Pakistani Taliban chief implements foreign agenda, say dissenters
June 18th, 2009 - 3:41 pm ICT by IANS
Islamabad, June 18 (DPA) Two militant leaders who broke away from Pakistan’s top Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud have accused their former comrade of following a foreign agenda by waging an insurgency inside the Islamic state, media reports said Thursday.
The open disagreement came two days after Pakistan’s armed forces announced they were preparing a decisive offensive against Mehsud and his network, which is centred around the South Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border.
Mehsud has been blamed for a string of terrorist attacks, including the suicide bombing that killed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007. He admits attacks on government troops but denies targeting politicians.
“These people (Mehsud and his men) are working against Islam,” Qari Zainuddin, a prominent militant leader, was quoted as saying by The News daily.
Zainuddin alleged that Mehsud had links with India and Israel, two countries widely considered traditional enemies of Pakistan.
The Taliban dissenter supported the impending attack on his former comrade and warned Mehsud’s loyalists against infiltrating the lawless territory under his control.
However, Zainuddin supported giving a dominant role to Mehsud’s Pashtun tribesmen in the upcoming fighting to minimise civilian casualties.
Another defector, Turkistan Bittani, called the Taliban commander “an American agent”, arguing that Mehsud was never targeted in the dozens of US drone attacks inside Pakistan’s tribal region.
Missile strikes by pilotless aircraft, mostly operated by the CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), have killed hundreds of people and only a few suspected Al Qaeda operatives.
Bittani told the Geo News television channel that Mehsud was misleading local youth into carrying out terrorist attacks on mosques and religious scholars at the alleged instigation of Israel and India.
The News said one of Mehsud’s supporters in the Orakzai tribal district, Hafiz Saeed, rejected the accusations, claiming that “Zainuddin was playing into the hands of the government” by defaming the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an umbrella organisation headed by Mehsud.
There has been discord between militant groups since 2007 when Mehsud formed the TTP following the death of then-Taliban commander Abdullah Mehsud during a raid.
Many believe the wedge between the militant hierarchy will benefit Pakistani troops in hunting down the Taliban chief.
Both Zainuddin and Bittani say they have thousands of fighters, but intelligence estimates put the figure at around 1,500. Mehsud, on the other hand, commands a 20,000-strong force of hard-core militants, including hundreds of suicide bombers.
Owais Ahmed Ghani, governor of North West Frontier Province (NWFP) which borders the troubled district, said last week that the military had been ordered to eliminate Mehsud who he described as “the root cause of all the evil”.
- US doubtful about winning war on Pakistan border - Dec 06, 2010
- US drone attack kills Al Qaeda linked top Chinese militant - Mar 02, 2010
- US skeptical about winning military struggle in "porous" Pak border areas: WikiLeaks - Dec 07, 2010
- Cracks appear in Pak Taliban, rival commander calls Mehsud's terror acts UnIslamic - Jun 18, 2009
- Prove Baitullah Mehsud is alive, Pakistan tells Taliban - Aug 11, 2009
- Pakistani Taliban leader possibly killed in U.S. drone strike - Jan 16, 2012
- US drones kill over 50 Taliban in Pakistan (Lead) - Jun 24, 2009
- Rival commander Zainuddin killed on Mehsud's behest - Jun 24, 2009
- Pak military's 'Get Baitullah' strategy - Jun 16, 2009
- Militant leader opposing Pakistani Taliban chief killed - Jun 23, 2009
- Pakistan Taliban kill five soldiers - Oct 15, 2010
- Drone strike didn't kill top leader: Pakistani Taliban - Jan 16, 2012
- 70 killed in Pakistan Taliban, local militia clashes - Aug 12, 2009
- TTP claims Qari Hussain Mehsud alive, brands news report of his death 'drama' - Oct 17, 2010
- Young slayer takes up reins of Pakistani Taliban - Aug 30, 2009
Tags: afghan border, benazir bhutto, central intelligence agency, cia central intelligence agency, civilian casualties, defector, dominant role, former prime minister, geo news, government troops, impending attack, instigation, militant leader, missile strikes, news television, pashtun, qari, religious scholars, south waziristan, traditional enemies