Originally Posted by
Bill Moore
Ray,
I think this incredibly important and a lot of folks in the U.S. who work counterterrorism and the strategic implications of terrorism don't grasp the potential scale of the challenge throughout South Asia, but especially India since Al-Qaeda and its various affiliates will target India, probably more so once the jihad ends or scales down in Afghanistan.
Intentional or accidental, and based on my reading of various Islamist doctrine and strategy I believe it is the former, one of the more effective ways for them to create to a high degree of instability they can exploit to spark to an ethnic conflict, either between Shia and Sunni, Sunni and Christian, Sunni and Buddhist, etc.
The Sunni/Shia conflict in Syria and now in Iraq (this has been ongoing, but it is more prominent now in the media, to include Jihadist websites) creates opportunities that can be exploited by both sides.
I brought this up once before to people who have known better and they were briefing senior leaders that were no Shia in India, and for that matter no Shia in the USPACOM region, and they were of course wrong on both accounts. Once they realized they were wrong they defended their position by stating they were only a small percentage.
Let's look at that argument in India alone. India is the second or most populace nation in the world. They have the third largest Muslim population in the world, close to 161 million Muslims. The so called experts are right, Shia are a minority estimated to represent 10-13% of that population, so darn there are only around 16 million Shia in India. That is more than the population of many countries, to include: Mali, Tunisia, Belgium, Cuba, UAE, Sweden, etc. No problem easy to manage for India's security forces right?
I think the assumption that all politics is local is deeply flawed. Global issues may manifest differently in various locales but they're still global issue that often mobilize people regardless of good the local governance is. In fact their issues often have nothing to due with the local governance issues.
Hope India can get to the left of this. Another aspect worth watching is Shia foreign fighters traveling to Iraq now, much like many traveled to Syria to support Assad. I doubt they'll be focused on targeting the West or their host nations when they return, but they could very well continue their civil war against the Sunnis when they return.
I heard yesterday for the first time that the U.S. is only capable of focusing on one thing at a time when it comes to national security, and while I think that is an exaggeration, we do focus on one thing (Al-Qaeda) to the extent that we don't appreciate the significance of other things simultaneously.
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