Islamabad,
June 25 (IslamOnline.net) - In a recent meeting held in Afghanistan,
Taliban elders appointed ten leaders, including military commanders, to
lead the new "Jihad" drive against U.S. troops in Afghani
provinces and districts, a senior Taliban commander told
IslamOnline.net.
"Taliban
top hierarchy has been revamped and has a new outlook now," the
commander said Wednesday, June 25, adding that Taliban has re-organized
itself and is now in the process of revitalizing "Jihad"
against the U.S. forces and its proxy government in Kabul.
The
meeting of Taliban Shura (consultative) council, which took place in
central Afghanistan in February 2003, was the first formal meeting since
the regime was ousted by the U.S. in October 2001.
According
to other Taliban sources, the meeting was ordered by the movement
commander Mullah Mohammad Omar who, although was not himself present,
still managed to get the approval of the Shura for the appointments he
made few months earlier.
The
appointments were not ordinary ones, noted the sources, adding that
Mullah Omar made selection of the people who are to lead the
"Jihad" in Afghanistan in the months to come.
They
include Taliban military commanders of various provinces and districts
across Afghanistan, said the sources, asserting that the Shura council
met to formally approve their appointments.
"In
a bid to fight the enemy in a forceful manner, Omar appointed commanders
in every province of the country," they added.
He
issued the call in an audio tape sent from his hiding place in
Afghanistan, the daily The News said, quoting Taliban
spokesman Mohammad Mukhtar Mujahid.
Who
Is Who
Mullah
Beradar is Taliban second-in-command after Mullah Omar.
All
other Taliban commanders take instructions from him and he is the only
person though to be communicating regularly with Mullah Omar via
personal messengers.
Beradar,
who hails from Mullah Omar’s home village of Deh Rawood, is former
deputy chief of the Taliban army, the Taliban source told IOL.
The
three leaders in charge of southern Afghanistan from Kandhar to Zabul
and Urzogan are Akhtar Usmani, former corps commander of Kandhar, Mullah
Abdul Razzak, former interior minister, and Mullah Dadullah, former
commander of Northern Command who was leading the defense of Kabul from
the north before it fell to the opposition Northern Alliance, the
sources said.
Though
he was captured, Dadullah later managed to escape from Kunduz prison.
Maulana
Saif Rehman, the former commander of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hizbe
Islami, who joined the ranks of the Taliban in 1996-97.
He
is in charge of the Taliban movement in Paktia, Paktika, Khost and
Ghazni.
Mullah
Kabir, Taliban’s former deputy prime minister, is now in charge of the
Taliban forces in Nangarhar, Laghman and Kunar, they sources told IOL.
Leader
Anwar is the commander in charge of Parwan, Kapsia, Kabul, Logar,
Wardak.
To
organize and recruit Taliban members in Pakistan, Mullah Omar has
appointed Qari Akhtar, a veteran Taliban, as a "coordinator"
for Pakistan, the sources said.
Also
working closely with him is Talha Yeldaz, a Chechen, they said, arguing
that both of them live in tribal areas of Pakistan.
In
the southern border area of Balushistan, Muhammad Ibrahim is Taliban
contact person.
In
a recent visit to Pakistan, Afghani President Hamid Karzai pressed for
the arrest and extradition of four of these top leaders who he said were
hiding in Pakistan.
He
officially mentioned Mullah Beradar, Akhtar Mohammad Usmani, Mullah
Dadullah and Taliban former Kandahar intelligence Chief Hafiz Mujeeb.
The
Pakistani government categorically denied the presence of any of these
leaders in the country.
Mullah
Muhammad Omar, once the most authoritative ruler of Afghanistan, now
lives an elusive life somewhere in Afghanistan.
But
he is firmly in charge of his group which he still prefers to call a
movement, the source told IOL.
Omar,
know as “Ameer Ul Momineen” (Leader of the faithful) among his
followers, has never been seen in public.
He
seldom met his commanders personally even when he was a ruler.
But
according to well-informed sources in Taliban, he is now in regular
contact with six members of his group, through messengers.
Omar
has not used any electronic equipments or devices since Taliban’s
demise and now uses messengers and handwritten messages to run his
movement, they said.
Shabnama
Although
the issue of Taliban re-organization is the daily talk of Afghani towns
nowadays, no one knows for sure as to what kind of re-organization the
movement has undertake in recent days.
But
what is clear is that all this began in November last year when
Shabnama, a Persian word for “Message of night”, started circulating
in towns and villages in Afghanistan.
Shabnama
has always marked the beginning of an internal resistance movement in
Afghanistan.
Traditionally
the message comes in the form of a poster, handwritten in Pashtu or
Persian, through which secret messages are conveyed about the enemy and
operational strategy.
In
almost all the Pashtun belt of Afghanistan, the circulation of Shabnama
has become a daily matter since November 2, 2002 when the first
authenticated Shabnama of its kind was distributed not only in
Afghanistan but also was sent to journalists in Pakistan by the known
Taliban leader Muhammad Mukhtar Mujahid.
Through
this word of night, Taliban declared "Jihad" for the first
time since their demise 2001.
The
statement was faxed to journalists in Pakistan from undisclosed location
inside the country.
It
mentioned Afghanistan with its previous name of Islamic Emirates of
Afghanistan and Mullah Omar as “Ameer Ul Momineen”.
It
also said that Mullah Omar has formally declared "Jihad"
against the foreign occupation forces in Afghanistan and its proxy
government.
The
Shabnama stated Mullah Omar will "guide" this
"Jihad" and he has appointed two deputies to organize
commanders all over Afghanistan to recruits "Mujahideen."
It
identified Mullah Beradar and Mullah Ubaidullah, former defense
minister, as the two deputies, adding they were directed to appoint
local commanders in Afghanistan and wage "Jihad."
Al-Qaeda
Connection
Al-Qaeda
remains to be a strong ideological force in Afghanistan, though Taliban
and others argue that Osama Bin Laden’s network is almost diminished
from Afghanistan.
"Most
of them fled Afghanistan in post-Taliban days following instruction from
their leadership," Taliban sources told IOL.
However,
the sources said that Afghan and Pakistani members of Al-Qaeda joined
different local groups and most of them turned to Taliban.
"With
the dissolution of Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, many of Al Qaeda former
fighters have joined us but they are now under the command of Mullah
Omar not Bin Laden," they added.
Authorities
in Pakistan confirm that Al-Qaeda is fast evaporating from Afghanistan
and Pakistan.
Investigators
following trails of Al-Qaeda fugitives, who have reportedly sneaked into
Pakistan to escape U.S. military crackdown, have found evidence
suggesting they have moved to other country.
The
Riyadh bombings and other recent attacks outside South Asia have
enhanced these claims to a great extent.
Although
the U.S. investigators initially pointed fingers to Pakistan as the
country in which the Riyadh bombings were planned, later clues proved
that Pakistan was not fitting into the new Al-Qaeda map.
Pakistani
authorities have shared the clues with the U.S. authorities suggesting
that Al-Qaeda has shifted its training camps from Afghanistan border
areas with Pakistan to other countries.
Sources
said that the war on Iraq has changed the direction and methodology of
Al-Qaeda operations to a great extent.
There
has been a spike in recruitment for Al-Qaeda from the Arab world since
the U.S. invaded Iraq in March, and the network is believed to be
reorganizing into smaller, more disciplined units, in the Middle East
with new leaders accustomed to operating on the run, they claimed.