August 12, 2008:
Iraq is quickly
being displaced by South Asia as the area with the most terrorist activity.
Currently, about a third of the world's terrorist casualties are occurring in
Iraq (currently, about 40 a day). Until
al Qaeda and the local Sunni Arabs decided to use terror tactics to restore
Iraq to Sunni rule, the Persian Gulf saw little terrorist activity. Well
established police states saw to that. But South Asia has never had that kind
of iron rule, and many terrorist groups have had more opportunities, for a very
long time. Moreover, their recent defeat in Iraq has sent al Qaeda operatives,
technicians and cash to Afghanistan. This showed up last March, when, for the
first time, there were more terrorist deaths in Afghanistan (527) than in
Pakistan (351).
Terrorism has been common in Pakistan for decades, mostly between
Islamic radicals who don't like each other very much. But since the Afghan
Taliban were overthrown in late 2001. The Islamic radicals became quite angry
with the U.S. presence in Afghanistan, where remnants of the Taliban continued
to fight for power, or to support their main financial base among the heroin
gangs. The Taliban and al Qaeda leadership were hiding out in the tribal areas
of Pakistan, where the government was having a hard time finding and catching
all of them.
Pakistan has some unique problems. It's not just the national average
illiteracy rate of 66 percent (and unemployment rate of ten percent) that
causes so much unrest. In the tribal territories along the Afghan border, the
illiteracy rate is over 90 percent, and the unemployment rate is unknown, but
believed to be very high, even if you count most of those seemingly idle guys
with guns, as employed. The tribal areas contain less than ten percent of the
population, but far more of the armed unrest and terrorism. There are similar
situations in rural India (the northeast and northwest, as well as communist
rebels all through the jungles and hills of eastern India.) Sri Lanka, the
island nation off the southern coast of India, has been fighting separatist
terrorists for decades, and recently has been a major source of terrorist
activity in South Asia.
The shift of terrorism activity from the Middle East (Iraq, Lebanon and
Israel) to South Asia won't be as abrupt
as it may seem. South Asia has had problems with terrorists decades before it
became a big problem in the Middle East. Things will settle down in the Middle
East, but will continue to get messier in South Asia.