, especially India, in this fight against terrorism. Bob Blackman is British Conservati­ve MP for Harrow East.

 ?? IANS ?? Pilgrims embark on the annual Amarnath Yatra from Nunwan Pahalgam base camp on 29 June.
IANS Pilgrims embark on the annual Amarnath Yatra from Nunwan Pahalgam base camp on 29 June.
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