MarketNeutral
9th April 2010, 02:56 AM
The brazen attack on Monday on the United States consulate in Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), was the first ever against a US facility in the restive region.
The attack, in which gunmen fired on a security post at the consulate in broad daylight before detonating a car bomb, killing eight people, comes at a key time in Pakistan's turbulent history: deep fissures have created an environment ripe for exploitation by militants.
At stake is not only the security - and survival - of Pakistan, but the broader United States-led struggle in Afghanistan against the resilient Taliban.
In this volatile situation, political polarization has reached a climax in insurgency-hit NWFP between the majority Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns. The Punjab-dominated establishment comprising the judiciary, the chief of army staff, the prime minister and the media corps has ganged up against Sindhi President Asif Ali Zardari, making him a virtual figurehead. Al-Qaeda-led militants, far from being crushed as the military claims, have regrouped and are stronger than ever.
The timing and target of the Peshawar attack could not have been more significant as it followed close on an announcement by army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kiani that the months-long operation in the South Waziristan tribal area, the headquarters of the al-Qaeda linked Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP - Pakistan Taliban) had been concluded and that thousands of displaced families could return home. Earlier, Kiani had announced victories in Bajaur, Mohmand and Khyber agencies against militants.
Monday's assault on the consulate - the first on a US mission in Pakistan since 2006 - was clearly a statement that any declarations about the demise of militancy are grossly premature. The TTP claimed responsibility, but the plan in all likelihood would have been hatched by al-Qaeda.
Although the US Embassy in Islamabad says that the four attackers in two vehicles who tried to breach the heavily fortified compound caused only minor damage, a Pakistani security official told Asia Times Online on the condition of anonymity that the militants did enter the compound and exchanges of gun fire were heard, followed by a huge explosion.
It is possible that the extent of the damage is being played down. It is an open secret that the consulate serves as a front for Central Intelligence Agency operations against al-Qaeda and it is also believed to be the headquarters of American defense contractors who, according to American media, have been tasked to kill militants and pro-Taliban and al-Qaeda figures in Pakistan.
The attack, in which gunmen fired on a security post at the consulate in broad daylight before detonating a car bomb, killing eight people, comes at a key time in Pakistan's turbulent history: deep fissures have created an environment ripe for exploitation by militants.
At stake is not only the security - and survival - of Pakistan, but the broader United States-led struggle in Afghanistan against the resilient Taliban.
In this volatile situation, political polarization has reached a climax in insurgency-hit NWFP between the majority Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns. The Punjab-dominated establishment comprising the judiciary, the chief of army staff, the prime minister and the media corps has ganged up against Sindhi President Asif Ali Zardari, making him a virtual figurehead. Al-Qaeda-led militants, far from being crushed as the military claims, have regrouped and are stronger than ever.
The timing and target of the Peshawar attack could not have been more significant as it followed close on an announcement by army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kiani that the months-long operation in the South Waziristan tribal area, the headquarters of the al-Qaeda linked Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP - Pakistan Taliban) had been concluded and that thousands of displaced families could return home. Earlier, Kiani had announced victories in Bajaur, Mohmand and Khyber agencies against militants.
Monday's assault on the consulate - the first on a US mission in Pakistan since 2006 - was clearly a statement that any declarations about the demise of militancy are grossly premature. The TTP claimed responsibility, but the plan in all likelihood would have been hatched by al-Qaeda.
Although the US Embassy in Islamabad says that the four attackers in two vehicles who tried to breach the heavily fortified compound caused only minor damage, a Pakistani security official told Asia Times Online on the condition of anonymity that the militants did enter the compound and exchanges of gun fire were heard, followed by a huge explosion.
It is possible that the extent of the damage is being played down. It is an open secret that the consulate serves as a front for Central Intelligence Agency operations against al-Qaeda and it is also believed to be the headquarters of American defense contractors who, according to American media, have been tasked to kill militants and pro-Taliban and al-Qaeda figures in Pakistan.