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Twilight Of The Taliban : TTP Buckles Under Internal Fissures, External Pre

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Our sacrifices in this WOT are paying off, and the results prove that these terrorists are nearing their end. Our mutual interests in the region encouraged us to stay united while overcoming many obstacles along the way. The terrorists continued to create hurdles for our forces by regularly disguising themselves among civilians and attacking our forces. But our will and resilience did not allow them to hamper our mission. The terrorists are still trying to take advantage of our situation, but we can all see that now would be the time for us to regroup and go after them with full force and eliminate the threat once and for all. We certainly do not want them to use the current situation to their benefit and gather any sort of momentum against our objectives. Therefore, the all important goal of defeating terrorism needs to prevail once again. We hope that our governments will shift their attention back towards our common enemies to keep the pressure on.

MAJ Nevers,
DET, United States Central Command
U.S. Central Command

Sorry Sir with all due respect , you never did anything to stop terrorism in My Country , so whatever you achieved & how you achieved matters a little.
 
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Why are people getting excited about?


The problem with urdu speakers is that they do not travel across Pakistan much. They have barricaded themselves, as you rightly admit, in Karachi and isolated from much of Pakistan's landscape. For ex, they would rather go to europe or mideast for a vacation but not the sawat valley, Murree, and other equally beautiful and peaceful areas in Pakistan. And political parties play their ethnic cards to get votes and ignore everyone. Few days ago i was watching Mubashar Luqman show where some MQM leader comes and says "Urdu speaking marrying a Punjabi? That's not even a possiblity" to a question. Which is quite pathetic really.

Actually when muhajir first arrived they were one of the most educated in the country as all the biggest universities were in Delhi, Bombay etc. so most got the impression that punjabis were illiterate and uncivilized, but ofcourse the'ye more educated and perfect now and I have some close punjabi friends, although my mother prefers I'd stay away from them(because of her generation's experience with punjabis) :P
And also, my parents visited Swat and Muree, a lot of karachiites go there >(
 
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Twilight Of The Taliban : TTP Buckles Under Internal Fissures, External Pressure


Submitted by NK on December 19, 2011 – 4:42 pm



pakistani-taliban.jpg





ISLAMABAD: The twilight of the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) – an outlawed umbrella of militant groups – appears to have set in.

The group responsible for most violence in the country is in disarray with its ‘chain of command’ crumbling, funds dwindling and infighting intensifying, admit Taliban foot soldiers.

“It appears the TTP’s days are numbered … what was a well-coordinated militia just a year ago has fragmented now and dozens of splinters groups have emerged,” a disgruntled member of the network told.

At least two associates of the group in South Waziristan, the strongest bastion of TTP where its chief Hakimullah Mehsud is hiding, also confirmed this.

They said Mehsud has further isolated himself due to threats to his life from the dreaded American drones and Pakistani spy agencies.

“He is virtually a lonely man running for his life … he is always on the move and doesn’t meet even his once most-trusted lieutenants,” said Muhammad, a nom de guerre because the militants seldom use their real names.

Muhammad, who lives in the North Waziristan tribal region, was in Islamabad for the treatment of some kidney ailment at a private clinic. Mehsud has stopped meeting members of his notorious network from Punjab, better known as Punjabi Taliban, suspecting that some of them might be spying on him for Pakistani agencies.

“This is one of the reasons for relative peace in the country … there is no coordination among various groups of the Taliban,” said an intelligence official. There has been a visible decline in the Taliban violence in the country over the past few months.

The TTP associates said that their group was crumbling due to differences on the question of pursuing peace talks with the government — an option Mehsud had rejected outright when he was first approached with the offer.

One the other hand, several key TTP leaders have responded positively to peace overtures from the Pakistani agencies. TTP’s deputy chief in South Waziristan Mufti Waliur Rehman and the group’s No 2, Maulvi Faqir Muhammad from Bajaur Agency, are reportedly in talks with the government, indirectly though. Officially, both the government and the TTP deny peace talks.

Muhammad claimed that several members of the TTP shura, or decision-making council, have also showed willingness for talks. He added that the shura, which once had around three dozen senior leaders, has now shrunk to less than 10.

“People are now deserting Mehsud and joining the group led by Waliur Rehman,” he said, adding that the latter’s group is becoming more powerful.

No more money

Apart from differences within, supply of foot soldiers to the TTP is also drying up fast, said Muhammad who himself has given up violence to start a small business in his village.

“They (foot soldiers) are deserting because it no longer earns them money,” said Raqeebullah Mehsud, a former TTP field commander.

Intelligence officials are claiming the credit for the TTP’s imminent collapse, saying it was their squeeze that had played a key role in blocking funds supply to the Taliban. But experts like Brigadier (Retd) Muhammad Saad believe that TTP’s inability to generate money might be the result of what has been happening behind closed doors in Afghanistan in the recent past.

“There have been reports that the Afghan Taliban are actively engaged in peace talks,” he added.

Saad said that the war in Afghanistan was the main source of funds for the TTP “but it may not be the case anymore”.

But Brigadier (Retd) Mehmood Shah, another security analyst based in Peshawar, said it won’t be fair to deny the Pakistani agencies credit for the isolation and subsequent rupture in the ranks of the TTP.

“Much of this happened due to their (Pakistani agencies) maneuvers,” he said.

Twilight Of The Taliban : TTP Buckles Under Internal Fissures, External Pressure | PKKH.tv
 
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Emergency meetings going on at CIA and RAW HQs to stop this? :lol:
 
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good the dumbAR$3'S are back in their whole .. all needs doing in smoke em out
 
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Sorry Sir with all due respect , you never did anything to stop terrorism in My Country , so whatever you achieved & how you achieved matters a little.

Dear F.O.X:

The thing to remember here is that we are fighting a common war and have mutual interests in the region. Moreover, whatever we achieve in regards to this WOT directly impacts Pakistan! Let’s not forget that together we have been able to capture or kill some of the top terrorist leaders (Younis al-Mauritani, OBL). No one denies that this WOT has brought its fair share of challenges, but it’s our persistence and resilience against terrorism that keeps us moving forward. No two other nations could understand each other’s sacrifices better, and it would be fair to say that no two other nations have condemned terrorism as much, since the beginning of this WOT. Our job is not done, and we are well aware of the challenge our nations are facing at the moment. It may just be convenient to look the other way and allow our emotions to take over. But terrorism cannot be eradicated from the region unless both nations cover their ends and continue to squeeze the life out of the insurgency. Therefore, the logic must prevail before making any decisions in regards to our alliance.

MAJ Nevers,
DET, United States Central Command
U.S. Central Command
 
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How facinating...

It's always been "the million dollar question" with TTP, that how/where did their supply line come from. Takes alot of logistical support to arm&supply even a small band of say 5000 people. Each person has to be fed three times a day, each bullet they fire has to be provided and ammo has to be supplied constantly or these folks can't continue fighting.

And we've been hearing alot of noise about the US supplying these TTP folks through Afghanistan. These TTP refuse to fight the US, their only aim is to serve US interests and destabilize Pakistan, supporting this whole media campaign the US has been carrying on about how this nuclear-armed country is really in danger and the nukes could fall into militant hands any day(and that the US would be right in coming in and taking the nuclear "eggs" as their media calls it).

It is facinating that when the US is facing severe supply problems, and probably isn't in a position to supply the TTP very well, these TTP folks also start to crumble...
 
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Top Pakistan Taliban commanders 'at each other's throats'
By Reuters
Published: January 3, 2012

Any division within the TTP could hinder the Afghan Taliban, al Qaeda's struggle in Afghanistan against the US. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
ISLAMABAD: Al Qaeda, the Afghan Taliban and Pakistani militants have held a series of meetings aimed at containing what could soon be open warfare between the two most powerful Pakistani Taliban leaders, militant sources have said.
Hakimullah Mehsud, the head of the Pakistani Taliban, also known as the Tehreek-i-Taliban (TTP), and his deputy, Waliur Rehman, were at each other’s throats, the sources said.
“You will soon hear that one of them has eliminated the other, though hectic efforts are going on by other commanders and common friends to resolve differences between the two,” one TTP commander said.
Any division within the TTP could hinder the Afghan Taliban and al Qaeda’s struggle in Afghanistan against the United States and its allies, making it more difficult to recruit young fighters and disrupting safe havens in Pakistan used by the Afghan militants.
Despite multiple reports of the Rehman-Mehsud split, Rehman told Reuters on Tuesday there was no problem between the two.
“There are no differences between us,” Rehman said.
The TTP, formed in 2007, is an umbrella group of various Pakistani militant factions operating in Pakistan’s unruly northwestern tribal areas along the porous border with Afghanistan.
It has long struggled with its choice of targets. Some factions are at war with the Pakistani state while others concentrate on the fight against the United States and its allies in Afghanistan.
There has been a noticeable decrease in militant attacks in Pakistan, but there continue to be random acts of violence across the country.
Al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban commanders are asking the TTP to provide more men for the fight in Afghanistan and are looking to smooth over the dispute between Mehsud and Rehman.
Long-standing feuds
Taliban sources said Rehman had ordered his fighters to kill Mehsud because of his increasing closeness with al Qaeda and its Arab contingent.
Mehsud’s former deputy has also alleged the TTP chief received money from Pakistan’s arch-rival, India, to kill a former Pakistan spy agency official acting as a mediator between the Pakistani Taliban, Afghan insurgents and the Pakistani government.
The reported enmity between Mehsud and Rehman is not the only conflict within the TTP ranks.
Mehsud has a long-standing feud with militant commanders Maulvi Nazeer in South Waziristan and Hafiz Gul Bahadur in North Waziristan, both of whom have non-aggression agreements with the Pakistani military.
Mehsud’s men have also fought with the militia under the control of Fazal Saeed Haqqani, the former TTP head in the Kurram tribal region. He has accused Mehsud of killing his commanders and innocent people and kidnapping for ransom.
Haqqani, who is close to the militant Afghan Haqqani network, broke away from the TTP last year.
A pamphlet distributed by militants in North Waziristan this week announced the formation of a council to try to resolve the conflicts.
“All jihadi forces have jointly, on the recommendation of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, formed a five-member commission which will be known as the Shura Muraqba,” the pamphlet said, using the term by which the Afghan Taliban describe themselves.
“The Shura Muraqba will be working to resolve differences and problems between mujahideen.”
It said that any “mujahideen” found to have committed an “unlawful” killing or kidnapping would be punished under Islamic law. It is likely any attack on a fellow “mujahideen” commander would be considered “unlawful”.
“All mujahideen should respect the decisions of the council that has been set up,” a senior commander of the Haqqani faction in Kurram said.
“If people continue to do as they like, the situation will not improve. Things will instead get much worse.”
 
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Intel is doing all it can to disrupt the takfiri divide and exterminate is the policy, these turds open fire on another for even for the affections of dancing boys :(.
 
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