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Loosely translated,
Padshahgardi means the double-dealing engaged in by kings. For
Afghans, it is a historical term signifying the strategies-fair or otherwise-employed
by tribal chiefs in pursuit of power. In tactical deference to this tradition,
when the US-led forces bombed the Taliban out of Kabul, several local
warlords and their supporters simply changed sides and joined Afghanistan
Chairman Hamid Karzai's bandwagon. But where are the Taliban leaders and
their committed cadres? Do they still have the clout to destabilise the
Afghanistan Government? More significantly for India, are they in a position
to wreak havoc in Kashmir?
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| POISONED CROP:
Taliban prisoners freed in Kabul |
When the US-led assault in Afghanistan began in October last year, the
Taliban militia under Mullah Mohammed Omar had the active support of some
60,000 heavily armed men, including 5,000 Al Qaida fighters. While more
than 1,000 Al Qaida warriors and a large number of Taliban cadres and
supporters died in the bombing, the remaining either changed sides or
fled the country. Intelligence reports say that nearly 2,000 Taliban men
crossed the Durand Line into Pakistan's North West Frontier Province and
the Tribal Areas.
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THE MASTERMINDS
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| DEAD OR ALIVE: The US is still hunting for
Mullah Omar but the intelligence reports say the Taliban leader may
have been killed during Kandahar bombing in January |
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| THE GREAT EVASION: While the US is unsure about
Osama bin Laden's whereabouts reports say he was injured in the US
bombing |
Delhi believes around 14 leaders (see graphic) in the former Taliban
administration are currently in and around the Tribal Areas and refugee
camps near Peshawar. These include Maulvi Noor Mohammed Saqib, chief justice
in the Taliban regime, his deputy Maulvi Musajam-both believed to be in
Peshawar-as well as seven ministers, two provincial governors and two
top police and intelligence officials.
A large number of the Taliban fighters have also been sighted in Baluchistan,
Karachi, and Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK). According to intelligence
reports, the militia have moved in small groups into Gilgit and Muzaffarabad,
while 60-80 Pakistani Pashtoons have regrouped in Skardu. ''It's this
group of Pashtoons that we are worried about. There will be serious security
ramifications if they decide to cross the Line of Control (loc) into Kashmir,"
says a senior Indian intelligence official.
That the Taliban leaders have moved into Pakistan became clear during
the February 8 surrender of former Taliban foreign minister Wakil Ahmad
Muttawakil before the Afghanistan interim administration. While the surrender
was shown to have taken place at Kandahar, reports says that Muttawakil-the
main Taliban interlocutor in the IC-814 plane hijacking-was arrested near
Quetta. He was handed over to the US forces in Kandahar to save embarrassment
to Islamabad, especially as it came on the eve of Pakistani President
General Pervez Musharraf's visit to Washington. However, Afghanistan Foreign
Minister Abdullah Abdullah, without naming Pakistan, said leaders of the
"vanquished Taliban movement" were collecting outside Afghanistan
to oppose the Karzai Government. "We do not have details of the organisations
but it is not acceptable," he said.
Other experts say over four Taliban organisations have recently come
up in Pakistan. Besides, Karzai's recent visit to Pakistan was to garner
enough Pashtoon votes to help him get re-elected at the Loya Jirga, which
is to be convened within six months. The Taliban is said to be regrouping
at Tshahi Kurgam which is at the tip of the Wakhan corridor in Xinjiang
province in China. "The British Air Force asked for bases at Kashgar
and Khotan to launch operations against these Taliban groups ... but perhaps
the Chinese have not agreed," says P. Stopdan, director of the Indian
Cultural Centre in Almatty, Kazakhstan.
While a large majority of the Taliban have sought Islamabad's patronage,
around 400 militiamen are known to have fled to Uzbekistan and Tajikistan
as early as last November. Owing allegiance to Juma Namangani, the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) leader who is believed to have died in the
US bombing on Mazar-e-Sharif, the cadres have not moved into their traditional
stronghold in Uzbekistan's Ferghana Valley but are waiting to strike back.
A significant number of the Taliban have also used the Baluchistan-Zahedan
route to move from Kandahar, Nimruz and Helmand provinces into Iran. While
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld recently blamed Teheran for lax patrolling
of its borders he was silent on Pakistan sheltering and supporting the
Taliban. Understandable, given the fact that Washington is convinced Musharraf
will deliver on his promise to tackle terrorism on its soil.
While refuting the US allegations of interference in Afghan affairs,
Iranian Minister for Information and Intelligence Ali Younessi has acknowledged
that several people crossing over from Baluchistan into Iran have been
arrested. He also warned Pakistan to prevent further intrusions. But there
is a lurking suspicion that hardliners in Iran may have turned a blind
eye to the exodus due to its concern over perceived longterm US involvement
in Afghanistan.
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| INFO-EXCHANGE: India is awaiting
specifics on Kashmir after the US grilling of the Taliban prisoners
at the Guantanamo prison in Cuba |
While Iran may be the "evil axis" for the US, and Pakistan
a key ally in its fight against terrorism, Washington itself looked the
other way when the Taliban's Pakistani supporters slipped out of Afghanistan
during the key battle in Kunduz. In fact, the Northern Alliance's Uzbek
warlord Dawood Khan apparently saw Pakistan Air Force craft air-lifting
Pakistani nationals in January this year to escape a possible massacre.
Though India brought this to the notice of US Secretary of State Colin
Powell during his visit to Delhi last month, the official remained silent.
However, it is the presence of top Taliban leaders and cadres in Pakistan
that can have serious ramifications for Afghanistan. Former Indian high
commissioner to Pakistan G. Parthasarathy says Islamabad will keep Karzai
on his toes by limiting his powers in the Pashtoon-dominated areas of
Afghanistan. "As the Taliban's jehadi links with ISI continue to
exist, it is in Pakistan's interest to use the militia to keep the Afghan
Government weak," the former diplomat said. This is precisely what
is happening beyond the Afghan capital.
Intelligence reports indicate that as many as 32 warlords, some of whom
supported the Taliban, were given money ranging from $50,000 to $200,000
(Rs 24 lakh-Rs 96 lakh) by the Afghan Government to change sides and ensure
stability in Afghanistan. This was to secure its writ outside Kabul and
in the Pashtoon-dominated areas. However, the power tussle currently on
between the Government-appointed provincial governors and the local warlords,
some former Pakistan protégés, shows that money is fast
drying up. Reports suggest complete lawlessness in Pashtoon-dominated
provinces of Paktia, Khowst and Kandahar with fighting among former Northern
Alliance warlords adding to the uncertainty. In Paktia and Khowst, local
governor and former Taliban supporter Badshah Khan is battling with Saifullah
Khan, a Zahir Shah supporter. Reports say 60 persons were killed in clashes
on January 30. The situation in Kandahar too is on the boil despite heavy
US presence, with Governor Gul Agha in a stand-off with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's
Hizb-e-Islami. No wonder that Hekmatyar, whose ISI and CIA connections
go back to the Soviet Union's Afghan occupation, was asked to shut down
offices by Iran.
In Nangarhar province, Governor Abdul Qadir faces threat from local
warlord Hazarat Ali, who has a strong Pakistani link. During the Taliban
regime, Ali had supported Maulvi Qabir as Nangarhar governor as also Pakistan-backed
warlord Younis Khalis. The situation in Baghlan province is also precarious
with Ismaili Governor Syed Nadu Kyan unsettled by the forces led by Tajik
General Himmanuddin. The fate of this tussle will be decided by the struggle
between supporters of former Afghanistan president Burhanuddin Rabbani's
Jamiat-e-Islami and Tajik forces owing allegiance to late Ahmed Shah Masood's
Shura-e-Nazar party for control of Kunduz and Samagam.
Another battle is on in the key western province of Herat. Despite Iranian
denials, Teheran has traditionally backed former Afghan resistance leader
Ismail Khan. Earlier appointed as Khor Governor, Khan was shifted to Herat
after a violent Pashtoon uprising. The US has beefed up its military presence
at the Shindand air base to curb the perceived Iranian interference.
It is in this scenario that Afghanistan is interested in strengthening
the UK-led International Security Assistance Force to extend stability
beyond Kabul. Karzai's visits to the US, Pakistan and Gulf countries indicate
that he wants more monetary support for the country's reconstruction.
While his Washington visit was to ensure the US' long-term support in
Afghanistan, the meeting with Musharraf may have been to ensure the Taliban
is kept under control. His immediate aim, however, is to maintain peace
in Afghanistan and prepare for the Loya Jirga. Karzai's plans may be boosted
by reports indicating that at least 15 Taliban leaders will surrender
before the Afghan and US authorities.
India believes Pakistan will make it tough for Afghanistan by playing
the Taliban card. Already there are signs that the Pakistan-based Afghanistan
Defence Council may be revived and that the Taliban cadres are regrouping
to emerge as a force in the post-US scenario. For the time being, the
Taliban focus appears to be Kabul and there is no indication they will
cross the loc in Kashmir. But then, as in the past, it is the ISI and
not the Taliban that decides policy issues.
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