Terrorism in South Asia (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
Revised Aug. 31, 2005 |
Report Number |
RL32259 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
K. Alan Kronstadt and Bruce Vaughn, Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
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Summary:
This report reviews the recent incidence of terrorism in South Asia, concentrating on Pakistan
and
India, but also including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal. The existence of
international terrorist groups and their supporters in South Asia is identified as a threat to both
regional stability and to the attainment of central U.S. policy goals. Al Qaeda forces that fled from
Afghanistan with their Taliban supporters remain active on Pakistani territory, and Al Qaeda is
believed to have links with indigenous Pakistani terrorist groups that have conducted anti-Western
attacks and that support separatist militancy in Indian Kashmir. Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden
and his lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are widely believed to be in Pakistan. A significant portion
of Pakistan's ethnic Pashtun population is reported to sympathize with the Taliban and even Al
Qaeda. The United States maintains close counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan aimed
especially at bolstering security and stability in neighboring Afghanistan. In the latter half of 2003,
the Islamabad government began limited military operations in the traditionally autonomous tribal
areas of western Pakistan. Such operations have since intensified in coordination with U.S. and
Afghan forces just across the international frontier.
The relationships between international terrorists, indigenous Pakistani extremist groups, and
some elements of Pakistan's political-military structure are complex and murky, but may represent
a serious threat to the attainment of key U.S. policy goals. There are past indications that elements
of Pakistan's intelligence service and Pakistani Islamist political parties provided assistance to
U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs). A pair of December 2003 attempts to
assassinate Pakistan's President Musharraf reportedly were linked to Al Qaeda. Lethal, but failed
attempts to assassinate other top Pakistani officials in summer 2004 also were linked to Al
Qaeda-allied groups. Security officers in Pakistan have enjoyed notable successes in breaking up
significant Al Qaeda and related networks operating in Pakistani cities, although numerous wanted
militants remain at large.
The 9/11 Commission Report contains recommendations for U.S. policy toward Pakistan,
emphasizing the importance of eliminating terrorist sanctuaries in western Pakistan and near the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border and calling for provision of long-term and comprehensive support to
the government of President Musharraf so long as that government remains committed to combating
extremism and to a policy of "enlightened moderation." Legislation passed by the 108th Congress
( S. 2845 ) seeks to implement this and other Commission recommendations.
The United States remains concerned by the continued "cross-border infiltration" of Islamic
militants who traverse the Kashmiri Line of Control to engage in terrorist acts in India and Indian
Kashmir. India also is home to several indigenous separatist and Maoist-oriented terrorist groups.
Moreover, it is thought that some Al Qaeda elements fled to Bangladesh. The Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) of Sri Lanka have been designated as an FTO under U.S. law, while Harakat
ul-Jihad-I-Islami/Bangladesh, and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)/United Peoples Front,
appear on the State Department's list of "other terrorist groups."