Islamabad - Pakistan's top three Taliban commanders have set
aside their rivalries and decided to cooperate as the US expands its
covert drone attacks against militants on Pakistani soil, media
reports said on Saturday.
Baitullah Mehsud, the head of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, an
umbrella organization of more than a dozen militant organizations in
Pakistan's ungoverned tribal region and neighbouring North West
Frontier Province, held a meeting with his rival commanders Maulvi
Nazir and Hafiz Gul Bahader last week, it has emerged.
A close aide of Nazir told English-language daily The News that
the three commanders promised to cooperate with each other in the
future against their common enemies, namely Pakistan and United
States.
'I am extremely excited today. I even danced and fired shots in
the air as we succeeded in removing misunderstandings created by the
Pakistan government,' he told the newspaper over phone.
The three militant leaders, who have previously fought each other,
jointly lead thousands of Taliban fighters in Pakistan's tribal
region.
The purported alliance came as the New York Times reported that
the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has broadened its battle
against militants within Pakistan.
The American newspaper claimed that a recent attack by
unmanned drones targeted Mehsud and his followers. They had
apparently previously been spared because they had 'played less of a
direct role in attacks on American troops' in Afghanistan.
Mehsud is suspected of ordering dozens of attacks inside
Pakistan over the last two years, including the one that killed
former prime minister and wife of current President Asif Ali Zardari,
Benazir Bhutto.
By contrast, the other two Taliban leaders, Bahader and Nazir, are
believed to focus their resources solely on launching cross border
attacks on US-led international forces in Afghanistan.
Bahader, who is the Taliban chief in North Waziristan, signed a
peace accord with the government on February 17, 2008 to cease
attacks on security forces and government installations.
Nazir led an offensive against al-Qaeda-linked Uzbek fighters to
expel them from his area in South Waziristan, a stronghold of Mehsud.
The US drones last week fired rockets at camps run by Mehsud's
network, the New York Times reported, saying further that a Saturday
strike was aimed specifically at Mehsud, but he was not killed.
The strikes are a sign that new US President Barack Obama is
continuing, and in some cases extending, the Bush administration
policy of using American spy agencies against terrorism suspects in
Pakistan, the New York Times said.
'This might have compelled Mr Mehsud to reconcile with Mr Bahader
and Mr Nazir who are already enraged over increased US drone attacks
which they believe are carried out with the support of Islamabad
government,' said Pakistani defence analyst Mahmood Shah.
'The development might help Afghan Taliban in their offensive
against NATO troops in the coming spring because previously reluctant
Mehsud will be able to dispatch more men and arms to Afghanistan
under the new alliance,' he added.
The CIA have carried out more than 30 drone attacks since
September to eliminate dozens of al-Qaeda second-tier operatives,
including Abu Jihad al-Masri and Usama al-Kini, believed to have
helped the 1998 American Embassy bombings in East Africa and last
year's bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.
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