Lt-Gen Bhopinder Singh (retd)
Since 1979, the United States Department of State has routinely designated certain countries as 'State Sponsors of Terrorism', where it alleges that the said state had, "repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism". Besides countries, the department also notifies organisations and individuals to expose, isolate and deny them access to the US financial system. These listings can also assist the law enforcement activities of the US agencies and other governments to bear pressure on them. In August 2017, the department had designated Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation under Section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, and as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) under Section 1(b) of Executive Order (EO) 13224. Consequently, all the property and interests of the designated individual, organisation or the nation-state is blocked under the US jurisdiction, and the US nationals are prohibited from engaging in any transactions with the said person or entity.
However, the dimensions and dynamics of the term 'State Sponsors of Terrorism' has an exclusive US perspective, as opposed to an unbiased global outlook. From time to time, the list of the 'rogue's gallery' has included countries like Iran, Iraq, Cuba, North Korea, Sudan and Libya.
Convenient leniency to Pak, Saudi
This US-centricity is reflected in the list of ‘State Sponsors of Terrorism’, which today includes North Korea, Iran, Sudan and Syria — all hosting anti-US regimes.
The historically limited spirit of ‘axis of evil’ as coined by George W Bush, has sustained itself, even today. Similarly, the US Executive Order titled ‘Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States’, impacting Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen, is exclusively US-centric.
Unbiased blacklisting needed
However, a more holistic and unbiased blacklisting of ‘State Sponsors of Terrorism’ should entail countries that impact any other sovereign’s interest and not just that of the US — a fact that spared Pakistan (till recent years), as its proven complicity and support to terrorism in India in the 80s and 90s was either ignored or served motherhood platitudes that basically ensured the continuation of US support for Pakistan, till the ISI-created terror infrastructure started hitting the US interests and lives, directly. The historical Pakistani pattern of outright denials, ignorance or even incapacity has a narrative of wilful inaction and surreptitious cover for the 'terror nurseries', leading to the patented act of duplicity and insincerity in the ‘war on terror’.
Clearly ‘State Sponsorship of Terror’ must encompass both the ‘acts of direct commission’ (arming and training terrorists), as also, the equally dangerous ‘acts of omission’ (providing indirect sanctuary, allowing fundraising and recruitment). The complex nature of modern 'State Sponsorship' needs a more stringent, sensitive and intolerant appreciation of the passive support systems that could be financial, diplomatic or even moral.
However, the more unbiased and composite blacklist of ‘naming and shaming’ is the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an inter-governmental body comprising 35 nations and two regional organisations (EU and GCC), which was set up to “set standards and promote effective implementation of legal, regulatory and operational measures for combating money-laundering, terror financing and other related threats to the integrity of the international financial system”.
‘Gray’ and ‘black’ lists
This entails the maintenance of a diplomatically embarrassing ‘gray’ and ‘black’ list of countries that are designated “non-cooperative” in the global fight against moneylaundering and terror-financing. Pakistan was put on the ‘gray’ list for three years starting 2012, and it now faces the prospects of re-entering the humiliating list owing to a joint motion proposed by the US, Britain, France and Germany who have blown the lid on Islamabad’s continuing chicanery and incorrigible deceit. The FATF reprieve till June, when Pakistan is expected to go under the ‘gray’ list, has seen a stunning withdrawal of support for Islamabad, by its ‘all weather friend’ China. China is wary of Pakistani inaction towards terrorism that could potentially jeopardise the $60 billion investment under the China-Pakistan-Economic-Corridor (CPEC).
Clearly, there is no global consensus on defining the criteria of blacklisting countries — it is only when the negative impact of omissions and commissions by another state are felt directly on the recipient state, does it scramble to first diplomatically embarrass the ‘roguish’ state, and then push for more punitive political, military The democratic world is on the short-fuse with terrorism, it disdains the categorisation of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ terrorists and it further needs to call the bluff on any sophistry and contextualisation of terror, by any nation that tries to do so.
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