Marwat Khan Lodhi
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Hafiz Gul Bahadur is the most important Pakistani militant leader in North Waziristan. He is believed to be forty-five years old and is from the Mada Khel clan of the Uthmanzai Wazir tribe, which is based in the mountains between Miram Shah and the border with Afghanistan. He is a resident of the village of Lowara and a descendant of the Faqir of Ipi, a legendary fighter known for his innovative insurrection against British occupation in the 1930s and 1940s. Bahadur is a cleric and studied at a Deobandi madrassa in the Punjabi city of Multan. Bahadur fought in Afghanistan during the civil war that followed the Soviet withdrawal and upon returning to North Waziristan became a political activist in the Islamist party Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (Fazel ur-Rahman), or JUIF. He rose to prominence in 2004 following Pakistani military operations in North Waziristan and coordinates closely with the Haqqanis on both strategy and operations in Afghanistan. Today, Bahadur has more fifteen hundred armed men under his direct command.
Strategy and Relationships
Bahadur is a pragmatist, maintaining constructive relations with a host of militants in North Waziristan and beyond while avoiding confrontation with the Pakistani state that might initiate a powerful crackdown. He has entered alliances with Baitullah Mehsud and his successors—leaders of the anti-Pakistan TTP—but carefully refrained from provoking a harsh backlash from the government. Not surprisingly, Bahadur’s tightrope walk carefully parallels that of the Haqqanis, who are favorites of the ISI and with whom he is co-located. Like the Haqqanis, Bahadur focuses his military efforts on U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Bahadur’s relationship with Taliban militants in other FATA agencies is complex. Although he led North Waziristan fighters against Pakistani security forces in 2006 and 2008, he also signed two peace agreements with the Pakistani government, and then proceeded not to fully implement either. Bahadur has moved in and out of coalitions with other Pakistani Taliban elements but always aimed to maintain productive relationships with them. Most recently, he left a coalition of anti-Pakistan militants in 2009 after the death of Baitullah Mehsud but still offered safe haven to Mehsud fighters fleeing Pakistani government operations in South Waziristan.
The TTP, commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban, was formed in December 2007 as a coalition to unite militant groups across the FATA and in settled areas of Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa (known previously as the North West Frontier Provinces, NWFP).At its formation, Baitullah Mehsud of South Waziristan was named emir and Bahadur his deputy. The alliance was somewhat surprising because Bahadur maintained a strong relationship with Baitullah’s most important rival from South Waziristan, Mullah Nazir. Moreover, Bahadur was frustrated with Uzbek militants backed by Baitullah, many of whom relocated to areas near Mir Ali in North Waziristan after being evicted from Nazir’s territory in South Waziristan.
In addition, although the TTP was founded as an explicitly anti-Pakistan alliance, Bahadur began negotiations with Pakistan almost as soon as the coalition was announced. Not surprisingly, he did not stay in the TTP very long, leaving in July 2008, whereupon he and Nazir created a separate alliance opposed to Baitullah’s insistence on fighting Pakistani government forces. Some reports suggest that the Bahadur-Nazir coalition was backed by the Haqqanis as a way to mitigate the power of Baitullah Mehsud.90 Yet even the new anti-Mehsud alliance did not last long. In February 2009—at the prodding of Sirajuddin Haqqani—Baitullah Mehsud, Mullah Nazir, and Hafiz Gul Bahadur announced the formation of the Shura Ittihad-ul-Mujahideen (SIM), or Council of United Mujahideen.The SIM was designed to end hostilities among the factions, and it reportedly included an agreement that pardoned all parties for past wrongs. The agreement was holding in June 2009 when forces loyal to Bahadur attacked a military convoy in North Waziristan that was supporting Pakistan’s South Waziristan operations against Mehsud. Such attacks on key logistical routes into South Waziristan severely threaten the viability of Pakistani operations against Mehsud dominated TTP strongholds because there are very few roads in and out of Mehsud territory. Recent reports suggest, however, that the SIM became defunct after the death of Baitullah Mehsud in August 2009, and there have been no reports of major violence between Bahadur’s forces and Pakistani troops since.Bahadur has hedged his bets since the June 2009 convoy attack and seems to have largely allowed Pakistani troops to pass through North Waziristan, while simultaneously offering anti-Pakistan South Waziristan militants safe haven in North Waziristan. It is unclear exactly how Baitullah Mehsud’s death affected relations between Bahadur and the Mehsud elements led by Baitullah. Some sources suggest that the SIM alliance collapsed after Baitullah was killed, while others suggest that his death did not damage relations because Baitullah’s successor and cousin, Hakimullah, is considered close to Bahadur.
Bahadur’s most important commander is Maulana Sadiq Noor of the Daur tribe. Sadiq Noor is around forty-five years old and has had close contacts with the Afghan Taliban since 1996, when they formed the government in Afghanistan. Like Bahadur, Sadiq Noor is based near Miram Shah, where he directs the Mamba-ul-Uloom madrassa, originally built by Jalaluddin Haqqani to support the Afghan jihad against the Soviet occupation in the 1980s. The madrassa and a neighboring housing complex served as Sadiq Noor’s headquarters until a U.S. drone strike in September 2008. Although the strike did not kill Sadiq Noor, there were conflicting reports that either nine of his family members or nine members of the Haqqani family were killed in the attack. Such confusion is understandable, considering Sadiq Noor’s close connections with both Jalaluddin and Sirajuddin Haqqani and the shared legacy of the Mamba-ul-Uloom compound. Sadiq Noor has about eight hundred fighters in his group.
Sadiq Noor’s right-hand man in North Waziristan is Saeed Khan Daur, who plays something of a consigliere role. Saeed Khan is also from Miram Shah. Although he is younger than either Sadiq Noor or Bahadur—he is thirty-three or thirty-four—Saeed Khan has a university degree and is known as a computer expert. Rumors suggest that his code name is Aryana, but he is rarely seen and avoids the media.
Maulana Abdul Khaliq Haqqani is another of Bahadur’s commanders, also of the Daur tribe. He is based in Miram Shah and is reported to have around five hundred armed men in his group. Abdul Khaliq follows Bahadur’s delicate balancing act between TTP militants and the Pakistani government. Nonetheless, local actors expect that Abdul Khaliq would support militant resistance to the Pakistani army in the face of a full-scale incursion.
Wahidullah Wazir leads a militant group of two hundred Wazir tribesmen around Miram Shah. The Wahidullah group is involved in cross-border attacks in Afghanistan but also conducted operations against the Pakistani military in 2006 and 2008. Similarly, Halim Khan Daur, a thirty-five-year-old militant based near Mir Ali who leads about 150 men, is primarily involved in cross-border attacks on NATO forces but also actively engaged the Pakistani army in 2006 and 2008.
A man referred to locally as Buddah (old man) has been appointed by Gul Bahadur as the head of the Mir Ali area. Buddah, who reportedly has been a supporter of the Afghan Taliban since 1996, closely toes Gul Bahadur’s political line. He avoids fighting the Pakistan Army and has clashed with Rasool Khan, a rival of Gul Bahadur’s. Buddah has earned a local reputation as an enforcer as well and reportedly beheaded suspected American spies.
Another Bahadur ally in North Waziristan is Saifullah Wazir, a local Uthmanzai Wazir based near Shawal, a notorious hideout for foreign militants in North Waziristan. He is very close to Bahadur and represented him for the 2006 peace agreement between militants and the Pakistani government. He reportedly has four hundred men in his militia, many of whom are active against U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. He is also known to fight the Pakistani army.
A variety of militant groups in North Waziristan do not operate under Bahadur’s direct leadership, for either personal or political reasons. One is led by a Wazir tribesman from Miram Shah named Zanjir, who focuses attacks on U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Unlike Bahadur and most other militants in the region who trace their political roots to the JUI-F faction, Zanjir is politically affiliated with Jamaat-e- Islami (JI) and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hizb-i Islami.
Rasool Khan Daur runs an independent militia around Mir Ali, where he is a schoolteacher. Bahadur appointed Khan head of the Mir Ali bazaar area but removed him in 2009, after which Khan started his own militant group. It now has between 120 and 150 men. Khan’s group is known for its extensive criminal activities, which may have prompted his dismissal by Bahadur. The group’s militants do not strike U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan but are known to target Pakistani security forces and installations in North Waziristan.
One of the more important independent militant leaders is Maulana Manzoor Daur. His support base is Eidak, a village near Mir Ali on the Mir Ali-Miram Shah road. He reportedly has nearly three hundred fighters under his command and is widely believed to have a strong support base among foreign militants. This support created tension with Bahadur and Sadiq Noor after they tried to evict some foreign militants from North Waziristan in 2006. Manzoor’s militia fights both in Afghanistan against U.S. and NATO forces and in Pakistan against the Pakistani army.
One other independent militant group in North Waziristan is led by Haq Nawaz Daur, a forty-five-year-old religious scholar from the Daur tribe. He operates near Mir Ali, hails from the nearby village of Aisori, and has very good relations with foreign militants who have worked in the area, especially Uzbeks. This has similarly caused tension with Sadiq Noor and Bahadur. Haq Nawaz avoids fighting the Pakistani army and is reported to have about three hundred men under his command.
Jaish-e Muhammad (JeM) was established in 1999 by Mawlawi Masood Azhar, after splitting from the venerable Pakistani militant group Harakat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM). The traditionally Punjabi group has established an outpost in Miram Shah that is led by Asmatullah Mowia, who is in his early thirties. JeM is involved in fighting against the Pakistan state and has been implicated in several major terrorist attacks in the Pakistani heartland. The group reportedly has close links with the Qari Hussain faction of the anti-Pakistan militant TTP.
source:Talibanistan: Negotiating the Borders Between Terror, Politics, and Religion - Google Books
@AmnaR @Assault Rifle
Strategy and Relationships
Bahadur is a pragmatist, maintaining constructive relations with a host of militants in North Waziristan and beyond while avoiding confrontation with the Pakistani state that might initiate a powerful crackdown. He has entered alliances with Baitullah Mehsud and his successors—leaders of the anti-Pakistan TTP—but carefully refrained from provoking a harsh backlash from the government. Not surprisingly, Bahadur’s tightrope walk carefully parallels that of the Haqqanis, who are favorites of the ISI and with whom he is co-located. Like the Haqqanis, Bahadur focuses his military efforts on U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Bahadur’s relationship with Taliban militants in other FATA agencies is complex. Although he led North Waziristan fighters against Pakistani security forces in 2006 and 2008, he also signed two peace agreements with the Pakistani government, and then proceeded not to fully implement either. Bahadur has moved in and out of coalitions with other Pakistani Taliban elements but always aimed to maintain productive relationships with them. Most recently, he left a coalition of anti-Pakistan militants in 2009 after the death of Baitullah Mehsud but still offered safe haven to Mehsud fighters fleeing Pakistani government operations in South Waziristan.
The TTP, commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban, was formed in December 2007 as a coalition to unite militant groups across the FATA and in settled areas of Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa (known previously as the North West Frontier Provinces, NWFP).At its formation, Baitullah Mehsud of South Waziristan was named emir and Bahadur his deputy. The alliance was somewhat surprising because Bahadur maintained a strong relationship with Baitullah’s most important rival from South Waziristan, Mullah Nazir. Moreover, Bahadur was frustrated with Uzbek militants backed by Baitullah, many of whom relocated to areas near Mir Ali in North Waziristan after being evicted from Nazir’s territory in South Waziristan.
In addition, although the TTP was founded as an explicitly anti-Pakistan alliance, Bahadur began negotiations with Pakistan almost as soon as the coalition was announced. Not surprisingly, he did not stay in the TTP very long, leaving in July 2008, whereupon he and Nazir created a separate alliance opposed to Baitullah’s insistence on fighting Pakistani government forces. Some reports suggest that the Bahadur-Nazir coalition was backed by the Haqqanis as a way to mitigate the power of Baitullah Mehsud.90 Yet even the new anti-Mehsud alliance did not last long. In February 2009—at the prodding of Sirajuddin Haqqani—Baitullah Mehsud, Mullah Nazir, and Hafiz Gul Bahadur announced the formation of the Shura Ittihad-ul-Mujahideen (SIM), or Council of United Mujahideen.The SIM was designed to end hostilities among the factions, and it reportedly included an agreement that pardoned all parties for past wrongs. The agreement was holding in June 2009 when forces loyal to Bahadur attacked a military convoy in North Waziristan that was supporting Pakistan’s South Waziristan operations against Mehsud. Such attacks on key logistical routes into South Waziristan severely threaten the viability of Pakistani operations against Mehsud dominated TTP strongholds because there are very few roads in and out of Mehsud territory. Recent reports suggest, however, that the SIM became defunct after the death of Baitullah Mehsud in August 2009, and there have been no reports of major violence between Bahadur’s forces and Pakistani troops since.Bahadur has hedged his bets since the June 2009 convoy attack and seems to have largely allowed Pakistani troops to pass through North Waziristan, while simultaneously offering anti-Pakistan South Waziristan militants safe haven in North Waziristan. It is unclear exactly how Baitullah Mehsud’s death affected relations between Bahadur and the Mehsud elements led by Baitullah. Some sources suggest that the SIM alliance collapsed after Baitullah was killed, while others suggest that his death did not damage relations because Baitullah’s successor and cousin, Hakimullah, is considered close to Bahadur.
Bahadur’s most important commander is Maulana Sadiq Noor of the Daur tribe. Sadiq Noor is around forty-five years old and has had close contacts with the Afghan Taliban since 1996, when they formed the government in Afghanistan. Like Bahadur, Sadiq Noor is based near Miram Shah, where he directs the Mamba-ul-Uloom madrassa, originally built by Jalaluddin Haqqani to support the Afghan jihad against the Soviet occupation in the 1980s. The madrassa and a neighboring housing complex served as Sadiq Noor’s headquarters until a U.S. drone strike in September 2008. Although the strike did not kill Sadiq Noor, there were conflicting reports that either nine of his family members or nine members of the Haqqani family were killed in the attack. Such confusion is understandable, considering Sadiq Noor’s close connections with both Jalaluddin and Sirajuddin Haqqani and the shared legacy of the Mamba-ul-Uloom compound. Sadiq Noor has about eight hundred fighters in his group.
Sadiq Noor’s right-hand man in North Waziristan is Saeed Khan Daur, who plays something of a consigliere role. Saeed Khan is also from Miram Shah. Although he is younger than either Sadiq Noor or Bahadur—he is thirty-three or thirty-four—Saeed Khan has a university degree and is known as a computer expert. Rumors suggest that his code name is Aryana, but he is rarely seen and avoids the media.
Maulana Abdul Khaliq Haqqani is another of Bahadur’s commanders, also of the Daur tribe. He is based in Miram Shah and is reported to have around five hundred armed men in his group. Abdul Khaliq follows Bahadur’s delicate balancing act between TTP militants and the Pakistani government. Nonetheless, local actors expect that Abdul Khaliq would support militant resistance to the Pakistani army in the face of a full-scale incursion.
Wahidullah Wazir leads a militant group of two hundred Wazir tribesmen around Miram Shah. The Wahidullah group is involved in cross-border attacks in Afghanistan but also conducted operations against the Pakistani military in 2006 and 2008. Similarly, Halim Khan Daur, a thirty-five-year-old militant based near Mir Ali who leads about 150 men, is primarily involved in cross-border attacks on NATO forces but also actively engaged the Pakistani army in 2006 and 2008.
A man referred to locally as Buddah (old man) has been appointed by Gul Bahadur as the head of the Mir Ali area. Buddah, who reportedly has been a supporter of the Afghan Taliban since 1996, closely toes Gul Bahadur’s political line. He avoids fighting the Pakistan Army and has clashed with Rasool Khan, a rival of Gul Bahadur’s. Buddah has earned a local reputation as an enforcer as well and reportedly beheaded suspected American spies.
Another Bahadur ally in North Waziristan is Saifullah Wazir, a local Uthmanzai Wazir based near Shawal, a notorious hideout for foreign militants in North Waziristan. He is very close to Bahadur and represented him for the 2006 peace agreement between militants and the Pakistani government. He reportedly has four hundred men in his militia, many of whom are active against U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. He is also known to fight the Pakistani army.
A variety of militant groups in North Waziristan do not operate under Bahadur’s direct leadership, for either personal or political reasons. One is led by a Wazir tribesman from Miram Shah named Zanjir, who focuses attacks on U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Unlike Bahadur and most other militants in the region who trace their political roots to the JUI-F faction, Zanjir is politically affiliated with Jamaat-e- Islami (JI) and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hizb-i Islami.
Rasool Khan Daur runs an independent militia around Mir Ali, where he is a schoolteacher. Bahadur appointed Khan head of the Mir Ali bazaar area but removed him in 2009, after which Khan started his own militant group. It now has between 120 and 150 men. Khan’s group is known for its extensive criminal activities, which may have prompted his dismissal by Bahadur. The group’s militants do not strike U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan but are known to target Pakistani security forces and installations in North Waziristan.
One of the more important independent militant leaders is Maulana Manzoor Daur. His support base is Eidak, a village near Mir Ali on the Mir Ali-Miram Shah road. He reportedly has nearly three hundred fighters under his command and is widely believed to have a strong support base among foreign militants. This support created tension with Bahadur and Sadiq Noor after they tried to evict some foreign militants from North Waziristan in 2006. Manzoor’s militia fights both in Afghanistan against U.S. and NATO forces and in Pakistan against the Pakistani army.
One other independent militant group in North Waziristan is led by Haq Nawaz Daur, a forty-five-year-old religious scholar from the Daur tribe. He operates near Mir Ali, hails from the nearby village of Aisori, and has very good relations with foreign militants who have worked in the area, especially Uzbeks. This has similarly caused tension with Sadiq Noor and Bahadur. Haq Nawaz avoids fighting the Pakistani army and is reported to have about three hundred men under his command.
Jaish-e Muhammad (JeM) was established in 1999 by Mawlawi Masood Azhar, after splitting from the venerable Pakistani militant group Harakat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM). The traditionally Punjabi group has established an outpost in Miram Shah that is led by Asmatullah Mowia, who is in his early thirties. JeM is involved in fighting against the Pakistan state and has been implicated in several major terrorist attacks in the Pakistani heartland. The group reportedly has close links with the Qari Hussain faction of the anti-Pakistan militant TTP.
source:Talibanistan: Negotiating the Borders Between Terror, Politics, and Religion - Google Books
@AmnaR @Assault Rifle
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