FIGHING PAK ARMY Mullah Omar sacks commander

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MOSABJA

Junior Member
Mullah omar has sacked the CHIEF OF PAKISTAN TALIBAN BAITULLAH MEHSUD FOR FIGHTING PAKISTAN ARMY.

KARACHI - With the Taliban's spring offensive just months away, the Afghan front has been quiet as Taliban and al-Qaeda militants have been heavily engaged in fighting security forces in Pakistan's tribal regions.

But now Taliban leader Mullah Omar has put his foot down and reset the goals for the Taliban: their primary task is the struggle in Afghanistan, not against the Pakistan state.

Mullah Omar has sacked his own appointed leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Baitullah Mehsud, the main architect of the fight against Pakistani security forces, and urged all Taliban commanders to turn their venom against North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces, highly placed contacts in the Taliban told Asia Times Online.

Mullah Omar then appointed Moulvi Faqir Mohammed (a commander from Bajaur Agency) but he refused the job. In the past few days, the Pakistani Taliban have held several meetings but have not yet appointed a replacement to Mehsud.

This major development occurred at a time when Pakistan was reaching out with an olive branch to the Pakistani Taliban. Main commanders, including Hafiz Gul Bahadur and the main Afghan Taliban based in Pakistan, Sirajuddin Haqqani, signed peace agreements. But al-Qaeda elements, including Tahir Yuldashev, chief of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, undermined this initiative.

"We refused any peace agreement with the Pakistani security forces and urged the mujahideen fight for complete victory," Yuldashev said in a jihadi video message seen by Asia Times Online. Yuldashev's closest aide and disciple, Mehsud, last week carried out an attack on a Pakistani security post and then seized two forts in the South Waziristan tribal area.

As a result, Pakistan bombed South Waziristan and sent in heavy artillery and tanks for a major operation against Mehsud. Other important commanders are now in North Waziristan and they support the peace agreements with the Pakistani security forces.

Pakistan's strategic quarters maintain the planned operation in South Waziristan is aimed particularly at eliminating Mehsud.

"While talking to government representatives in the jirga [peace council] we could clearly discern a grudge against Baitullah Mehsud and the Mehsud tribes by the security forces. And there are signs that the government is obsessed with a military operation to make Baitullah Mehsud a martyr," a leading member of the peace jirga in South Waziristan, Maulana Hisamuddin, commented to Voice of America.

Mehsud came into the spotlight after Taliban commander Nek Mohammed was killed in a missile attack in South Waziristan in mid-2004. Nek was from the Wazir tribe, which is considered a rival tribe of the Mehsud. Haji Omar, another Wazir, replaced Nek, but support from Yuldashev and Uzbek militants strengthened Mehsud's position. He rose through the ranks of the Taliban after becoming acquainted with Mullah Dadullah (killed by US-led forces in May 2007) and Mehsud supplied Dadullah with many suicide bombers.

Dadullah's patronage attracted many Pakistani jihadis into Mehsud's fold and by 2007 he was reckoned as the biggest Taliban commander in Pakistan - according to one estimate he alone had over 20,000 fighters.

The link to Dadullah also brought the approval of Mullah Omar, and when the Taliban leader last year revived the "Islamic Emirates" in the tribal areas, Mehsud was appointed as his representative, that is, the chief of the Pakistani Taliban.

Mehsud was expected to provide valuable support to the Taliban in Afghanistan, but instead he directed all his fighters against Pakistani security forces.

With Mehsud now replaced, Mullah Omar will use all Taliban assets in the tribal areas for the struggle in Afghanistan. This leaves Mehsud and his loyalists completely isolated to fight against Pakistani forces.

Taliban aim for the jugular
According to Taliban quarters in Afghanistan that Asia Times Online spoke to recently, the Taliban have well-established pockets around Logar, Wardak and Ghazni, which are all gateways to the capital Kabul.

Many important districts in the southwestern provinces, including Zabul, Helmand, Urzgan and Kandahar, are also under the control of the Taliban. Similarly, districts in the northwestern, including Nimroz, Farah and Ghor, have fallen to the Taliban.

Certainly, the Taliban will be keen to advance from these positions, but they will also concentrate on destroying NATO's supply lines from Pakistan into Afghanistan. The Taliban launched their first attack in Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province on Monday, destroying a convoy of oil tankers destined for NATO's Kandahar air field.

"If NATO's supply lines are shut down from Pakistan, NATO will sweat in Afghanistan," a member of a leading humanitarian organization in Kabul told Asia Times Online on condition of anonymity. "The only substitute would be air operations, but then NATO costs would sky-rocket."
 

Munawar

Striving for Paradise
:salam2:
Thanks for sharing. Great Info.
Where did you get it from? Asia Times Online ?
:wasalam:
 

GAZIJA

Well-Known Member
Staff member
Esselamu Aleikum

This story is like a story Shreck movie. There is something fishy in thet story, and especially when Al-Qaida is mentioned. That is just adding oil on fire:eek:
 

Mabsoot

Amir
Staff member
assalamu alaykum,

I deletd earlier posts because this site not about arguing or discussing such issues. Especially when people give answers not based on knowledge, but from emotion and from not knowing what they are talking about.

Yes, they are Muslims, but the Taliban did not set about anything that was based on Quran and sunnah.

There was a lot of stupersticious stuff and things based on cultural interpretation of Islam and tribalism.

Maybe some people need to read about how the Taliban initially slaughtered people such as Shaykh Jamil ur-Rahman and many other Noble Scholars and other great leaders of the Jihad in Afghanistan. He was a great scholar and an Amir of Jihad there. But, he and many of his men were killed because they taught Tawheed and for the people not to venerate the tombs of Saints!

The Taliban did bring some law and order into an otherwise destroyed and impoverished country. But, it did nothing in terms of da'wah to Tawheed and the outlawing of Shirk (associating partners with Alah).. and no the destruction of the Buddha statues is not example of that!! Rather, the thousands of shrines and other places of shirk that exist there. Mazaar-i-Shariff is the name of a City based on one of these shrines!

The Taliban simply barred women from education and closed cinemas and outlawed music and televisions. -- That is not Islam.

When the Taliban were in power, I knew many practising Muslim brothers from Afghanistan who feared returning there because they would be arrested and persecuted by the Taliban. These brothers were all upon Quran and Sunnah and had beards and were very good.

Not all the Taliban were bad, but we must think about the actual belief of the people, not by emotion or the outward appearance and words of what people say.

Obviously, we as Muslims do not wish to see Muslims getting killed or hurt. And, we have no love whatsoever for the foreign armies in Afghanistan and the evil they bring.. nor for any neighbouring countries, like Pakistan that destroys lives of so many innocents in North West Frontier province and inside Afghanistan.

May Allah help the Muslims there and give them victory, and make things easier for us all.

Our troubles are simply because of our people not following Islam properly.
 
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