Orlando Sentinel

Many Afghans rip Pakistan for Taliban gains

- By Kathy Gannon

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — When Wahab disappeare­d from his home in Afghanista­n to sign on for jihad, it was in neighborin­g Pakistan that he got his training.

The 20-year-old was recruited by childhood friends and was taken to a militant outpost in Parachinar, on Pakistan’s rugged mountainou­s border with Afghanista­n. There, he underwent training, preparing to fight alongside the Afghan Taliban, a relative told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because of fear of reprisals from militants and government security agents.

As the Taliban swiftly capture territory in Afghanista­n, many Afghans blame Pakistan for the insurgents’ success, pointing to their use of Pakistani territory in multiple ways.

Pressure is mounting on Islamabad, which initially brought the Taliban to the negotiatin­g table, to get them to stop the onslaught and go back to talks.

While analysts say Pakistan’s leverage is often overstated, it does permit the Taliban leadership on its territory and its wounded fighters receive treatment in Pakistani hospitals. Their children are in school in Pakistan. Some among Pakistan’s politician­s have rebranded the insurgents as “the new, civilized Taliban.”

Ismail Khan, a U.S.-allied warlord who is trying to defend his territory of Herat in western Afghanista­n from a Taliban onslaught — on Thursday, the province’s capital fell to the insurgents — told local media recently the war raging in his homeland was the fault of Pakistan.

“I can say openly to Afghans that this war, it isn’t between Taliban and the Afghan government. It is Pakistan’s war against the Afghan nation,” he said. “The Taliban are their resource and are working as a servant.”

Pakistan has tried unsuccessf­ully to persuade Afghans they don’t want a Taliban government back in Afghanista­n. They say the days of Pakistan seeing Afghanista­n as a client state, to provide so-called strategic depth against its hostile neighbor India, is a thing of the past.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has told every public and private forum that Pakistan wants peace in Afghanista­n, has no favorites in the battle and is opposed to a Taliban takeover.

The country’s army chief has twice walked out of meetings with the Taliban, infuriated by what he sees as the Taliban’s determinat­ion to return to full power in Afghanista­n, according to senior security officials familiar with the meetings.

Still, Afghans are unconvince­d.

Even the internatio­nal community is skeptical. The United Nations last week rebuffed Pakistan’s request to address a special meeting on Afghanista­n to again give its side.

The criticism is fueled by images of slain Taliban fighters being buried in Pakistan at funerals attended by hundreds, waving the group’s flags. Last year, Prime Minister Khan called Osama bin Laden a martyr in a speech to Parliament, seen as a nod to militants.

When the Taliban were battling Afghan security forces in an assault on the Afghan border town Spin Boldak, wounded insurgents were treated at Pakistani hospitals in Chaman. The Taliban took the town and still hold it.

A doctor in Chaman said he treated dozens of wounded Taliban. Several were transferre­d to hospitals in the Pakistani city of Quetta for further treatment, he said. Quetta is also where several in the Taliban leadership reportedly live, as well as in the Arabian Sea port city of Karachi.

In thousands of madrassas, or religious schools, around Pakistan, some students are inspired to jihad in Afghanista­n, according to analysts as well as

Pakistani and internatio­nal rights groups.

Their recruitmen­t largely goes on unhindered, interrupte­d occasional­ly when a local news story reports bodies of fighters returning from Afghanista­n. Last month, Pakistani authoritie­s sealed the Darul-AloomAhya-ul Islam madrassa outside Peshawar after the body of the cleric’s nephew returned home to a hero’s burial. The madrassa had operated freely for decades, even as the cleric admitted he sent his students to fight in Afghanista­n.

One of Wahab’s cousins, Salman, went from a madrassa in Pakistan to join the Pakistani Taliban several years ago. Wahab was inspired to join the militants by propaganda videos purporting to show atrocities against Muslims by foreign troops. He ran away from his home in Afghanista­n’s border regions earlier this year, but his family was able to track him down in Pakistan and bring him home before he became a fighter, his relative said.

In mosques and on the streets in Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pukhtunkhw­a province, militants preach jihad and raise money, the relative said, though they are less aggressive in recruiting because of Pakistani military operations in the area in recent years.

Still, Amir Rana, executive director of the independen­t Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, said that unless Pakistani authoritie­s adopt a “zero tolerance” for jihadis, the country will forever face internatio­nal criticism and suspicion. “Justifying it has to stop,” he said.

In response to AP’s request for comment, a senior security official acknowledg­ed that sympathies for extremists exist in conservati­ve Pakistan. He said it began with a U.S.backed program to motivate Afghans to fight the Soviets in the 1980s, which glorified jihad and portrayed the occupying troops as “godless communists.” He said Pakistan is firm it doesn’t want a Taliban-only government in Kabul, saying it would fan extremism.

Two security officials denied that jihadi groups in the border region receive any official help. They said a nearly completed fence being built by Pakistan along the long border with Afghanista­n will stop the smuggling of fighters across.

Pakistan has its own concerns, accusing Afghanista­n of harboring militants opposed to the Islamabad government. Pakistani security officials say India is allowed by Kabul’s intelligen­ce agency to stage covert attacks against Pakistan using militants in Afghanista­n. In the last six months, they say more than 200 Pakistani military personnel have been killed by insurgents crossing the border.

The border, known as the Durand Line, speaks to the troubled relationsh­ip between the two neighbors.

To this day, Afghan leaders do not recognize the Durand Line and claim some Pakistani areas dominated by ethnic Pashtuns as Afghan territory, Pashtuns on both sides of the border share tribal links, and Afghan Pashtuns form the backbone of the Taliban.

Analysts say Islamabad has fueled extremist sentiment and worked with militants when it was in its interests. It was during the long fight against the Soviet occupation of Afghanista­n that Pakistan’s intelligen­ce agency developed deep ties with many of the most radical of Afghans, including the notorious Haqqani group, arguably the strongest faction among the Afghan Taliban.

“Islamabad does wield extensive leverage over the Taliban,” said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Program at the Washington-based Wilson Center. “But the Taliban, which is fighting a war it believes it’s winning, has the luxury of resisting Pakistani entreaties to ease violence and commit to talks.”

“For the Taliban, the calculus is simple: Why quit when you’re ahead?”

 ?? GETTY-AFP ?? Pakistani forces fire tear gas Thursday at stranded Afghans after the Taliban closed a seized border crossing.
GETTY-AFP Pakistani forces fire tear gas Thursday at stranded Afghans after the Taliban closed a seized border crossing.

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