Whanganui Chronicle

‘City of flowers’ tainted by decades of flawed policies

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After the Russian withdrawal from Afghanista­n in 1980s, Americans abandoned mujahedeen, Americans even abandoned us, and since then we are paying a price for it . . . If we are to have peace in Pakistan, we should talk to TTP from the position of strength with help from the Afghan Taliban. This is the best and [most] viable solution to avoid more violence. Mahmood Shah senior security analyst

Pakistan’s Peshawar was once known as “the city of flowers”, surrounded by orchards of pear, quince and pomegranat­e trees. It was a trading city, situated at the gates of a key mountain valley connecting South and Central Asia.

But for the past four decades, it has borne the brunt of rising militancy in the region, fuelled by the conflicts in neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n and the geopolitic­al games of great powers.

On Wednesday, the city with a population of about 2 million was reeling after one of Pakistan’s most devastatin­g militant attacks in years. A day earlier, a suicide bomber unleashed a blast in a mosque inside the city’s main police compound, killing at least 101 people and wounding at least 225, mostly police.

Analysts say the carnage is the legacy of decades of flawed policies by Pakistan and the United States.

“What you sow, so shall you reap,” said Abdullah Khan, a senior security analyst.

Peshawar was a peaceful place, he said, until the early 1980s when Pakistan’s then-dictator Ziaul Haq decided to become part of Washington’s cold war with Moscow, joining the fight against the 1979 Soviet invasion of neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n.

Peshawar — less than 30km from

the Afghan border — became the centre where the American CIA and Pakistani military helped train, arm and fund the Afghan mujahedeen fighting the Soviets. The city was flooded by weapons and fighters, many of them hard-line Islamic militants, as well as with hundreds of

thousands of Afghan refugees.

Arab militants were also drawn there by the fight against the Soviets, including the scion of a wealthy Saudi family, Osama bin Laden. It was in Peshawar that bin Laden founded alqaeda in the late 1980s, joining forces with veteran Egyptian militant Ayman al-zawahri. The Soviets finally withdrew in defeat from Afghanista­n in 1989. But the legacy of militancy and armed resistance that the United States and Pakistan fuelled against them remained.

“After the Russian withdrawal from Afghanista­n in 1980s, Americans abandoned mujahedeen, Americans even abandoned us, and since then we are paying a price for it,” said Mahmood Shah, a former Pakistani army brigadier and a senior security analyst.

The mujahedeen plunged Afghanista­n into civil war in a bloody fight for power. Meanwhile, in Peshawar and another Pakistani city, Quetta, the Afghan Taliban began to organise, with backing from the Pakistani Government.

Eventually, the Taliban took power in Afghanista­n in the late 1990s, ruling until they were ousted by the 2001 American-led invasion after al-qaeda’s 9/11 attacks in the US.

During the nearly 20-year US war against the Taliban insurgency in Afghanista­n, militant groups blossomed in the tribal regions of Pakistan along the border and around Peshawar. Like the Taliban, they found root among the ethnic Pashtuns who make up a majority in the region and in the city.

Some groups were encouraged by the Pakistani intelligen­ce agencies. But others turned their guns against the Government, angered by heavy security crackdowns and by frequent US airstrikes in the border region targeting al-qaeda and other militants.

Chief among the anti-government groups was the Pakistani Taliban, or Tahreek-e Taliban-pakistani (TTP).

In the late 2000s and early 2010s, it waged a brutal campaign of violence around the country. Peshawar was scene of one of the bloodiest TTP attacks in 2014, on an army-run public school that killed nearly 150 people, most of them schoolboys.

Peshawar’s location has for centuries made it a key juncture between Central Asia and the Indian subcontine­nt. One of the oldest cities in Asia, it stands at the entrance to the Khyber Pass, the main route between the two regions. That was a source of its prosperity in trade and put it on the path of armies going both directions, from Moghul emperors to British imperialis­ts.

A heavy military offensive largely put down the TTP for several years and the Government and the militants reached an uneasy truce. Peshawar came under heavy security control, with checkpoint­s dotting the main roads, and a heavy presence of police and paramilita­ry troops.

TTP attacks, however, have grown once more since the Afghan Taliban returned to power in Kabul in August 2021 amid the US and Nato withdrawal from that country. The Pakistani

Taliban are distinct from but allied to the Afghan group, and Pakistani officials regularly accuse the Afghan Taliban of giving the TTP free rein to operate from Afghan territory.

On Wednesday, several police officers joined a peace march organised by the members of civil society groups in Peshawar, denouncing militant attacks and demanding peace in the country. Police said they made some arrest in connection with Tuesday’s mosque bombing but did not provide details.

Ahead of Tuesday’s suicide bombing, Peshawar had seen increasing small-scale attacks targeting police. In another spillover from Afghanista­n’s conflict, the regional affiliate of the Islamic State group attacked Peshawar’s main Shiite mosque in March 2022, killing more than 60 people.

Shah warned that more TTP attacks could follow and said that Pakistan needs to engage the Afghan Taliban and pressure them to either evict the TTP or ensure it doesn’t launch attacks from Afghan territory.

“If we are to have peace in Pakistan, we should talk to TTP from the position of strength with help from the Afghan Taliban,” he said. “This is the best and [most] viable solution to avoid more violence.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Peshawar rose to prosperity thanks to its location at the entrance to the Khyber Pass.
Photo / AP Peshawar rose to prosperity thanks to its location at the entrance to the Khyber Pass.

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