Gulf Times

Amid peace moves, militant attacks surge in northwest

- By Umar Farooq, Reuters

Militants have stepped up attacks on security forces in northwest Pakistan, raising fears of a revival of their insurgency and a return of lawlessnes­s as brighter prospects for peace in Afghanista­n herald shifting Islamist alliances.

The ethnic Pashtun border region was for years a haven for militants who fled the US invasion of Afghanista­n in 2001.

However, the Pakistani military cleared out the stronghold­s in a 2014 offensive.

Since March, Al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban have unleashed a wave of attacks on the Pakistani security forces.

Bolstering their bid to re-establish themselves in the border lands, the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), struck an alliance in July with half a dozen small militant factions.

“The group’s capability and military strength has increased, as has their reach,” said Mansur Khan Mahsud, executive director of the Islamabad-based FATA Research Centre.

September has seen near daily incidents, from roadside bombs to sniper attacks, to ambushes and the killing of residents accused of collaborat­ing with government forces.

The militants have killed at least 40 soldiers since March, according to a Reuters tally of official figures.

At least 109 people were killed in 67 attacks between January and July – twice the number in 2019, according to the FATA Research Centre.

“The TTP’s regrouping is concerning both because of its own activities and its links to groups like Al Qaeda,” said Elizabeth Threlkeld, a former US State Department official who served in Pakistan, now deputy-director for the South Asia programme at the Washington-based Stimson Centre. “It could again provide significan­t support to internatio­nal terror groups if it continues to regain ground.”

Militant violence surged in Pakistan after it was pressed to sign on to the US-led war on terror after the terror attacks on September 11, 2001.

Soon the Pakistani government found itself under attack from home-grown Taliban but the military succeeded in pushing them out of the region, known as the tribal areas, in 2014.

Millions of residents were displaced by the fighting but since then, militant violence in Pakistan

has largely ceased.

But now fears are growing that the surge of Pakistani Taliban violence is an unintended consequenc­e of efforts to make peace in Afghanista­n.

In February, the Afghan Taliban and the United States struck a deal allowing for the withdrawal of US forces in exchange for Afghan Taliban guarantees they would not harbour other militants.

The UN said in a report in July that there were more than 6,000 Pakistani fighters in Afghanista­n, most affiliated with the TTP, who could be heading home if they lose their refuge.

“It’s a concern for everyone,” a Western security official based in Pakistan told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Pakistan’s military did not respond to a request for comment on the violence but its spokesman said on Twitter recently that the attacks were “meant to derail (the) Afghanista­n Peace Process”.

For those living in the area, insecurity is again becoming a daily worry.

The TTP issued a statement this week telling residents to leave “until peace returns”.

“Our war against Pakistan is continuing and you will continue to see daily attacks,” the militants said.

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