Monday, October 30, 2006

Taking the Fight to the Taliban

This is the 2nd part of the Elizabeth Rubin's article about the resurgence of Taliban in Pakistan. No doubt high handedness of "counter-insurgency" operations is also feeding to the popularity of Taliban's cause - however- this is just a part of the explanation. It seems unlikely that without substantial support from "abroad" (read: Pakistan), Taliban would be able to regroup and sustain themselves after their ouster from Kabul.

Excerpts from the article below:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/29/magazine/29taliban.html?pagewanted=print

Later, when I met a Taliban commander in Pakistan, he told me that they knew the Americans listened to their radios, so that the five daily prayers were often used as code to signal anything from "I've run out of food" to "Ambush them."

The next afternoon, we flew by helicopter to Andar, a nearby village. I sat in the fields with a former teacher named Anwarjan. The governor had appointed him district chief for all of Day Chopan, but Anwarjan could barely travel. The entire province, he said, was Taliban. Still, he was busy with Shields getting hundreds of kids to school in the central town. He had convinced the parents that Pakistan wants their children to stay wild and uneducated. "I have 300 students now," he said. "They're changed. They are polite, greet people, treat their mothers well. One man can change a generation."

But his efforts, he said, were being undermined by the constant incursions of Taliiban from Pakistan. "The leader of Day Chopan, Mullah Kahar, lives in Quetta," in Pakistan, Anwarjan said. "All the heads are there. So why don't you do anything?"

U.S. intelligence knows the same thing. As Seth Jones, an analyst with Rand, told The New York Times earlier this year, Pakistani intelligence agents are advising the Taliban about coalition plans and tactical operations and provide housing, support and security for Taliban leaders. Sturek told me that the U.S. is well aware that the Taliban heads are in Quetta. On one side, he said, most U.S. policy makers argue that the Pakistanis are our friends. On the other side are those, including some in the military, who say, "Let's just drive into Quetta."


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