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Afghanistan/South Asia
The Jihad Lives On — Part 2
2005-03-09
Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM)
Acting under the establishment dictum, one of the most dangerous jehadi organizations operating from Pakistan and active in J&K, the JeM, restyled itself as the Khudamul Islam, claiming it is devoted to preaching Islam and social work. The Jaish chief, Maulana Masood Azhar, who had to be released by the Indian Government in December 1999 after an Indian airplane was hijacked, is one of India's 20 most-wanted men. However, Maulana Masood Azhar had to face the wrath of the Pakistani intelligence establishment after his group was found involved in the December 2003 suicide attacks against General Musharraf in Rawalpindi. Investigations into these attacks later cleared Masood Azhar's name after it transpired that one of the two suicide bombers - Mohammad Jameel - actually belonged to the Jaish's dissident group - Jamaatul Furqaan, led by Maulana Abdul Jabbar alias Maulana Umer Farooq. Much before the suicide attacks, Masood had informed the ISI high-ups in writing that Jabbar and 11 of his associates had revolted against him and he was no more responsible for their actions.

Despite its renaming, the US State Department designated the Jaish a foreign terrorist organization in December 2001, compelling Musharraf to ban the group in January 2002. Masood Azhar got his outfit registered under the new name of Khudamul Islam within no time. The Jaish chief was kept under house arrest for a few months after the 9/11 terror attacks, but was subsequently set free. Though Masood Azhar, while conceding to the ISI's pressure, had directed his henchmen not to target the American interests in Pakistan, there are strong fears in the Pakistani intelligence circles that the dissident members of the Jaish, who are unknown and have gone underground, constitute the real threat.

The murmurs of dissent in the outfit first surfaced when Masood Azhar failed to react to General Musharraf's policy change on Afghanistan after the 9/11 terror attacks. Several prominent Jaish members favoured retaliatory attacks against US interests in Pakistan to pressurize the military ruler against supporting the Bush administration. But acting under the agencies' command, Masood refused to acquiesce. As things stand, there are fears that ongoing disputes over possession of the various Jaish offices, mosques and other material assets could lead to more serious clashes between the two banned factions.
The main cause behind the fighting is the embezzlement of fundsby Azhar and his family members, his lucrative profession is the main reason he has been so loyal to the establishment.

Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM)
Led by Rawalpindi-based Yousaf Shah alias Syed Salahuddin, HM is the outfit to watch in the coming months. Of all the militant groups operating in J&K, the HM is the largest, with a 20,000-strong cadre base drawn from both indigenous and foreign sources. The Hizb happens to be one of the most lethal jehadi groups, and controls about 60 per cent of militants operating in J&K. With India and Pakistan finally agreeing to allow travel across the Line of Control (LoC) by bus between Srinagar-Muzaffarabad, the Pakistani establishment has asked HM Chief Salahuddin to halt, for the time being, all militant operations against the Indian security forces in J&K. However, the United Jehad Council (UJC), an alliance of 13 Kashmiri jehadi organizations led by Salahuddin, has been restructured and three Pakistan-based jehadi groups, the LeT, JeM and Al-Badar Mujahideen have been brought into the UJC. This new adjustment is called Muwakhaat ('agreement on the basis of brotherhood') that is aimed at putting an end to the internal differences among the jehadi groups waging the Kashmir jehad.
There have been numerous clashes between the Pakistani Jihadis and the ethnic Kashmiri Jihadis, as well as fighting between the Salafis and the others

According to the intelligence sources, reorganizing the command and control structure of the HM-led UJC was part of a strategy change to enable Pakistani intelligence to have tighter control over its running. With the restructuring of the UJC, they said, no component member of the UJC would be allowed to launch an attack in J&K, unless approved by the Council. That is why most of the smaller groups, which had been irritants for the ISI, have been merged to reduce the number of their representation in the Jehad Council from thirteen to five. Al-Barq, Tehreek-e-Jehad, Islamic Front, Brigade 313 and the Kashmiri component of HuM have been merged to form the Kashmir Freedom Force, which would be led by Farooq Qureshi of Al Barq. The Muslim Janbaz Force, Al Jehad Force, Al Fateh Force, Hizbullah and Jamiatul Mujahideen (JuM) have also been merged to form the Kashmir Resistance Force, which would be led by Ghulam Rasool Shah. Similarly, many of the militant training camps have been moved from Azad Kashmir to Pakistan in Punjab and the Frontier provinces, with strict restrictions on the movement of militants. The training camps have reportedly been relocated at Taxila, Haripur, Boi, Garhi Habibullah and Tarbela Gazi.
The reorganisation actually took place a while ago

Harkatul Mujahideen (HuM)
Led by Maulana Fazalur Rehman Khalil till recently, the HuM has regrouped and is working in a low-key manner under the name of the Jamiatul Ansar, but insisting that it has a non-militant agenda. As the Government's anti-extremism drive brought into sharp focus Maulana Khalil's alleged al-Qaeda links, he had to resign from the top slot of the organization in January 2005, as advised by his spy masters. Khalil, who was released in December 2004 after an eight-month detention in a seven by seven foot cell, submitted his resignation at a January 2005 meeting of the 'executive committee' of the HuM and asked the committee members to elect Maulana Badar Munir from Karachi as the new chief. Intelligence sources, however, insist that Khalil remains in the good books of the establishment and would continue calling the shots from behind the scene, despite his resignation as the Harkat chief, which was nothing more than an eye wash.

HuM's association with Osama bin Laden was established on August 20, 1998, when US planes bombed the al-Qaeda training camps near Khost and Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan in retaliation to US Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The US bombs destroyed two HuM training camps and killed 21 of its activists. As of today, the US intelligence agencies believe the Harkat still retains links, like most other jehadi groups, with the Taliban remnants and al-Qaeda operatives hiding on the Pak-Afghan border.

Despite enthusiastic applause from the West for anti-militancy efforts of Pakistan's 'visionary' military ruler, it is evident that much remains to be done on the ground before these efforts will actually bear fruit. With changing scenarios all over the world, there has been a change of minds, yet what is required is a change of hearts.
Link


ISI re-organising militant organisations
2004-02-27
More on the reorganisation of the Kashmir Jihad posted yesterday
In a two-pronged change of strategy, the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) has shifted several militant training camps from Pak-occupied-Kashmir (PoK) to Pakistani territory, and is re-organising the command structure of militant organisations it uses for terrorist strikes in India. Under pressure to stop cross-border terrorism into India, ISI has now moved several of the training camps from PoK since these had come to the notice of the international community. But some of the camps have been retained for use by foreign mercenaries as Islamabad uses the excuse that it has no control over them, informed sources said here. Interrogation of a number of Pakistani militants captured by the Indian authorities, reveals that about 2300 militants from five camps in Muzaffarabad areas have just been moved to two camps at Taxila and Haripur in Islamabad-Peshawar area.
There was a throwaway remark in the latest edition of Pak’s Friday Times that some of the Jihadis in one of the training camps were killed in an earthquake earlier this month.
There's that whole signs and portents thing again ...

These tactical changes have been accompanied by moves to restructure the United Jehad Council (UJC), an umberella group of 13 militant outfits, to enable ISI to have a tighter control over its running. Smaller outfits which have been irritants for ISI are being merged which will reduce the number of their representation in UJC from 13 to five. The ISI has asked Al-Barq, Teherek-e-Jehad, Islamic Front, 313 brigade and the Kashmiri component of Harkat-ul-Mujahideen to merge and form Kashmir Liberation Organisation. However, there were differences on the name between Kashmiri militant leaders and ISI and the new name suggested by Kashmiris was Kashmir Freedom Force which would be led by Farooq Qureshi of Al Barq, the report said.
Apparently they went with the latter.
Well, "Kashmir Freedom Force" is certainly a better name than some of the ones that they were floating around yesterday ...

Similarly Muslim Janbaz Force, Al Jehad force, Al Fateh force, Hizbullah and Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen were being merged to form Kashmir Resistance Force and would be led by Ghulam Rasool Shah alias General Abdullah, it said. Interestingly Tehrek-ul-Mujahideen, which did not agree to merge as per the wishes of ISI, has been asked to fend for itself and it is reported that the outfit was getting close to Lashker-e-Taiba for training and Ahl-e-Hadis (Wahabi) organisations in Pakistan for financial support, the report said.
The Lashkar likely has enough financial resources to sponsor their own Jihadi groups, but it doesn’t seem wise to let them...
Yeah, but I thought that the ISI was laying off the LeT for now. They also seem to be becoming the new "legitimate" face of the International Front with al-Qaeda's leadership underground.

The ISI has roped in its trusted lieutenant Sheikh Jamil-ur-Rehman in the UJC so that it could have a complete control over the amalgam. Meanwhile, amidst fears of war looming large over it in mid-2002 and growing international pressure, ISI was quick enough to shift militant camps from PoK to other places in the country with strict restrictions on the movements of Kashmiri militants. According to the report, the militants of various outfits except Hizbul Mujahideen, were shifted to a closed factory on Haripur-Taxila road in Punjab province, the report said. It said that the factory had been taken over by the Pakistan government on rent and handed over to ISI. There were about 500 militants in this camp which included Al-Barq (70 militants), Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen (65), Tehrek-e-Jehad (70), Islamic Front (25), Teherek-ul-Mujahideen (60), Muslim Janbaz Force, Al-Jehad and Al-Fateh (150 combined strength), Hizbullah (15), Al Umar (25), Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islamia (50) and JKLF (55).
Assuming the intell is acurate, RAW must have heavily infiltrated these groups to have such specific numbers.
There were reports a little while back suggesting that Pakistan was feeding India intel on at least the Hizb ul-Mujahideen. Then again, RAW does have a reputation for being very good in this regard.

About of 2300 Hizbul Muajhideen cadres had been kept in Taxila camp and Haripur camps around Islamabad. The loyalists of Abdul Majid Dar were shifted to Boi camp located at a place atop a hill on the confluence of river kaghan and river Jehlum on Muzzafarabad-Mansehra road in Pakistan. Another set of 300 to 400 militants had been lodged in Gari Habibullah camp and Tarbela Gazi Camp in North West Frontier Province of Pakistan.

The report said that after May this year, when the militants were shifted to these camps in Pakistan, ISI imposed restrictions on the free movement of militants. "They are not allowed to move out and those visiting them have to reach the camps in the night and leave before sun rise," it said and added that the Kashmiri boys in the camps were so fed up with the restrictions and uncertainity of the life that they were desperate to return to their homes.
Link


India-Pakistan
11 more gunnies hang it up...
2002-06-05
Another 11 militants handed themselves over to the civil and police authorities in Kashmir on Wednesday and surrendered their arms and ammunition, an army spokesman said. The surrender ceremony, the second in five days, was organised by the Indian army in the northern Kashmir district of Kupwara. On Saturday, 21 rebels gave themselves up at a similar function in Kupwara.
Who wants to be the last guy killed in a war you've lost?
The militants are members of the pro-Pakistan militant groups Hizbul Mujahideen, al Barq, Zarb-e-Islam and al Fateh, the spokesman said. In all, they surrendered 11 AK-47 assault rifles, two dozen grenades, a landmine and two grenade launchers, besides other arms and ammunition.
The Hizbul gunnies are suffering internal splits. Al Barq and Fateh are both scheduled to be cannibalized for parts to build the new, improved, longer, lower, leaner, wider Kashmir Resistance Force.
The spokesman said efforts by the army, police, intelligence agencies and the families of the militants all combined to persuade the militants to surrender. "There is a latent groundswell within the public against terrorism which could, sooner rather than later, manifest itself," he said.
More likely their jobs were reorged out of existence and they don't feel like starting over again from the bottom in a flat market.
The army officers present during the surrender ceremony said the militants had expressed a desire to shun violence and lead a normal life instead of as fugitives in the forests. "They were either duped or coerced into joining militancy," said Brigadier B.S. Ghotra. "This action of surrender is likely to give impetus to others to follow suit and thereby bring normalcy to the state."
If the Paks really do cut off the money, there will be quite a few more who just decide to retire, at least until the money and arms start flowing again — which they will.
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Terror Networks
Kashmir jihadi groups redoing their org charts again...
2002-03-25
  • Reports are surfacing in Kashmir of local outfits staging a comeback have started pouring in from Pakistan-Controlled-Kashmir (PCK), where almost all militant outfits are based. According to the details made available by a local news agency, quite a few outfits would remain active in the coming days as all the smaller outfits have been directed to merge into them.

  • This year's lineup will include Hizbul Mujahideen, Jamiat-Ul-Mujahideen, Tehreek-Ul-Mujahideen, Harkat-e-Jehad-e-Islami, Al-Umar Mujahideen, Tehreek-e-Jehad, Islamic Front and Kashmir Resistance Force trying to dominate the militancy in the state in the near future.

  • Al-Khalid, a stray group of Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), has merged into HM after three years of independent existence. Another group, Al-Badr Mujahideen has joined Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen, and Hijb-e-Islami has been directed to join the Tehreek-ul-Mujahideen outfit, the report said.

  • Negotiations for merger between Tehreek-e-Jehad-e-Islami and Al-Baraq are stated to be in the final stages and they are merging under a new name.
    They will continue to offer the same fine product line, however.

  • Similarly the stray group of Tehreek-e-Jehad that was operating under a PCK militant commander Ishfaq Balwal under code name Third Brigade has returned to the mother outfit. While Karvan-e-Jehad has been directed to merge into Al-Umar Mujahideen, Lashker-e-Islami has been asked to merge into Islamic Front.

  • The reports said all the militant outfits floated by various factions of the Peoples’ League have managed to forge a single outfit called Kashmir Resistance Force (KRF). The KRF will draw its cadres from the Al-Jehad, Hizbullah, Muslim Janbaaz Force and Al-Fateh. Since all these outfits, floated by various factions of the league, have strong Kashmiri identity, the aim of the exercise is to get back militancy to the locals in order to whitewash the allegations that non-local outfits are running the show in the name of Kashmir.

  • Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad, the two outfits having sizable non-Kashmiri membership have been asked to work with local outfits, as the the two are already in trouble because of the crackdown launched by Pakistan against the Jehadi cult after the September 11 and December 13 attacks in the US and India respectively.
  • Link



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