http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9582/pub_detail.asp

 

May 23, 2011


Taliban Terror Network Establishes Itself in Southern Pakistan


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.3/author_detail.asp>
Adrian Morgan,
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.172/author_detail.asp> The
Editor


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http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110513_ShabqadarMap480.jpg

 

On
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/pakistan/8511427/Taliban-rev
enge-attack-on-Pakistan-eyewitness-accounts.html> May 11, the Pakistani
Taliban carried out a twin suicide bomb attack against a police training
center in Shabqadar, Charsadda district, in Pakistan’s Northwest Frontier
province. That attack claimed the lives of 80 police personnel, in a Pashtun
region of Pakistan that is renowned as a center of Taliban and al-Qaeda
activity.

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110523_KarachiAttack.jpg

 

Yesterday, on Sunday evening (around 10 p.m. local time) a group of
paramilitary Taliban terrorists attacked a Pakistan naval base at the other
end of the country, in the port city of Karachi, capital of Sindh province
in southeast Pakistan. The PNS Mehran base is a naval airbase, and around
fifteen to twenty assailants armed with guns and grenades advanced from
three sides simultaneously to mount the attack. For such a small group of
people, the base was unprepared to resist the assault. The siege finally
ended after 17 hours.

 

The news is carried by
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-05-23/pakistan-commandos-remove-taliban-
guerrillas-from-karachi-naval-air-base.html> Bloomberg, Associated Press via
<http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories/20110523/pakistani-troops-hunt-militan
ts-on-naval-base-110523/> CTV, the
<http://tribune.com.pk/story/173888/blast-on-dalmia-road/> Pakistan Tribune,
the
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/23/militants-attack-pakistani-nava
l-base-karachi> Guardian, the
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13497328> BBC,
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/23/terrorists-attack-navy-airbase-in-karachi-de
stroy-three-aircraft.html> Dawn, the Daily Times and numerous other sources.

 

It has been reported that three aircraft were destroyed in the raid, either
by placing bombs or using rockets against them, and some Chinese workers
were  <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13495969> taken hostage.
Twelve Pakistani military personnel
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-pakistan-attack-web-201
10523,0,7584938.story> were killed in the assault. The Pakistani Taliban
claimed responsibility, stating that the act was carried out as revenge for
the killing of Osama bin Laden. 

 

There is still some confusion in the reports. Apparently eleven Chinese and
six Americans were trapped in the base during the attack. These were
<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/taliban-16-hour-siege-of-pakistans
-mehran-airbase-ends-14-killed/articleshow/8535223.cms> safely rescued.
Though most say the siege took more than 16 hours, some downsize the length
of the raid to  <http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2011/s3224854.htm>
12 hours. The number of aircraft destroyed varies from one to three.

 

The aircraft that were destroyed were American in origin, Lockheed Martin
-manufactured
<http://www.navy.mil/navydata/fact_display.asp?cid=1100&tid=1400&ct=1> P-3C
Orion anti-submarine warfare and marine surveillance aircraft. These
aircraft have four turbo-propellor engines and a distinctive spike jutting
out beneath the tail, used for magnetic detection of submarines.

 

This Taliban action in Karachi comes on the heels of a rise in the group’s
activities in the city. On
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/04/26/several-injured-in-karachi-bus-explosion.htm
l> April 26, 2011, days before Bin Laden was killed, the Pakistan navy came
under attack. Two buses carrying navy officials were hit by a pair of
remote-controlled roadside bombs. 54 people were injured, and four people
died.

 

There has been a growing influence of radicalism in the city over the past
decade. Karachi is the political home of the late Benazir Bhutto, who was
killed on  <http://www.fsmarchives.org/article.php?id=1385984> December 27,
2007 in a suicide blast.  Bhutto and her husband Ali Asif Zardari, the
current president of Pakistan, both had reputations for financial and
political corruption, but were still technically “moderate.” Karachi is also
regarded as Pakistan’s financial hub, and it is in Karachi that Pakistan’s
stock exchange is located.

 

The comparative wealth of Karachi has attracted migrants from other regions
of the nation, including a large contingent of Pashtuns. Some estimates
claim there is a
<http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/rough/2009/07/karachis_invisi.html>
population of 7 million Pashtuns in the port city, whose total population
numbers 17 million. The Pashtun areas of Karachi have been associated with
Islamist influence. There are ethnic tensions between Pashtuns and the local
“Mohajir” people. Occasionally these tensions have erupted into violence, as
on
<http://archives.dawn.com/dawnftp/72.249.57.55/dawnftp/2008/07/08/top1.htm>
July 7, 2008, when a series of explosions injured about fifty people. The
blasts apparently were set up to provoke ethnic tension. A month after those
blasts, a local politician claimed that there was
<http://archives.dawn.com/2008/08/07/top8.htm> no Talibanization taking
place in Karachi. History appears to have proved him wrong.

 

By that time, Karachi had already been a center for some of the activities
of the terrorist group Jundallah (army of God). This group is primarily
based in Baluchistan province in the southwest of Pakistan, and probably
started around 2003. It was set up to attack Shia-dominated Iran whose
border adjoins southern Baluchistan, to “liberate” Sunnis living in Iran. It
has mounted cross-border raids and bomb attacks into Iran. In
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_18-6-2004_pg7_7> June
2004, twelve Jundallah activists were arrested in Karachi. These later
<http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2004-07-20/pakistan/27157217_1_
fire-indiscriminately-militants-jundullah> admitted plotting to attack the
U.S. consulate in Karachi, as well as U.S. military interests. 

 

The southwestern province of Baluchistan (Balochistan) is rich in gas and
oil reserves, and there is already a separatist movement, the Baluchistan
Liberation Army, which seeks to secede from Pakistan and exploit the
potential wealth

 

Jundallah has been involved in kidnapping of Iranian soldiers and holding
them hostage in Pakistan; for example, in January 2006 the group kidnapped
nine Iranian soldiers, and in
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2008/07/13/MN4711J914.D
TL> June 2008 sixteen more were abducted. In Karachi, Jundallah activists
could gain some anonymity. 

In
<http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Polit
ics/25-Jan-2010/Karachi-police-arrest-4-Jundullah-activists> January 2010,
four Jundallah terrorists were arrested in Karachi. They admitted their part
in a series of three bomb blasts in the city which left 45 people dead in
December 2009. The blasts had taken place during the festival of Ashura,
which is sacred to Shia Muslims. When the four Ashura bombers were sent to
trial in June, 2010, six armed men, who had grenades,
<http://jafarianews.com/en/?p=6228> attacked the courtroom and freed the
defendants.

 

There is some cross-pollination between Jundallah and other sectarian terror
groups, particularly Sipah-e-Sahabah and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which carry out
terror attacks against Shia Muslims and incites violence against Christians
in Pakistan. It has widely been assumed that Jundallah is a spent force
politically. It may carry out random acts of terror and involve itself in
sectarian conflict, but in the Pakistani media and in counter-terrorism
activities, it has become eclipsed by the Pakistani Taliban. In Karachi,
however, Jundallah still has a presence. According to an article from
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\09\07\story_7-9-2010_pg7
_25> September, 2010, the group was reforming itself in Karachi. The
article’s author claims Jundallah was founded in Karachi by a student at the
university, called Attaur Rehman. He was assisted in forming the group by
the student wings of the Jamaat-e-Islami party. 

 

Attaur Rehman (Rahman) had been among 11 Islamists who were sentenced to
death in February 2006 for their part in the attempted murder of a Pakistani
army general. In June 2004, militants with assault rifles and bombs attacked
the motorcade of Lt. Gen. Ahsan Saleem Hayat. The general surived the
assault, but 10 people died in the attack, six soldiers, three police
officers and one bystander. Subsequently the general was raised to second in
command of the military. The defendants accused of the failed attack against
the general cried out “God is Great” as their sentences were handed out. An
article by the Associated Press from
<http://calgary.ctv.ca/servlet/an/plocal/CTVNews/20060221/pakistan_militants
_death_060221/20060221/?hub=MontrealHome> February 28, 2006 quoted Rahman as
saying: “If one Attaur Rahman dies, many more will come to replace me in
this way of jihad.”

 

The Rise of the Taliban in Karachi

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110523_MullahOmar.jpg

 

Mullah Omar, the official head of the Afghanistan Taliban.

 

So far, the resurgence of Jundallah as an organized terror force appears not
to have happened, but the attack by the Pakistani Tehreek-i-Taliban upon the
air force base suggests that the Taliban have already overtaken Jundallah as
the main Sunni terror organization in the city.

 

One senior Taliban figure was “accidentally” discovered in Karachi in
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/19/world/asia/19intel.html> late January
2010. This individual is Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar. He was said to have
been found in a raid on a house outside the city. Baradar, described as the
second-in-command of the Taliban, is said to have been the main organizer of
the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan. The only person more senior than him
was one-eyed Mullah Omar.

 

Baradar was one of the four men who founded the original Taliban. The
original leaders of the Afghan Taliban had been educated at the Haqqania
madrassa in Pakistan, run by Sami ul-Haq (Mullah Omar had not failed to
complete his course). Baradar also had links to the ISI, according to the
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8517693.stm> BBC. Baradar was believed to be the
deputy of Mullah Omar. The BBC states that Baradar was captured in a
madrassa in Karachi, not in a “house”. On April 22, Pakistan's ISI
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8637780.stm> announced that
American investigators were allowed access to Baradar. The date of Baradar’s
arrest is also contested. Apparently, he had been arrested in a madrassa in
Loni Kot, Karachi, on
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/feb/16/karachi-haven-taliban-fugitives
> February 8, 2010 as a result of a joint Pakistani-U.S. operation. 

 

In
<http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5btt_news%5d=34384>
January 2009, an article by the Jamestown Foundation had claimed that the
Pakistani Taliban had been targeting Peshawar and Karachi as these were seen
to be important locations along the supply-line for U.S. troops in
Afghanistan.

 

The author, Andrew McGregor made mention of a raid that took place on
January 15 in Karachi upon suspected Taliban safe-houses. Two people had
been killed and seven wounded. Nearly eighty suspects had been arrested. The
raids had taken place to locate a kidnapped Iranian commercial attaché.
However, it has recently been claimed that this raid had been carried out to
free a prominent Hindu film-maker called
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\03\10\story_10-3-2011_pg
7_3> Satish Anand.

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110514_IlyasKashmiri.jpg

 

The raid in Karachi on January 15, 2009 had been upon Taliban members who
had been working in conjunction with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. The raid had
uncovered a suicide vest, 32 kilograms of C4 plastic explosives, detonators,
Kalashnikovs and a large quantity of hashish. 

 

The cell was said to be linked to Waziristan, in the tribal areas of NWFP
adjoining Afghanistan, where the Pakistan Taliban traditionally has its
roots. Satish Anand, the kidnapped movie maker, was
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\04\13\story_13-4-2009_pg
7_51> released in April 2009, six months after he was first captured en
route to the Karachi press club. Anand was freed after a ransom was paid,
apparently after negotiations were made with Ilyas Kashmiri (pictured above)
who heads his own terror group (Harkatul Mujahideen-Al-Islami) and was once
tipped as a successor to bin Laden. Though kidnapped in Karachi, Anand had
been held as a hostage in Miranshah in North Waziristan.

 

In his Jamestown article, McGregor quoted Mullah Omar, who had said in the
<http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Polit
ics/06-Aug-2008/Taliban-could-activate-in-Karachi-on-Baitullah-orders>
summer of 2008:

 

“We are very strong in Karachi; our network could come in action once the
central Amir of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan [Baitullah Mahsud] ordered the
Taliban for action. We want to help improve law and order and maintain peace
in Karachi. The Taliban could surface in Karachi if foreign hands do not
stop interfering in the city… We are capable of capturing any city of the
country at any given time.”

 

On
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/nov/20/taliban-chief-takes-cover-i
n-pakistan-populace/> November 20, 2009, the Washington Times reported that
senior American officials had claimed that Mullah Omar, head of the Afghan
Taliban, had fled from Quetta in Baluchistan to a safe region in Karachi in
the previous month. Omar had been assisted in this move by Pakistan’s
intelligence agency, the ISI. It should be noted that the ISI did indeed
help to set up the Taliban inside Afghanistan. The story was also reported
in the
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\11\21\story_21-11-2009_p
g1_3> Pakistan Daily Times.

According to one U.S. counterterrorism official:

 

“There are indications of some kind of bleed-out of Taliban types from
Quetta to Karachi, but no one should assume at this point that the entire
Afghan Taliban leadership has packed up its bags and headed for another
Pakistani city.”

 

Though Pakistan denied the report, and Mullah Omar was never found, his
son-in-law Motasim Agha Jan was reported to have been arrested in Karachi in
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\03\05\story_5-3-2010_pg1
_1> March 2010. On the same day, police reported that a senior Pakistan
Taliban member called Alam Mehsud had been
<http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\03\05\story_5-3-2010_pg1
_2> arrested in Karachi.

 

On Sunday, May 22, 2011, shortly before the attack upon the PNS Mehran base
in Karachi, an Afghanistan TV news station claimed that Mullah Omar had been
killed. The news had originally been
<http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/southasia/news/article_1640880.php/A
fghan-spy-agency-Mullah-Omar-goes-missing-in-Pakistan> sourced from the
National Directorate of Security, Afghanistan's intelligence service, via
its spokesperson Lutfullah Mashal. The Afghan TV channel, TOLO, had
<http://www.smh.com.au/world/pakistani-troops-end-taliban-siege-20110523-1f0
n1.html> claimed that Mullah Omar had been killed while he was traveling in
Pakistan’s Baluchistan province. Mullah Omar had apparently been on his way
from his hide-out in Quetta, where many believe he has spent the last
decade, to North Waziristan. Hamid Gul, the Taliban-supporting former head
of the ISI, had ridiculed the claim. The TOLO TV report had claimed that
Mullah Omar had been escorted by Hamid Gul on his trip to the northwestern
frontier when he was killed.

 

The Afghan Taliban has also
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/taliban-denies-report-that-mullah-omar-
is-dead/2011/05/23/AFdJLh9G_story.html> denied the report, releasing this
statement:

 

“Claims and rumors were spread this morning by the Kabul stooge regime’s
intelligence directorate, other officials and some media outlets that the
esteemed Amir ul Mumineen was martyred in Pakistan. We strongly reject these
false claims of the enemy.”

 

The raid upon the PNS Mehran base in Karachi could be seen as a dramatic
attack, motivated by anger at bin Laden’s death. It is true that the attack
has highlighted how weak and unprepared the Pakistan military must be. There
are also rumors that for the attack to be successful, there could have been
“inside help” at the base.

 

Even though Sunday’s attack upon the naval airbase is spectacular, it
nonetheless is consistent with an ever-increasing tally of terror attacks
and sectarian atrocities in the city of Karachi.

 

Recent Terrorism Attacks in Karachi

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110523_KarachiCID-bombing.jpg

 

On the evening of
<http://www.dawn.com/2010/11/12/striking-at-karachiâ??s-soul.html> November
11, 2010, a bomb struck at the headquarters of the police’s Crime
Investigation Department in Karachi (pictured).

 

At a press conference on
<http://www.dawn.com/2010/12/15/â??ttpâ??-man-arrested-explosives-seized-in-
karachi.html> December 14, 2010, Pakistani police displayed a man who had
been arrested in the Sohrab Goth neighborhood of Karachi (below). The man,
Hajj Rehman, was said to be a member of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan. A
quantity of explosives had been seized. Rehman and his five accomplices had
allegedly planned to set off bombs during Ashura processions. The five
accomplices had escaped. Rehman had moved to Karachi from Orakzai Agency,
one of the FATA or tribal areas in NorthWest Frontier Province.

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110523_TalibanKarachi.jpg

 

Two weeks before, on
<http://www.dawn.com/2010/11/30/police-arrests-taliban-planning-karachi-atta
cks.html> November 29, 2010, four alleged Taliban activists were arrested in
the same district of Karachi. Three suicide jackets, rifles, pistols and
explosives were retrieved during the arrests. The men were not natives of
the city of Karachi. A police chief said that they admitted that the
(Pakistan) Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud had sent them to Karachi to carry
out terror attacks. 

 

Last month, on
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/04/09/two-ttp-militants-held-in-sohrab-goth.html>
April 8, 2011, Dawn newspaper reported that two suspected Taliban activists,
originally from Mohmand agency in NorthWest Frontier Province, had been
arrested in the Sohrab Goth district of Karachi. They had guns and were said
to have been involved in murders in Karachi, police claimed.

 

On
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/04/22/blast-in-karachi-several-reported-injured.ht
ml> April 21, fifteen people were killed and thirty were injured when a bomb
ripped apart a gambling den in the city. 

 

After the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbotabad on May 2, the
violence in Karachi continued.  Three people were killed and almost thirty
injured in a grenade attack in the city on
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/06/blast-in-karachi-one-killed-ten-injured.html
> May 6. The attack seemed to be aimed at people who may have been engaged
in gambling and other “un-Islamic” activity.

 

On
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/16/saudi-consulateâ??s-car-attacked-in-karachi-
driver-killed.html> May 10 this year, a Saudi consulate official was shot
dead in Karachi. Two grenades had been thrown at the consulate. The Pakistan
Taliban
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/17/taliban-claim-responsibility-saudi-consulate
-official-shot-dead-in-karachi.html> claimed responsibility for the attack
in a phone call, with a spokesman stating: “Until America stops chasing Al
Qaeda and stops drone strikes we will keep carrying out such attacks.”

 

On
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/20/karachi-police-â??foil-taliban-terror-attack
sâ??.html> May 20 this year, police announced that three militants from the
Pakistani Taliban had been arrested in Karachi. These had been preparing to
carry out a suicide bombing, it was claimed. They came from Swat, again in
NorthWest Frontier Province, and had fled to Karachi from heavy military
action in the Swat valley. 

 

The attack upon the naval air force base in Karachi is a sign that the
Pakistan Taliban are no longer to be considered to be mostly housed in the
tribal regions of northwest Pakistan or in Quetta. Karachi appears to have
become as integral part of the Taliban’s network as Waziristan or the Swat
valley. Military actions and American drone attacks seem to be pushing
activists to expand southward. However, migration of certain activists does
not mean the Taliban have been driven out of the Federally Administered
Tribal Areas of NorthWest Frontier Province. Far from it. The move south is
an expansion of operations, and when kidnap victims are transported the
entire length of the nation, policing the activities of the group will
become more difficult.

 

http://morganinterviews.zoomshare.com/files/Sirajuddin.jpg

 

Sirajuddin Haqqani, acting leader of the Haqqani movement, has had close
relations with the Pakistan Taliban.

 

The Taliban (the word literally means “students”), could be rapidly growing
into an international movement like al-Qaeda, rather than merely being a
localized, centrally governed force. In the south, the group seems ready to
share operations with other Islamist groups, such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi,
Sipah-e-Sahaba and Jundallah. In the north of Pakistan and into Afghanistan,
the Taliban shares its influence with the
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.6356/pub_detail.asp>
Haqqani network. In Waziristan, the Taliban has shared territory, personnel
and ambitions with the
<http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2011/02/islamic_movement_of_5.php>
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, an al-Qaeda-related group with a network
extending into the Central Asian nations of Kyrgystan and Uzbekistan, and
also the Harkatul Mujahideen-Al-Islami of Ilyas Kashmiri.

 

A recent event at a checkpoint in Quetta, Baluchistan, suggested that the
Pakistani jihad is drawing international recruits. On
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/18/five-chechens-killed-in-quetta.html> May 18,
it was reported that five Chechens were killed by bullets fired by the
Frontier Corps, after they had apparently thrown grenades. In terms of the
jihad in Pakistan, Chechens are said to have been
<http://www.jamestown.org/programs/gta/single/?tx_ttnews%5btt_news%5d=26187&;
tx_ttnews%5bbackPid%5d=178&no_cache=1> involved in training activities with
the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, along with other nationalities, in the
northern tribal regions of Pakistan. What is unusual is to find alleged
Chechen activists so close to the southern border with Afghanistan. 

 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110523_Chechenvictim.jpg

 

There are questions that need to be answered by the Pakistani authorities in
relation to the incident involving the Chechens. Three of the five who were
killed were women, and one of these was
<http://www.brecorder.com/pakistan/general-news/14929-fir-against-chechens-k
illed-in-quetta-to-be-amended.html> pregnant. To complicate matters,
eyewitnesses have
<http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/19/chechens-killed-in-quetta-were-unarmed-witne
sses.html> claimed that the Chechens were unarmed. A photograph of one of
the Chechen women raising her arm indicated that she had survived the bullet
rounds, but she was subsequently shot, despite her apparent gesture of
surrender. Kavkaz Center, a website that publicizes jihad activity by
Chechens and other peoples in the Russian Caucasus, has
<http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2011/05/19/14325.shtml> condemned the
killing of the Chechens in Quetta.

 

While doubts remain on the true facts behind the Quetta incident, what is
certain is that the Pakistan Taliban is no longer a small offshoot of the
Afghanistan Taliban. From its first appearance in Pakistan media in the
winter of 2005-2006, the group now exists throughout Pakistan, and has
strong links to other Islamist groups in neighboring nations. 

 

The United States and the Pakistan government should take note of its
growth, and its connections to other jihadist groups. After bin Laden was
discovered in Abbottabad, under the nose of the Pakistan military, tensions
between Pakistan and America
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9497/pub_detail.asp>
worsened. The two nations should work out a strategy that supports their
mutual interests, for the road ahead is going to get very rough indeed.

 



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