The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU, ) is a militant Islamist group formed in 1998 by former Soviet
paratrooper Juma Namangani, and the Islamic ideologue Tahir Yuldashev - both ethnic Uzbeks from the Fergana Valley
. Its objective was to overthrow President Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan
, and to create an Islamic state under Sharia.
Operating
out of bases in Tajikistan
and Taliban-controlled areas of northern Afghanistan
, the IMU launched a series of raids into southern
Kyrgyzstan
in 1999 and 2000. However, in 2001 the
IMU was largely destroyed while fighting alongside the Taliban
against United
States
-led coalition forces in Afghanistan.
Namangani was killed, and the IMU's remaining fighters were
dispersed.
Yuldeshev and an unknown number of fighters
escaped with remnants of the Taliban to Waziristan in the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas
of Pakistan
.
Since then the IMU has reportedly opened training camps in
Waziristan and is now involved with other groups attempting to
overthrow the government of Pakistan.
Despite occasional proclamations from Yuldeshev, and rumours of a
re-emergence under the name the
Islamic Movement of
Turkestan (
IMT), there is no reliable
evidence indicating that the IMU/IMT remains an operational force
in
Central Asia outside of the
Afghanistan/Pakistan border region.
Background
During the Soviet era, Islam in Central Asia was officially
suppressed -
mosques were closed, and all
contact with the wider
Muslim world was
severed. This isolation ended with the
Soviet war in Afghanistan
(1979-1989), when thousands of
conscripts
from
Soviet Central Asia were
sent to fight the Afghan
mujahedin.
Many of
these conscripts returned home impressed by the Islamic zeal of
their opponents, and newly aware of the religious, cultural and
linguistic characteristics they shared with their neighbours in the
South - and which distinguished them from their rulers in Moscow
.
Adolat (1991-1992)
One such soldier sent to fight in Afghanistan was the Uzbek
paratrooper, Jumaboi Khojayev (b. 1969).
Following the war,
Khojayev returned to his hometown of Namangan
in Uzbekistan's Fergana Valley radicalized by his
experiences, and became associated with a local Islamic ideologue,
Tohir Yuldashev (b.1967). In the period of initial
instability that followed Uzbekistan's sudden independence in 1991,
Yuldeshev and Khojayev (now adopting the
nom de guerre Juma Namangani) established
a radical
Salafi Islamist group in Namangan
which they called
Adolat
(Justice).
Adolat assumed civil authority in Namangan and quickly established
a degree of order and security through the imposition of Sharia
Law, which was ruthlessly enforced by Adolat's vigilante cadres.
Initially tolerated by the newly installed President Karimov,
Adolat became increasingly assertive, culminating in a demand that
Karimov impose Sharia throughout Uzbekistan.
However, by 1992
Karimov had successfully cemented his authority in Tashkent
, and was strong enough to outlaw Adolat and
re-establish central control over the Fergana Valley region -
traditionally one of the most Islamic regions in Central
Asia.
Tajik Civil War (1992-1997)
Evading arrest, Yuldashev and Namagani fled to Tajikistan, where
civil war was raging following a bloody but successful coup led by
Emomali Rahmonov earlier in 1992.
The civil war pitted Rahmonov's neo-communist forces against a
loose coalition of democrats and Islamists known as the
United Tajik Opposition (UTO). The UTO was led by
the widely popular and highly respected Islamist
Said Abdullah Nuri, whose
Islamic Renaissance
Party of Tajikistan (IRPT) advocated a moderate and democratic
brand of Islamism.
Namangani's combat experience in Afghanistan saw him entrusted by
the IRPT with the command of active units in the field, based out
of the remote, mountainous Tavildara Valley region - a role he
carried out with considerable success.
Meanwhile, Yuldashev
left Tajikistan on a tour of Afghanistan, Turkey
and the
Middle East, during which time he
developed contacts with numerous Islamist groups.
From
1995-8 Yuldashev was based in Peshawar
in Pakistan, where he established relations with
Osama Bin Laden and the Afghan Arabs based there at the
time.
IMU Formation (1998)
In 1997 Rahmonov and Nuri signed a peace agreement which saw
Rahmonov agree to sharing power with the IRPT. Disillusioned with
the political concessions made by the Tajik Islamists, Yuldeshev
and Namangani formed the IMU in 1998 with the aim of creating a
militant Islamic oppostion to Karimov in Uzbekistan. Receiving
initial funding and assistance from Pakistan's
Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) agency, the IMU began moving towards the Afghan Taliban and
away from their former and more moderate IRPT allies - who were in
turn backing the ethnic-Tajik
Ahmad
Shah Massoud and his
Northern
Alliance against the Taliban.
Nevertheless, Namangani maintained his base in Tajikistan's
Tavildara Valley, and was able to recruit large numbers of
disaffected youth from the Fergana Valley, where economic hardship
and religious persecution were continuing under Karimov's
authoritarian rule.
Operations
1999
In 1999 a
series of explosions in the
capital Tashkent
were orchestrated in an unsuccessful attempt on
Karimov's life. Karimov placed the blame on radical
Wahhabi Islamists, and the IMU in particular -
however this attribution remains disputed, and it's possible the
assassination attempt was the work of rival political and regional
elites. Irrespective of who was responsible, the result was an
escalation in Karimov's suppression of Islam, particularly in the
traditionally observant Fergana Valley - a move which only
increased the number of those fleeing Uzbekistan to join up with
Namangani and the IMU in the Tavildara Valley.
Later
that year the IMU conducted its first verifiable operations, with
an incursion into the Batken
region of
southern Kyrgyzstan - a region populated mainly by ethnic Uzbeks,
and lying between Tavildara in Tajikistan and the Fergana Valley in
Uzbekistan. Insurgents seized the Mayor of Osh
(the
regional capital) and successfully extorted a ransom from the
ill-prepared Kyrgyz government in Bishkek
, as well as a helicopter to transport them to
Afghanistan. Further incursions into Batken followed,
with one raid seeing a number of Japanese geologists kidnapped - although denied by
Japan
, their subsequent release almost certainly followed
a significant ransom payment.
These raids had a major impact in Central Asia, and resulted in
considerable international pressure on Tajikistan, not least from
Karimov, to expel the IMU from its base in the Tavildara Valley.
The IRPT persuaded their former ally Namangani to abandon Tavildara
in late 1999. Controversially, Namangani and his fighters were then
flown from Tajikistan to northern Afghanistan in Russian military
helicopters - a move which enraged Karimov, who claimed the
Russians were aiding the IMU in an attempt to undermine
Uzbekistan.
2000
In Afghanistan Yuldeshev was able to exploit the contacts he had
made on his earlier travels to negotiate freedom of operation from
the Taliban, in return for providing them with assistance in their
battle with Massoud's Northern Alliance. The IMU established
offices and training camps, and began expanding their recruitment
of disaffected Uzbeks - with their activities increasingly funded
through their lucrative participation in the Afghan
opium trade.
It is
estimated that the IMU were now approximately 2000 strong, and in
the spring they contributed around 600 fighters to the Taliban's
offensive against Massoud, participating in the successful siege of
Taloqan
, where they fought alongside Bin Laden's 555 Arab
Brigade. The IMU also provided the Taliban with a
useful degree of deniability - under pressure from China
to expel
Uighur militants the Taliban simply sent them north to the IMU's
camps.
By the summer of 2000 Western and
CIS
intelligence sources claim the IMU were equipped with more advanced
weaponry such as
sniper rifles and
night-vision goggles, and had
been supplied with a pair of heavy transport helicopters by Bin
Laden. Namangani led IMU fighters back to the Tavildara Valley in
Tajikistan, and from there launched multipronged attacks into
Batken in Kyrgyzstan, and also into northern Uzbekistan, close to
Tashkent.
In August 2000 the IMU also kidnapped four U.S. mountain-climbers
in the Kara-Su Valley of Kyrgyzstan, holding them hostage until
they escaped on
12 August.
In response, the
United
States
classified the IMU as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization.
Once again the raids were followed by a strategic retreat to
Tavildara, and once again international pressure on the Tajik
government saw Namangani agree to him and his men being flown by
the Russians back to Afghanistan, where they arrived in January
2001.
In his
book Terror and Consent, Philip
Bobbitt noted that Sultan
Bashiruddin Mahmood, a scientist of the Pakistan Atomic Energy
Commission, had met Osama bin Laden in Kabul
in August
2001. Mahmood is said to have disclosed that bin Laden
"insisted that he already had sufficient fissile material to build
a [nuclear] bomb, having obtained it from former Soviet stockpiles
through a militant Islamic group, the Islamic Movement of
Ubekistan" (p120).
2001
By now the connections between the IMU and the Taliban had become
more overt - the media reported that Namangani had been appointed
Deputy Defence Minister in the Taliban government, which the
Taliban did not deny. In the spring the IMU again supplied the
Taliban with 600 fighters for a renewed campaign against Massoud,
while in Batken in Kyrgyzstan a number of sleepers armed the
previous year executed a series of attacks.
However, following 9/11 and the US-led coalition intervention in
Afghanistan, the IMU was largely destroyed while fighting alongside
the Taliban, and Namangani himself was killed. The IMU's fighters
were scattered, with Yuldeshev and many others fleeing along with
remnants of the Taliban to the tribal areas of Pakistan.
NB: In September 2002 an aide to Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil, the
Foreign Minister of the
Taliban, claimed he
had been sent prior to 9/11 to warn the U.S. government of an
impending attack and to persuade them to take military action
against Al Qaeda's presence in Afghanistan. The aide claimed
advance knowledge of the attack came from Yuldashev, which if true
would indicate a high degree of cooperation between Al-Qaeda and
the IMU.
Current status
Despite remaining operationally inactive since 2001, the IMU
continues to be cited as a terrorist threat by governments within
and outside of the region.
In 2003,
A. Elizabeth Jones, the U.S. assistant
secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia, testified on the threat
of terrorism in Central Asia before the
U.S. House of Representatives'
subcommittee on the Middle East and Central Asia, arguing that the
greatest threats were the IMU, and
Hizb
ut-Tahrir. Jones said that despite the death of Namangani, the
"IMU is still active in the region -- particularly in Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan -- and it represents a
serious threat to the region and therefore to our interests."In
addition, the
Government of
Russia banned the movement under the name "Islamic Party of
Turkestan" in 2006.
On 7
August 2006, Kyrgyz special
forces killed Rafik Kamalov, an
alleged leader of the movement, in the Kyrgyz border town of
Kara-Suu
.
Mahmadsaid Juraqulov, head of the
anti-organized crime department in
the Interior Ministry of Tajikistan
, told reporters in Dushanbe
on 16 October 2006 that the "Islamic Movement of
Turkestan is the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan," and that Uzbek
secret services manufactured the change in name.
Juraqulov
also said that the IMT is not a major security threat to Tajikistan
or Kyrgyzstan
. "Everyone knows that it is in Uzbekistan
that [the IMU] wants to create problems. For them, Tajikistan and
Kyrgyzstan are just regrouping bases they're trying to
reach."
The
Tajik Government wants 23
suspected IMU members who Tajik authorities say attacked supporters
of
Tajik President Imomali Rakhmonov on 28 September 2006,
wounding two people. Between July 2006 and September 2007, 31
persons accused of IMU membership have been arrested in the Sughd
region in the north of Tajikistan. They are usually sentenced to 12
– 18 years of prison.
However, while Yuldeshev has issued a number of pronouncements
suggesting a widening of the IMU's focus, evidence does not support
the notion that the IMU remains a credible threat in the region.
Furthermore, events in early 2007 suggest
that the IMU may no longer be able to count on refuge in Pakistan's
tribal belt
. In March local Pakistani and reportedly
Arab militants turned against the IMU in the
Wana conflict.
Some analysts have asserted that rather than the image of a unified
IMU under Namangani and Yuldeshev, it has always been an
organization consisting of two poles - the radical, spiritual
(Yuldeshev) and militant, criminal (Namangani). With the latter's
death in 2001, it is probable a less mujahideen-style of warfare
will emerge favouring terror-style attacks. The 2004 Tashkent
bombings attributed to a group calling itself Islamic Jihad was
certainly perpetrated by IMU operatives, either active or
previously so.
Nevertheless, in a context of continued socieoeconomic deprivation
and an absence of political pluralism, a resurgence of militant
Islam in the region cannot be ruled out.
On 30 September 2009, a man claiming to be a bodyguard of Tahir
Yuldashev reported that Yuldashev was killed in a US missile
airstrike that occured shortly after the death of Pakistan Taliban
chief Baitullah Mehsud.
The man also claimed that Uzbek militant Abdur Rehman had succeeded
Yuldashev as chief of the IMU. The next day, Pakistan and US
officials confirmed this report.
References
-
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\10\02\story_2-10-2009_pg7_8
External links