Are we seeing last gasp of terrorism in Kashmir?

Are we seeing last gasp of terrorism in Kashmir?
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Highlights

The increase in violence levels on the streets of Kashmir and participation of the local population became a cause for worry in 2016. The peace dividend achieved at great cost only a couple of years earlier seemed to be losing out to the mindlessness of violent mobs. This was accompanied by enhanced local recruitment, especially within the ranks of the Hizb-ul Mujahideen (HM).

The increase in violence levels on the streets of Kashmir and participation of the local population became a cause for worry in 2016. The peace dividend achieved at great cost only a couple of years earlier seemed to be losing out to the mindlessness of violent mobs. This was accompanied by enhanced local recruitment, especially within the ranks of the Hizb-ul Mujahideen (HM).

A larger proportion of the new recruits came from South Kashmir, unlike in the past when North Kashmir was the hub of violence and terrorism. The situation seemed to be going downhill from the perspective of an average peace-loving Kashmiri who in the past had seen schools being burnt by terrorists. The security forces were routinely the target of stone pelting mobs. And finally, children and women had been pushed into the line of pellets and bullets due to relentless propaganda, coercion and the resultant cycle of violence.

In the midst of these incidents, a series of events seem to indicate the arrival of a watershed moment in Kashmir, which could result in Pakistan-sponsored terrorism becoming a victim of its own machinations. On June 22, DSP Mohammed Ayub Pandit was lynched by a mob at Nowhatta, near Srinagar. Just about a week before that, Feroz Ahmad Dar and five of his J&K police compatriots were killed in Anantnag by terrorists belonging to the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT). And a little over a month earlier, Lieutenant Ummer Fayyaz, an unarmed young officer of the Rajputana Rifles, an illustrious infantry regiment of the army, was kidnapped and shot dead by terrorists in Shopian district.

Fayyaz was on leave to attend a family wedding. The latest in this series of violent incidents was the July 10 targeting by terrorists of a bus ferrying pilgrims to Amarnath, resulting in the death of seven innocent people, including five women. This was the first attack against Amarnath yatris after the year 2000. All this should normally indicate an upswing in the levels of violence and a hardening of approach by Pakistan, which controls and coordinates major terrorist groups like the LeT and HM. It should further suggest the increased effectiveness and lethality of the terrorist groups themselves.

Contrary to this seemingly obvious conclusion, however, the reality could be the very opposite. In fact, we may well witness a shift in the ground situation in Kashmir. This is best illustrated by the experience in Punjab, which had suffered painful years of terrorist violence in the eighties and the first few years of the nineties. Even as terrorism was at its peak in the state, the criminalisation of terrorist groups had led to senseless violence, with humiliation and atrocities being unleashed against policemen and their families as well as common citizens.

This led to a fight for survival between the people and the local police on one side and the terrorists on the other…The alienation of the population and victimisation of the local police turned the tide in favour of the State…The series of events cited above in relation to Kashmir appears to be following a similar course.

The misdirected angst of terrorists against policemen, their families, a defenceless Kashmiri army officer on leave and innocent pilgrims all appear to represent a sign of disarray in their ranks. It is a reflection of the frustration that has surfaced against Kashmiris employed in the police and in the security forces as well as against the syncretic culture of tolerance prevalent in the state.

The various incidents of violence are possibly aimed at breaking the will of the security forces and the population at large through the tool of sensational terrorist attacks. But, as the debacle of terrorism in Punjab suggests, all this could push the common people who came for the funerals of terrorists to shift their loyalties.

They will also contribute to the hardening of the resolve of the Kashmir police to not only protect themselves but also take the fight to the terrorists. Finally, the return of violence also sets back any possibility of bringing different groups to the negotiating table in the near future. The turning of the tide through a series of counter terrorism operations seems to suggest that the shift is already underway.

June 2017 witnessed a series of successful strikes by security forces against terrorists and especially their leaders. To a casual observer, this may seem to be a coincidence. But the reality is that these strikes were enabled by accurate intelligence provided by angry locals who may not be able to voice their dissent in public, given their fear of being targeted by terrorists, but have helped punish them for their wanton acts of violence...The distancing of every segment of Kashmiri politics, population and even separatists from the Amarnath pilgrim attack is a clear indication of anger and frustration that seems to be building up against senseless acts of terrorism.

It is also a reality check for Kashmiri leaders, both mainstream and separatist…The decision of some within terrorist ranks to reject Kashmiriyat and secularism is likely to propagate a radical ideology that the present leadership in the state will be unable to reconcile with their own objectives.

If this reality does not lead to a rejection of senseless violence, it is a matter of time before the people and their police in Kashmir turn the tide of violence and defeat terrorism in conjunction with other security forces, as happened in Punjab. (Courtesy: IDSA.IN; Col Vivek Chadha (Retd) is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi)

By Vivek Chadha

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