Pakistan’s decades-long struggle against militancy has produced extensive security frameworks, significant military victories, and countless counter-terrorism operations. Yet the fundamental question remains inadequately addressed: what keeps producing these movements? The analytical lens has almost always focused on operational manifestations, attack frequencies, militant networks, and body counts, while the ideological architecture that sustains and regenerates extremism continues to operate largely unchallenged.
The core problem has a name: Kharjeeyat. It is a recurring ideological pattern that has appeared throughout Islamic history whenever religious interpretation becomes detached from scholarly tradition, political grievances get reframed as matters of faith, and the concept of Takfir gets weaponized for mass mobilization. Understanding this distinction is the difference between a strategy that works and one that merely postpones the next wave.
Takfir, i.e declaring a fellow Muslim to be a disbeliever, sits at the very heart of this ideology. In classical Islamic jurisprudence, it was among the most carefully guarded legal judgments in the entire scholarly tradition. Qualified scholars, strict evidentiary standards, extensive dialogue, and removal of all doubt were not bureaucratic formalities but safeguards built on centuries of understanding that once Takfir becomes easy, Muslim societies begin consuming themselves. Classical scholars across all major schools of Islamic law warned repeatedly that wrongful Takfir is itself a grave sin. The threshold was kept deliberately and necessarily high.
Contemporary militant groups have stripped everyone of those conditions. What was once a guarded scholarly conclusion has become a political weapon deployed in stages. First, the ruler is declared un-Islamic. Then state institutions are delegitimized. Then the military is branded impure. Then democracy itself becomes an act of disbelief. Then ordinary citizens who pay taxes, vote, or serve in government are gradually pulled into the expanding circle of apostasy. At that point, violence stops being a crime in the minds of those committing it. It becomes a religious obligation. This is what political Takfir does. It converts political frustration into theological confrontation and makes insurgency feel divinely sanctioned.
This is precisely the vocabulary TTP, ISKP, and Al-Qaeda have all used against Pakistan. The specific slogans vary, but the underlying logic is identical across all three. It traces back through Zawahiri’s Egyptian Islamic Jihad to Sayyid Qutb’s revolutionary reimagining of Islamic governance, a lineage that is consistent, structured, and deliberately reproduced. Afghanistan’s post-2021 environment has given this ecosystem renewed depth and operational sanctuary, with cross-border ideological production now feeding directly into militancy inside Pakistan.
The hard truth is that military operations alone cannot close this cycle. They are necessary but not sufficient. Every network dismantled without addressing the doctrine behind it creates conditions for the next one. Pakistan needs scholars engaging this ideology on its own terms, counter-narratives operating at scale, and institutions willing to treat ideas as seriously as they treat weapons. The sword without the argument has never been enough. It still isn’t.
Kharjeeyat and the Ideological Roots of Pakistan’s Extremism Crisis
Pakistan’s decades-long struggle against militancy has produced extensive security frameworks, significant military victories, and countless counter-terrorism operations. Yet the fundamental question remains inadequately addressed: what keeps producing these movements? The analytical lens has almost always focused on operational manifestations, attack frequencies, militant networks, and body counts, while the ideological architecture that sustains and regenerates extremism continues to operate largely unchallenged.
The core problem has a name: Kharjeeyat. It is a recurring ideological pattern that has appeared throughout Islamic history whenever religious interpretation becomes detached from scholarly tradition, political grievances get reframed as matters of faith, and the concept of Takfir gets weaponized for mass mobilization. Understanding this distinction is the difference between a strategy that works and one that merely postpones the next wave.
Takfir, i.e declaring a fellow Muslim to be a disbeliever, sits at the very heart of this ideology. In classical Islamic jurisprudence, it was among the most carefully guarded legal judgments in the entire scholarly tradition. Qualified scholars, strict evidentiary standards, extensive dialogue, and removal of all doubt were not bureaucratic formalities but safeguards built on centuries of understanding that once Takfir becomes easy, Muslim societies begin consuming themselves. Classical scholars across all major schools of Islamic law warned repeatedly that wrongful Takfir is itself a grave sin. The threshold was kept deliberately and necessarily high.
Contemporary militant groups have stripped everyone of those conditions. What was once a guarded scholarly conclusion has become a political weapon deployed in stages. First, the ruler is declared un-Islamic. Then state institutions are delegitimized. Then the military is branded impure. Then democracy itself becomes an act of disbelief. Then ordinary citizens who pay taxes, vote, or serve in government are gradually pulled into the expanding circle of apostasy. At that point, violence stops being a crime in the minds of those committing it. It becomes a religious obligation. This is what political Takfir does. It converts political frustration into theological confrontation and makes insurgency feel divinely sanctioned.
This is precisely the vocabulary TTP, ISKP, and Al-Qaeda have all used against Pakistan. The specific slogans vary, but the underlying logic is identical across all three. It traces back through Zawahiri’s Egyptian Islamic Jihad to Sayyid Qutb’s revolutionary reimagining of Islamic governance, a lineage that is consistent, structured, and deliberately reproduced. Afghanistan’s post-2021 environment has given this ecosystem renewed depth and operational sanctuary, with cross-border ideological production now feeding directly into militancy inside Pakistan.
The hard truth is that military operations alone cannot close this cycle. They are necessary but not sufficient. Every network dismantled without addressing the doctrine behind it creates conditions for the next one. Pakistan needs scholars engaging this ideology on its own terms, counter-narratives operating at scale, and institutions willing to treat ideas as seriously as they treat weapons. The sword without the argument has never been enough. It still isn’t.
SAT Commentary
SAT Commentary
SAT Commentaries, a collection of insightful social media threads on current events and social issues, featuring diverse perspectives from various authors.
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