Briefing: Who are the Taliban?
The umbrella organization includes many different groups fighting the Afghan government and Western forces.
from the April 16, 2009 edition
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Who are the Pakistani militants?
Pakistan's tribal areas bordering Afghanistan are home to various groups that call themselves the Taliban. They emerged after 9/11, when Pakistan allied with the US and began launching raids in the tribal areas, which it had rarely entered before. Some groups evolved from ones that had been fighting India in Kashmir, but most were tribesmen who previously had not been active.
In late 2007, as many as 27 groups merged to form an umbrella Taliban movement, the Tehreek-e-Taliban, under guerrilla leader Baitullah Mehsud. But, over time, they became divided over whether to fight both the Pakistani and Afghan government or to focus solely on Afghanistan. Some groups even fought one another.
Recently, though, three of the most powerful, once-feuding commanders – Mr. Mehsud and Maulavi Nazeer of South Waziristan and Hafiz Gul Behadur of North Waziristan – formed an alliance in response to US airstrikes.
Dozens of non-Taliban groups espouse similarly radical ideologies and fight in Afghanistan. "The majority of militant groups in Pakistan are in fact not Taliban groups," says Christine Fair, South Asia specialist with the RAND Corp.
While some of these groups are based in the tribal areas, others are also in the so-called "settled regions," such as the North West Frontier Province. A leading example is Lashkar-e-Taiba. It was banned after being accused of the attacks in Mumbai (formerly known as Bombay) last November, but is still active in Afghanistan and Pakistan, according to US military officials. Many of these groups predate the Afghan or Pakistani Taliban and tend to remain independent of either group.
Where do insurgents get money?
Funding comes from many sources: governments, donors, Afghan poppy farmers, in exchange for protection for their fields.
"A large majority ... is thought to derive from wealthy individuals living in Arab Gulf states," says Mr. DuPee. Insurgents may also use the hajj – the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca – as a time to raise funds, he adds. These ties to Gulf-based militants may account for Al Qaeda's influence over some groups.
Pakistan is also widely believed to provide covert funding to the Afghan insurgents.
What do insurgents want?
Al Qaeda and groups linked to it call for global jihad – attacks on Western cities and on US forces worldwide. But Mullah Omar's Taliban has adopted the rhetoric of a national liberation struggle, to oust foreign forces and restore Islamic rule. According to Waliullah Rahmani of the Kabul Center for Strategic Studies, the Taliban is trying to rebrand itself by referring to its fighters as the mujahideen, conjuring images of the struggle against the Soviets in the 1980s.
"Such differences cause natural tensions between the Taliban and Al Qaeda," says one intelligence officer with NATO. "Al Qaeda has not been able to hijack the insurgency the way it did in Iraq."
Do Afghans back the insurgency?
Support for insurgents is heavily tied to ethnicity.
The insurgents are predominantly Pashtun and enjoy more support in areas where Pashtuns live, namely, the south and east. They find little favor with other ethnic groups. Some rural Pashtuns view the insurgents – especially the Taliban – as a lesser of two evils compared with the Afghan government.
"One of the most important things to an Afghan, especially in the context of the last 30 years of open warfare, is personal security," says DuPee. "The central government and to a degree NATO/Coalition forces have failed in this regard. The Taliban, in the view of ordinary Pashtuns, is the only entity able to impose law and order."
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