Whither the Muslim World’s NATO?
Source: Dawn
By James M. Dorsey
Controversy and uncertainty over the possible appointment of
a Pakistani general as commander of a 40-nation, Saudi-led, anti-Iranian military
alliance dubbed the Muslim world’s NATO goes to the core of a struggle for
Pakistan’s soul as the country reels from a week of stepped up political
violence.
It also constitutes a defining moment in Saudi relations with
Pakistan, historically one of the Gulf state’s staunchest allies and a country
where the kingdom is as much part of the problem as it is part of the solution.
Finally, whether the general accepts the post or not is likely to be a
bellwether of the Muslim world’s ability to free itself of the devastating impact
of Saudi-like Sunni ultra-conservatism and bridge rather than exasperate
sectarian divides.
Retired Pakistani military chief of staff General Raheel
Sharif’s acceptance of the command of the alliance, the Islamic Military
Alliance to Fight Terrorism, would kill several birds with one stone. The
alliance, created in 2015 to bolster Saudi Arabia’s two-year old, flailing
intervention in Yemen and counter Iran, has so far largely been a paper tiger.
The alliance has staged military exercises that appeared to
target Iran but has not yet established a joint command or command
infrastructure. The appointment of General Shareef could potentially help the
alliance evolve into a force that is credible, assuming that he can overcome
widespread hesitancy towards it across the Muslim world.
In personal terms, the appointment would award Mr. Sharif
for opposing the Pakistani parliament rejection in 2015 of a Saudi request for
military support in Yemen.
The decision took Saudi Arabia by surprise given that
Pakistan has been one
of the world’s foremost beneficiaries, if not the largest, of Saudi
government and non-governmental largess and its dependency
on remittances from Pakistani workers in the kingdom.
The appointment of General Sharif would have also been a
favour to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, a politician and businessman with close
ties to the kingdom who like the general favoured Pakistani military support in
Yemen. It would remove the popular general as a potential political rival of
the prime minister. Namesakes, Messrs Sharif are not related to one another.
The uncertainty about General Raheel’s appointment that has
been lingering since it was first announced two months ago, and then been
called into question is indicative of strains in relations between Saudi Arabia
and Pakistan, once the closest of nations in the Muslim world.
In a telling tale of the times, remittances
to Pakistan from Saudi Arabia dropped 5.8 percent over the last seven
months while cheaper and better trained Indians and Bangladeshis have begun to
replace Pakistani manpower. Moreover, Saudi Arabia has deported
39,000 Pakistanis since October as part of its crackdown on militants.
Abdullah Ghulzar Khan, a Pakistani national who lived in
Saudi Arabia for 12 years, last year
blew himself up in a parking lot near the US consulate in the Red Sea port
of Jeddah. Fifteen Pakistanis have since been arrested on suspicion of being
militants. Two of them were believed to be part of a plot to attack
the city’s Al-Jawhara Stadium with a truck carrying 400 kg of explosives
during a Saudi Arabia-UAE soccer match that was attended by 60,000 spectators.
The arrests like the story of Tashfeen Malik, the Pakistani
woman who together with her American-Pakistani husband, gunned down 14 people
in San Bernardino, California, in December 2015, tell a much bigger tale about
the risks inherent in Saudi backing at home and abroad, including Pakistan, of
puritan, supremacist interpretations of Islam.
Ms. Malik moved with her parents to Saudi Arabia when she
was a toddler to escape sectarian skirmishes and family disputes. In the
kingdom, the family turned its back on its Sufi and Barelvi traditions that
included visiting shrines, honouring saints and enjoying Sufi trance music,
practices rejected by the kingdom's austere Wahhabi form of Islam.
The change sparked tensions with relatives in Pakistan, whom the Maliks accused
in Wahhabi fashion of rejecting the oneness of God by revering saints.
Ms. Malik turned even more conservative when she returned to
Pakistan in 2009 to study pharmacology. She started attending religion classes
at a branch of Al-Huda (The Correct Path) International Welfare Foundation, a
controversial academy that has made significant inroads into Pakistan’s upper
and middle classes, and propagates an ideology akin to that of Saudi Arabia.
In a statement
after the San Bernardino attack, Al Huda described itself as “a non-political,
non-sectarian and non-profit organisation which is tirelessly serving humanity
by promoting education along with numerous welfare programmes for the needy and
destitute.” It said that it “does not have links to any extremist regime and
stands to promote peaceful message of Islam and denounces extremism, violence
and terrorism of all kinds.” The institution said that it could not be held
responsible for “personal acts “of its students.
To be sure, Al Huda like Sunni ultra-conservatism in its
various guises does not breed violence by definition. Yet, like any inward-looking,
intolerant and supremacist ideology it creates potential breeding grounds in a
given set of circumstances. Similarly, as in the case of the Islamic State (IS)
or Al Qaeda, the shared basic tenets of ultra-conservatism has lead to the
formation of groups that have turned on Saudi Arabia itself.
A newly formed alliance of IS and Pakistani Taliban that
strives to impose strict Islamic law was responsible for the series of attacks
in the last week that killed 83 people at a Sufi shrine in southern Punjab and targeted
the Punjabi parliament, military outposts, a Samaa TV crew, and a provincial
police station.
Complicating Pakistan’s struggle with militancy is the fact
that massive, decades-long backing of ultra-conservativism by successive
Pakistani political, military and intelligence leaders and Saudi Arabia has
made it part of the fabric of significant segments of Pakistani society and
education as well as key branches of the government and arms of the state.
That coupled with geopolitics and Pakistan’s increasingly
troubled relationship with its religious and ethnic minorities is precisely
what makes the proposed appointment of General Raheel so problematic.
Pakistan, a country with a long border with Iran and the world’s
largest Shiite minority, has long been a major frontline in Saudi Arabia’s
almost four-decade long covert proxy war with the Islamic republic, dating back
to the 1979 Islamic revolution. Saudi Arabia, in cooperation with the Pakistani
military and intelligence as well as senior government officials, has long
backed militant sectarian groups that have helped push Pakistan towards Sunni ultra-conservatism
and are responsible for a large number of deaths among Shiites, Ahmadis, Sufis
and others.
General Raheel’s appointment would bring the chicken home to
roost. By taking the command, General Raheel would give the alliance the
credibility it needs: a non-Arab
commander from one of the world’s most populous Muslim countries who commanded
not only one of the Muslim world’s largest militaries, but also one that
possesses nuclear weapons. The appointment would build on decades of Pakistani
military support of Saudi Arabia dating back to war in Yemen in the late 1960s.
Yet, accepting the command would put Pakistan more firmly
than ever in the camp of Saudi-led confrontation with Iran that Saudi political
and religious leaders as well as their militant Pakistani allies often frame
not only in geopolitical but also sectarian terms. Ultimately, it was that step
that the Pakistani parliament rejected in 2015 when it refused to send troops
to Yemen. Acceptance of the command by General Raheel would fly in the face of
parliament’s decision.
Pakistani Shiite leaders as well as some Sunni politicians
have warned that General Raheel’s appointment would put an end to Pakistan’s
ability to walk a fine line between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
It could raise the
stakes in Balochistan, the province bordering Iran where separatists are
agitating for independence and China has invested billions of dollars as part
of its One Belt, One Road initiative.
Pakistani news
reports suggest that General Raheel has sought to alleviate the risk by
setting conditions that are unlikely to be acceptable to Saudi Arabia,
including that Iran be invited to join the alliance and that he be the mediator
in disputes among alliance members with no need to report to a higher i.e.
Saudi authority. Iran reportedly advised Pakistan that it would work with
General Raheel if he took the command to reach a negotiated resolution of the
Yemen war.
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir, in a speech
last weekend to the Munich Security Conference, laid out a vision that rules out
General Raheel’s thinking. “Iran remains the biggest state sponsor of terrorism
in the world. Iran has as part of its constitution the principle of exporting
the revolution. Iran does not believe in the principle of citizenship. It
believes that the Shiite, the ‘dispossessed’, as Iran calls them, all belong to
Iran and not to their countries of origin. And this is unacceptable for us
in
the kingdom, for our allies in the Gulf and for any country in the world… So,
until and unless Iran changes its behaviour, and changes its outlook, and
changes the principles upon which the Iranian state is based, it will be very
difficult to deal with a country like this.,” Mr. Al-Jubeir said.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and a forthcoming book, Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
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