03-26-2009, 05:50 PM
<b>Britain, Al Qaeda and Pakistan</b>
The United Kingdom has unveiled a 174-page report on how to tackle the Al Qaeda threat facing it. The threat is no longer confined to Underground blasts but may be âa chemical or even nuclear terrorist attackâ. And those who do it will possibly be linked to two unstable and extremism-haunted âIslamicâ states, Pakistan and Somalia, âas well as Yemen and countries in sub-Saharan Africaâ. Al Qaeda doesnât only train in the tribal regions of Pakistan, it inspires âself-startingâ followers long-distance too.
An interior ministry official in London pointed to Pakistan in particular: âPakistan weaves its way through virtually everything in this strategy [report]. We attach importance to the huge amount of work weâre doing in Pakistan. Weâve got very big collaborative programmes with the Pakistani authorities, the new government... weâre very interested in working with themâ. In short, âmilitants in Pakistan pose the greatest concernâ.
Britain has also been voicing concern about the bad state of preparedness of the Pakistani security establishment. One British national Rashid Rauf, involved in the Heathrow terrorism plot and linked to Al Qaeda, was arrested in Pakistan but âlet offâ by the Pakistani police while he was been taken to the court. Another British national, Umar Sheikh, was actually involved in the 9/11 attack and was responsible for the killing of the American journalist Daniel Pearl. Thousands of dual-nationality Pakistanis who travel from the UK to Pakistan during vacations are vulnerable to the terrorist trap of Al Qaeda in Pakistan.
<b>Pakistanâs past policies are responsible for the rise of extremism in the country, some of them conceived in close collaboration with the US and the UK during the Afghan war against the Soviets. One must also look closely at what the UK did to itself. Terrorism may be an inspiration coming from Al Qaeda in Pakistan but Muslim radicalism in the UK is home-grown. Even elected Muslims in the UK tend to be more aggressive in their identity than the usually careful Pakistanis.</b>
The mosques in the UK were not radicalised by Pakistan; that was done by British policy, based on ignoring the usurpation of Barelvi mosques by Saudi-funded radical organisations. London refused to read the message when Pakistanâs biggest Barelvi leader, Maulana Shah Ahmad Noorani, began to have trouble talking to his flock in the UK. British Pakistanis, 700,000 strong, were all Barelvis to begin with. Now London is to have the worldâs largest Deobandi mosque.
The UK literally borrowed the hardline Islamists from France and the rest of Europe thinking it was acquiring âassetsâ for its Middle East policy. It doomed its majority Muslim population composed of Pakistanis in the process as most of these Arab extremists linked up with Al Qaeda and its funded madrassas in Pakistan and sent the expat Pakistanis in a beeline to their handlers in Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar. The UK remained passive to accusations of having converted London to Londonistan till July 7, 2005 when a group of Pakistani Brits attacked as suicide-bombers. But till then, Lashkar-e-Tayba had received millions of pounds as âcharityâ from the UK.
<b>Pakistan is in trouble today. Al Qaeda is embedded here and Pakistanis are more busy hating America and its side-kick, the UK, than paying attention to the consequences of allowing the terrorists to win territory and then enforce their own laws on it. Pakistan may have the will to fight them but lacks the material capacity to do so.</b> The British report is right in its diagnosis that Pakistan has to be helped. Whether this will happen in these cash-strapped days is another matter.
What is significant is that Pakistan is doing much better than in the past in keeping tabs on the UK Pakistanis after they enter Pakistan. It has tipped off the British government about âmore than 20 Britons believed to have spent time with radical militant groups and then returned to the UKâ. Pakistanis elected to the British parliament need to play a bigger role when they come to Pakistan, talking less about how wrong Britain was about Iraq and more about how Pakistan can help by preventing the expats from the UK to link up with Al Qaeda.
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