Pakistan a 'Taliban mini-state'?

Published: Thursday, Oct. 29, 2009 12:04 a.m. MDT
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Almost a year ago, New York Times correspondent David Rohde was abducted by the Taliban. I was in Afghanistan at the time and, like many Westerners in the country, I heard about it but agreed not to write about it. Publicity, it was thought, could increase the danger Rohde faced. Even so, over the months that followed, many people figured he would not be seen again except, perhaps, on a videotape with hooded jihadis ecstatically applying a butcher knife to his infidel throat.

But Rohde survived seven months in captivity — briefly, in Afghanistan, then in the Taliban-controlled areas of Pakistan — before managing to escape. His account of this period, published in The Times last week, is riveting. It is revealing, too, though sometimes in ways Rohde does not articulate and may not intend.

When Rohde's captors took him across the border into Pakistan, he was "astonished" to find "a Taliban mini-state that flourished openly and with impunity. ... We heard explosions echo across North Waziristan as my guards and other Taliban fighters learned how to make roadside bombs that killed American and NATO troops." These tribal areas, "widely perceived as impoverished and isolated," in fact had "superior roads, electricity and infrastructure compared with what exists in much of Afghanistan. ... Taliban policemen patrolled the streets ... foreign militants freely strolled the bazaars of Miram Shah and other towns."

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The obvious implication is that the Pakistani government and military were permitting the Taliban to maintain elaborate bases of operation, safe havens where combatants — Afghans, Pakistanis, Arabs, Uzbeks, Chechens and others — could rest, train and prepare to fight American and Afghan forces on the other side of the frontier.

Has that changed? Earlier this month, while I was visiting Pakistan, the Taliban attacked the military's General Headquarters, the equivalent of the Pentagon. Since then, a major campaign against the Taliban has been launched in Waziristan. It's too soon to say whether the Pakistani military possesses both the will and the capability to clear these areas and hold them for the long run. But perhaps that should be determined before aid to Pakistan is tripled as envisioned under legislation signed by President Barack Obama this month.

We also can infer this: Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida leaders are not living in caves or suffering severe deprivation as so many have believed. On the contrary, we must now assume they are ensconced in comfortable villas with electricity, running water, as well as guards, servants and maybe even wives to attend them.

Recent comments

When GW Bush vowed to hunt down bin Laden, I guess he really meant...

Go Bush! | Nov. 4, 2009 at 9:40 a.m.

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Or He is simply just another slacker.

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Image
Charles Krupa, Associated Press

New York Times reporter David Rohde, at Boston's Logan Airport in 1995, has written about his captivity by Taliban.

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