http://arabnews.com/world/article18713.ece

Pakistani army confirms arrest of Taleban commander 
By REUTERS 

Published: Feb 17, 2010 11:32 PM Updated: Feb 17, 2010 11:32 PM 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani military confirmed on Wednesday that the Afghan 
Taleban's top military commander, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, had been captured.

US and Pakistani officials who declined to be identified said on Tuesday 
Baradar had been captured in the Pakistani city of Karachi in a raid by 
Pakistani and US agents.

"At the conclusion of detailed identification procedure, it has been confirmed 
that one of the persons arrested happens to be Mullah Baradar," the military 
said.

It declined to say where he had been caught or to give other details, citing 
security reasons.

The capture came as US forces spearhead one of NATO's biggest offensives 
against the Taleban in Afghanistan in an early test of US President Barack 
Obama's troop surge policy.

US officials and analysts said it was too soon to tell whether Pakistan's 
cooperation against Baradar would be extended to other top militants on the US 
hit list.

The arrest followed months of behind-the-scenes prodding by US officials who 
saw inaction by Islamabad as a major threat to their Afghan war strategy.

Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik had on Tuesday declined to confirm 
Baradar's capture, saying a large number of people had fled operations by NATO 
forces in Afghanistan to Pakistan and many had been picked up.

He denied that there had been any joint operation by Pakistani and US agents.

Though nuclear-armed Pakistan is a US ally, anti-US sentiment runs high and 
many people have long been suspicious of the US-led campaign against militancy 
and oppose any US security operations in Pakistan.

A Pakistani intelligence official said security agents had been searching for 
Baradar in the southwestern city of Quetta, where the United States says a 
Taleban leadership council is based.

"Sensing that he might be arrested, he somehow slipped out of Quetta and into 
Karachi, maybe in disguise. That's where we arrested him, about four days 
back," said the official, who declined to be identified.

"He is with us and is being interrogated." Asked if the United States was 
involved in the questioning, he said: "Yes of course. We have that sort of 
cooperation with them."

Baradar's arrest comes amid a a renewed drive for peace talks between the 
Afghan government and the Taleban.

Asked if the Taleban commander could help with any reconciliation process, the 
Pakistani agent said: "It might lead to that eventually ... Anything is 
possible but so far we have not come to that." Pakistan is anxious to have a 
say in post-war Afghanistan in order to limit the influence of old rival India 
there.

Anger in Pakistan toward the United States has been exacerbated by attacks by 
pilotless US drone aircraft on militants in lawless enclaves along the Afghan 
border.

In the latest strike, a US drone fired a missile into the North Waziristan 
region on the Afghan border, killing at least three militants, Pakistani 
intelligence officials said.

The drone targeted a militant compound in the village of Tapi, about 15 km east 
of Miranshah, the main town in the region, which is a hotbed of Taleban and 
Al-Qaeda militants. It was the second attack on the village this week.

There was no information about the identity of those killed or of three men 
wounded in the strike, they said.

Pakistan objects to the drone strikes, saying they are a violation of its 
sovereignty and complicate its efforts against militancy.

The Pakistani army has made gains against militants battling the state over the 
past 10 months but it has ruled out a major offensive against Afghan Taleban 
factions on its soil, saying its forces are already stretched.

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