The Pakistani army is paralysed by the growing Taliban threat and some retired officers are covertly aiding the militants, according to a former CIA officer.
Soldiers posted to Waziristan, a tribal area that hosts an estimated 2 000 al-Qaeda fighters, are ”huddling in their bases, doing nothing”, said Art Keller, a CIA case officer who was posted to Pakistan last year.
”Their approach was to pretend that nothing was wrong because any other approach would reveal that they were unwilling and unable to do anything about Talibanisation,” said Keller, who has visited Waziristan.
The Pakistani military insists it is doing its best. President Pervez Musharraf has repeatedly referred to the 80 000 soldiers posted to the tribal areas, about 700 of whom have been killed in action.
But Keller said that behind the scenes, the fight is riven by divisions among the officers.
”There are the moderates who fear Talibanisation, the professional jihadis who want to embrace the Taliban again, and the middle group who aren’t too fond of the Taliban but resent doing anything under pressure from the US out of sheer bloody-minded stubbornness,” he said. ”Because of [that], the Pakistani military remains paralysed.”
Keller alleged that retired army officers, including the former spy chief Hamid Gul, are secretly supporting the Taliban. ”To the degree that they aren’t arrested or forced to cease and desist, they are tacitly tolerated,” he said.
General Gul, who has faced similar accusations before, said on Friday night: ”I morally support the movement to end the American occupation of Afghanistan. But there is no physical dimension to it, no hidden agenda.”
Sensitive time
Keller’s comments come at a sensitive time in United States-Pakistani relations. Since 2001, Washington has given Pakistan $10-billion in exchange for counter-terrorism cooperation. But although hundreds of al-Qaeda figures have been arrested, Osama bin Laden remains at liberty and Taliban attacks on Afghanistan have soared.
On Thursday, the US Assistant Secretary of State, Richard Boucher, visited Quetta, the capital of the western province of Baluchistan where Nato officials say the Taliban has headquarters. The chief minister of Baluchistan, Jam Muhammad Yousaf, told him that ”Mullah Omar or Osama bin Laden are not [here]”, according to a government statement.
Uzbek, Arab, Chechen and Somali militants are sheltering in Waziristan, to the north of Baluchistan. The majority Uzbeks are concentrated around Mir Ali in north Waziristan, where they have allied with local fighters — self-styled ”Pakistani Taliban” — to coordinate attacks inside Afghanistan.
Musharraf’s efforts to stem the violence through a controversial peace deal with the militants have failed, and in recent months ”Talibanisation” has spread north out of the tribal belt and into North-West Frontier province, with attacks on music shops, barbers and government officials.
But Keller said American efforts to catch the ringleaders are being thwarted by Pakistani rules restricting CIA agents to heavily guarded military camps.
”Limited freedom of movement and limited freedom to directly engage locals were, and remain, the biggest obstacles to success,” he said. Critics say the CIA has also inflamed the situation through secretive attacks by Predator aeroplanes on al-Qaeda targets that have killed dozens of civilians.
Last year, the CIA revived efforts to hunt Bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri. Keller doubted they are in Waziristan. ”I don’t think the two top guys are there, but some roads leading to them run through there,” he said.
Excessive pressure from Washington is also hampering the chase, he added. Spies need peace and quiet to ”spin webs and wait for the flies to come”, he said. ”Such a manhunt is chess, not checkers.” — Guardian Unlimited Â