Monday, January 31, 2011

Dual Taliban & Al Qaeda Leader Calls 21 Afghan Tribal Leaders To Summit Then Kidnaps Them All


Well, here we are again at the latest installment of the Taliban and Al Qaeda's book - "How NOT To Win Friends and Allies With the Afghan People"...as a Taliban/al Qaeda leader has apparently lured 21 tribal leaders in Afghanistan to a "meeting" at a mosque in Kunar province and then ended up kidnapping every last one of them. Surprise, surprise! You mean the Taliban and al Qaeda aren't to be trusted? Imagine that.

The whole reason for the kidnappings is to extort the resignation of relatives of the tribal leaders from the Afghan army and other military/security positions. I guess if the tribal leaders' brothers and/or sons don't resign, the leaders won't be released or should I say....killed?

From the report at The Long War Journal:

A dangerous, dual-hatted Taliban and al Qaeda commander has kidnapped 21 Afghan tribal leaders in the eastern province of Kunar.

Qari Zia Rahman, a regional commander who leads forces on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border, summoned the tribal leaders to a meeting in the district of Marawara eight days ago, then kidnapped them.

"The Taliban first called them for a meeting at a mosque and after a discussion, the Taliban took all the elders away to an unknown place," a local Afghan official in Kunar told AFP.

Qari Zai claimed the kidnapping in a text message sent to an AFP reporter, and demanded local Afghans end their cooperation with the Afghan government and security forces.

"The reason behind this act is that some relatives, sons and close family members of these men, work in the Afghan army, Afghan police and some with NATO", Qari Zia text read.

"Unless these people do not resign their jobs with the army, police and NATO, we will not release the hostages."

The district of Marawara, which directly borders Pakistan, is a known haven for al Qaeda and the Taliban. The US and Afghan forces targeted Qari Zai in three raids in the district during the summer of 2010. On June 29, the US launched a battalion-sized operation. More than 150 Taliban fighters were reported killed in the operation. On July 20, US and Afghan forces launched another battalion-sized operation in Marawara to flush out Qari Zia. And on Aug. 2, combined forces conducted a raid, again in Marawara, that targeted the al Qaeda leader.


This obviously isn't the first time that al Qaeda and/or the Taliban have shit on the people of Afghanistan but let's face the facts - up until now, the Afghan people really haven't revolted in any way or taken up arms. In Pakistan, the villagers have occasionally formed lashkars or awakenings against the Taliban but in Afghanistan, we simply haven't seen it.

So, I don't hold out any hope here that the Afghan people in this area are going to rise up over this but perhaps all of these acts of terror and deceit by the Taliban/al Qaeda will finally reach a point with the Afghans where they will stop taking it up the ass.


Al Qaeda leader kidnaps 21 Afghan tribal leaders in Kunar


A dangerous, dual-hatted Taliban and al Qaeda commander has kidnapped 21 Afghan tribal leaders in the eastern province of Kunar.

Qari Zia Rahman, a regional commander who leads forces on both sides of the Afghan-Pakistani border, summoned the tribal leaders to a meeting in the district of Marawara eight days ago, then kidnapped them.

"The Taliban first called them for a meeting at a mosque and after a discussion, the Taliban took all the elders away to an unknown place," a local Afghan official in Kunar told AFP.

Qari Zai claimed the kidnapping in a text message sent to an AFP reporter, and demanded local Afghans end their cooperation with the Afghan government and security forces.

"The reason behind this act is that some relatives, sons and close family members of these men, work in the Afghan army, Afghan police and some with NATO", Qari Zia text read.

"Unless these people do not resign their jobs with the army, police and NATO, we will not release the hostages."

The district of Marawara, which directly borders Pakistan, is a known haven for al Qaeda and the Taliban. The US and Afghan forces targeted Qari Zai in three raids in the district during the summer of 2010. On June 29, the US launched a battalion-sized operation. More than 150 Taliban fighters were reported killed in the operation. On July 20, US and Afghan forces launched another battalion-sized operation in Marawara to flush out Qari Zia. And on Aug. 2, combined forces conducted a raid, again in Marawara, that targeted the al Qaeda leader.

Qari Zia is the Taliban's top regional commander as well as a senior member of al Qaeda. He operates in Kunar and neighboring Nuristan province in Afghanistan, and he also operates across the border in Pakistan's tribal agency of Bajaur. In early 2010, the Pakistani government claimed they killed Qari Zia in an airstrike, but he later spoke to the media and mocked Pakistan's interior minister for wrongly reporting his death.

Qari Zia is closely allied with Faqir Mohammed as well as with Osama bin Laden. Qari Zia's fighters are from the Caucasus, Uzbekistan,Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, and various Arab nations. He commands a brigade in al Qaeda's paramilitary Shadow Army, or the Lashkar al Zil, US intelligence officials have told The Long War Journal.

The terrorist commander has established training camps for female suicide bombers in both Pakistan and in Kunar in Afghanistan.

A female suicide bomber struck for the first time in Afghanistan in Kunar province on June 21, 2010. Two US soldiers were killed and two Afghan children were wounded in the attack. Qari Zia claimed credit for the bombing.

The next female suicide attack took place on Dec. 24, 2010, in Pakistan's tribal agency of Bajaur. The suicide bomber killed 42 Pakistani civilians in an attack at a World Food Program ration distribution point.

Kunar province is a known sanctuary for al Qaeda and allied terror groups. The presence of al Qaeda cells has been detected in the districts of Pech, Shaikal Shate, Sarkani, Dangam, Asmar, Asadabad, Shigal, and Marawana; or eight of Kunar's 15 districts, according to an investigation by The Long War Journal.




1 comment:

Lysol said...

Most of those tribal leaders have the education of a 1st grader at best. This was probably easy as cake for the Taliban.

The US should pounce on this though. Even tribal leaders with 1 tooth know what death and torture is.

Negotiating with the enemy has never worked in war. War needs to be black and white. You are with the good guys (us) or the bad guys (them).