Federally Administered Tribal Areas: Difference between revisions
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==Security issues== | ==Security issues== | ||
[[David Kilcullen]] describes the FATA as the "ancestral home of the [[David Kilcullen#Accidental Guerilla]]".<ref name=Accident>{{citation | [[David Kilcullen]] describes the FATA as the "ancestral home of the [[David Kilcullen#Accidental Guerilla|Accidental Guerilla]]".<ref name=Accident>{{citation | ||
| title = The Accidental Guerilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One | | title = The Accidental Guerilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One | ||
| author = David Kilcullen | | author = David Kilcullen |
Revision as of 17:13, 12 August 2009
A region of Pakistan is the Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA), the name making the distinction that it is outside the regular Pakistani provincial system. Under British rule, the area was called the Northwest Frontier, and the part between the FATA and the rest of Pakistan is the Northwest Frontier Province.
Along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan Pakistan exercises a measure of authority over Pakistan's Tribal Agencies.[1] an unique administrative and political status from the British colonial rule in 1849. They were demarcated, in 1893, from Afghanistan by the Durand Line. Governance is by federal Political Agents and tribal elders, "while leaving the people with their traditions and internal independence. "[2]
Most of the population of the seven Tribal agencies are traditional, conservative muslims. The agencies are: the Bajaur Agency, the Mohmand Agency, the Khyber Agency, the Orakzai Agency, the Kurram Agency and North Waziristan and South Waziristan.
Ethnicity
According to the Pakistani government, the FATA contain about a dozen major tribes with several smaller tribes and sub-tribes. Utmankhel, Mohmand, Tarkani and Safi are the major tribes living in Bajaur and Mohmand. Afridi, Shilmani, Shinwari, Mulagori Orakzai are settled in Khyber and Orakzai while the FRs of Peshawar and Kohat are occupied by Afridi. A good mix of Turi, Bangash, and Masozai inhabit Kurram Agency. Major tribes of North and South Waziristan are Darwesh Khel Wazirs with a pocket of Mahsuds in the central part of the region. Other tribes of the region are Utmanzai, Ahmadzai Dawar, Saidgai, Kharasin and Gurbaz. Bhittani occupies FR Lakki and Tank, while FR Bannu is Wazir. Ustrana and Shirani tribes live in FR D.I. Khan.[3]
Some of the tribes are Pashtun -- the same ethnic group that was the Taliban's power base in Afghanistan.[1]
Economic development
The FATA have not had the same priority for economic development as has the rest of Pakistan. Efforts were concentrated around sectoral facilities and benefiting few influential and politically active sections. "This ad hoc approach deprived large segments of the population from social uplift, and economic empowerment."[2] Lack of economic development has contributed to political isolation.
Ijaz Khan, a professor at the University of Peshawar, finds a fundamental incompatibility in the government position. Unless terrorism is eliminated rather than contained, the latter, in his opinion, the government position, economic development cannot be secured. Second, the programs do not reflect "the FATA’s evolving socio-economic landscape and power structure".[4]
Security issues
David Kilcullen describes the FATA as the "ancestral home of the Accidental Guerilla".[5] He credits Barrett Rubin with the observation that to think of "Afghanistan and Pakistan as separate countries divided by an international border, or to conceive of Pakistani Taliban in Afghanistan, or Afghans in Pakistan, as foreign fighters is to fundamentally misunderstand the mental geography of the Pashtun nation." The countries are divided by the Durand Line, which was shaped by geographic features and British convenience, not the critical tribal and ethnic borders.
There are increasing tensions between outside militants, the main FATA population, and militant residents. The government of Pakistan, however, has not yet adopted a counterinsurgency method that integrates political, economic and military measures. [6]
Among the major actors have been the Taliban under Mullah Omar, former Soviet-era groups who trace their origin to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (i.e., Hezb-e-Islami under Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and the Haqqani Network of Jalaluddin Haqqani), al-Qaeda, and indigenous Sunni militants. [7] The Jamiat-ul-Ulama-i-Islam (JUI), while at times banned, does participate in national politics.
Still, according to Kilcullen, al-Qaeda and its predecessors have had a presence in the area for almost 30 years. The Western concept of al-Qaeda leadership hiding in caves there does not match reality; "If bin Laden is actually in the FATA, this is by choice rather than necessity; he is not hiding but veiled, coccooned in a protected network of local allies and trusted relationships." [8] Al-Qaeda, Taliban, Chechen, Uzbek, Uighur and other fighters have intermarried, formed local alliances, provided charities, and, in many cases, displaced the classical tribal governance and the Pakistani political agents and maliks. This, he writes, is "absolutely typical of the infection phase of the accidental guerilla syndrome," in which a "wound" in governance structures allowed initial entry of extremists. The extremists eventually integrated into the society. FATA tribal fighters, affiliated with the outsiders, now dress distinctively, drive recent vehicles, and have Arab or other foreign "minders". They threaten Pakistani and American assistance teams.
Baitullah Mehsud, who probably was killed by a drone strike in August 2009, was associated with a new generation of leadership, more Islamic and less tribal.[9]
Dealing with the problem is challenging because it involves tribal, national, religious and transnational issues. The Pakistani government remembers the breakaway, in 1971, of what was then East Pakistan and is now Bangladesh. There remains a sovereignty issue, between India and Pakistan, about Kashmir. Pakistan, therefore, is sensitive to any possible separatist movements, and sees a FATA dominated by outside militants as such a situation.[10]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 David Rodhe. PAKISTAN TRIBAL REGION; An Anti-U.S. Haven for Al Qaeda, New York Times, 2002-12-26. Retrieved on 2009-02-11.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Welcome to FATA, Government of Pakistan
- ↑ Tribal and ethnic diversity, Government of Pakistan
- ↑ Ijaz Khan, Challenges Facing Development in Pakistan’s FATA, NBR Analysis: Challenges Facing Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR), p. 14
- ↑ David Kilcullen (2009), The Accidental Guerilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780195368345, pp. 233-238
- ↑ Pervaiz Iqbal Cheema, Challenges Facing a Counter-Militant Campaign in Pakistan’s FATA, NBR Analysis: Challenges Facing Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR), p. 22
- ↑ Shuja Nawaz, FATA — a Most Dangerous Place: Meeting the Challenges of Militancy and Terror in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, Center for Strategic and International Studies, p. v }}
- ↑ Kilcullen, The Accidental Guerilla, pp. 233-237
- ↑ Mark Mazzetti and Eric Schmitt (7 August 2009), "C.I.A. Missile Strike May Have Killed Pakistan’s Taliban Leader, Officials Say", New York Times
- ↑ Tariq Mahmud Ashraf (June 18, 2008), "Military Operations in FATA: Eliminating Terrorism or Preventing the Balkanization of Pakistan?", Terrorism Monitor 6 (12)