The challenges of an attempt by the SCO to actually “counter” terrorism are vast within the organisation

by Kabir Taneja

Prime Minister Narendra Modi concluded his second trip to China in as many months as he took part in the meeting of the leaders spearheading the Beijing-led and dominated Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), a grouping initially designed for China’s outreach to Central Asia, but one which has over time expanded to accommodate its growing global and regional clout.

In September 2018, India along with other SCO member states, including Pakistan, will take part in a multi-nation counter-terrorism drill in the Ural mountains of northern Russia.

The narrative was given a boost during Modi’s visit by India’s Ambassador to China Gautam Bambawale, who said “SCO has been working and will continue to work in counter-terrorism.”

While counter-terrorism seems to be highly prioritised within the SCO’s agenda, with Pakistan being a permanent member along with Afghanistan and Iran being observing members, the output of what is another multilateral institution in an increasingly globally inward-looking nation-state system in the West is a challenge in itself.

While the pictures coming from the SCO summit were drastically different, and upbeat, compared to those coming out from the fractures of the G7 summit in Quebec, Canada, the global narratives on countering terrorism in fact rely more on regional inter-operability than the idea of a globally rallied effort.

Problems Aplenty for SCO to Actually “Counter” Terrorism

The challenges of an attempt by the SCO to actually “counter” terrorism are vast within the organisation, with glaring divergence in views and geo-political ambitions of the SCO members. The joint declaration released from Qingdao, China, is a good study of this kaleidoscope.

The declaration states, for example, a generalised condemnation of all types of terrorism. It offers crevasses to accommodate individualistic lines of the member states. For instance, the communiqué states, in relation to the Middle East, that it recognises the “growing threat from foreign terrorists who return to their countries to continue their terrorist and extremist activities within the SCO.” This gives cushion and precedence to Russia’s involvement in Syria, one that has been quietly backed by New Delhi.

Closer to home, the document also states that the “interference in domestic affairs of other states under the pretence of combating terrorism is unacceptable, as well as the use of terrorist, extremist and radical groups for one’s own purposes”, a line that Islamabad has also, ironically, signed with a straight face.

The fact that Pakistan is a participant to such a construct already significantly devalues any serious chance for the SCO leading any kind of resolute effort in the field as a single entity. Former Chinese Ambassador to India and Pakistan Zhou Gang explained that on the SCO’s counter-terror mechanism “Pakistan will make some compromise”. The reality, however, may stand at a very different juncture despite the hypothesis that China may pressure Pakistan to curtail its state-sponsored militant groups operating in the Kashmiri theatre to protect its own interests.

Beijing till date opposes a ban on the Mumbai attacks mastermind Masood Azhar of UN-designated terror group Jaish-e-Mohammed, and has blocked India’s bids to do the same at the UN. This, alone, showcases the false halo around the SCO’s counter-terrorism narratives and the challenges it faces.

China Yet to Show Blueprint to Distance Global Jihadist Groups

China’s aims against terrorism are limited to Islamist insurgencies in its restive Xinjiang province, an area the state today successfully surveils and controls with an iron fist. Groups such as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP, also known as East Turkistan Islamic Movement) and ethnic Uyghur militant violence are not existential threats to China, however, they have the potential to be major irritants if left unchecked. Beijing’s ideological bend allows it to suppress and control political, social and economic agendas in Xinjiang to make sure Islamist ideologies and global jihadist groups keep distance.

The TIP, for example, has released propaganda from both the Afghan and Syrian jihadist theatres, fighting with the Taliban in the former and Al-Qaeda affiliates in the latter.