Tehrik-E-Taliban Pakistan: An
Update - International Terrorism Monitor ---
Paper No. 615
By B. Raman
The death of three US soldiers (Marines?),
living under civilian cover in the Lower Dir
District of the Malakand Division of the
North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) of
Pakistan, in an explosion which a struck a
convoy in which they were reportedly
traveling with some Pakistani security
forces personnel on February 3, 2010, has
been confirmed by the US Embassy in
Islamabad.
2. Initially, the killed Americans were
projected as journalists or as employees of
the US Agency For International Development
(AID), but subsequently, the US Embassy
admitted that they were military personnel
deployed in the area on a training-cum-
civil construction mission. They were posted
in the area to train personnel of the
Frontier Corps (FC), a para-military unit
headquartered in Peshawar and consisting
largely of Pashtuns recruited in the NWFP
and the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas
(FATA).
3. Since 2005, there have been many reported
instances of the penetration of the FC by
the Pakistani Taliban and collusion of many
FC personnel with the Taliban. There were
also instances of the desertions of a large
number of FC personnel to the Taliban during
the fighting in the South Waziristan area.
4. Despite such instances, the US had
proposed a project for the training of the
FC personnel by members of the US Special
Forces units and for undertaking civil
construction projects in remote rural areas
in the hope of thereby helping the FC win
the hearts and minds of the local tribals
and weaning them away from supporting the
Taliban. This project, which was accepted by
the Pakistan Government, has been under
implementation for over a year.
5. The training project has two components.
Under the first component, selected
commissioned officers of the FC are taken to
the US for special training. Under the
second component, selected non-commissioned
officers and other ranks are trained locally
in the NEFP, but not in the FATA.
6. The three US military personnel killed on
February 3 were reportedly proceeding in a
convoy escorted by the FC to attend the
inauguration of a school for girls
constructed by the voluntary labour of the
FC personnel and the US trainers. Available
details regarding the incident are
confusing. Some reports suggest the
explosion was triggered off either by a
suicide bomber or through a remote control
device as the convoy was proceeding to the
venue of the function. If this was so, it is
not clear, as to how, many girls, who had
assembled at the venue, were injured. A
possibility is that the explosion struck the
convoy just as it arrived at the venue.
7. It is also not clear whether the
explosion specifically targeted the US
military personnel or it merely targeted the
girls school because the Taliban is opposed
to girls’ education and the US personnel who
were there got killed. A person, who claimed
to be the spokesman of the Pakistani
Taliban, has claimed that the Taliban
carried out the attack and alleged that the
three US military personnel were actually
working for Blackwater, a US security firm
employed by the US Government for physical
security and training purposes in the Af-Pak
area.
8. The Dir area of the Malakand Division is
the native place of Sufi Mohammad, the
founder of the
Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM),
a component of the TTP, which had
established its control over the Swat Valley
of the Malakand Division under the
leadership of Maulana Fazlullah, son-in-law
of Sufi Mohammad, who is a native of Swat.
In operations undertaken towards the end of
2008 and in the beginning of 2009, the
Pakistani Army managed to eject the TNSM
from the Malakand Division, including Lower
and Upper Dir and Swat. Its leaders evaded
capture or death and managed to escape.
9. The explosion of February 3 shows that
while the TNSM and its associates in the
area may have lost their territorial control
in the area, they still have some capability
for random attacks with explosive devices.
The incident is unlikely to affect the
training programme of the US. What is
significant is not the success of the
terrorists on February 3, but their
inability to identify and target US military
trainers till now despite the fact that they
have been operating in the area for over a
year now. This speaks well of the high level
of security of the training programme.
10. In the meanwhile, rumours regarding the
death of Hakimullah, the Amir of the TTP, on
January 26, 2010, as a result of the
injuries sustained by him in a US Drone
strike on January 14, 2010, continue to
persist despite the repeated denial of these
rumours by the TTP. There is no way of
establishing the veracity of these rumours
unless the TTP itself decides to admit the
truth, if he is really dead, as it did after
a delay in the case of the death of his
predecessor Baitullah Mehsud in a Drone
strike in August last.
11. What is clear is that despite the
spectacular success of the TTP in getting
seven CIA officers and one Jordanian
intelligence officer killed in the Khost
area of Afghanistan on December 30, 2009,
through a Jordanian double agent, it seems
to be facing difficulties in Pakistani
territory due to relentless air strikes by
the US with its Drones and the Pakistani
Army operations in the South Waziristan
area. It has lost territorial control in the
Mehsud area in South Waziristan and the
disruption of its command and control has
resulted in the senior leaders of the
organization such as Hakimullah himself if
he is still alive, Waliur Rehman, its leader
in charge of South Waziristan, and Qari
Hussain Mehsud, in charge of its suicide
wing, being forced to move from place to
place in non-Mehsud areas in order to escape
attacks by the US Drones. This has added to
their vulnerability and affected their
ability to carry out spectacular terrorist
strikes in the non-tribal areas. The TTP
seems to be a weakened, but not a defeated
force.
12. This may please be read in continuation
of my earlier article titled
CIA: Alive &
Kicking at
http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers37/paper3610.html.
(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)