ID :
186450
Sat, 06/04/2011 - 15:40
Auther :

US had one bin Laden in Pak, India has half-a-dozen:Think tank

From Lalit K Jha
Washington, Jun 4 (PTI) Several terrorists charged by
India with mass killings on its soil have been living in
Pakistan, an eminent American think tank has said, noting that
the US has not yet made it a priority to hold Islamabad to
account for the infiltration of militants across the border.
Indians have been watching the Pakistani army send
"armed young men with groups like Lashkar(-e-Toeba) across
that border with impunity for years, and the United States has
not made it a priority of holding Pakistan to account for the
rates of infiltration," Steve Coll, President and CEO of New
America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank, said at a
Congressional hearing.
"It would be unreasonable to say you should have zero
infiltrations into complex territory, big mountains, but the
rates of infiltration that Pakistan has allowed suggest state
policy," he told lawmakers.
It is important for Americans to understand that the
ambiguity in the nature of the haven that Osama bin Laden
found in Pakistan is not, by itself, unusual in the country,
Coll said.
"From India's perspective, there are five or six
listed terrorists living around the country (Pakistan) in
similar circumstances. Sometimes they're judged to be under
house arrest. Sometimes they're notional fugitives. Sometimes
they really are difficult to find," he said Friday.
Many of these people have either admitted to or been
credibly charged with mass killings on Indian soil, Coll
said, responding to questions of US lawmakers.
"So these patterns look outrageous to the United
States when the personality is someone like Osama bin Laden.
But in the context of the way Pakistan has evolved in the last
10 years, his (bin Laden) circumstances were not, by
themselves, unusual," he said.
Coll said the presence of bin Laden in a town like
Abbottabad, certainly raises the question of whether ISI
would not have been involved in such a racket.
"ISI is best understood as a criminal enterprise as
well as a security agency. It's involved in many rackets
around the country," he said.
"The fundamental problem is that the Pakistani
military and intelligence service has not been held
accountable, over a long period of time, adequately, by its
partners or by its own people. It has made it difficult for
its own people to hold the services accountable by often
ruling directly, or suppressing those who question the
military's supremacy," he said.
Daniel Byman from the Georgetown University said that
certainly components of the al-Qaeda network have been
extremely useful to Pakistan in India and in Afghanistan.
"So it's very hard for us to make progress on the
counter-terrorism front without making progress on
Afghanistan/Kashmir, which makes this exceptionally
difficult," he said.
"Pakistan has long had what it feels are strategic
interests in both Afghanistan and India in terms of ensuring a
friendly government in Afghanistan -- and I would say one
dominated by Pakistan -- and with India, in preventing Kashmir
from becoming a normal part of the Indian union. As a result,
it's worked with a range of militant groups," he said.
Coll said the Pakistanis use their own weakness as a
defence against accountability.
"But there are some areas where the state's capacity
to control terrorist activity is clear, and one of those is in
the cross-border movements of militants from Pakistani
territory into Kashmir, for example. That border is
essentially a military zone. Nobody moves across that border
without the Pakistan army's permission," he said.

X