War, peace, death — and the Taliban

With multiple sources seemingly confirming the death of Mullah Mansoor, a welter of questions are asked and unanswered


Editorial May 23, 2016
A file photo of Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.

With multiple sources seemingly confirming the death of Mullah Mansoor, the titular leader of the Taliban, a welter of questions are asked and unanswered — for now. Some may be answered in coming days, others not for weeks or months. What is clear is that Mansoor and a man he was with were killed in a drone strike inside Pakistan. He was returning to Quetta from Iran and had a valid Iranian visa in the name of Wali Muhammad, s/o Shah Muhammad, and was carrying a Pakistani passport and ID card. Considering the fact that the vehicle the two men were in was reduced to a gutted shell, one might reasonably wonder at the survival of any documentation.

The strike was admittedly authorised by President Obama and was not carried out by the CIA but by the American Army, unusual in itself. The fact that the strike was outside tribal areas was not only unusual but unique, the Osama bin Laden raid excepted. Members of the Pakistan government were notified after the strike, and took 24 hours to craft a response, which was along the well-trodden path of a condemnation of American violation of Pakistan sovereignty.



Mullah Mansoor was a target once it became clear that the rumours that accompanied his accession to the position held by the long-dead Mullah Omar that he was peaceably inclined, were false. He had actively opposed the peace process in his 10 months at the top, and was widely credited with undermining the work of the Quadrilateral Coordination Group (QCG), which in the last week reiterated that a politically-negotiated settlement was “the only viable option for lasting peace in Afghanistan”. His death is going to add nothing to the possibility of the Taliban, Afghan or any other iteration, of coming to the negotiating table. The collateral damage is the likely demise of the QCG. He was also the probable architect of the current spring offensive in Afghanistan that has seen scores dead and injured — mostly civilians.

How Mullah Mansoor came to lead the Taliban is yet unclear, and at the time of his death, he was still consolidating his grip on an organisation that many within felt should be led by a descendant of Mullah Omar, despite a strong aversion to the creation of ‘dynasties’ within the Taliban more widely. So who now? In terms of profile, Sirajuddin Haqqani who was one of Mansoor’s two deputies is being bruited about. It was he that finagled some Taliban commanders into allegiance with Mansoor, against that is the perception by some commanders that he is “too close to Pakistan” — meaning under the sway or influence thereof — which may not chime with their plans for a complete takeover of the whole of Afghanistan rather than the 50-or-so per cent they control now.

The other potential casualty of the Mansoor strike is the never-easy relationship between Pakistan and the US. It is alleged that there was an unspoken agreement that while the peace process was still alive — the QCG — Taliban leaders would move freely between Pakistan and Afghanistan. But did that agreement extend to movements between Pakistan and Iran?

It may be perceived that the US has played a double game, a move not unknown on the Pakistan side, presumably as a signal that the gloves are off and there are to be no further blind eyes turned to the many contradictions and ambiguities that there are in Pakistani relations with the various Taliban groups. If so, then American exceptionalism will be extended to targets as they see fit, with Pakistan being informed post-hoc and strikes deeper into Pakistan not impossible to envisage. The Quetta Shura, now deep in discussions about succession, is unlikely to be sleeping in the same beds night-on-night. Is the death of Mullah Mansoor a game changer? Probably not as the die was already cast for the Taliban, which will continue to fight for control of Afghanistan — with or without the support of Pakistan.

Published in The Express Tribune, May 24th, 2016.

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COMMENTS (4)

wajid | 7 years ago | Reply Very balanced and cogent analysis.
Solomon2 | 7 years ago | Reply "Members of the Pakistan government were notified after the strike, and took 24 hours to craft a response, which was along the well-trodden path of a condemnation of American violation of Pakistan sovereignty." Under post-9/11 U.N. Security Council Resolution 1373, member-states have the binding sovereign obligation to deny terrorists safe-haven, fundraising, etc. Failure to do so nulls sovereignty with respect to other states' actions against such terrorists. Perhaps Pakistan should look to Yemen as an example. The U.S. carried out drone strikes against Al Qaeda in Yemen. Rather than condemn them as sovereignty violations, they were embraced by its president as welcome efforts to eliminate terrorists on Yemeni soil.
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