Taliban infighting could benefit both US, Pak: NYT
August 9th, 2009 - 2:39 pm ICT by ANI
Washington, Aug.9 (ANI): An American counter-terrorism official has said that the infighting within the Taliban could provide an opportunity for both the United States and Pakistan to exploit the rivalries to their respective advantages.
According to the counter-terrorism official, one of those opportunities, from the American point of view, would be the ability to focus its fleet of drone aircraft on attacking militant leaders who were involved in the Afghan war, or on Qaeda leaders planning attacks against the West.
That has been a source of tension between the Americans and Pakistani officials, who had viewed the Mehsuds as the most urgent threat.
One Pakistani official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the fighting could create an opening for the Haqqanis, another group that has close ties to Al Qaeda, to intervene in resolving the leadership issue.
Sirajuddin Haqqani is the point man in Pakistan for the leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Muhammad Omar.
Details of the fighting were spotty on Saturday.
Pakistan’s Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, confirmed reports of a shootout at a meeting in South Waziristan and said one of the commanders had been killed but did not say who it was.
“The infighting was between Waliur Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud,” Malik said, adding “We have information that one of them has been killed. Who was killed we will be able to say later after confirming.”
Reports received by government officials on Saturday indicated that Rehman and Hakimullah Mehsud - a member of Baitullah’s tribe but not a close relative - argued over succession at a tribal meeting at Sara Rogha in South Waziristan.
A shootout ensued, killing Mehsud and wounding Rehman, officials said.
A senior government official in Peshawar was quoted by the New York Times, as saying that Baitullah Mehsud’s father-in-law, who had been at the meeting, was now in the custody of an opposing faction.
Beyond being a succession struggle, the infighting may also represent a deeper conflict over the goals and direction of the Pakistani Taliban.
A resident of the area who spoke by telephone on Saturday said foreign militants favored Mr. Rehman while local Mehsuds wanted Hakimullah to be their new leader.
The alliance between Al Qaeda and Pakistani Taliban leaders goes back years in Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas, where local Pakistani militants helped ferry Arab operatives back and forth across the border from Afghanistan. More recently it has surfaced in the attacks on Pakistan’s major cities, far from the war-torn western tribal areas.
“They are interconnected,” a Karachi counterterrorism official said, referring to Al Qaeda and the Taliban. “They depend on each other.”
Clear evidence of that alliance, counterterrorism officials say, was the 2008 bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.
The bomber was an Afghan, trained by Taliban fighters in Mohmand Agency, part of the tribal area where the Mehsuds operate. But it was a Qaeda operative of Kenyan origin, Usama al-Kinni, who planned and financed the attack.
In an added complication with serious implications for security in Pakistan, the handlers and facilitators in that attack were from Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and strategic province, which itself has been the target of a series of suicide bombings and commando-style attacks since March. (ANI)
- Pakistani Taliban leader possibly killed in U.S. drone strike - Jan 16, 2012
- Drone strike didn't kill top leader: Pakistani Taliban - Jan 16, 2012
- Top Al Qaeda leader killed in US drone attack (Lead) - Nov 20, 2010
- US airstrike kills 10 in Pakistan (Lead) - Jan 14, 2010
- US doubtful about winning war on Pakistan border - Dec 06, 2010
- Prove Baitullah Mehsud is alive, Pakistan tells Taliban - Aug 11, 2009
- Pakistani Taliban added to US terror list - Sep 02, 2010
- Pakistani Taliban confirm Baitullah Mehsud's death - Aug 25, 2009
- Top Al Qaeda leader killed in Pakistan - Sep 29, 2010
- US drone attack kills seven militants in Pakistan - Sep 05, 2010
- Pakistani Taliban issues video of ISI spy's execution - Feb 20, 2011
- Suspected US drone attacks kill 13 militants in Pakistan - Sep 29, 2009
- Pakistani Taliban chief dead, meeting on to choose successor (Third Lead) - Aug 07, 2009
- Drone attack kills six in Pakistan (Lead) - Nov 21, 2010
- TTP chief Hakimullah survived US drone attack: ISI official - Apr 29, 2010
Tags: afghan taliban, afghan war, baitullah mehsud, close ties, counter terrorism, drone aircraft, government official, haqqani, infighting, interior minister, leadership issue, mullah muhammad omar, new york times, nyt, pakistani officials, point man, rehman malik, south waziristan, taliban mullah, urgent threat