This
is a slap on the face of pseudo-secularists who say that 'only poor and
illeterate youth join path of terrorism'. Will Indian Government take
appropriate steps to stop terror groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba ? - Editor
Washington (U.S.A.) :
Terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) recruits from Pakistan's elite,
contradicting "a lingering belief that Islamist terrorists are the
product of low or no education or are produced in madrassahs", a media
report said Friday quoting an exhaustive study.
Lashkar is "a group whose well-educated
recruits defy the idea that poverty and ignorance breed extremism. A
group whose fighters include relatives of a politician, a senior army
officer and a director of Pakistan's Atomic Energy Commission", said
ProPublica, an investigative news site, citing the study.
The study released by the Combating
Terrorism Center at the US Military Academy in West Point helps explain
why Pakistan has resisted international pressure to crack down on
Lashkar after it slaughtered 166 people in Mumbai in 2008, it said.The
findings are based on 917 biographies of LeT fighters killed in combat.
They illuminate "Lashkar's integration
into Pakistani society, how embedded they are", said co-author Don
Rassler, the director of a research programme at the centre that studies
primary source materials.
"They have become an institution," Rassler was quoted as saying.
The 56-page report "The Fighters of
Lashkar-e-Taiba: Recruitment, Training, Deployment and Death" refrains
from policy suggestions, but there are implications for US counterterror
strategy.
Lashkar's popularity and clout defy
conventional approaches to fighting extremism, said co-author Christine
Fair, a Pakistan expert at Georgetown University.
"When you have an organization that
enjoys such a degree of open support, there are no options for US policy
other than counterintelligence, law enforcement and counter-terrorism
targeting," Fair said.
The study says that recruits often
become holy warriors with the help of their families, which admire
Lashkar's military exploits in India and Afghanistan and its nationalism
and social service activities at home.
Most recruits joined at about age 17 and died at about 21, generally in India or Afghanistan.
Their
backgrounds contradict "a lingering belief in the policy community that
Islamist terrorists are the product of low or no education or are
produced in Pakistan's madrassas", the report said.
In fact, the fighters had higher levels of secular education compared to the generally low average for Pakistani men.
Relatively few studied at religious
schools known as madrassahs. They joined Lashkar because they wanted
more meaningful lives, admired its anti-corruption image and felt an
obligation to help fellow Muslims, the study said.
"These are some of Pakistan's best and
brightest and they are not being used in the labor market, they are
being deployed in the militant market," Fair said.
"It's a myth that poverty and madrassahs create terrorism, and that we can buy our way out of it with US aid."
"It's a myth that poverty and madrassahs create terrorism, and that we can buy our way out of it with US aid."
At least 18 fighters who were killed had immediate family members who served in Pakistan's armed forces.
Although most recruits were working or
lower middle-class, some "had connections to elite Pakistani
institutions and Pakistani religious leaders and politicians".
The study cites Abdul Qasim Muhammad
Asghar, son of the president of the Pakistan Muslim League's labour wing
in Islamabad and Rawalpindi.
Another case: a fighter known by the nom
de guerre of Abdul Razzaq Abu Abdullah. His 2003 obituary describes his
maternal uncle as "a director of Pakistan's Atomic Energy Commission".
Source : Deccan Herald
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