HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHow 9/11 changed India’s war against militancy in J&K

How 9/11 changed India’s war against militancy in J&K

9/11 marks the day when the world changed, and global security was prioritized both by states and international organizations.

September 11, 2021 / 08:39 IST
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Security forces personnel in Kashmir in 2021. (Photo by Irfan Amin Malik)
Security forces personnel in Kashmir in 2021. (Photo by Irfan Amin Malik)

Srinagar: After the attack on the World Trade Center in the United States on 11 September 2001 that left nearly 3,000 people dead, India’s war against militancy in Jammu and Kashmir too witnessed a paradigm shift.

While earlier India could not garner as much global attention over the presence of local and foreign militants in J&K, now it had an edge in the “war on terror” in the region.

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Gowhar Geelani, journalist and author of Kashmir Rage and Reason, said, “Immediately after the devastating attack on the twin towers in September 2001, India's Parliament building in New Delhi was attacked in December. Policy makers in New Delhi linked the attack to Islamist violence and tried to put the armed militant rebellion in Kashmir in the framework of global terrorism. Paradoxically, though, the restive region also witnessed some of the biggest Kashmir-centric confidence-building measures (CBMs) around the same period as the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad and other trans-LoC routes were thrown open in April 2005.”

Another journalist working with an international news agency said that 9/11 gave India the opportunity to brand militants fighting in J&K as part of pan-Islamic Jihad. “The attack made things easy for India to connect Kashmir with the global Islamic struggle. Following 9/11, India on global forums tagged the militant outfits operating in J&K with al-Qaeda and other designated terror outfits. By doing this, India easily managed to crack the dissent on ground and due to which the human rights violation in the region was undermined by the world,” the 50-year-old journalist said.