Taliban
Fights Fiercely to Protect Zawahiri -
International Terrorism Monitor--Paper No.
428by B. Raman
The current week-long fighting in the
Bajaur Agency of the Federally-Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan, in which
the Bajaur wing of the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) claims to have inflicted
heavy fatalities on the personnel of the
Frontier Corps (FC), a para-military unit,
and repulsed its attempts to capture the
Loyesam area of the Agency, which has been
under the control of the TTP, was the
outcome of a drive launched by the FC,
reportedly under pressure from the US, to
clear the area of Al Qaeda and Taliban
elements, which had established sanctuaries
there.
2. The US intelligence agencies had long
suspected that Ayman al-Zawahiri, the No. 2
of Al Qaeda, was living in this Agency under
the protection of the local tribals led by
Maulana Faqir Mohammad, who is no. 2 to
Baitullah Mehsud, the Amir of the TTP. Abu
Faraj al-Libbi, the Libyan, who was
projected as the No.3 in Al Qaeda and who
was arrested by the Pakistani authorities in
the Mardan area of the North-West Frontier
Province (NWFP) in May, 2005, and handed
over to the US, was reported to have been
given shelter before his arrest by the
Mamond tribe in the Mamond sub-division of
the Bajaur Agency.
3. Abu Faraj reportedly stated during his
interrogation that Osama bin Laden and
Zawahiri were taking shelter in the Bajaur
agency. On the basis of his claim during the
interrogation, the Pakistani Army, at the
request of the US, had undertaken a cordon
and search operation in the Mamond
sub-division after Abu Faraj's arrest. It
arrested one or two Uzbecks and some Afghans
in the area, but it claimed that it did not
find any Arabs belonging to Al Qaeda.
4. While Pakistani military and
intelligence officers discounted Abu Faraj's
statement that the members of the Mamond
tribe had given shelter to bin Laden and al-Zawahiri,
US intelligence and military officers,
operating from the adjoining Kunar area of
Afghanistan, took Abu Faraj seriously. It
was largely on the basis of what he stated
during his interrogation, corroborated by
other reports from tribal sources, that
senior US intelligence and military officers
had been saying since July, 2005, that they
knew where bin Laden and al-Zawahiri were,
but were unable to smoke them out.
5. After the arrest of Abu Faraj, the
hunt for the two Al Qaeda leaders was
stepped up by the US forces in Afghanistan,
narrowing their area of focus to the areas
inhabited by the Mamond tribe. Apart from
strengthening their electronic intelligence
capability in the adjoining Afghan territory
and seeking the assistance of heroin
smugglers in the area, many of whom come
from this tribe, they also mounted special
operations inside Pakistan to find out how
al-Zawahiri's audio and video messages were
being recorded and transmitted to Al Jazeera
and other TV channels. This task was
facilitated by the increasing frequency with
which al-Zawahiri was sending messages.
6. On the basis of information that al-Zawahiri
and his body-guards were going to spend the
night of January 12, 2006, in the Mamond
village of Damadola in the house of a local
smuggler of gems and precious stones, US
aircraft, believed to be Predators of the
US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), made
two strikes with missiles at 3 AM and 3-30
AM on the morning of January 13, 2006, at a
cluster of houses belonging to this smuggler
in which his family members were staying.
7. Eighteen persons were killed, of whom
14 were identified as members of the
smuggler's family. The smuggler himself was
reportedly away in Saudi Arabia for Haj. The
identities of the remaining four were
not established. The local
villagers insisted that they too were local
residents and not foreigners, but were
not able to give their identities.
8. In a video message disseminted on
January 30, 2006, al-Zawahiri informed his
followers that the US air strikes of January
13, 2006, on some houses in Damadola, which
were directed against him, could not get
him. In a virulent personal attack on
President Pervez Musharraf, al-Zawahiri
said: "The American planes raided in
compliance with Musharraf the traitor and
his security apparatus, the slave of the
Crusaders and the Jews. In seeking to kill
my humble self and four of my brothers, the
whole world has discovered the extent of
America's lies and failures and the extent
of its savagery in fighting Islam and
Muslims." He warned Musharraf against
cooperation with the Americans, threatening,
"Your day of judgement is approaching".
9. In an earlier message disseminated on
September 28, 2003, al-Zawahiri had said:
"It is Musharraf who enabled America to
topple the (Taliban's) Islamic emirate in
Afghanistan. Had it not been for his
tremendous help, America would not have been
able to do this, nor would it have been able
to kill thousands of innocents in
Afghanistan. It is Musharraf who is seeking
to send Pakistani forces to Iraq so that
they, rather than American soldiers, are
killed and so that they kill Muslims in Iraq
and enable America to control Muslim lands.
Muslims in Pakistan must unite and
co-operate to topple this traitor and
install a sincere leadership that would
defend Islam and Muslims. The President
would hand you over to the Hindus and flee
to enjoy his secret bank accounts if India
attacked Pakistan." An earlier
video-recorded message of Zawahiri telecast
by Al Jazeera on September 10, 2003, had
denounced Musharraf as a traitor.
10. There was an air strike on a madrasa
at Chenagai in the Bajaur Agency on October
30, 2006, in which 80 students studying in
the madrasa were killed. There was
considerable controversy regarding the
origin of the air strike and the background
of the students killed. The local
villagers claimed that the attack was made
by an American Predator aircraft, which flew
into the area from Afghanistan. A US TV
channel quoted unidentified Pakistani
intelligence officials as saying that the
attack was carried out by an American
Predator aircraft because the Americans had
information that al-Zawahiri was in the
madrasa at that time. However, the Pakistani
authorities denied the presence of any
high-level Al Qaeda personality in the
madrasa when it was attacked. They claimed
that it was they who carried out the attack
because they had received reliable
intelligence that the madrasa was training
suicide bombers for operations in
Afghanistan. The attack on the madrasa led
to a wave of anger and demonstrations all
over the FATA. Nearly 15,000 persons
demonstrated repeatedly for a week in the
Bajaur Agency.
11. Forty-five Pakistani army recruits
undergoing training at a Punjab Regimental
Centre training school at Dargai, 100 kms
north of Peshawar in the NWFP, were killed
and many others were injured early on the
morning of November 8, 2006, when a
suspected suicide bomber ran towards them
and blew himself up. The investigation into
the suicide attack could not make any
progress. The presumption in official and
non-governmental circles was that the
suicide attack was, most probably, in
reprisal for the Chenagai air strike.
12. Despite the failure of their past
attempts to get at al-Zawahiri, the
Americans seem convinced that the TTP
elements in the Bajaur Agency are protecting
him. Prime Minister Yousef Raza Gilani and
Rehman Malik, his Internal Security Advisor,
came under pressure from the US officials to
take action to trace and kill or arrest al-Zawahiri.
On their return from their recent visit to
the US, an operation by the FC was mounted
from August 6 to trace al-Zawahiri. The Air
Force was asked to provide air cover to the
operation. Helicopter gunships of the Army
were pressed into action to support the FC's
ground operation.
13. As part of this operation, the FC set
up an advance post in the Loyesam area to
collect intelligence and mount special
strikes. The TTP, which has allegedly been
protecting al-Zawahiri, fiercely reacted
against the advance of the FC into this
area. Armed Taliban militants, led by Maulana
Faqir Mohammad, ambushed an FC convoy on
August 8 near Sadeeqabad village and
inflicted heavy losses on the forces. The
next day, they handed over to the local
authorities the dead bodies of 22 FC
personnel, including a Major. Following
fierce fighting in this area, in which
Mehsuds from South Waziristan and Uzbecks
from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU)
and the Islamic jihad Union (IJU) joined the
TTP in attacking the FC personnel, the FC
decided to withdraw from this area to Khar,
the headquarters of the Agency. The Army
apprehended that the TTP, the IMU and the
IJU might attack Khar also, but this has not
happened so far.
14. While the ground fighting decreased
after the withdrawal of the FC, the Pakistan
Army kept up its air strikes and attacks by
helicopter gunships in which it claimed to
have inflicted heavy fatalities on the
jihadis.There was even speculation that
among those killed by the air strikes was
the Egyptian-born Abu Saeed al-Masri alias
Mustafa Mohammad Ahmad, a member of the
Majlis-i-Shura of Al Qaeda and its
financial chief, but this has not been
confirmed. Another unconfirmed claim by
Pakistani sources has stated that Mustafa
abu al Yazid, an Egyptian who was in charge
of Al Qaeda operations in Afghanistan, was
killed in an air strike. Al Qaeda, which
normally admits the deaths of its senior
operatives, has not commented on these
reports so far.
15. In retaliation for the widespread air
strikes in the Bajaur Agency, the TTP blew
up a bus of the Air Force on the Kohat Road
in the NWFPon Auguast 12 in which 13
persons, including seven administrative
personnel of the PAF, were reported to have
been killed. The TTP has warned of more such
attacks even in non-tribal areas, including
Karachi, if the air strikes did not stop.
Despite this, the Army has kept up with its
air strikes. According to reliable police
sources, Asif Ali Zardari has been keen to
oblige the US by continuing with this
operation. He is hoping that as a quid pro
quo, the US could be persuaded not to come
in the way of the proposed impeachment of
President Pervez Musharraf. He seems to be
convinced that if the US stops supporting
Musharraf, the Army and the Inter-Services
Intelligence will take the hint and will not
come in the way of his impeachment.
16.Coinciding with the fighting in the
Bajaur Agency, a Pakistani TV channel
claimed to have received an audio message
from Zawahiri on August 10 in which he
said: "Musharraf has insulted and
compromised Pakistan's sovereignty by
allowing the CIA and FBI to operate freely
in Pakistan and arrest, interrogate,
torture, deport and detain any person,
whether Pakistani or not." Zawahiri
appealed to Pakistani soldiers to rethink
their role in the fighting that has often
pitted them against their countrymen,
especially in the tribal regions. He urged
Pakistanis to rise up and fight the US and
support the Taliban. He apologised for
speaking in English, "the language of the
Muslims' enemies". He explained this by
saying that he does not speak Urdu and that
most Pakistanis cannot understand Arabic.