Probably al-Qaeda from Iran or Iraq helping out the Taliban.
 
-Bruce
 

Taliban turn to suicide attacks


By Scott
<http://www.csmonitor.com/cgi-bin/encryptmail.pl?ID=D3E3EFF4F4A0C2E1ECE4E1F5
E6> Baldauf | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 

February 03, 2006

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN - Fourteen successive suicide bomb attacks have shaken
this province in a way that nearly four years of guerrilla insurgency has
not.

Afghan officials say they have made strides in the last few days to shut
down terror networks that launched these attacks, arresting 20 insurgents
this week. But Taliban spokesmen say their suicide attacks, including a
deadly bombing Wednesday in Khost Province, have only just begun.

"I confirm that there are 200 to 250 fidayeen [dedicated soldiers] who are
prepared to carry out suicide attacks, and the number is increasing day by
day," says Dr. Mohammad Hanif, a Taliban spokesman, speaking to the Monitor
by telephone.

While it is impossible to verify such claims, the use of suicide bombers has
already given the Taliban a renewed visibility. Once deemed unacceptable in
Afghan culture, suicide attacks have become common this winter, including
the Jan. 15 assassination of Canadian diplomat Glyn Berry in Kandahar and an
attack the following day that killed 23 Afghans in the border town of Spin
Boldak. The suicide attacks have had a devastating effect on the morale of
Afghans, and have begun to force foreign aid workers to change the way they
deliver aid in the southern part of the country.

"The Taliban have been doing a lot of guerrilla attacks in the last year,
but they didn't get any credit for that; it didn't create enough
instability," says Mullah Abdul Salam Rocketi, a former Taliban commander
who threw his support behind the Karzai government last year after being
released from Afghan prison. "Now, with the suicide attacks, they have added
a lot of instability and nervousness and anxiety to the people and the
government, and now their name is bigger than it was before."

"But to me, it just shows the Taliban's weakness," says Mullah Rocketi, who
earned his nickname during the Russian war for his ability to shoot down
helicopters with rockets. "They couldn't do frontal assault. They couldn't
do guerrilla attacks. All they can do is suicide attacks, and kill more of
their own people."

Whether out of weakness or strength, the tactic has changed daily life. The
streets of Kandahar, while still bustling with trade, have checkposts on
nearly every other block, as police and national Army troops check vehicles
for suspicious packages.

Police officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say the key trouble
signs are cars that have had seats removed to make room for large bundles.
But several of the most recent arrests have come from tip-offs, including
vehicle descriptions and license-plate numbers. Yet even police admit they
don't have the manpower to check every vehicle; the only way to stop the
suicide attacks is if more Afghans come forward to cooperate with police
when they see suspicious activity.

The suicide attacks have set off debate over where the suicide bombers come
from. The Taliban claim that all of their 250 suicide bombers are Afghans, a
sign of local support. Afghan officials insist that the bulk of the attacks
have been conducted by foreigners, as evidenced by recent arrests that have
included non-Pashtun Pakistanis.

"It is obvious that the Taliban have some secret places here, they have
professional people who help them fix the wires and assemble the bombs,"
says Gen. Rahmatullah Raufi, the corps commander of Afghan National Army in
Kandahar. "The explosives come from Pakistan, and the drivers come from
Pakistan and foreign countries. It is very difficult for an Afghan to
persuade himself to commit suicide."

Earlier this week in Nimroz, a province on the Iranian border, an Iraqi and
three Pakistanis with suspected links to Taliban rebels were arrested and
are believed by police to have been plotting attacks.

Recent arrests in Kandahar indicate that both Pakistanis and Afghans may be
involved in the latest attacks. According to Kandahar Gov. Asadullah Khalid,
Afghan police have arrested 20 people - including two Pakistanis who were
caught with a vehicle packed with explosives - in villages around Kandahar.
The two Pakistanis, Governor Khalid says, have admitted that they were
preparing to carry out suicide attacks.

But some Afghan officials say that the recent trend of violence has as much
to do with the failures of Afghan governance as it does with foreign
infiltration.

"Why are these attacks happening now? It's because of the distance between
the government and the people," says Mirwaiz Yaseeni, former chief of an
elite counter-narcotics police unit and now a member of Parliament. "Our
intelligence service is weak. Our law enforcement and judicial systems are
weak. Our government is constantly shaken by corruption. We have to come up
with a good cabinet, then purify the second layer and so on. Only then the
support for the Taliban will decrease."

One thing that everyone agrees on is that suicide attacks have brought the
Taliban renewed attention.

The attack against a crowd of spectators at a wrestling match in Spin
Boldak, for instance, grabbed headlines worldwide, mostly because of the
number killed in the attack. More than 23 Afghans died on that day alone,
and dozens of others were seriously wounded, all by a single man riding a
motorcycle packed with explosives.

"Their tactics are changing," says a Kandahar police official familiar with
the investigation. "They used to hire Afghans to drive cars to a target, and
not tell them that there were explosives inside. But the Afghans were not
very effective and they didn't get close enough to the target. So now they
are sending in voluntary suicide bombers, and their effectiveness has
improved a lot."

Gov. Khalid says he is hopeful that more Afghans will cooperate to arrest
suicide attackers. As an example, he points to the village of Loy Kariz, on
the Pakistan border. According to police reports, a group of Taliban
attempted to cross the border around midnight on Tuesday, and demanded to be
put up for the night.

An argument between the Taliban and villagers quickly turned into a
gunbattle, leaving two Taliban and one villager killed. "They wanted to
cross the border, and the people stopped them," says Khalid. "From my view,
security is getting better."

General Raufi, points to a similar incident where a suicide bomber was
driving from the Pakistani border past the airport with massive explosives
in the back of a minivan. Afghan Army forces gave chase, after getting a tip
that explosives were inside. The driver finally crashed into a truck. The
van, which was set to explode on impact, failed to detonate.

"The driver ran into a village, and the villagers captured him and tied his
hands," says Raufi. "You could see that he was ready to die. He had clean
clothes, a clean beard, and he has kohl [eyeliner] around his eyes. I don't
know why he couldn't do it."

He smiles. "Thank God."

In interview, Taliban official defends suicide attacks 

The following interview was conducted by phone Tuesday with Taliban
spokesman Mohammad Hanif, from an undisclosed location in Afghanistan. 

Monitor: Why is the Taliban carrying out suicide attacks now?

Hanif: This is just one of the tactics we are using in our war. This is an
effective way of destroying our enemy. It is a tactic that has been used by
mujahideen all over the world.

Monitor: Have you received any advice or training from foreign mujahideen?
If so, from where?

Hanif: There is no need for training somebody to carry out a suicide attack.
A fidayee [dedicated soldier] is ready to die for his religion. He just puts
bombs around himself, and he is giving up his soul to God. There is no need
for training.

Monitor: How many fidayeen do you have?

Hanif: I confirm that there are 200 to 250 fidayeen who are prepared to
carry out suicide attacks, and the number is increasing day by day.
Especially in the Southern and Eastern provinces of the country, the country
is occupied by foreign forces and it affects the pure nationalist emotions
of our people. That is why the numbers are increasing.

Monitor: Of those fidayeen, how many are Afghans and how many are
foreigners?

Hanif: The 200 to 250 fidayeen are all Afghans. There are no foreigners.

Monitor: In the Koran, suicide is forbidden. Is a suicide attack allowed
under Islam?

Hanif: In Islam, there are things that are haram [forbidden] and things that
are hallal [permitted]. The suicide attack is allowed under sharia [Islamic]
law. And the reason I say that it is allowed is that we find it in stories
in the Holy Koran. For instance, in the past history of Islam, there are
people who sold themselves just to make Allah happy. And also, it happened
once that one of the companions of the prophet Muhammad, peace be unto him,
asked the prophet, "if I die fighting my enemy, what will happen to me?" And
the prophet told him, "You will go to heaven." So this companion of the
prophet attacked the enemy all by himself, and he killed many enemies but he
himself was martyred. And the prophet Muhammad, peace be unto him, said
'This man is a shahid, he is a martyr." And we have the same examples from
the period of the first caliph of Islam, Abu Bakr Sediq.

Monitor: The Taliban have always told the world that they are seekers of
knowledge, so why are they attacking schools and threatening teachers?

Hanif: Yes, you are right, the Taliban are supporters of education. And the
people who burn schools, they are not the Taliban. They are the enemies of
Islam, they are the enemies of the Taliban.... Burning schools is not
allowed under Islam.

Monitor: Do you have enough funding to carry out your attacks, and if so,
where does the money come from?

Hanif: We are well supported by the people of Afghanistan, and especially by
the rich and wealthy Afghans who like the Taliban's ideas and approach to
government. At the same time, God is helping us. In each battle, in each
attack, we seize lots of weapons that the government does not admit to the
media.

Monitor: Recently, Osama Bin Laden offered a truce with Americans if they
withdrew troops from Afghanistan and Iraq. Would the Taliban be prepared to
offer a truce with the Afghanistan government?

Hanif: It is too early to tell you what we will do. The main goal of our war
is to drive away the occupiers and the Americans. After that, we might start
to talk with what you call the Afghan government and what we call the slaves
of the foreign occupiers.

 



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