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The resilient Mullah Omar

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The resilient Mullah Omar
2009 October 11
by coincentral

Reprinted from NY Times

October 11, 2009
A Dogged Taliban Chief Rebounds, Vexing U.S.

By SCOTT SHANE
WASHINGTON — In late 2001, Mullah Muhammad Omar’s prospects seemed utterly bleak. The ill-educated, one-eyed leader of the Taliban had fled on a motorbike after his fighters were swiftly routed by the Americans invading Afghanistan.

Much of the world celebrated his ouster, and Afghans cheered the return of girls’ education, music and ordinary pleasures outlawed by the grim fundamentalist government.

Eight years later, Mullah Omar leads an insurgency that has gained steady ground in much of Afghanistan against much better equipped American and NATO forces. Far from a historical footnote, he represents a vexing security challenge for the Obama administration, one that has consumed the president’s advisers, divided Democrats and left many Americans frustrated.

“This is an amazing story,” said Bruce Riedel, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer who coordinated the Obama administration’s initial review of Afghanistan policy in the spring. “He’s a semiliterate individual who has met with no more than a handful of non-Muslims in his entire life. And he’s staged one of the most remarkable military comebacks in modern history.”

American officials are weighing the significance of this comeback: Is Mullah Omar the brains behind shrewd shifts of Taliban tactics and propaganda in recent years, or does he have help from Pakistani intelligence? Might the Taliban be amenable to negotiations, as Mullah Omar hinted in a Sept. 19 statement, or can his network be divided and weakened in some other way? Or is the Taliban’s total defeat required to ensure that Afghanistan will never again become a haven for Al Qaeda?

The man at the center of the American policy conundrum remains a mystery, the subject of adoring mythmaking by his followers and guesswork by the world’s intelligence agencies. He was born, by various accounts, in 1950 or 1959 or 1960 or 1962. He may be hiding near Quetta, Pakistan, or hunkered down in an Afghan village. No one is sure.

“He can’t operate openly; there are too many people looking for him,” and the eye he lost to Soviet shrapnel in the 1980s makes him recognizable, said Alex Strick van Linschoten, a Dutch-born writer who lives in Kandahar, where Mullah Omar’s movement was born, and who has helped a former Taliban official write a memoir.

“There are four or five people who can pass messages to Omar,” Mr. Strick van Linschoten said. “And then there’s a circle of people who can get access to those four or five people.”

Rahimullah Yusufzai, of The News International, a Pakistani newspaper, who interviewed Mullah Omar a dozen times before 2001, called him “a man of few words and not very knowledgeable about international affairs.” But his reputed humility, his legend as a ferocious fighter against Soviet invaders in the 1980s, and his success in ending the lawlessness and bloody warlords’ feuds of the early 1990s cemented his power.

“His followers adore him, believe in him and are willing to die for him,” Mr. Yusufzai said. While even Taliban officials rarely see him, Mullah Omar “remains an inspiration, sending out letters and audiotapes to his commanders and fighters,” the journalist said.

A recent assessment by Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the top American commander in Afghanistan, identified the Taliban as the most important part of the insurgency, coordinating “loosely” with groups led by two prominent warlords. He concluded that “the insurgents currently have the initiative” and “the overall situation is deteriorating.”

The statement from Mullah Omar, one of a series issued in his name on each of the two annual Id holidays, offered a remarkably similar analysis. He, or his ghostwriter, praised the success of “the gallant mujahedeen” in countering the “sophisticated and cutting-edge technology” of the enemy, saying the Taliban movement “is approaching the edge of victory.”

For a recluse, he showed a keen awareness of Western public opinion, touching on the history that haunts foreign armies in Afghanistan (“We fought against the British invaders for 80 years”), denouncing fraud in the recent presidential election and asking of the American-led forces, “Have they achieved anything in the past eight years?”

American military and intelligence analysts say the Taliban have definitely achieved some things. They describe today’s Afghan Taliban as a franchise operation, a decentralized network of fighters with varying motivations, united by hostility to the Afghan government and foreign forces and by loyalty to Mullah Omar.
Mullah Muhammad Omar

Mullah Muhammad Omar

The Taliban have deployed fighters in small guerrilla units and stepped up the use of suicide bombings and improvised explosive devices. The movement has expanded military operations from the Taliban’s southern stronghold into the north and west of the country, forcing NATO to spread its troops more thinly.

Day-to-day decisions are made by Mullah Omar’s deputies, in particular Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a skilled, pragmatic commander, who runs many meetings with Taliban commanders and “shadow governors” appointed in much of the country, analysts say.

Mullah Omar heads the Taliban’s Rahbari Shura, or leadership council, often called the Quetta Shura since it relocated to the Pakistani city in 2002. The shura, consisting of the Taliban commanders, “operates like the politburo of a communist party,” setting broad strategy, said Mr. Yusufzai, the Pakistani journalist. General McChrystal wrote in his assessment that the shura “conducts a formal campaign review each winter, after which Mullah Omar announces his guidance and intent for the coming year.”

Thomas E. Gouttierre, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at the University of Nebraska, Omaha, said that “as a symbolic figure, Omar is a centrifugal force for the Taliban,” playing a similar role to that of Osama bin Laden in Al Qaeda. But Dr. Gouttierre credits the Taliban’s success not to any military genius on the part of Mullah Omar but to more worldly advisers from Pakistan’s intelligence service and Al Qaeda.

Western and Afghan sources agree on the bare outline of Mullah Omar’s biography: He was born in a village, had limited religious schooling, fought with the mujahedeen against the Soviet Army and helped form the Taliban in 1994. Some accounts say he is married and has two sons.

His emergence as the leader of the puritanical students who later fought their way to the capital, Kabul, may have resulted from his very obscurity, some experts say. He was not a flamboyant warlord with allies and enemies, a likely plus for the Taliban’s sponsors in Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate. “He had an unaligned quality that made him useful,” Mr. Strick van Linschoten said.

In jihadist accounts, his story has the feeling of legend: “At the height of his youth, he stepped forward against the disbelievers and terrorized their ranks,” says an undated 10-page biography from an Islamist information agency, which also describes how he once refused cream and other delicacies, preferring “a bowl of plain soup with some hard, stale bread.”

Taliban folklore tells of his bravery in the 1980s in removing his own injured eye and fighting on; of his dream in the mid-1990s in which the Prophet Muhammad told him he would bring peace to Afghanistan; and of how in 1996, he donned a cloak reputed to have belonged to the prophet and took the title “commander of the faithful.”

That was the year that Mr. bin Laden moved his base to Afghanistan. Ever since, the central question about Mullah Omar for American officials has been his relationship with Al Qaeda.

In 1998, two days after American cruise missiles hit a Qaeda training camp in an unsuccessful attempt to kill Mr. bin Laden, Mullah Omar telephoned an astonished State Department official, Michael E. Malinowski, who took the call on his porch at 2:30 a.m. Mullah Omar demanded proof that the Qaeda leader was involved in terrorism, according to declassified records. (Mullah Omar also suggested that to improve American relations with Muslim countries, President Bill Clinton should step down.)

Mr. bin Laden courted the Taliban leader, vowing allegiance and calling the far less educated man a historic leader of Islam. A letter of advice from Mr. bin Laden to Mullah Omar on Oct. 3, 2001, found on a Qaeda computer obtained by The Wall Street Journal, heaped on the praise (“I would like to emphasize how much we appreciate the fact that you are our emir”).

Despite intense pressure from the United States and its allies to turn over Mr. bin Laden, Mullah Omar declined, and paid a steep price when the Taliban fell.

Richard Barrett, a former British intelligence officer now monitoring Al Qaeda and the Taliban for the United Nations, argues that Mullah Omar has learned the lesson of 2001. If the Taliban regain power, he said, “they don’t want Al Qaeda hanging around.”

He added, “They want to be able to say, ‘We are a responsible government.’ ”

Indeed, in his Sept. 19 statement, Mullah Omar made such an assertion: “We assure all countries that the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, as a responsible force, will not extend its hand to cause jeopardy to others.”

Mr. Riedel, who helped devise the Afghanistan strategy now being rethought, scoffs at such pronouncements as “clever propaganda.”

“We’ve been trying for 13 years to get the Taliban to break with Al Qaeda and turn over bin Laden, and they haven’t done it,” Mr. Riedel said. “Whatever the bond is between them, it’s stood the test of time.”

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington, and Pir Zubair Shah from Islamabad, Pakistan.
 
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Here in this article they have tried to show him a man of fight that his fighters do everything for him. nobody asks what if he takes part in general election and how many people vote for him, perhaps those people who are like him the killers will vote for this blind and illetrate mullah? a thief can also be a feriece fighter, but you dont give him the credit of a good human being. BTW, i can confidently say that the taliban have much better weapons than the NATO.
 
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Here in this article they have tried to show him a man of fight that his fighters do everything for him. nobody asks what if he takes part in general election and how many people vote for him, perhaps those people who are like him the killers will vote for this blind and illetrate mullah? a thief can also be a feriece fighter, but you dont give him the credit of a good human being. BTW, i can confidently say that the taliban have much better weapons than the NATO.

Yes, they have invisible soldiers which NATO dont have known as Ghoast or Jin:D
 
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Yes, they have invisible soldiers which NATO dont have known as Ghoast or Jin:D

no, they dont have visible soldiers, or i should say fighters, but they hide themselves among the civilians. do you call this manhood and bravery to put lives of many civilans at risk to cover their own backs? tell the taliban to go in open place and see how the taste of fight is. they take civilians as human shield so nobody can fire on them, what a fight. that is the reasosn i said they have better weapons than the nato, civilians are their weapons.
 
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no, they have visible soldiers, or i should say fighters, but they hide themselves among the civilians. do you call this manhood and bravery to put lives of many civilans at risk to cover their own backs? tell the taliban to go in open place and see how the taste of fight is. they take civilians as human shield so nobody can fire on them, what a fight. that is the reasosn i said they have better weapons than the nato, civilians are their weapons.

Christian,Jews and Muslim all believe in Jin or Ghoast, their population is 9 times human population and they can help human in comunication ,survalliance and security.

Mullah omer have these Jin security guards. :D
 
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Christian,Jews and Muslim all believe in Jin or Ghoast, their population is 9 times human population and they can help human in comunication ,survalliance and security.

Mullah omer have these Jin security guards. :D

come on man, give a proper answer to my question about the civilians and the taliban's tactic!!
 
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come on man, give a proper answer to my question about the civilians and the taliban's tactic!!

ISAF using their best soldiers and weapons but failed to defeat talaban there is no other reason other then mentioned above.
On other hand PA sucessfully defeating TTP and Al Qaeda with less force and old weapons
 
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ISAF using their best soldiers and weapons but failed to defeat talaban there is no other reason other then mentioned above.
On other hand PA sucessfully defeating TTP and Al Qaeda with less force and old weapons

you again didnt answer my question and side steped it. no matter what ISAF have or dont have, but the taliban use the civilians as human shield. do you think it is a good muslims's act to save his life in the cost of another unarmed woman and child? do you think it is the act of bravery? pakistani taliban have their headquarters, there is proper battle and there first line of battle and etc, with afghani taliban you dont see this. BTW, pakistan havent been able to tame TTP in cities, cant you see how much damage they are bringing to the poor defenceless pakistani public? cant you see how they target military, police, intelegence, other official places everyday and nobody can do anything about it? TTP and afghani taliban must both be rooted out, otherwise nobody will see any peace.
 
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you again didnt answer my question and side steped it. no matter what ISAF have or dont have, but the taliban use the civilians as human shield. do you think it is a good muslims's act to save his life in the cost of another unarmed woman and child? do you think it is the act of bravery? pakistani taliban have their headquarters, there is proper battle and there first line of battle and etc, with afghani taliban you dont see this. BTW, pakistan havent been able to tame TTP in cities, cant you see how much damage they are bringing to the poor defenceless pakistani public? cant you see how they target military, police, intelegence, other official places everyday and nobody can do anything about it? TTP and afghani taliban must both be rooted out, otherwise nobody will see any peace.

Mullah Omer is anti TTP supported by Indian agencies, you dont have understanding of Pushtoon tribe structure , either they are your friend or enemy , Mullah Omer has support of local tribes and elders but TTP is killing elders have no support of tribel elders.

This is main difference
 
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Mullah Omer is anti TTP supported by Indian agencies, you dont have understanding of Pushtoon tribe structure , either they are your friend or enemy , Mullah Omer has support of local tribes and elders but TTP is killing elders have no support of tribel elders.

This is main difference

my friend, i am talking about sky and you talk about earth. mullah omar is not anti TTP as a matter of fact they(TTP) were sending fighters to the afghani taliban in thousands to take part in masacaring people and destruction of villages and cities in afghanistan in the past. there were many many many TTP war prisoners in afghanistan. they are still sending suicide bombers in afghanistan. Jalaludin Haqani has very close relationship with TTP. i very well know the pasthoon mentality because my own mother is pashtoon, but why do people of pakistan are keen to talk about ethnicities especially pashtoons in afghanistan? as if they dont know any other thing about that country? i think this is the reason pakistan is not making any progress there. you are also wrong about TTP, they are enjoying full support of Mehsud tribe and others. and the last thing, you didnt answer my question, i am still wating.
 
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my friend, i am talking about sky and you talk about earth. mullah omar is not anti TTP as a matter of fact they(TTP) were sending fighters to the afghani taliban in thousands to take part in masacaring people and destruction of villages and cities in afghanistan in the past. there were many many many TTP war prisoners in afghanistan. they are still sending suicide bombers in afghanistan. Jalaludin Haqani has very close relationship with TTP. i very well know the pasthoon mentality because my own mother is pashtoon, but why do people of pakistan are keen to talk about ethnicities especially pashtoons in afghanistan? as if they dont know any other thing about that country? i think this is the reason pakistan is not making any progress there. you are also wrong about TTP, they are enjoying full support of Mehsud tribe and others. and the last thing, you didnt answer my question, i am still wating.

Come out from Fairy land , your understanding about mullah omer network is wrong , Haqqani,Hikmatyar are close allies of MO.

TTP is very small group of Mehsud tribe better update your records.


Pushtoons are in majority always played important role in formulation of government and in future they will control majority of provinces.

You are refering to which question , your post is full of question most of them are silly:D
 
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Come out from Fairy land , your understanding about mullah omer network is wrong , Haqqani,Hikmatyar are close allies of MO.

TTP is very small group of Mehsud tribe better update your records.


Pushtoons are in majority always played important role in formulation of government and in future they will control majority of provinces.

You are refering to which question , your post is full of question most of them are silly:D

Fairy land? Hikmatyar have always distanced himself from Mollah Omar, Haqani, a former commondar of Mujahideen is now proud member of the Taliban. and you are very very wrong that small group of Mehsudis support TTP, they have got a wide support.

Pashtoons make up 40% of the country, the largest ethnic group not majority. linguistically they are 35%.

Here was my question about the human shield and civilians being used as a defence tool against the nato forces.

no, they dont have visible soldiers, or i should say fighters, but they hide themselves among the civilians. do you call this manhood and bravery to put lives of many civilans at risk to cover their own backs? tell the taliban to go in open place and see how the taste of fight is. they take civilians as human shield so nobody can fire on them, what a fight. that is the reasosn i said they have better weapons than the nato, civilians are their weapons.
 
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Fairy land? Hikmatyar have always distanced himself from Mollah Omar, Haqani, a former commondar of Mujahideen is now proud member of the Taliban. and you are very very wrong that small group of Mehsudis support TTP, they have got a wide support.

Pashtoons make up 40% of the country, the largest ethnic group not majority. linguistically they are 35%.

Here was my question about the human shield and civilians being used as a defence tool against the nato forces.

no, they dont have visible soldiers, or i should say fighters, but they hide themselves among the civilians. do you call this manhood and bravery to put lives of many civilans at risk to cover their own backs? tell the taliban to go in open place and see how the taste of fight is. they take civilians as human shield so nobody can fire on them, what a fight. that is the reasosn i said they have better weapons than the nato, civilians are their weapons.

They are controlling more than 70% Afghanistan, it means few tajik and uzbik tribes are also supporting them



Afghan mujahdeen are fighting gurrilla war , which can not be fought in cities , their most suitable hidding place is high mountains and desert, you understanding is not logical
 
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