THE attack on the air force base in Kamra has raised disturbing and
disturbingly familiar questions. That only one security personnel was
killed as opposed to nine dead militants is only a small consolation:
the first and foremost question is, how were militants able to yet again
infiltrate a highsecurity armed services` base and engage security
forces inside for many hours? Given that some kind of military operation
in North Waziristan against at least the Pakistancentric militants is
in the offing, the possibility of pre-emptive strikes by the militants
is high. Had the warning of a blowback only been made at the policy
level without it filtering down to the security forces likely to be in
the crosshairs of the militants? Already, the very specific threat
against PAF bases in Punjab by the TTP in revenge for the killing of a
militant leader earlier this month had been picked up by the
intelligence apparatus. Surely, then, at this stage of the fight against
militancy, the security apparatus should be able to repulse attacks on
at least critical sites with more efficiency, particularly with both the
circumstantial and direct forewarning appearing to have been available.
As
with previous attacks, the possibility of insider help to the militants
in the assault on Kamra is also very high. From sympathisers of radical
Islamistthought to direct supporters of militant groups, the army
appears to have a militancy problem, the severity of which is hidden
from the public because investigations and court martials are often
carried out in secret. The wider concern going forward ought to have the
army`s screening procedures: how robust and effective is the
surveillance and vetting of the armed forces` personnel to prevent an
incident before it happens? Clearly, as recent history suggests, not
robust or effective enough but what will it take for a more serious and
sustained effort? Finally, the question that has bedevilled the fight
against militancy: when will the state, both the army and the political
government, drive home the message to the Pakistani public that the war
is real, it is against a radicalised fringe of Pakistan and that unless
the war is fought with total commitment and purpose, the state and
society itself will spiral towards irreversible disaster? Gen Kayani`s
Independence Day message contained the first strands of that message but
it has to be sustained and spread to the farthest corners of the
country. The ones shouting `this isn`t our war` many on the political
right need to be countered, firmly and unequlvocally. Delay that battle
any longer and the already manifold complications will grow yet more
complicated.
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