• 04:23
  • Wednesday ,25 May 2016
العربية

Senior Taliban figure says death of leader could unify group

By-thecairopost

Copts and Poliltical Islam

00:05

Wednesday ,25 May 2016

Senior Taliban figure says death of leader could unify group

The death of the leader of the Afghan Taliban in a U.S. drone strike last week could make the insurgent movement stronger by bringing back dissident commanders and unifying the movement’s ranks, a senior Afghan Taliban figure said on Tuesday.The death of the leader of the Afghan Taliban in a U.S. drone strike last week could make the insurgent movement stronger by bringing back dissident commanders and unifying the movement’s ranks, a senior Afghan Taliban figure said on Tuesday.

Mullah Mohammad Ghous, a foreign minister during the Taliban’s 1996-2001 rule of Afghanistan, told The Associated Press that Mullah Akhtar Mansour’s death cleared the way for those who left after he became leader to return to the insurgency.
 
Mansour was killed on Saturday in the strike in southwestern Pakistan, just over the border from Afghanistan.
 
His death has been confirmed by some senior Taliban members, as well as Washington and Kabul. The Taliban has yet to formally announce his death.
 
Mansour had led the Taliban since last summer, when the death of founder Mullah Mohammad Omar became public. Mansour ran the movement in Mullah Omar’s name for more than two years. The revelation of Mullah Omar’s death and Mansour’s deception led to widespread mistrust, with some senior leaders leaving to set up their own factions.
 
Some of these rivals fought Mansour’s men for land, mostly in the opium poppy-growing southern Taliban heartland.
 
Ghous said a faction loyal to the leader of a major breakaway faction, Mullah Mohammad Rasool — who is believed to be detained in Pakistan — could rejoin the main branch “bringing greater strength.”
 
“Once the death of Mullah Akhtar Mansour is confirmed, Mullah Rasool’s group will have no excuse,” he said.
 
Mansour is widely said to have been a major player in Afghanistan’s multi-billion-dollar drug production and smuggling business, which along with other contraband helps fund the insurgency.
 
Western diplomats in Kabul have said that Mansour had been in contact with Iran and Russia in recent months, as he was trying to diversify his support base away from Pakistan. Pakistan’s ISI secret service has long been suspected of supporting the Taliban leadership in cities over the border from Afghanistan, notably Quetta and Peshawar.