Co-Ordinated Hunt For Baitullah Mehsud -
International Terrorism Monitor--Paper No.
537
by B. Raman
According to
well-informed Pakistani police sources,the
US and Pakistani Armed Forces, intelligence
agencies and special forces have launched a
co-ordinated hunt for Baitullah Mehsud, the
Amir of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP),
in South Waziristan in the
Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).
It is a co-ordinated and not a joint
operation. In a co-ordinated operation the
two collaborators operate independently of
each other and not jointly together under a
common command and control, but keep each
other informed in advance of their
operational plans to avoid attacking each
other by mistake instead of their common
target.
2. The
operations undertaken by the Pakistan Army
in the Swat Valley of the Malakand Division
in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP)
since April have started coming in for some
criticism because while the Pakistan Army
has claimed to have killed over 1500 foot
soldiers of the Pakistani Taliban hardly any
important leader has been killed or
captured. To avoid such criticism, the focus
of the operations in South Waziristan would
be on killing Baitullah Mehsud and Qari
Hussain Mehsud, one of his lieutenants, who
reportedly trains suicide terrorists, and
not on re-establishing immediate territorial
control over the Mehsud areas of South
Waziristan. While re-establishing
territorial control will be the ultimate
objective, eliminating Baitullah and Hussain
would be the immediate objective. The
calculation is that if they are eliminated,
the TTP could disintegrate.
3. The initial
emphasis would be more on the use of air
power than ground forces. While the
Pakistanis would use their F-16 aircraft and
helicopter gunships, the US would continue
to use its unmanned Drones with their
missiles. The initial emphasis on the use of
air power by Pakistan also takes into
account the difficulties that it might face
in diverting adequate forces to South
Waziristan till the operations in the Swat
Valley are over. The internally displaced
persons from the Swat Valley, who are
presently living in camps in the NWFP, are
anxious to go back to their villages in
Swat. Making arrangements for their return
and for maintaining control over the
re-captured areas of the Swat would keep a
large number of Pakistani troops tied up in
the Swat Valley. Thus, the ability of the
Pakistani Army to deploy adequate troops for
any ground operations in South Waziristan
would be limited. Keeping all these factors
in view, the initial focus will be on a co-ordinated
hunt for Baitullah and Hussain from the air.
4. A
well-planned, intelligence-driven and
smartly-executed double strike by US Drones
in South Waziristan on June 23, 2009, had
targeted Baitullah and Hussain, but it
failed to achieve its objective for want of
luck despite the operations being executed
with precision. The double attack was
carried out at a village called Lattaka in
the Shabikhel area of South Waziristan,
where one of the buildings periodically used
by Baitullah is reported to be located. In
the first strike directed at the building,
Khwaz Ali, a close associate of Baitullah,
and five other unidentified persons were
killed. The second strike was directed some
hours later at the village graveyard where
about a hundred people had gathered for the
burial of Khwaz Ali. About 80 of the
mourners, including some children, are
believed to have been killed. Initial
reports that Qari Hussain Mehsud of the
Pakistani Taliban and Maulvi Sangeen Zadran,
a close associate of Serjuddin Haqqani of
the Afghan Taliban, were among the mourners
killed have not been corroborated. There
have been conflicting reports about
Baitullah. Some reports say he was among the
mourners, but had left the graveyard before
the Drone attack. Others deny that he
was among the mourners. The fact that there
has been no public demonstration in the area
indicates that the majority of those killed
must have been members of the Taliban and
not innocent local villagers as subsequently
alleged by Taliban elements.
5. The US has
carried out 24 Drone strikes in Pakistani
territory so far this year as against 36
during the whole of 2008. The Obama
Administration is not relenting in its
policy of using the Drones whenever
warranted by specific intelligence without
worrying about proforma protests from the
Pakistani authorities and leaders or about
warnings by some US analysts that increasing
civilian casualties due to the Drone attacks
could drive more tribals into the arms of
the Taliban. The stepped-up Drone strikes,
which were initially justified as necessary
to disrupt the presence and activities of Al
Qaeda remnants in Pakistani territory, are
now sought to be used to indirectly help the
Pakistan Army in its operations against the
Pakistani Taliban.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)