Pakistan may use LeT for proxy war in Kashmir: US report
Washington, April 6
(IANS) Raising the specter of a renewed conflict between India and
Pakistan over Kashmir, a US study has warned that Islamabad may well turn to trusted Pakistani militant groups, such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), to do its bidding.
For the past two decades LeT, the group behind the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks that killed 166 people, has steadily emerged as one of Pakistan's most lethal and capable militant proxy groups, according to the study.
Titled "The Fighters of Lashkar-e-Taiba: Recruitment, Training,
Deployment and Death," the 61-page report by the Combating Terrorism
Centre at the US Military Academy in West Point, New York is primarily
focused on LeT and its integration into Pakistani society.
Once the primary battleground for jihad in South Asia, "over the last decade the fight in Kashmir
just hasn't been as relevant for jihadist actors" with US and
international troops in Afghanistan providing "a visible and seductive
target" for militant groups, it said.
It was difficult to predict the directional priorities of
Pakistan-based militant groups after the US reduces its role in
Afghanistan, especially in light of the internal security challenges
faced by Pakistan and the state's own shifting threat priorities, the
report said.
But "historical precedent suggests that some of these militant groups will reorient to and invest more broadly in the conflict in Kashmir," said the study.
"The series of skirmishes between Pakistani and Indian forces along
the Line of Control in Kashmir in January have brought the potential for
renewed conflict in Kashmir into sharp relief," said the report
wondering "whether this incident was isolated or a harbinger of more
violence to come" between the two neighbours.
"Should elements of Pakistan's
security establishment view it in their interest to spoil peace or
reignite conflict in the region... they will likely turn to trusted
Pakistani militant groups, such as Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), to do their
bidding," the report warned.
This could be due "potentially to serve as a release valve for
domestic challenges or to redirect the actions of militants actively
waging war against Islamabad," it said.
"While the group has historically been used by Islamabad as an agent
of regional foreign policy ... a steady array of incidents tied to the
group over the last decade strongly suggest that LeT's interests are
evolving and that its operations in the future might be less
constrained," the report said.
The Mumbai terrorist attacks left "some to question whether Mumbai
was an outlier or a sign of a broader strategic or ideological shift
taking place within the group, with more, similar international attacks
to come," the report said.
Western counterterrorism
investigators have been particularly troubled by LeT's recent attack
history, its links to several international terror plots, the group's
transnational footprint, the accessibility of its infrastructure in
Pakistan and the two-decade-long spillover associated with its training
camps, it said.
The group's active recruitment of
US and European citizens and the discovery of a number of LeT
operatives and cells based in both places, the report said, "have led
some researchers to conclude that a threat to the US homeland by this
organization (or an associated splinter group or LeT-trained element)
can no longer be ruled out."
"Even if this is not the case and the group maintains a more limited
operational focus on Kashmir and India in the years to come, its attack
on Mumbai raises the spectre that future attacks orchestrated by the
group in that region may be more hybrid in nature or international in
flavour-helping LeT to draw world media attention to its cause," the
report concluded.
The Pakistan government insists
that Pakistanis are not engaging in acts of terrorism in India or
elsewhere. But the West Point report suggests that "while few entertain
these claims as credible, our database indicates that this claim is
false."
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
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