Countering Terrorism/Extremism Best Practices 1. Lisa Curtis The Heritage Foundation. Quad-Plus Dialogue Jaipur, India February 14-16, 2016

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Countering Terrorism/Extremism Best Practices 1 Lisa Curtis The Heritage Foundation Quad-Plus Dialogue Jaipur, India February 14-16, 2016 The global terrorist threat has evolved and expanded since the death of Osama bin Laden nearly five years ago. In just the past seven months, there have been major terrorist attacks throughout the world, most notably the November 13, 2015, attacks in Paris that killed 130. The so-called Islamic State (ISIS or ISIL) was responsible for the Paris attacks, as well as attacks in Brussels, Istanbul, Jakarta, Ouagadougou, and other cities since the beginning of the year. The December 2, 2015, shootings in San Bernardino, California, while probably not directed by ISIS (or al-qaeda), were almost certainly inspired by the ideology of one or both of these groups. The shooter, Omar Mateen, responsible for the June 12th Orlando shootings at a gay night club that killed 49 pledged allegiance to ISIS in a phone call he made to emergency responders during the shooting rampage. Al-Qaeda the rival, parent organization of ISIS is adapting its tactics and strategy to try to recover from an intensive U.S. drone campaign in Pakistan s tribal border areas that eliminated numerous al-qaeda leaders, particularly from 2010 2012. Al-Qaeda has delegated command and control to affiliate organizations throughout the broader Middle East, and there are far more al- Qaeda affiliates operating throughout the world today than ever before. Some analysts have 1 This paper was derived largely from a presentation the author gave at the Counterterrorism Conference 2016 in Jaipur, Rajasthan in India from February 2-3, 2016. The Conference was hosted by the India Foundation in collaboration with the Government of Rajasthan. 1

called this diffusion of the threat the beginning of a global Islamist insurgency. 2 Instead of being a centralized cadre of terrorists with tight command and control, al-qaeda is now a loose network of groups operating across the globe. Both al-qaeda and ISIS constitute major threats to global security, but at present ISIS poses the most significant and immediate threat to international stability. Since June 2014 when it took control of Iraq s second largest city of Mosul and declared the establishment of a caliphate in areas under its control, ISIS has spread its tentacles throughout the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia, and Africa. Whether capturing swathes of territory (as in Iraq, Syria, and Libya); commanding allegiance from local militant groups (as in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Egypt); or recruiting foreign fighters to its cause from places like Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Tunisia, ISIS has demonstrated its global reach and influence. ISIS has also taken the terrorism phenomenon to new levels of depravity and violence. It has codified sexual slavery of women and girls mostly from the Yazidi minority community. 3 The group s strategy also includes the dissemination of videos of gruesome murders of journalists, aid workers, and even rival militant factions to both create fear in the populations under its control and to recruit more ruthless individuals to its cause. Foreign Fighter Challenge ISIS has been able to attract more than 30,000 foreign fighters including over 4,500 from western nations to join its ranks in Iraq and Syria. Through a sophisticated Internet and social media campaign, ISIS leaders have convinced an unprecedented number of individuals to leave their home countries to fight for the caliphate. Individual motivations for joining ISIS vary widely among individuals and in different regions of the world. The civil war in Syria was initially the main catalyst for young people to travel to the Middle East to fight the regime of Syrian dictator Bashar al-assad. Failure of Western nations to respond to incidents like Assad s 2013 chemical attack on civilians facilitated ISIS recruiting. While some individuals are motivated primarily by religion, others are seeking a source of identity and desire to commit to a cause larger than themselves. Some ISIS recruits are simply psychopathic, seeking adventure and the opportunity to commit violence. In Western Europe, ISIS often connects through social media with Muslim immigrants who may feel marginalized 2 Maajid Nawaz, ISIS Is Just One of a Full-Blown Global Jihadist Insurgency, The Daily Beast, November 19, 2015, http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/11/19/isis-is-just-one-of-a-full-blown-global-jihadistinsurgency.html 3 Charlotte Alter, A Yezidi Woman Who Escaped ISIS Slavery Tells Her Story, Time, December 20, 2015, http://time.com/4152127/isis-yezidi-woman-slavery-united-nations/ 2

from society. ISIS recruiters work to further isolate these individuals and then brainwash them into believing it is their religious duty to join and fight for the caliphate in Syria and Iraq. 4 According to Heritage Foundation Senior Research Fellow Jim Phillips, ISIS has instituted a rigorous vetting process for its recruits. 5 After an individual is identified as interested in joining ISIS, an interview is set up via social media or a local recruiter. The recruiter will inculcate the narrative of being a part of the brotherhood, a community of friends and like-minded individuals working toward a larger goal. The recruit then transitions to becoming a foreign fighter as his recruiter/mentor helps him to travel to Syria or Iraq to join with the group. As ISIS suffers losses on the battlefield in Iraq and Syria, there are indications that foreign fighters are seeking to return to their home countries. CIA Director John Brennan told a U.S. congressional committee in mid-june that ISIS had lost significant chunks of territory in Syria and Iraq in the past six months and that its ability to generate finances, conduct media operations, and attract foreign fighters is beginning to wane. 6 Even so, Brennan acknowledged that ISIS maintained a global presence and the means to inspire and conduct terrorist attacks throughout the world. ISIS Inspires Multiple U.S. Attacks ISIS has already inspired several attacks in the U.S. One of the most notable was last December s shootings in San Bernardino, California, carried out by Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik that killed 14. Investigations into the attacks showed that Farook and Malik had been radicalized for some time and were likely inspired by both al-qaeda and ISIS ideology. Malik had sent private messages on social media to Pakistani friends as early as 2012 declaring her support for jihad. 7 While the FBI has released few details of the investigation into Omar Mateen, the Orlando shooter, his pledge of allegiance to ISIS and its leader Abu Bakr al- Baghdadi in a 911 call placed during the attack indicates he was likely self-radicalized through ISIS propaganda. In addition to the San Bernardino and Orlando attacks, there have been several other terrorist incidents inspired by ISIS s ideology and message, such as Zale Thompson s hatchet attack on 4 Lisa Curtis et al., Combatting the ISIS Foreign Fighter Pipeline: A Global Approach, Heritage Foundation Special Report No.180, January 6, 2016, http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2016/01/combatting-the-isisforeign-fighter-pipeline-a-global-approach. 5 Ibid. 6 Central Intelligence Agency Director John O. Brennan, statement before the Select Committee on Intelligence, U.S. Senate, June 16, 2016, at https://www.cia.gov/news-information/speeches-testimony/2016-speechestestimony/statement-by-director-brennan-as-prepared-for-delivery-before-ssci.html (accessed July 25, 2016). 7 Aoun Sahi, David S. Cloud, and Brian Bennett, Tashfeen Malik Was Modern Girl Who Began Posting Extremist Messages on Facebook, The Los Angeles Times, December 6, 2015, http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-lntashfeen-malik-facebook-extremist-messages-20151205-story.html (accessed July 25, 2016). 3

New York City police officers in October 2014. 8 On May 3, 2015, there was a foiled attack by two Islamist extremists who were fatally shot by police before they could commit mass murder at a contest to draw the Prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas. 9 FBI Director James Comey reported last year that tracking Americans who have returned from Syria is one of the FBI s top counterterrorism priorities, and that the FBI is currently investigating suspected ISIS supporters in all 50 states. 10 In 2015 alone, the FBI foiled at least 11 Islamist terrorist plots against the U.S. homeland, more than in any other year since 9/11. 11 Uprooting Extremist Ideology While denying terrorists the ability to control territory and enjoy safe haven is critical, it is equally important to actively counter the Islamist ideology that motivates the violence. The Obama Administration has been reluctant to talk about the ideological underpinnings of terrorism and the relationship between Islamism (political Islam) and terrorism. Counterterrorism policies must take into account the direct connection between Islamist ideology and the terrorist attacks that are born of it. It would be impossible to uproot support for Islamist extremist ideology unless there is willingness among political leaders to discuss it candidly. The democratic uprisings throughout the Arab world over the past five years have brought Islamist political parties to the fore, most notably in Egypt, where the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood held power from 2012 2013. While Islamist parties fill a political need and thus have a role to play in the democratic evolution of their respective countries, the anti-west ideologies and anti-democratic practices of the hardline elements among them pose serious risks to U.S. foreign policy objectives. Islamists often pursue policies that undermine individual freedoms and lead to discrimination, repression, and violence against religious minority groups and women. Moreover, their lenient policies toward terrorist groups undercut U.S. counterterrorism measures and encourage a permissive environment for extremists to plot, plan, and train for international terrorist attacks. 12 For instance, former Egyptian Prime Minister and Muslim Brotherhood leader Muhammad Morsi, during his brief stint in power, released scores of terrorists from jail and called on the 8 David Inserra, An Interactive Timeline of 73 Terror Plots Since 9/11, The Daily Signal, September 10, 2015, http://dailysignal.com/2015/09/10/a-timeline-of-73-islamist-terror-plots-since-911/. 9 Jamie Dettmer, ISIS Claims First Attack Inside America, The Daily Beast, May 5, 2015, http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/05/05/isis-claims-attack-in-texas.html 10 Jesse Byrnes, FBI Investigating ISIS Suspects in All 50 States, The Hill, February 25, 2015, http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/233832-fbi-investigating-isis-suspects-in-all-50-states (accessed January 28, 2016). 11 Peter Bergan, Can We Stop Homegrown Terrorists? The Wall Street Journal, January 22, 2016, http://www.wsj.com/articles/can-we-stop-homegrown-terrorists-1453491850/ 12 Lisa Curtis et al., Pursuing a Freedom Agenda Amidst Rising Global Islamism, Heritage Foundation Special Report No.159, November 17, 2014, http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2014/11/pursuing-a-freedom-agendaamidst-rising-global-islamism. 4

U.S. to release Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, who orchestrated the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center. When Islamist party Ennahda held power in Tunisia from 2011 to 2014, thousands of Islamist extremists were released from jail, including Abu Iyad, who fought with al-qaeda in Afghanistan. Once released, Iyad formed Ansar al-sharia Tunisia (AST), a Salafist organization adhering to al-qaeda s ideology. AST was banned in Tunisia in August 2013 after the organization was directly linked to two high-profile political assassinations. For its part, the U.S. is grappling with how best to counter Islamic radicalism and homegrown terrorism without trampling on Muslim civil liberties. A report published by the New York Police Department (NYPD) in 2007, Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat, produced a backlash from the Muslim community in New York, which viewed its conclusions as justifying racial profiling. The NYPD report proposed ways to counter domestic radicalization and thwart homegrown terrorist plots by lone wolves (individuals who conceptualize and carry out attacks on their own but are inspired by al-qaeda and increasingly ISIS ideology). The report makes a case for identifying the threat at the point radicalization begins, rather than after planning for an attack is underway. 13 The NYPD later distanced itself from the report s findings and agreed to remove the report from its website as part of a settlement of a lawsuit that claimed Muslims were the target of baseless surveillance and investigations. 14 CNN National Security Analyst and Vice President of the New America Foundation Peter Bergen, in an article in The Wall Street Journal, discusses the differences between the counterterrorism strategy laid out in the 2007 NYPD report and the current FBI approach, which relies on behaviors of individuals not the ideologies that may be driving them to lead their investigations. 15 Still RAND expert Cheryl Bernard, in an article in The National Interest, notes that Islamists who disavow violence still may contribute to the radicalization process in that they believe Muslims living in the West should not integrate with Western values nor feel compelled to demonstrate loyalty to Western institutions. Bernard says, They may be against violence, but they are also against integration. 16 Given that ISIS preys on young Muslims in Western countries who may feel disaffected or alienated within their societies, such Islamist policies would seem only to foster the radicalization process. 13 Mitchell D. Silber and Arvin Bhatt, Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat, The New York City Police Department, August 16, 2007, https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/legacy/justice/20070816.nypd.radicalization.in.the.west.pdf 14 Pervaiz Shallwani, NYPD to Settle Muslim Surveillance Lawsuits, The Wall Street Journal, January 7, 2016, http://www.wsj.com/articles/nypd-settles-muslim-surveillance-lawsuit-1452187209 15 Bergen, Can We Stop Homegrown Terrorists? 16 Cheryl Benard, Moderate Islam Isn't Working, The National Interest, December 20, 2015, http://nationalinterest.org/feature/moderate-islam-isnt-working-14693 5

Thwarting homegrown terrorist plots in the U.S. requires both an understanding of Islamist extremist ideology and how it drives terrorism and a recognition that the religion of Islam itself is not responsible for terrorism, but rather individual human beings who act in its name. Such distinctions are enormously important in upholding the U.S. commitment to religious freedom and in showing respect for the vast majority of peaceful American Muslims. It is essential that U.S. law enforcement officers reach out and work closely with American Muslim communities as they move forward with counter-radicalization efforts. Fear-mongering about the religion of Islam aside from being morally repugnant undercuts counterterrorism strategy by alienating Muslim communities, which can help identify threats before they materialize. Combatting Pakistan-based Terrorists The global terrorist threat emanating from Pakistan remains a core U.S. national security concern as a multitude of different extremist groups with varying degrees of ties to al-qaeda operate in and from Pakistan. Terrorist groups like the Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LeT), which conducted the 2008 Mumbai attacks; Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM), which carried out the January 2, 2016, attack on the Indian air base at Pathankot; and the Haqqani Network, which regularly conducts attacks in Afghanistan, all maintain links to the Pakistani security establishment and continue to operate relatively freely in the country. Despite the Pakistani military campaign against the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP or Pakistani Taliban) bases in North Waziristan that started nearly two years ago, TTP retains the ability to strike Pakistani targets. In the worst terrorist attack in Pakistan in over fifteen months, a breakaway faction of the TTP, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, in late March targeted Pakistani Christians celebrating the Easter holiday at a park in Lahore in a suicide bombing that killed 72 people, nearly half of which were children. The terrorist group said the bombing was a message to the Pakistan government that we will carry out such attacks again until sharia is imposed in the country. 17 On January 20th, militants stormed a university in the Pakistani city of Charsadda, killing 20 students and professors. TTP leader Umar Mansoor (mastermind of the 2014 attack on Peshawar Army Public School) claimed responsibility for the university attack on Facebook. Pakistani Director General of Inter-Services Public Relations Major General Asim Bajwa confirmed in a public statement that the attack was directed by Mansoor from a base in Afghanistan. Pakistan has arrested five suspects it says provided shelter, transport, and weapons to the four university attackers, who were killed on the scene. 18 17 Lisa Curtis, Anti-Christian Violence Threatens Fabric of Pakistani Society, The Daily Signal, March 18, 2016, http://dailysignal.com/2016/03/28/anti-christian-violence-threatens-fabric-of-pakistani-society/. 18 Sophia Saifi, At Least 22 Killed in Attack on Bacha Khan University in Pakistan, CNN, January 21, 2016, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/23/pakistan-arrests-five-over-deadly-attack-on-bacha-khan-university 6

The attack in Charsadda followed closely on the heels of the JeM attack on the Indian air base, which left seven Indian soldiers dead. Indian officials promptly provided their Pakistani counterparts information on the Pathankot attackers, making clear future Indo-Pakistani dialogue would hinge on whether Islamabad took decisive action on the leads. 19 The leader of JeM, Masood Azhar, spent time in an Indian jail but was released in 1999 to end a hijacking stand-off. He received a hero s welcome upon his return to Pakistan and then established the JeM, which was blamed for the December 2001 attack on the Indian parliament that led to a six-month military stand-off between India and Pakistan. Azhar laid low for several years after the 2003 Indo-Pakistani cease-fire took effect, but resurfaced in early 2014 to address a large public rally, where he called on suicide attackers to resume jihad against India. 20 There are questions about whether the Pakistan military may have had some hand in the Pathankot attack, given its past links to the JeM and its failure to restrict Masood Azhar s activities. This would seem counterproductive from the perspective that the Pakistan Army already has its hands full conducting counterinsurgency operations on its western flank along the border with Afghanistan. Still, the onus is on the Pakistan military and civilian leadership to track down the leads provided by New Delhi and to take action against the group and individuals involved in the attack. Pakistan has reportedly arrested several JeM militants, including leader Masood Azhar, but there is skepticism about whether Azhar will remain in custody. 21 He was taken into custody shortly after the attack on the Indian parliament in 2001, but was later released. Pakistan has a poor track record of prosecuting terrorists, even those involved in attacks that have killed U.S. citizens. In April 2015, Pakistan released on bail the LeT mastermind behind the Mumbai attacks, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi. The day before Lakhvi s release, the U.S. had announced the approval of nearly $1 billion in U.S. military sales to Pakistan. There were 166 victims in the Mumbai attacks, including six U.S. citizens. Family members of four of the U.S. victims filed a wrongful death lawsuit in a New York City court in 2010, accusing Pakistani intelligence of complicity in the Mumbai attacks. 22 While Pakistan has assisted the U.S. in capturing numerous al-qaeda leaders, its support to groups like the Afghan Taliban, Haqqani Network, LeT, and JeM has undermined U.S. national 19 Pathankot Attack: India PM Modi Urges Pakistan Action, BBC, January 5, 2016, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-35230391 20 Lisa Curtis, After the Election: Opportunity for Revitalizing U.S. India Relations, Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 2919, June 2, 2014, http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2014/06/after-the-electionopportunity-for-revitalizing-usindia-relations. 21 Bill Roggio, Pakistan Again Puts Jaish-e-Mohammed Leader Under Protective Custody, The Long War Journal, January 16, 2016, http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2016/01/pakistan-again-puts-jaish-emohammed-leader-under-protective-custody.php 22 John Marzulli, Families of Mumbai Terror Attack Victims Accuse Pakistani Intelligence in Wrongful Death Suit, NY Daily News, November 22, 2010, http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/families-mumbai-terror-attackvictims-accuse-pakistani-intelligence-wrongful-death-suit-article-1.452987 7

security interests in the region and provided an ideological environment conducive to international terrorism. Pakistan will only be able to fully get a handle on the terrorism problem within its own borders when its leadership repudiates and uproots the Islamist extremist ideology that drives all of these groups. Al-Qaeda ISIS Competition in South Asia ISIS is seeking to make inroads into South Asia and in January 2015 announced the formation of the Khorasan group. Khorasan is an Islamic historical term used to describe the area encompassed by Afghanistan, parts of Pakistan, and parts of other countries bordering Afghanistan. According to the Hadith (sayings attributed to the Prophet Muhammad), South- Central Asia maintains a key role in establishing a global caliphate. The Hadith contains references to the Ghazwa-e-Hind (Battle of India), where the final battle between Muslims and non-muslims before the end times will supposedly take place. One Hadith further says that an army with black flags will emerge from Khorasan to help the Mahdi (the prophesied redeemer of Islam) establish his caliphate at Mecca. 23 ISIS-Khorasan (ISIS-K) has been able to seize pockets of territory from the Taliban in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar, where the Pentagon says it has a presence of between 1,000 and 3,000 fighters. ISIS-K also is broadcasting radio programs in local languages in the region to recruit young Afghans. The propaganda denigrates both the Afghan government by portraying it as a puppet of the U.S. and the Taliban by claiming it has been co-opted by Pakistan. ISIS-K sought to take advantage of splits within the Taliban leadership that followed news last summer that Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar had died over two years ago. But the killing of Omar s replacement, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, in a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan s Baluchistan province in May could paradoxically facilitate Taliban cohesion. Mansour was replaced by Mawlawi Haibatullah Akhundzada, a well-educated cleric that apparently enjoys broad-based support from within the Taliban movement. Mansour, on the other hand, had been a controversial figure, tainted by accusations that he had lied about the circumstances surrounding Omar s death and was too close to Pakistani intelligence. ISIS faces other obstacles in building bases in Afghanistan and Pakistan, primarily because al- Qaeda has well-established roots in the region and commands loyalty from the various South Asian terrorist organizations. Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-zawahiri has carefully nurtured the group s relationship with the Afghan Taliban. Zawahiri has also sought to make inroads with Muslim populations in other parts of South Asia to help fend off ISIS encroachment. 24 In September 2014, Zawahiri made a video announcement 23 Husain Haqqani, Prophecy and the Jihad in the Indian Subcontinent, Current Trends in Islamist Ideology, Vol. 18 (May 2015), p. 6. 24 Ibid., p. 11. 8

launching an al-qaeda wing in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS). 25 In the video, Zawahiri assures Muslims in India, Bangladesh, and Burma that the organization did not forget you and that they are doing what they can to rescue you from injustice, oppression, persecution, and suffering. Moving Forward The U.S. must lead a multi-pronged, multi-nation effort to defeat ISIS by denying the group ability to hold territory, disrupting its recruitment efforts, and countering its destructive ideology. The U.S. and its international partners must demonstrate that ISIS is not invincible. Without territory, ISIS cannot claim to have a caliphate. This will require a robust military campaign, with much more intensive air strikes, expanded deployments of special operations forces, and the deployment of U.S. advisers embedded with the Iraqi army, Kurdish militias, and Sunni Arab militias. NATO allies have already demonstrated willingness to increase their military efforts due to the terror attacks in Paris in November 2015 and in Brussels in March 2016 but they are looking to the U.S. to lead the effort. Blocking terrorist travel also is a priority, especially given concerns about radicalized foreign fighters returning to their home countries to conduct attacks. The House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee Task Force report on foreign fighters that was released in September 2015 laid out numerous recommendations for countering terrorist travel. The report suggests that the U.S. government do more to share information on terrorist travel with international partners; to bolster law enforcement in dealing with the growing threat; and to enhance community awareness about the problem of youth radicalization. 26 Just as it must lead the global military effort, the U.S. must also spearhead a global approach to countering the ideology that drives people to join ISIS. To do this, the U.S. needs a strong counter narrative that acknowledges the dangers to democracy of the Islamist agenda, including its persecution of religious minorities, repression of women, and support for Sharia law. The Obama Administration has failed to lead the way in developing an effective counter narrative and has instead placed political correctness over precisely naming the threat. One important way of undermining ISIS credibility and ideology is to amplify the stories of ISIS defectors. Most of the defectors have complained about the brutality that ISIS waged against fellow Sunnis, or have expressed their disillusionment with the factional infighting among the different extremist groups. While those who fought for ISIS should face the legal consequences, they should also be encouraged to tell their stories of disappointment and disillusionment. 25 Lisa Curtis, Al-Qaeda Announces New Affiliate in South Asia, The Daily Signal, September 4, 2015, http://dailysignal.com/2014/09/04/al-qaeda-announces-new-affiliate-south-asia/ 26 U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee, Final Report of the Task Force on Combating Terrorist and Foreign Fighter Travel, September 2015, https://homeland.house.gov/wpcontent/uploads/2015/09/taskforcefinalreport.pdf 9

While individual countries will need to take responsibility for protecting their own homelands, there must be constant efforts among like-minded nations to share best practices and cuttingedge technologies that help thwart terrorist attacks. In the U.S., the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF), which is made up of local, state, and federal officials, has helped disrupt several attempted attacks. Better coordination among local and federal officials and among the various intelligence-gathering agencies has contributed to the U.S. ability to disrupt and prevent nearly 70 terrorist plots in the U.S. since the 9/11 attacks. Regarding South Asia, the U.S. should foster continued support for NATO and U.S. counterinsurgency strategies in Afghanistan to prevent the Taliban from regaining influence in the region. The fall of the northern Afghan city of Kunduz to the Taliban in September 2015 demonstrated that the Afghan security forces continue to need U.S. and NATO support in the form of air strikes, intelligence, training, and battlefield advice. Afghan forces were able to regain control of Kunduz, but other key urban areas remain under threat from the Taliban. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the U.S. must continue to pressure the Pakistani government to shut down Pakistan-based terrorist groups such as the Haqqani Network, LeT, and JeM. These groups not only undermine stability and key U.S. national security interests in the region, they have been responsible for the deaths of several American civilian and military personnel. Overcoming the terrorist threat emanating from within Pakistan will require Islamabad to rethink how it promotes its regional interests. Relying on terrorist proxies to undermine stability in neighboring states has backfired on Pakistan in the form of TTP attacks that have killed nearly 35,000 Pakistanis in the past decade. The Pakistani government s ambivalence toward the various Islamist terrorist groups has led to confusion in the minds of the Pakistani public, and made it difficult to rally public support behind military operations against groups like the TTP that attack the Pakistani state. The May 21st drone strike against Taliban leader Mullah Mansour was a bold move by the U.S. that represents a long overdue shift in tactics against the Taliban leadership sheltering in Pakistan. The drone strike signals Pakistani officials that Washington s patience with Islamabad s Afghanistan policy is wearing thin. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani bent over backwards to reach out to Pakistan during his first eighteen months in office. However, Pakistan has been unwilling to crack down on Taliban leaders on its territory, and Taliban attacks have escalated in Afghanistan. The Obama Administration has also wisely begun to condition aid to Pakistan on its cracking down on terrorist groups attacking U.S. interests in Afghanistan. The Administration last year withheld $300 million in Coalition Support Funds (CSF reimbursement payments for Pakistani military deployments and operations along the border with Afghanistan) because of Pakistan s failure to meet legislative conditions on U.S. military aid, which include cracking down on 10

Haqqani Network bases within Pakistani territory. The U.S. Congress has also blocked the use of U.S. government funds for Pakistan s purchase of eight F-16 aircraft until Pakistan widens its terrorist crackdown to groups fighting U.S. and Afghan forces. For the U.S. to achieve its counterterrorism objectives in South Asia, it should continue to employ a mix of incentives and disincentives aimed at convincing Pakistan to widen its terrorist crackdown to all Islamist terrorist groups within its borders. Conditioning military aid to Pakistan may not constitute the silver bullet to gaining Islamabad s full counterterrorism cooperation, but at least it will ensure U.S. taxpayer money is not indirectly benefiting those terrorist groups seeking harm against the United States. 11