Why Are Young People Angry? Perspectives From
Pakistan
By Moonis Ahma
One needs to analyze why anti-Americanism has permeated in
Pakistani society and why youth in the Muslim world feel not
only frustrated but also vulnerable to extremism and
militancy?
Recently, renowned Pakistani academician Pervez Hoodbhoy
rightly argued in Dawn that, “as anti-US lava spews from the
fiery volcanoes of Pakistan’s private television channels and
newspapers, a collective psychosis grips the country’s youth.
Murderous intent follows with the conviction that the US is
responsible for all ills, both in Pakistan and in the world of
Islam.” As depicted by General David Petraeus, who is in charge
of the US military operations in Iraq and in Afghanistan, that
Faisal Shahzad may be a ‘lone wolf’ but one wonders how a
Western styled young man of 30 years of age got influenced and
inspired by the ‘jihadi’ culture? Shahzad’s cousin, Zulfiqar
Ali, a bank employee in Peshawar when interviewed by Newsweek
said that “in recent months Shahzad didn’t seem like the same
person he knew when he was younger. As a young man, Shahzad was
polite, well mannered, and enthusiastic about his studies.” But
when Ali met Shahzad recently he was “serious, quiet, and
distant.”
Like many young Pakistanis, Shahzad went to the United States
for his studies and in the following years also got American
citizenship. There are hundreds of young Americans of Pakistani
origin not only in North America but also in the West who may
have embraced Islamic militancy but it doesn’t mean that a vast
majority of Pakistani youth hates the United States and the
West. Yet, what has happened in the last two decades is the
surge of anti-Americanism not only in Pakistan but in many
parts of the world. But the case of Pakistan is special because
as pointed out by Fareed Zakaria in his column ‘terrorism’s
supermarket’ (Newsweek, 17 May 2010) that “Faisal Shahzad, the
would be terrorist of Times Square, seems to have followed a
familiar path. Like many earlier recruits to jihad, he was
middle-class, educated, seemingly assimilated and then
something radicalized him.” Zakaria’s assertion that Pakistan
is a ‘terrorist supermarket’ may not be true but the media
blitz followed by each terrorist act, whether failed or
successful, found a direct and indirect link in
Pakistan.
Three factors are significant while analyzing the phenomenon of
anti-Americanism in Pakistan and the role of youth in this
regard. First, the culture of religious indoctrination in
Pakistan co-opted anti-Americanism when Washington stopped its
funding to the Afghan jihad. The so called betrayal of the US
in Afghanistan and its blatant support to Israel further
strengthened anti-American feelings in
Pakistan.
Second, frequent drone attacks in the tribal areas of Pakistan
killing countless innocent people triggered hostile reactions,
a fact which was also narrated by Pakistan’s Foreign Minister,
that Faisal Shahzad’ act might be a reaction to US drone
attacks. It was, perhaps for the first time, that an official
of the government linked what Shahzad had tried to do in Times
Square to the collateral damage done by the US drone attacks
inside Pakistan. For some circles, such a statement made by the
Foreign Minister was counter-productive because it vindicated
what the United States had been arguing since long, that in
order to eliminate the threat of terrorism against America, one
needs to liquidate the ‘safe heavens’ of terrorists in
Pakistan. This was evident from the hard hitting statement of
the US Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton, in which she
threatened Pakistan of serious consequences if in future an
attempt was made to target the United States by terrorists
having links inside Pakistan.
Finally, economic backwardness, a poor educational system and
the lack of proper employment opportunities provided space to
those elements who recruited youth to use them either as
suicide bombers or carry out other type of terrorist activities
inside Pakistan. But what has happened is that Western educated
and modern youth, belonging either to the middle or upper
middle classes were also lured by the so-called ‘jihadi’
elements so that they could be effectively used to conduct acts
of terror in the West, particularly in the United States.
American Muslims of either Pakistani origin or any other Muslim
country became useful tools for those who wanted to sustain
pressure on the West.
Anti-American sentiment among the educated youth of Pakistan is
more rhetorical than real. Majority of those who are studying
in Universities, both state owned and private, want to proceed
to the West for their higher studies and seek all the benefits
which a western lifestyle can offer. The problem is, while
living in a conservative background and with a parochial
mindset, when they reach the Western world, they get a cultural
shock. Some of them are lured by the local Muslim clergy who
while abusing the Western culture also want to secure all the
benefits. It is the dichotomy of a conservative mindset and the
liberal Western values which in some cases produce people like
Faisal Shahzad.
Moonis
Ahmar is Professor and Chairman of Department of
International Relations at the University of Karachi and may be
reached at amoonis@hotmail.com. This article was published
by IPCS.
Source:
http://www.eurasiareview.com/2010/05/why-are-young-people-angry-perspectives.html
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