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Home » Afghan Update » Paks Rumbling with Afghan Rebels?

Paks Rumbling with Afghan Rebels?

taliban.jpg

Here’s a lit­tle tid bit on the cut­ting room floor from last week’s inter­view with the Pentagon’s pol­icy chief, Eric Edelman.

The other day I got an email from a source of mine who claimed some of his bud­dies work­ing in the pri­vate secu­rity indus­try in Pakistan and Afghanistan told him Pakistani intel­li­gence offi­cers have been found in “non life-​​supporting pos­tures” after skir­mishes or air strikes on insur­gents in Afghanistan.

In other words, ele­ments within Pakistan’s ISI are directly aid­ing anti-​​coalition forces in Afghanistan — some­times engag­ing in com­bat oper­a­tions with them.

I asked Edelman what the deal was…here’s a brief tran­script of how that con­ver­sa­tion went:

Defense Tech: In Afghanistan, have you seen any evi­dence of Pakistani agen­cies’ involve­ment in assist­ing the Taliban and other par­ties within Afghanistan against US troops and also within the [fed­er­ally admin­is­tered tribal areas]?

Edelman: I think that, you know, there’s a long his­tory here. The Pakistan gov­ern­ment for a very long time has regarded Afghanistan as its ‘strate­gic depth’ and clearly there have been rela­tion­ships that go back to the Mujahaddin era that have per­sisted. We’ve had some con­cerns about it, we’ve expressed those con­cerns. We had a meet­ing with the head of ISI, gen­eral Pasha … my view is we ought to give him a chance to see how he can han­dle his new respon­si­bil­i­ties and go from there.

Defense Tech: So is that a ‘yes?’

Edelman: You’ll have to make a judg­ment on whether that was a yes or not.

Defense Tech: So you have seen involvement…?

Edelman: As I said there have been per­sis­tent ties that have with­stood over a long period of time and we’ve expressed con­cerns over those ties.

Sounds to me like a yes…What do you all think?

– Christian

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November 17th, 2008 | Afghan Update | 418814 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2008/11/17/paks-rumbling-with-afghan-rebels/Paks+Rumbling+with+Afghan+Rebels%3F2008-11-17+21%3A00%3A43Ward You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Tim says:
    November 17, 2008 at 4:15 pm

    There’s a per­sis­tent his­tory of jour­nal­ists try­ing to reduce com­plex prob­lems to sim­plis­tic answers, like bad­ger­ing peo­ple for a sim­ple yes or a no to their favorite ques­tion of the day, instead of dig­ging deeper. We’ve expressed our con­cerns about this behav­ior, and we’re will­ing to give them time to learn from their experiences.

    Reply
  2. CR says:
    November 17, 2008 at 4:55 pm

    Not a suprise.….the rela­tion­ship between the ISI and the Taliban goes way back.

    Reply
  3. kabura says:
    November 17, 2008 at 6:15 pm

    It is ter­ri­fy­ing that Mr. Edelman doesn’t express him­self clearly on the issue of ISI involve­ment with the Taliban and al-​​Qaeda. Edelman belongs to a Western cat­e­gory which has always been apolo­getic to the “Axis of Evil” of ISI+alQaeda+Taliban.
    ISI is respon­si­ble for 9/​11 and the con­tin­ued strife and insta­bil­ity in Afghanistan. This is clear as the sun!
    The most dan­ger­ous and ter­ri­fy­ing aspect of Mr. Edelman, who is unfor­tu­nately the pol­icy chief at the Pentagon, is that he is ask­ing for “more time” for the ISI to prove us wrong. But Mr. Edelman should remem­ber that he will be held respon­si­ble for his neg­li­gence of ISI.
    “Time” is exactly what the ter­ror­ist and extrem­ist ISI wishes for. Seven years, plus bil­lions of dol­lar in cash, arms, polit­i­cal and diplo­matic sup­port to the Pakistani army, thou­sands of civil­ian deaths, mil­i­tary losses etc. seem not to be anough for Edelman and the likes, who should be dis­missed for incom­pe­tence from the U.S. army and admin­is­tra­tion.
    Remember: The only way to sta­bi­lize and achieve a last­ing suc­cess in Afghanistan is to destroy ISI, which is noth­ing but al-​​Qaeda and Taliban. Otherwise pre­pare your­self for a defeat in Afghanistan.
    Then Mr.

    Reply
  4. Jim says:
    November 17, 2008 at 7:50 pm

    That read like a yes.
    Should any­one be sur­prised? No.

    Reply
  5. drm says:
    November 18, 2008 at 12:27 am

    Conflating the Taliban with Al Quaeda is a huge mis­take. They arent the same thing at all. The Taliban are islamic nation­al­ists first and fore­most. Al-​​Quaeda were some­thing alto­gether dif­fer­ent, and who hap­pened base them­selves in Afghanistan for rea­sons of con­ve­nience, as well as access to a large com­mu­nity if vet­er­ans of the wars against the Soviets. “Al-​​Quaeda” means “the base”, and orig­i­nally referred to a data­base of Afghan war vet­er­ans held by a Saudi Charity.
    Of course the Pakis have rela­tion­ships with Afghans of all stripes — Taliban and oth­ers. They were the pri­mary back­ers of the Taliban, with American sup­port, for many many years. I imag­ine that they view the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion as tem­po­rary, and that even­tu­ally the Taliban or its suc­ces­sors will rule Afghanistan again at some point in the future. It would be in their best inter­ests to keep rela­tion­ships will all par­ties that rule or may rule Afghanistan.
    “per­sis­tent ties that have with­stood over a long period of time” — cant imag­ine any­one let­ting go of those easily.

    Reply
  6. Wembley says:
    November 18, 2008 at 8:36 am

    This helps to under­line that mil­i­tary action is never goign to resolve the con­flict.
    Without polit­i­cal engage­ment it will never get any bet­ter — and may get a lot worse. Pakistan is a large and pop­u­lous nation which can­not sim­ply be ignored, and they have their inter­ests too.

    Reply
  7. Roy Smith says:
    November 18, 2008 at 8:39 am

    I’ve said this before that I believe that the rea­son the U.S. & NATO have not sent more troops into Afghanistan(with appro­pri­ate heavy armor) is because of the poten­tial stran­gle­hold that Pakistan,Iran,& the for­mer Soviet Central Asian States have over Afghanistan. If all of these nations,backed by both Russia AND China,put their col­lec­tive heads together,they could throw up a block­ade to pre­vent U.S. & NATO troops from going in &/​or out of Afghanistan. With Georgia,Turkey,& Azerbaijan also poten­tially join­ing up with these “block­ade part­ners & India & the Ukraine remain­ing “neu­tral,” there is absolutely no way to resup­ply Afghanistan by land,air,or sea. There will be no Afghan ver­sion of a “Berlin Airlift” in this sce­nario. We seri­ously need to cut our losses in Afghanistan & get out NOW.We should leave Afghanistan first before we leave Iraq.

    Reply
  8. Andre says:
    November 18, 2008 at 9:17 am

    The answer is ‘YES’ but not a clear cut one.
    ISI has to play with both sides. The rea­son for most of us is not appar­ent but impor­tant enough for Pakistani gov­ern­ment.
    Pakistan is made up of many nation­al­i­ties and last but not least Pashtuns (http://​en​.wikipedia​.org/​w​i​k​i​/​P​a​s​h​tun) liv­ing in moun­tain­ous tribal area along with Taliban and Al-​​Quaeda. Pashtuns are eth­nic Afghans who essen­tially existed on their own for cen­turies in those areas and are not very friendly to for­eign armies oper­at­ing in their home coun­try — Afghanistan. To add to this, Pakistani govt doesn’t have much of a con­trol of those areas. Now, if they decide to move in and lay down the law they will essen­tially might ignite local upris­ing (Pashtuns are 2nd largest eth­nic group in Pakistan) which obvi­ously is not their inten­tion. Therefore, most of the time Pakistani gov­ern­ment appears to ‘sit on the fence’ when it comes to curb­ing cross-​​border attacks into Afghanistan and ISI keeps play­ing both sides.
    Coincidently enough, here is recent arti­cle (http://​news​.bbc​.co​.uk/​2​/​h​i​/​s​o​u​t​h​_​a​s​i​a​/​7​7​3​4​7​6​4​.​stm) on cross-​​border Nato attack into Pakistan and typ­i­cal Pakistani response to it (I don’t pass a judg­ment here).
    So con­sid­er­ing the sit­u­a­tion, we might just have to get used to ‘not so clear answers’ and get on with sh**t shov­ing our­selves. Such is the nature of this game.

    Reply
  9. pedestrian says:
    November 18, 2008 at 10:38 am

    Christian, it has been well known for ISI sup­port for these ter­ror­ist ele­ments. It was no sur­prise for me either. The ISI has also been engag­ing dis­in­for­ma­tion against the US gov­ern­ment on deaths of ter­ror­ist offi­cials within Pakistan. If you have any con­nec­tion to DAWN, or some­one who could hook you up, you may find much more about this.

    Reply
  10. Aussie Armchair General says:
    November 18, 2008 at 11:35 pm

    >The only way to sta­bi­lize and achieve a last­ing suc­cess in Afghanistan is to destroy ISI
    Exactly how do you pro­pose that the U.S. carry out this task? Cruise mis­siles on ISI head­quar­ters? Logistical con­cerns alone dic­tate that the U.S. needs Pakistan on its side. To say noth­ing of con­cerns of Pakistan and its nuclear weapons falling under the con­trol of the Taliban and other rad­i­cal groups.
    >They were the pri­mary back­ers of the Taliban, with American sup­port, for many many years.
    Since when did the U.S. sup­port the Taliban? Once the Soviets were kicked out of Afghanistan the U.S. indif­fer­ence to Afghanistan was almost total. The Taliban are largely the cre­ation of ISI.
    Yes the Pakistan gov­ern­ment has legit­i­mate “inter­ests”. These don’t include directly sup­port­ing the Taliban or even just turn­ing a blind eye to the cre­ation of sanc­tu­ar­ies within Pakistan that per­mit the Taliban to cre­ate chaos in Afghanistan. The U.S. needs to address the legit­i­mate Pakistan secu­rity con­cerns by bro­ker­ing a set­tle­ment between India and Pakistan over Kashmir and to take what­ever steps are nec­es­sary to make the Pakistanis see that Afghanistan is not and will not become part of some encir­clement of Pakistan by India.
    That’s the car­rot — the stick is direct action against Al-​​Qaeda and their Pashtun sup­port­ers and pro­tec­tors and the threat of the U.S. boost­ing the inter­ests of India in the region at the expense of Pakistan if Pakistan fails to coop­er­ate. Plus call­ing a halt to the bil­lions of dol­lars the U.S. is spend­ing to prop up Pakistan’s gov­ern­ment.
    For the U.S. it is a bal­anc­ing act: it can­not afford to under­mine the Pakistani to the extent that Pakistan becomes a failed state. Not when it has nukes. Nor can it con­tinue to per­mit sanc­tu­ar­ies in the NWF to con­tinue unmolested.

    Reply
  11. Jerry Gyreene says:
    November 19, 2008 at 1:24 am

    Thanks for the heads up, Chris’!!
    btw.……interesting photo, hmmnn?
    WINK!!!
    JG

    Reply

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