It is a globally recognized fact that a
state’s police and law enforcement agencies play a critical role
as the first line of defense against the threats of terrorism
and insurgencies. An informative RAND study titled How
Terrorist Groups End provides evidence that effective
police and intelligence work, rather than the use of military
force, deliver better counterterrorism results.* Based on this
conclusion, the report suggested to U.S. policymakers that they
stop using the phrase "war on terrorism," because there is no
battlefield solution to defeating terrorists. Another valuable
study analyzing the police role in counterinsurgency campaigns
in Malaya and Cyprus concluded that nearly all major
twentieth-century counterinsurgency campaigns relied heavily on
indigenous police as well as military forces.*
Both studies are very relevant to the
terrorism and insurgency crisis faced by Pakistan today.* Many
security experts rightfully contend that both Pakistan and
Afghanistan are facing a growing Taliban insurgency in the
Pak-Afghan tribal belt – some even call it a Pashtun
insurgency.* According to Kelev I. Sepp’s Best Practices in
Counterinsurgency, which closely studied seventeen
insurgencies, the role of the police is always central to any
successful counterinsurgency measures.* His recommended measures
for insurgency hit areas emphasize "police in the lead" with the
military providing backup support and strengthening the police
with diversified training capabilities to help meet the security
needs of the at-risk population.
Since 9/11 and the consequent US/NATO military action in
Afghanistan, Pakistan’s troubled northwestern frontier has come
under increasing pressure from militant and terrorist
organizations operating in the area. Pakistan’s deficient and
flawed law enforcement capacity in the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) and the adjacent North West Frontier
Province (NWFP) have helped Pakistani Taliban and other
terrorist groups expand their influence and strongly challenge
the state’s writ. Outgunned and outfinanced, on average 400
police officers have been killed every year in terrorist attacks
since 2005.* Controversial and haphazard Pakistani military
action in the area has led to more instability, and limited
resistance in FATA has now become a growing ethnic insurgency.
As is clear from the turmoil in the NWFP’s Swat district, any
army action can provide no more than a breathing space to the
state; only police and law enforcement actions can help the
state reestablish its writ and stabilize the area. A timely
police action can be more effective in quelling emergent
insurgencies. My research into the 2007 Lal Masjid (Red Mosque)
crisis in Islamabad, where a strong military operation led to
hundreds of deaths and dozens of retaliatory suicide attacks,
also indicates that: (a) an effective police action in time
(2004-05) could have avoided the later bloody clash and (b) the
police lacked authority and the permission of the state and its
important institutions to legally pursue the rebel clerics in
the mosque (during the 2004-07 timeframe).*
The police infrastructure is one of
Pakistan’s most poorly managed organizations. It is aptly
described as ill-equipped, poorly trained, deeply politicized,
and chronically corrupt.* It has performed well in certain
operations; overall, however, that is a rare phenomenon.
Arguably, the primary reason for this state of affairs is the
government’s persistent failure to invest in law enforcement
reform and modernization. It is ironic that despite frequent
internal crises since its inception in 1947, ranging from ethnic
confrontations and sectarian battles to a sharp rise in criminal
activity and growing insurgencies, both political and military
policymakers have never given this sector top priority. Hence,
poor police performance in counterterrorism and
counterinsurgency is not surprising. The fact that the police
successfully challenged some militant religious groups in Punjab
and tackled an insurgency-like situation in Karachi in the late
1990s shows that they do have the potential to deliver the
desired results when political support is present and resources
are provided. Clearly, better policing standards and performance
will add to the government’s credibility and establish its writ
more effectively in areas that are currently slipping out of its
hands. Learning lessons from what transpired in the NWFP in
recent years especially in order to plan for any preemptive law
enforcement actions in South Punjab, where banned local militant
groups like Sipah-e-Sahaba and Jaish-e-Mohammad are resurgent,
is the need of the hour.
Historically, US support for Pakistan has
always been skewed in favor of country’s defense needs – heavy
guns, tanks, officers’ training and fighter aircrafts, etc. It
made some sense given the nature of external threats and
regional instability – ranging from Soviet expansionist designs
to Indian hegemonic tendencies – but now its all together a
different ball game. The internal threat to Pakistan today from
extremists is more severe than anything Pakistan has witnessed
in 60 years of its existence (perhaps with the exception of
civil war in East Pakistan 1969-1971, now Bangladesh). Bush
administration as well as Musharraf regime failed to understand
what this really meant – through there was no shortage of
rhetoric on the subject. Evidently, from 2002-2008, only the
thinnest slice of US funds for Pakistan went to policing.* More
specifically, in 2007 for instance, the US allocated $731
million to help the country’s military and only $4.9 million for
its police.*
This policy paper makes the case for international support
for police reform in Pakistan to enhance its law enforcement and
counterinsurgency capacities. The Obama administration’s
proposed $1.5 billion annual aid package for Pakistan for the
next five years must also include sufficient resources for this
sector. To build schools and hospitals, create jobs and spur
economic development, security environment in Pakistan has to
improve significantly.* Police and civilian law
enforcement agencies are the most appropriate institutions to
spearhead that effort countrywide. Rule of law besides requiring
an effective criminal justice system and independent judiciary
also needs a competent law enforcement infrastructure. If U.S.
funds will make all that happen, it will correspondingly lead to
its better image in Pakistan. Democratic institutions in turn
will also benefit as their dependence on military for internal
law and order duties will lesson.
* All references included in the full report