Sunday, April 22, 2012

Understanding the mind of the South Asian Jihadi - part 1

Zaid Hamid - image courtesy pakteahouse.net
2008 was the year my interest in learning more about extremist and Jihadi ideologies was kindled...

I was watching CNN and saw that they were covering the infamous Mumbai attacks live. The next day I was searching for other media coverage on the attacks on Youtube, and chanced upon on a Pakistani 'news show', what really seemed at best like irresponsible journalism.  One of the participants on the show was the gentleman on the left, Zaid Hamid, with statements and conspiracy theories that seemed so outrageous I was appalled. I decided to watch more of Pakistani television, and have since tried to piece together what I think is in the mind of the South Asian (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh) Jihadi. Here's part 1, for I'm sure there's more to come.

You will see a lot of Pakistani television talk shows that discuss/debate topics like 'What is wrong with Pakistan?', 'Kerry-Lugar ke paise lene ke liye hum beygairat qaum nahin hain', 'Pakistan mein jamhuriyat ya kisi aur ki hukumat honi chahiye', etc. A lot of existential questions, a lot of questions that may only appear on an Indian television channel on Independence Day, for example. However, these are weekly affairs on Pakistani television channels, with many hosts and participants just rambling on and on, sometimes using expletives. It definitely is fun to watch, and I have caught a lot of Urdu words along the way too..

Zaid Hamid is a good example to stick to in understanding the Jihadi because he spent a lot of time on TV (many of these archived on Youtube) doing his 'security and geopolitical' shows where he spewed his conspiracy theories against all and sundry. He is seen lesser these days..

In summary, there are a few beliefs that I think the extremist South Asian holds. I say South Asian, because there may be people in India, and most definitely Bangladesh too, that hold some of these beliefs, not necessarily just in Pakistan.

  1. India is a Hindu country.
    • This is not a good assumption. True, India is predominantly Hindu, 80+%, but most states have healthy minority percentages and religion as such is less a problem in India than are class and other such issues. There is no religious persecution in India, has never been, beyond occasional minor skirmishes. So, when the ignorant Pakistan tries to equate Pakistan's 98% Muslim majority and its air-sucked-out-of-the-atmosphere environment to India's Hindu, but secular peoples and environment, they are quite off the mark. However, you do need to imagine things a certain way to feed the frenzy.
  2. The Hindu was 'our slave' for a thousand years.
    • Indira Gandhi is rumoured to have said that India's role in liberating Bangladesh was a reply to the Hindus having been slaves of the Muslims for a 1000 years (or words to that effect). I don't know if there is documented evidence of her having said this, but even if there is, I don't think the statement itself is accurate. True, the Delhi sultanate kings ruled large parts of north India, even down to south central India for a long time, and later the Mughals. And during this time, a lot of conversions took place (forced or otherwise, a different topic). It is not as if the downtrodden Muslim was 'ruling' over the Hindu. Other than the ruling classes, the ordinary Muslim was nowhere close to slave owner status. 
    • One need only pick out other Pakistani public figures like Nasir Naji or Hassan Nisar who agree with this straightforward fact, something apparently so difficult for the average Pakistani to understand?
  3. We suffer from terrorism too.
    • True, Pakistan suffers the most from terrorism. It is for this reason one of the most dangerous places on earth now. The problem with this statement though is that this terrorism is the Pakistan state's (and non state actors') own doing. There is a lot of documented evidence of public and overt fund raising for jihad in Kashmir. Pakistan's role during the Soviet-Afghan war in the late eighties, and subsequent Taliban support, diversion of terrorists into India as a central tool of their state policy, etc. is all too well known. That their state's agencies have now lost control of these groups, and see them attacking their own people, is their own doing. As you sow, so shall you reap. The rest of the world is unwilling to listen to Pakistan when it says it suffers from terrorism too. You can hold all the talk shows you want and repeat the victimhood claim, but nobody is going to listen, sorry.
  4. Spain hamare haath se chalaa gaya.
    • A lot of commentators agree with what I have to say on this matter, so this isn't new from me.
    • Much of the Jihadi's ideology comes from a glorification of the 'Muslim' past. A glorification that makes many Pakistanis see Mahmud of Ghazni as their ancestor, rather than as an aggressor. In the same vein, a glorification of the khilafa (the Islamic khalifates, of which the Ottoman empire was the last) is still an ongoing spur for terrorism in many parts.
    • Spain was conquered by the Arabs sometimes during the 9th century (or thereabouts) and they held it for about 200 years. The capital of the Arabs in Spain was Cordoba. They were ultimately driven out, and Spain is probably the only Western country that they ever held, even if for a short period. While the Arabs may feel pride in having held Spain (though they were aggressor anyway, much like the British were imperialists later on), the Pakistani has no business in imaging this glory as being their own, merely on the basis of sharing the same religion. 
    • India is the only other country (Spain is the other) that ever 'went out of the hands' of Muslim aggressors, and it is for this reason that I think that the Jihadi ideologies views these two countries as prime targets.
    • Interestingly, the mosque ('Islamic center') being built near the September 2011 crash site in New York is called Cordoba House, which name hasn't attracted much attention.
There's more to come. Add comments if you think you agree/disagree with me.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

PTSD and TBI in the Indian armed forces...

Image courtesy: vorsprungdurchtheologie.blogspot.com
I am writing this as I watch Rambo: First Blood. This is the first Rambo movie, my favourite of the Rambo series, and one that's related to the topic of this post.

Within about 15 minutes into the movie, one can conclude that Rambo, a US military Vietnam war veteran, has Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

While I initially thought the Rambo movie was a bit extreme, I don't think that any longer. We've seen many instances reported of combat veterans indulging in violence, going on a murder spree, etc., at least in the US.

In the US, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Veterans Administration (VA) and probably some other government agencies work on or sponsor research efforts aimed at detecting, preventing, or helping cure PTSD. Run a search for PTSD on the Fedbizopps website (US government RFPs and RFIs for procurement of products and services) and see how many you are able to find, and the kinds of research topics listed.

I have begun wondering whether the Indian Ministry of Defence does anything at all to see whether their serving/retired officers and soldiers are in sound mental health. For one, we don't hear of any PTSD-related violence in India. Still, what I'm getting at is not necessarily a law and order problem (which there is the risk of, of course should a PTSD soldier try to spray bullets at civilians). I am getting at what the MoD is doing to detect, prevent, and help cure PTSD. At least some of our soldiers, for sure, have PTSD. We should be thankful India isn't in too many wars, but one doesn't have to be wounded in combat to get PTSD.

After some research, I found only two articles on PTSD relating to the Indian military, one by an Armed Forced Medical College (AFMC, Pune) professor, and another by an MoD person. Both papers seemed to be surveys of work done in other countries, with references to the US military, etc. I didn't find any relevant information relating to the Indian military.

The Indian MoD and the defence minister seem to be forever embroiled in controversies surrounding housing and kickbacks to arms dealers. Hope the day comes about when we start providing the care our men in arms need to lead healthy, successful lives.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Can't get one guy, and we have an entire secret service

Indian media coverage of the US state department 'bounty' for information leading to Laskhar-e-Taiba/Jamat-ud-Dawa chief Hafeez Saeed on April 4, 2012 riled me up.

Firstly, I was left wondering why NDTV had to have at least 5 different articles on the same event, all published the same day. It looks like some of these are syndicated articles, from Agence France-Presse, etc. but can't a top media house in the country come up with its own article as the main piece on one of the biggest terrorists in the neighbourhood?

http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/us-should-give-me-the-10-million-bounty-hafiz-saeed-193986
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/bounty-on-hafiz-saeed-why-now-193849
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/us-contradicts-pakistan-says-it-was-notified-about-bounty-for-hafiz-saeed-193886
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/lashkar-e-taiba-founder-says-us-bounty-at-indias-behest-193690
http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/us-bounty-is-an-act-of-terrorism-hafiz-saeed-193668

Foreign minister SM Krishna and the Congress-led Indian government have 'welcomed' the news of the US state department's 'bounty'. I think part of the nation's psyche now is that of playing it very safe to gain international acceptance for anything and everything, at the cost of being sitting ducks and unrealistically trigger unhappy. Why does India have so less self-confidence?

  • "Let's not go after Hafeez Saeed ourselves, let's just keep sending demarches to the Pakistani high commissioner. What if the international community thinks we are Israel-like? Oh, that would be a disaster for Gandhian principled India. What if we jeopardise our chances for the UN security council?"

These, I think, are the biggest concerns the government has, even after the international community has all sympathy for India after the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai, and acknowledges the LeT as being an international terror organization with Hafeez at its helm, at least behind the scenes. What more does the government of the day need to go after the fellow with a covert strike? Sure, a surgical military strike is inviting war, but situations like these are precisely why we have a secret service. Not one, but several (R&AW, the newly formed NIA, IB).

Israel deals with terrorists that attack it ruthlessly, no holds barred. The recent assassination of Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh of Hamas, allegedly by a Mossad team of operatives, did create international uproar, and if actually an Israeli hit it got the work done for Israel's national security. Hasn't Hafeez Saeed convinced the international community that he deserves being taken out by any means? Sure, it would be wonderful if he were to be convicted, but what is the chance of that happening? Does the foreign ministry ever weight the implications of another Hafeez Saeed public rally or fund-raising campaign?

I'm sure the Research & Analysis Wing's assets have a lot of information on the fellow's whereabouts. They might even be trailing him, but probably don't have sanction for a hit from the foreign ministry. With all the chaos in Pakistan now, isn't this the right time to sanction all the covert hits that we need to rid the region of as many terror camps and as much of that dark ecosystem as possible?

The R&AW does not, as far as I know, even need any sanction from the foreign ministry. The head of the service reports directly to the prime minister, and all it takes is a 'yes' from Dr. Manmohan Singh to bring justice to the victims of 26/11. The people will regain a lot of confidence in the nation's security apparatus. Oh, but the government doesn't get to take credit for covert strikes, what a missed PR opportunity that would be?!