| At Border, Signs of Pakistani
Role in Taliban Surge
The New York Times
By CARLOTTA GALL
Published: January 21, 2007
QUETTA, Pakistan — The most explosive question about the Taliban
resurgence here along the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan is this:
Have Pakistani intelligence agencies been promoting the Islamic
insurgency?
The government of Pakistan vehemently rejects the allegation and insists
that it is fully committed to help American and NATO forces prevail
against the Taliban militants who were driven from power in Afghanistan in
2001.
Western diplomats in both countries and Pakistani opposition figures say
that Pakistani intelligence agencies — in particular the powerful
Inter-Services Intelligence and Military Intelligence — have been
supporting a Taliban restoration, motivated not only by Islamic fervor but
also by a longstanding view that the jihadist movement allows them to
assert greater influence on Pakistan’s vulnerable western flank.
More than two weeks of reporting along this frontier, including dozens of
interviews with residents on each side of the porous border, leaves little
doubt that Quetta is an important base for the Taliban, and found many
signs that Pakistani authorities are encouraging the insurgents, if not
sponsoring them.
The evidence is provided in fearful whispers, and it is anecdotal.
At Jamiya Islamiya, a religious school here in Quetta, Taliban sympathies
are on flagrant display, and residents say students have gone with their
teachers’ blessings to die in suicide bombings in Afghanistan.
Three families whose sons had died as suicide bombers in Afghanistan said
they were afraid to talk about the deaths because of pressure from
Pakistani intelligence agents. Local people say dozens of families have
lost sons in Afghanistan as suicide bombers and fighters.
One former Taliban commander said in an interview that he had been jailed
by Pakistani intelligence officials because he would not go to Afghanistan
to fight. He said that, for Western and local consumption, his arrest had
been billed as part of Pakistan’s crackdown on the Taliban in Pakistan.
Former Taliban members who have refused to fight in Afghanistan have been
arrested — or even mysteriously killed — after resisting pressure to
re-enlist in the Taliban, Pakistani and Afghan tribal elders said.
“The Pakistanis are actively supporting the Taliban,” declared a Western
diplomat in an interview in Kabul. He said he had seen an intelligence
report of a recent meeting on the Afghan border between a senior Taliban
commander and a retired colonel of the Pakistani Inter-Services
Intelligence.
Pakistanis and Afghans interviewed on the frontier, frightened by the long
reach of Pakistan’s intelligence agencies, spoke only with assurances that
they would not be named. Even then, they spoke cautiously.
The Pakistani military and intelligence services have for decades used
religious parties as a convenient instrument to keep domestic political
opponents at bay and for foreign policy adventures, said Husain Haqqani, a
former adviser to several of Pakistan’s prime ministers and the author of
a book on the relationship between the Islamists and the Pakistani
security forces.
The religious parties recruited for the jihad in Kashmir and Afghanistan
from the 1980s, when the Pakistani intelligence agencies ran the
resistance by the mujahedeen and channeled money to them from the United
States and Saudi Arabia to fight the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, Mr.
Haqqani said.
In return for help in Kashmir and Afghanistan the intelligence services
would rig votes for the religious parties and allow them freedom to
operate, he said.
“The religious parties provide them with recruits, personnel, cover and
deniability,” Mr. Haqqani said in a telephone interview from Washington,
where he is now a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.
The Inter-Services Intelligence once had an entire wing dedicated to
training jihadis, he said. Today the religious parties probably have
enough of their own people to do the training, but, he added, the I.S.I.
so thoroughly monitors phone calls and people’s movements that it would be
almost impossible for any religious party to operate a training camp
without its knowledge.
“They trained the people who are at the heart of it all, and they have
done nothing to roll back their protégés,” Mr. Haqqani said.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States, President Pervez
Musharraf, under strong American pressure, pledged to help root out
Islamic extremism, and, as both head of the army and president, he has
more direct control of the intelligence services than past civilian prime
ministers. But according to several analysts, Pakistani intelligence
officials believe it is more prudent to prepare for the day when Western
troops leave Afghanistan.
Pakistan has long seen jihadi movements like the Taliban as a counter to
Indian and Russian influence next door in Afghanistan, the Western
diplomat and other analysts said, and as a way to provide Pakistan with
“strategic depth,” or a friendly buffer on its western border.
In Pashtunabad, a warren of high mud-brick walls and narrow lanes in
Quetta, the links of the government, religious parties and Taliban
commanders to a local madrasa are thinly hidden, said a local opposition
party member who lives in the neighborhood.
Three students from the madrasa went to Afghanistan recently on suicide
missions, he said. The family of one of the men admitted that he had blown
himself up but denied that he had attended the school. The man’s brother
suggested that he had been forced into the mission and that someone had
recruited him for payment.
“Nowadays people are getting money from somewhere and they are killing
other people’s children,” he said. “We are afraid of this government,” he
said. His father said he feared the same people would try to take his
other son and asked that no family names be used.
President Musharraf relies on the religious party Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam, or
J.U.I., which dominates this province, Baluchistan, as an important
partner in the provincial and national parliaments.
At a madrasa, called simply Jamiya Islamiya, on winding Hajji Ghabi Road,
a board in the courtyard proudly declares “Long Live Mullah Omar,” in
praise of the Taliban leader, and “Long Live Fazlur Rehman,” the leader of
J.U.I.
Members of the provincial government and Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam are frequent
visitors to the school, the local opposition party member said, asking
that his name not be used because he feared Pakistan’s intelligence
services. People on motorbikes with green government license plates visit
at night, he said, as do luxurious sport utility vehicles with blackened
windows, a favorite of Taliban commanders.
Maulvi Noor Muhammad, a Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam representative from
Baluchistan in the National Assembly, recently received a guest barefoot
while sitting on the floor of a grubby district office in Quetta, a map of
the world above him painted on the wall to represent his belief in
worldwide Islamic revolution.
He denied providing the militants any logistical support. “The J.U.I. is
not supporting the Taliban anymore,” he said. “We are only providing moral
support. We pray for their success in ousting the foreign troops from the
land of Afghanistan.”
On a recent morning, the deputy director of the Jamiya Islamiya madrasa,
Qari Muhammad Ibrahim, declined to meet a female reporter for The New York
Times but answered a question from a local male reporter.
He did not deny that some of the madrasa’s 280 students had gone to fight
in Afghanistan. “In the Koran it is written that it is every Muslim’s
right to fight jihad,” he said. “All we are telling them is what is in the
Koran, and then it’s up to them to go to jihad.”
NATO officials and Western diplomats in Afghanistan have grown
increasingly critical of Pakistan for allowing the Taliban leaders,
commanders and soldiers to operate from their country, which has given an
advantage to the insurgency in southern Afghanistan. In September, Gen.
James L. Jones, then NATO’s supreme commander, told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee that Quetta remained the headquarters of the Taliban
movement.
Still, Pakistan has insisted that the Taliban leadership is not based in
Quetta. “If there are Taliban in Quetta, they are few,” said Pakistan’s
minister for information and broadcasting, Tariq Azim Khan. “You can count
them on your fingers.”
American officials and Western diplomats noted that, when put under enough
pressure, Pakistan had come through with flashes of cooperation. But that
only seems to reinforce the view that Pakistan’s intelligence agencies are
more in touch with what is going on in the Taliban insurgency than the
government lets on publicly.
For instance, a senior Taliban leader, Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Osmani, who
operated on both sides of the border, was killed in an airstrike in
Afghanistan on Dec. 19, after Pakistan helped track him, an American
official in Afghanistan said.
At the same time, a kind of dirty war is building between Afghan and
Pakistani intelligence agencies. A senior Afghan intelligence official
said one of its informers in Pakistan was recently killed and dumped in
pieces in Peshawar, a border town. The Afghan intelligence service has
also recently arrested two Afghan generals, one retired, who have been
charged with spying for Pakistan, as well as a Pakistani suspected of
being an intelligence agent.
President Musharraf has acknowledged that some retired Pakistani
intelligence officials may still be involved in supporting their former
protégés in the Taliban.
Hamid Gul, the former director general of Pakistani intelligence, remains
a public and unapologetic supporter of the Taliban, visiting madrasas and
speaking in support of jihad at graduation ceremonies.
Afghan intelligence officials recently produced a captured insurgent who
said Mr. Gul facilitated his training and logistics through an office in
the Pakistani town of Nowshera, in the North-West Frontier Province, west
of the capital, Islamabad.
NATO and American officials in Afghanistan say there is also evidence of
support from current midlevel Pakistani intelligence officials. Just how
far up that support reaches remains in dispute.
At least five villages in Pishin, a district northwest of Quetta that
stretches toward the Afghan border, lost sons in the recent fighting in
Kandahar between the Taliban and NATO forces, opposition politicians said.
One village, Karbala, is a main center of support for the jihad, local
people say. Unlike the other villages, which blend into the stark
desertlike landscape with their mud-brick houses and compound walls,
Karbala has lavish houses, mosques and madrasas, suggesting an unusual
wealth.
Farther on, in the village of Bagarzai, lies the grave of Azizullah, a
religious scholar who used only one name and acquired fame as a Taliban
commander.
Only 25, he was killed with a group of 15 to 20 men in an airstrike in the
Afghan province of Helmand on May 22, said his father, Hajji Abdul Hai.
Thousands of people attended his funeral, including senior members of the
provincial government, the father said.
Mr. Hai, 50, who is a Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam member, denied that his son had
been persuaded to fight by anyone. “From the start it was his spirit to
take part in jihad,” his father said. “It’s all to do with personal will.
If someone agrees, then he goes. Even if someone wishes to, no one can
stop him.”
It is an argument that supporters of the jihad use frequently. But for
some of the families mourning their sons, there is no doubt that the
madrasas and the religious parties are the first point of contact.
That was the conclusion reached by the family of Muhammad Daoud, a
22-year-old man from Pishin who disappeared more than a year ago.
“In our search we went to many places and everyone said different things,”
said his father, Hajji Noora Gul. “We went to the madrasa in Pashtunabad,
but no one was ready to tell us his whereabouts.”
“Even the madrasa people did not know,” he added. “Behind the curtain of
the madrasa, maybe there are other people who do this. Maybe there are
some businessmen who take them.”
Then, he said, a Taliban propaganda CD came out showing his son with a
group of others taking an oath before the Taliban commander, Mullah
Dadullah.
“He had a shawl over his head and was preparing for a suicide bombing,”
Mr. Gul said. “He said, ‘I am fighting for God, and I am ready for this.’
”
His eldest son, Allah Dad, 33, blamed the jihadi groups and the
Inter-Services Intelligence. “We don’t know how he made contact with those
jihadi groups,” he said. “There are some groups active in taking people to
Afghanistan and they are active in Quetta.
“All Taliban are I.S.I. Taliban,” he added. “It is not possible to go to
Afghanistan without the help of the I.S.I. Everyone says this.”
David Rohde contributed reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan. |