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India-Pakistan
Mansewer Dadullah is Deadullah or Aliveullah - Unauthorized Officials
2008-02-11
QUETTA, Pakistan — Pakistani security forces critically wounded a top figure in the Taliban militia fighting U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, one of six militants captured after a clash near the border Monday, the army said.
We've got at least two other versions of this going, both under Afghanistan and Pakistain, but this adds a bit more detail, along with another pound of mud.
Mansoor Dadullah, brother of slain Taliban military commander Mullah Dadullah, and the five others were challenged by security forces as they crossed from Afghanistan into Pakistan's southwestern province of Baluchistan. They refused to stop and opened fire, said army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas. "Security personnel returned fire. As a result, all of them sustained injuries and all of them were captured," Abbas said. "Dadullah was arrested alive but he is critically wounded."
"There's a difference between being dead and mostly dead. When they're dead, all you can do is go through their pockets looking for change."
Earlier, a senior military official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to journalists, said Dadullah died of his wounds while being flown to a hospital with the other injured men.
"[Gasp! Wheeze! Gag!] Roseburrrrrr..."
Two Pakistani intelligence officials, who declined to be named for the same reason, gave a different account of Dadullah's capture, saying he was nabbed during a raid on a religious seminary in a neighboring district. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the differing accounts.
That's because at least one and possibly both of the stories are complete and intentional lies. I'd guess the madrassah story to be the more likely, though whether it was a raid or not is another question entirely. It's just as likely, and maybe moreso, that there was a shootout between two Koran study groups and the cops were called to haul away the bodies.
Dadullah's capture comes amid growing Western pressure on Pakistan to crack down on Islamic militants launching attacks inside Afghanistan but increasingly destabilizing Pakistan itself.
Picked right up on that, didn't they? And Mullah Mansour happens to be on Mullah Omar's pooplist, rendering him expendable. So it's likely he's gonna heroically die of his injuries.
In Afghanistan, officials reacted cautiously. Spokesmen at Afghanistan's Interior and Defense ministries said they had no immediate comment.
"Piss off. We got nuttin' to say."
Lt. Col. David Accetta, the top U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan, said he could not confirm the report.
"Mullah Who'djasay?"
Dadullah rose in the militia's ranks as an important commander in southern Afghanistan after his brother was killed during a military operation in Afghanistan's Helmand province in May.
We know he's titzup. They showed the meat in that one.
Abbas, the army spokesman, said Dadullah was captured near Gaddal, a border village in Qila Saifullah district in Baluchistan. Two Pakistani intelligence officials, however, gave the location as Gwal Ismailzai village, in neighboring Zhob district. They said five militants, not six, were captured and wounded, some critically.

One of the officials identified those captured with Dadullah on Monday as Haji Lala, Khudai Dad, Khaliq Dad and Abdur Razzak. He said the injured suspects were whisked away by an army helicopter from Zhob airport to an unknown destination.

In July 2007, another prominent militant, Abdullah Mehsud, died in Zhob, apparently after he was cornered by Pakistani security forces. Mehsud was a Taliban veteran of Guantanamo Bay who began fighting Pakistani security forces after his release from the U.S. prison for terror suspects in 2004.

In March 2007, two months before Mullah Dadullah was killed in Helmand, Mullah Obaidullah Akhund, one of the two top deputies of Taliban supreme leader Omar, was arrested in Quetta — where Afghan officials claim Omar is hiding.

In December 2006, another top Omar lieutenant, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, died in a NATO airstrike in Helmand, near the Pakistan border.
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India-Pakistan
While Pak Burns Perv Releases Top Talib Murders Into The Wind
2007-11-11
President Pervez Musharraf's newly declared state of emergency, his government has just let more than two dozen militant Islamists out of jail. Protesters might be even angrier if Musharraf disclosed the names of some of those freed militants. Taliban sources tell NEWSWEAK that the top man on the list was Mullah Obaidullah Akhund—the highest-ranking Taliban official ever captured by the Pakistanis. As one of Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar's closest confidants and his defense minister until the post 9-11 invasion of Afghanistan, Obaidullah was No. 3 in the group's hierarchy and a member of its ruling 10-man shura (council).

His arrest on Feb. 26 seems to have been anything but a coincidence. That was the very day that Vice President Dick Cheney arrived in Islamabad on an unannounced visit to demand a crackdown on Taliban operations in Pakistan. Washington was out of patience with Taliban commanders not only roaming free in Pakistan's tribal lands but even being allowed to hide in plain sight in cities like Quetta--the provincial capital near the Afghan border where Obaidullah was captured, along with the Taliban's senior Zabul province commander, Amir Khan Haqqani and another Mullah Omar confidant, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani.

Obaidullah, Haqqani, Osmani and others might still be in jail if not for a Pakistani military convoy that encountered a rockslide on a highway in South Waziristan in late August. The vehicles were quickly surrounded by fighters loyal to the notorious Pakistani tribal warlord Baitullah Mehsud, a veteran Taliban supporter who operates training camps for suicide bombers in his territory. More than 250 government troops were in the convoy, and they all surrendered without a shot being fired. Mehsud later beheaded several of his captives before Musharraf agreed to a prisoner swap.
Jumpin' Jimminy Crickical! it all sounds soo Coincedinkyical! like it 'twer prearrainged or sumthin?
more Perv and ISI funnies at the linky
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Afghanistan
3 Hostage Swap-ees Killed along with Dadullah
2007-05-16
Implanted microphone/transmitter/homing devices pay off? Here's hoping the other two swap-ees are visiting Mullah Omar.

3 Taliban released for Italian journalist killed with top commander

KABUL, Afghanistan: Three Taliban who had been released from prison in exchange for a kidnapped Italian journalist were killed alongside the insurgency's top field commander over the weekend, the Afghan intelligence service said Wednesday.

Mullah Dadullah, a one-legged militant who orchestrated a rash of Taliban suicide attacks and beheadings, died of gunshot wounds in a U.S.-led operation over the weekend in the southern province of Helmand.

An official with Afghanistan's intelligence service identified the three others as Mullah Shah Mansoor — Dadullah's brother — Mullah Hamdullah and Commander Ghafar. They had been freed in March in a prisoner swap for the release of Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo.

The prisoner swap was widely criticized in Afghanistan in part because two Afghans kidnapped with Mastrogiacomo were not freed as part of that deal and were executed by the Taliban.

U.S.-led coalition forces, with assistance from NATO and Afghan forces, were able to track Dadullah to the village of Sarwan using "modern technology," said the official, reading an intelligence service statement. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the agency's policy.

In Islamabad, Ronald Neumann, the former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, predicted the Taliban leadership would "regenerate" after Dadullah's death, but said the recent demise of several top figures in the insurgency could dissuade others from joining the fight.

Neumann, who stepped down as ambassador last month, mentioned the killing of Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani — in an airstrike in southern Afghanistan in December — and the arrest of former Taliban defense minister, Mullah Obaidullah Akhund.

Neumann's was the first official confirmation of reports from Pakistani intelligence that Akhund was nabbed in the Pakistani city of Quetta in February. He gave no further details, including who was holding Akhund, the highest-ranking Taliban militant to be captured alive since the fall of the Islamist regime in 2001.

"For those Taliban leaders who have been out of the fight and are looking to get back into the fight, the fact that Osmani has been killed, Dadullah has been killed and Obaidullah has been arrested might say something to them about their life insurance policies," said Neumann, visiting Pakistan for talks on Afghanistan.

In Kabul, Lt. Col. Maria Carl, spokeswoman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force, said Dadullah's killing would not have been possible without the help of Afghan civilians and security forces, whose intelligence helped track him down, but gave no details on the nature of the intelligence.

NATO has said that Dadullah was killed after he moved into Afghanistan from his "sanctuary" — a reference to Pakistan, where many Taliban are thought to hide. Another ISAF spokesman, Maj. John Thomas, declined to say if Pakistan provided any intelligence that helped in the operation.

Security officials in Pakistan have hinted that a bombing Tuesday that killed 25 people in a restaurant in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar may have been revenge for Dadullah's killing. They said a relative of Dadullah was arrested in the restaurant a few days earlier.
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Afghanistan
Blinky sezs the jihad continues
2007-05-14
Mujahoodies,
The jihad goes on!
Wishing you well from Pakistan,
Mullah O

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - The Taliban leader Mullah Omar said the killing of the group's top field commander "won't create problems" for the hardline militia, a spokesman said Monday.
Nah. No big deal. Room service still ran me up a nice big glass of goat milk this morning, so not much has changed for me...
Qari Yousef Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, told The Associated Press that Omar and other top Taliban leaders offered condolences to Mullah Dadullah's family over the killing by the U.S.-led coalition — the first Taliban confirmation of Dadullah's killing.
Better him then me, right, Blinky?
Ahmadi read a statement attributed to Omar insisting that Dadullah's death "won't create problems for the Taliban's jihad" and that militants will continue attacks against "occupying countries."
Next time, use guys with two legs. They run faster.
Ahmadi said Omar and his council of top Taliban leaders decided against naming an immediate replacement for Dadullah.
Let's get Blinky out there leading the charge. Whaddya say, OMan?
"Mullah Dadullah was the commander of all the fighting groups. Now all of the mujahedeen will carry on his same type of jihad. They will carry out attacks just as Mullah Dadullah did in his life," Ahmadi quoted Omar as saying.
If da jihad turns out for them the same way it turned out for him, I'm all for it...
Ahmadi spoke by telephone from an undisclosed location.
...in the lobby of the Peshawar Hilton.
Dadullah was the second top-tier Taliban field commander to die in six months, after a U.S. airstrike killed Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani in southern Afghanistan in December.
Remember, Blinky. They come in threes...
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Afghanistan
Dadulla Dead; Difference Doubtful
2007-05-14
Good news/bad news/same good news/more bad news, in the name of balance. Some editing for continuity.
The killing of the top Taliban commander Mullah Dadullah, a one-legged fighter who orchestrated suicide attacks, beheadings and an ethnic massacre, marks a major victory for the U.S. campaign but in fairness, we must report it comes at a time of flagging Afghan support over civilian killings.

As victims of Dadullah's brutality celebrated his death Sunday, analysts called the killing the most significant Taliban loss since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. But even NATO acknowledged that Dadullah, who directed some of the Taliban's most notorious violence, would soon be replaced.
Every silver lining has a cloud©

Kandahar Gov. Asadullah Khalid, who called Dadullah a "brutal and cruel commander" showed the body to reporters in Kandahar who saw a one-legged corpse with bullet wounds to the head, chest and stomach. Qari Yousef Ahmadi, a purported Taliban spokesman, denied that the Taliban commander had been killed, but there appeared little doubt Dadullah was dead.

Dadullah is the second top-tier Taliban field commander to be killed in the last six months, after a U.S. airstrike killed Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani in December. Dadullah, Osmani and policy-maker Mullah Obaidullah had been considered to be Omar's top three leaders.

Rahimullah Yusufzai, a Peshawar-based editor for the Pakistani newspaper The News and an expert on the Taliban, said Dadullah's death was "the biggest loss for the Taliban in the last six years." But he noted that even though the Taliban were demoralized after Osmani's death in December, they quickly resumed attacks. "I don't think they can find someone as daring and as important as Dadullah," Yusufzai said. "I think maybe temporarily some of their big operations will be disrupted, but i don't think it will have a long-term effect."

Yusufzai said many Taliban fighters had been unhappy with Dadullah, saying he maligned the militant group with his beheadings, a rash of kidnappings and boastful videos that starred himself firing guns and walking in Afghanistan's mountains. "They thought he had become too big for his shoes," Yusufzai said.

Mustafa Alani, director of security and terrorism studies at the Dubai-based Gulf Research Center, noted that insurgent attacks in Iraq did not abate after the killing of al-Qaida's leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, last June. "In this sort of organization, people are replaceable, and always there is a second layer, third layer. They will graduate to the leadership," Alani said. "He is important, no doubt about it. Yes, it is a moral victory, but he's replaceable."
As opposed to our soldiers, who are leaving soon.

Still, Dadullah's particular brand of cruelty was unmatched inside the Taliban. Dadullah's men videotaped beheadings of Afghans suspected of cooperating with international forces or the Afghan government, and the suicide bombers he is believed to have commanded have killed or injured hundreds of Afghan civilians, soldiers and police, as well as dozens of international forces.

The Taliban's former ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef, said Dadullah's death would stir more violence and could motivate supporters to take revenge. He said negotiations were the only way to end the insurgency, echoing a call by Afghanistan's upper house of parliament this week for talks with Afghan Taliban fighters. "When they are killing one Mullah Dadullah, they are creating 10 more," Zaeef said.
Maybe not as experienced and elusive, though.

NATO said Dadullah moved into Afghanistan from his "sanctuary" - a reference to Pakistan - where he trained suicide bombers. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf admitted in February that Dadullah had been in Pakistan several times and eluded capture. Dadullah "will most certainly be replaced in time, but the insurgency has received a serious blow," NATO said.

The Defense Ministry spokesman, Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi, said Dadullah was killed in the Sangin area of Helmand province, but just in case you think this is all good news, we must point out that this is a region that has seen heavy fighting in recent weeks and where airstrikes on Tuesday killed between 20 and 40 civilians, according to Afghan officials and villagers and Taliban Tools™, the latest in a series of civilian deaths that has weakened support for the international mission.

Azimi said Dadullah was killed Friday, though the intelligence service and Kandahar governor said he died Saturday. He said Dadullah died in a shootout alongside 10 other fighters, and that military officials had reports Dadullah may have been at the battle site but weren't positive the information was true.
Maybe he was wacked by his own folks, who "...thought he had become too big for his shoes"

An ethnic Pashtun, the group that makes up the core of the Taliban and is prominent in eastern and southern Afghanistan, Dadullah lost a leg fighting against the Soviet army that occupied Afghanistan in the 1980s.
He stepped on a land mine. Maybe he never was in a battle - a boss, not a participant?

He emerged as a Taliban commander during its fight against the Northern Alliance in northern Afghanistan during the 1990s, helping the hard-line militia to capture the city of Mazar-e-Sharif. In 1999 he led a Taliban massacre of ethnic Hazaras in the province of Bamiyan, where the Taliban in 2000 destroyed two ancient Buddha statues carved into a hillside cliff.
Brave Lions of Islam started with statues, then worked up to women and children.
Since the Taliban's ouster in late 2001, Dadullah emerged as the group's most prominent and feared commander. He often appeared in videos and media interviews, and earlier this year predicted a militant spring offensive that has failed to materialize.
Of course it materialized. How do you think he got dead?
In March, London television Channel 4 aired an interview in which Dadullah said al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden was alive and well and in contact with Taliban officers.
I saw the interview yesterday. IIRC, he said Binny directed several recent attacks, then a few minutes later said he'd heard reports he was alive. Couldn't keep his stories straight.

He's dead, Jim:
The Taliban in Afghanistan says the younger brother of a top military commander killed over the weekend will take over as chief military strategist for the movement.

The Taliban named Mullah Bakht to succeed Mullah Dadullah, a one-legged fighter who was killed on Saturday in Helmand province in a joint operation involving British and Afghan troops and U.S. Special Forces. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said in a statement that Dadullah's death means "the insurgency has received a serious blow," but the Taliban moved quickly to name a replacement. His brother, however, is said to have less combat experience.
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Afghanistan
Top Taliban commander killed in Afghanistan
2007-04-24
Afghan and NATO forces surrounded around 200 Taliban fighters in southern Afghanistan, possibly including top militants commanders, while US-led coalition forces claimed to have killed a key rebel commander in the country's northeast, officials said on Tuesday. Afghan and NATO forces have surrounded around 200 Taliban fighters, including some senior militant commanders, in a village in southern Uruzgan province, interior ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary said. Bashary said the militants came under siege when they gathered for a meeting in Chora district and were warned to surrender or face an attack.

He said the surrounded militants included some top Taliban commanders but did not name any. Deputy Interior Minister Abdul Hadi Khalid told parliament on Monday that it was possible that Mullah Dadullah, the top rebel commander for the southern region, could be among the fighters under siege. Dadullah is believed to have been responsible for the recent beheading of an Afghan journalist and his driver. US forces killed Taliban commander Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani in Helmand province in December. Khalid said that if the militants did not surrender, the joint forces would move forward and capture them.
Just don't let them slip away, ok?
Meanwhile, Gul Haqparast, a rebel leader who had extensive ties to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the former mujahedeen government's prime minister and currently leader of a rebel group, was killed during a US air strike in Laghman province Friday, the US military said in a statement on Tuesday.
One of Hek's boys
"Coalition sources described Haqparast as a significant regional Taliban leader involved in assassinations, improvised explosive device attacks and assaults on Afghan and Coalition facilities in Laghman and Kapisa provinces," the statement said.

In another development, two policemen were killed and five wounded when a remote-controlled bomb blew up their vehicle in Shamelzo district of southern Zabul province on Monday, said Abdul Ghafar Safi, the provincial police chief.

UPDATE: Afghan and coalition forces launched an overnight operation late Monday in Bakwa district in western Farah province, said a spokesman for the provincial police chief Baryalai Khan. He said two suspected militants were killed and two wounded, while two police personnel were also wounded, and eight suspected militants arrested in the ongoing operation.

Acting on a tip in the volatile southern province of Zabul, Afghan army and NATO troops surrounded Taliban militants Monday evening and asked that they surrender, said regional Afghan army commander Gen. Rahmetullah Raufi. The Taliban opened fire, and the ensuing battle left 11 Taliban dead, but there were no casualties among Afghan or NATO troops, Raufi said.

Provincial police chief Gen. Mohammad Qasim Khan said NATO troops were also involved in the siege, but NATO and the U.S.-led coalition said Tuesday they had no information to support the Afghans' account and denied their troops were involved in such an operation. A Taliban spokesman in the south, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said the Taliban were not trapped and that Dadullah was not in the area.
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Afghanistan
Trapped Like Rats!: 200 Talib surrounded
2007-04-23
Afghan forces have trapped up to 200 Taliban fighters in a southern village, possibly including the militia's military commander,
(Mullah Dadullah?)
demanding they surrender or come under attack, Afghan officials said Monday. Afghan police and government officials said the suspected Taliban fighters were surrounded as they gathered for a meeting in the mountain village of Keshay in Uruzgan province on Saturday.

Provincial police chief Gen. Mohammad Qasim Khan said NATO troops were also involved in the siege, but NATO spokeswoman Lt. Col. Angela Billings said she had no such information.
Yup.
Khan told The Associated Press that Mullah Dadullah, a close aide to Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar, and other regional Taliban commanders were at the meeting when the village was surrounded. The security forces were still positioned around the village on Monday, he said. "We are trying to get him to surrender and to arrest these Taliban without fighting," he said.
Why? Whack the whole bunch.
Abdul Hadi Khalid, the deputy interior minister for security, told a security commission in parliament on Monday that it was "possible that Mullah Dadullah is among" those who were attending the meeting. He said Afghan officials had demanded that the Taliban surrender or face military action. He did not mention any deadline for negotiations. A Taliban spokesman in the south could not immediately be reached for comment.
He's at the meeting, too?
Khan said the Taliban fighters had gone into hiding in villagers' homes.
"Wot the...? Hey! Youse can't come in here!"
"Shuddup! Where's yer wife's clothes?"

After a winter lull in violence, Afghan, NATO and U.S.-led forces have stepped up operations in recent weeks, hoping to pre-empt a feared spring offensive by militants that threatened the already shaky grip of President Hamid Karzai's government. Killing or capturing Dadullah would be a major victory for the Afghan government and its foreign backers. A NATO airstrike killed senior Taliban commander Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani in southern Helmand province in December.
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Afghanistan
Obaidullah's 'arrest' won't stop offensive
2007-03-03
Pakistan’s reported capture of the former Taliban defence minister boosts its anti-terror credentials and delivers a setback to the insurgent movement, but is unlikely to curb another wave of militant violence this year, said analysts on Friday.

Intelligence officials say Mullah Obaidullah Akhund, one of the two top deputies of Taliban supreme leader Mulla Omar, was arrested in Quetta on Monday, the highest-ranking Afghan militant to be captured since the fall of the hardline regime in 2001. The arrest – yet to be formally announced by the Pakistani government – came on the same day US Vice President Dick Cheney made a swift visit to Islamabad to express concern over Al Qaeda regrouping along the border and a feared Taliban spring offensive in Afghanistan.

“There is no truth in the report. I have told you, I have talked to him. He is in Afghanistan.”
Some doubt remained over whether Akhund was indeed arrested. With neither NATO nor Pakistan officially confirming his capture, the Taliban media machine dismissed it as a “rumour”. A militant spokesman claimed to have spoken with Akhund over the telephone on Friday. “There is no truth in the report. I have told you, I have talked to him. He is in Afghanistan,” Qari Yousuf Ahmadi told AP by satellite phone from an undisclosed location. In December, the Taliban issued a similar initial denial of the killing of another top Omar lieutenant, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, who was later confirmed to have died in a NATO airstrike.
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India-Pakistan
Mulla Omar not in Pakistan: Taliban
2007-01-21
The Taliban on Saturday rejected claims made by a captured spokesman that Taliban chief Mullah Omar was in Quetta under Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) protection, stressing that the man did not know the movement’s “military secrets”.

The Taliban also rubbished statements by Doctor Mohammad Hanif, (whose real name is Abdul Haq Haqiq) that the group was being aided by Pakistan’s ISI agency and that it was operating suicide training camps in Pakistan. Hanif, 26, made the claims during a videotaped interrogation released by Afghan intelligence last Wednesday, following his arrest two days earlier while allegedly crossing from Pakistan into the Afghan province of Nangarhar. A Taliban statement posted on its website said that Hanif neither held a sufficiently senior position nor had been with the group long enough to know its “military secrets”.

“These claims have no basis and no proof,” said a Dari language version of the statement from “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan media committee." "Doctor Hanif wasn’t with the Taliban for long enough to know about the location of Amir-ul-Momineen (the Leader of Muslims). He is not old enough to know about Amir-ul-Momineen or to know about the Taliban military secrets.”

While the Taliban statement did not say where Mullah Omar was, it did go on to deny reports that its leaders had ordered the killing of Mullah Dadullah, the movement’s top commander in southern Afghanistan. Afghan officials had said that Hanif was found with documents alleging Dadullah’s involvement in the killing last month of Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, a close associate of Omar and Osama Bin Laden, in an air strike by foreign forces in the southern province of Helmand. The Taliban statement described Dadullah as an obedient and loyal fighter. “It is clear that he (Hanif) has been interrogated under pressure or things have been added to what he has said,” the statement said. Pakistan has also rejected Hanif’s claims as “absurd”.
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Afghanistan
Taliban commander seized in Afghanistan
2007-01-17
A prominent Taliban commander has been captured by NATO-led troops in southern Afghanistan. The militant leader, who has not yet been identified, was detained during a raid by NATO and Afghan troops on a compound in Helmand province, the alliance said on Wednesday. According to a NATO spokesman, the commander led insurgents in the volatile Panjwaii district of Kandahar province, said NATO spokesman Squadron Leader Dave Marsh. "This seizure of a Taliban commander once again shows that there is nowhere to hide for insurgent leaders," Marsh said.

Most of Canada's roughly 2,500 troops serving in Afghanistan are stationed in Kandahar province. Last summer, NATO forces staged Operation Medusa, the largest ground offensive in the alliance's history, in the region. The capture appears to be a victory for NATO forces, said CTV's Paul Workman, reporting from Kandahar. "NATO hasn't given us a name yet and details are really quite vague, but they seem to believe they've arrested a regional commander, somebody who may have been involved in directing attacks against Canadian forces, we don't know, but they believe certainly against NATO forces," Workman told CTV Newsnet.

The alliance said the commander was fleeing another NATO campaign in the region when he was captured in the Gereshk district of Helmand province.
"Curly-toed slippers don't fail me... ummm... now..."
"Stick 'em up, hoser!"
"Whut?... Say! Are those mukluks?"
"Goin' somewhere, eh?"
Marsh said alliance authorities are convinced the man is a regional commander that NATO forces have been watching for a long time. The raid came a day after Afghan agents arrested Mohammad Hanif, a purported Taliban spokesman, near the border with Pakistan. Hanif is one of two spokesmen who often contacts journalists on behalf of the militia. He was arrested at the border town of Torkham on Monday after crossing from Pakistan, said Sayed Ansari, the spokesman for Afghanistan's intelligence service. Two people traveling with Hanif also were detained, Ansari said.

Earlier accounts by Noor Agha Zooak, a spokesman for the governor of the Nangarhar province where the arrest took place, claimed that Hanif and his two companions were detained in a raid at a house further from the border crossing. It was not immediately clear what caused the discrepancy in the accounts. Zooak said Hanif was being questioned by intelligence agents in Nangarhar's capital, Jalalabad.
"Aaaaaiiiieee! I know nothing! Nothing!"
"Nothing, eh? Give him a dose of the plumber's helper, Mahmoud!"
"No, no!"
[PLUNGE!]
Weapons, cell phones and other documents, which were shown to journalists in Jalalabad on Wednesday, were also recovered.
"Really, sahib! They are not mine! Somebody left them here!"
[PLUNGE!]
"Aaaaaiiiiieeee!"
Hanif used to convey statements purportedly from Taliban leader Mullah Omar and comment on fighting in the north, center and east of the country.
"Mahmoud! My knuckle dusters!"
Another purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, confirmed Hanif's arrest in a phone call from Peshawar an undisclosed location, but said that the Taliban's governing body already has appointed Zadiullah Mujahid as his replacement.
"Okay, Zadiullah! Into the barrel wit' yez!"
Western and Afghan officials have claimed a number of recent successes against top Taliban officials, including a U.S.-led coalition airstrike that killed Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, a key associate of Omar and the highest-ranking Taliban leader killed by the U.S.-led coalition since the late 2001 invasion of Afghanistan. The Taliban has stepped up its attacks in the past year, and roughly 4,000 people have been killed in violence related to the insurgeny, according to a count by The Associated Press.
Most of them, of course, were Talibs. And the majority seem to have been bumped off by Canucks.
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Afghanistan
Taliban official admits U.S. strike killed military chief: report
2006-12-27
Wednesday, December 27, 2006 | 8:40 AM ET
A Taliban official has confirmed a top military commander with close ties to Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar was killed in an air strike on Dec. 19, according to a report out of Pakistan.

Akhtar Mohammad Osmani died when a U.S. plane fired at his vehicle in the southern province of Helmand, near Afghanistan's border with Pakistan, U.S. authorities said on Saturday. The area said to have been controlled by Osmani has been the scene of countless attacks against Canadian soldiers and other coalition forces since U.S. forces invaded Afghanistan to oust the Taliban regime in late 2001 for hosting bin Laden and other top al-Qaeda officials.

Taliban officials originally denied that Osmani had died. However, on Wednesday, an unnamed Taliban commander told the Reuters news agency that Osmani was indeed one of the three people killed in the air strike.

In a telephone interview, the commander told a Pakistan-based reporter that Taliban leaders had confirmed the death on the day it happened but warned members of the insurgent militia not to discuss it publicly.
Believe this? Sheesh, who knows. Mebbe they've finally realized that confirming our kills is a favor. Mebbe not.
They don't need to confirm our kills. We do. Osmani's dead? Check. Confirmed? Check. Next!
There has been no other sign of acknowledgment from the Taliban.

Osmani, regarded as one of three top associates of Omar, is the highest-ranking Taliban leader that the coalition has claimed to have killed or captured since the administration was ousted in late 2001. He was believed to have played a role in some of the most high-profile excesses of the Taliban's ultra-conservative rule in Afghanistan, including the destruction of the ancient Buddha statues in Bamiyan and the trial of Christian aid workers in 2001.
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Afghanistan
Slain Taliban Leader's ID Confirmed
2006-12-24
Forensic analysis and other information enabled the U.S. military to verify that a key associate of Taliban chief Mullah Omar was killed in an airstrike in southern Afghanistan last week, a spokesman said Sunday. The military is "very sure" it killed Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani although it can't provide visual proof as his body was "obliterated" in Tuesday's attack on a vehicle traveling through Helmand province, said military spokesman Col. Tom Collins. A Taliban spokesman has disputed that Osmani died in the attack, and identified another militant it claimed was killed.

Collins said Osmani was the highest-ranking Taliban leader killed by the U.S.-led coalition since the invasion of Afghanistan that ousted the hardline regime in late 2001 for hosting Osama bin Laden. He said Osmani's death would hurt militant operations.

Osmani was one of the two top Taliban military commanders in the south and southeast of Afghanistan and believed to be among Omar's top lieutenants. "He was hit by a precision air strike. The vehicle was destroyed and all the occupants were obliterated," Collins said. "We checked various sources, and we are very, very sure it was him in that vehicle."

Osmani had been captured by U.S. special forces in Kandahar in 2002, but "he was later released by mistake," Collins said.

Osmani was identified through forensic analysis, but not through DNA tests, Collins said. The type of analysis performed was classified information. Purported Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi claimed the airstrike in fact killed Mullah Abdul Zahir, a group commander, and three other Taliban fighters. "I confirm that Osmani is alive and is in Afghanistan," Ahmadi told The Associated Press by phone from an undisclosed location after the U.S. military announcement made Saturday.

But Qatar-based satellite channel Al-Jazeera, said that sources close to the Taliban confirmed to its correspondent in Islamabad that, "Taliban leader Akhtar Mohammad Osmani was really killed with his companion Maulavi Abdul Zahir Baloushi and a third unidentified person." Helmand provincial police chief Ghulam Nabi Malakhail also said both Osmani and Zahir were killed in the airstrike, along with two other Taliban fighters. The U.S. military only said Osmani and two associates were killed.

The U.S. said Osmani played a "central role in facilitating terrorist operations" including roadside bombs, suicide attacks and ambushes against Afghan and international forces, and had been "utilizing both sides" of the Afghan-Pakistan border. Analysts said his death could hamper preparations for an expected militant offensive in southern Afghanistan in early 2007.

The U.S. said Osmani was an associate of Osama bin Laden, Omar and Afghan insurgent leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, but Collins said he didn't know the last time Osmani had contact with any of the three.

During the Taliban regime that was ousted from power in late 2001 by U.S.-led forces, Osmani served as corps commander in Kandahar, the militia's seat of power, which would have placed him close to Omar, the Taliban's reclusive leader who has a $10 million reward on his head. In June, a man claiming to be Osmani - his face was concealed by a black turban - gave an interview to a Pakistani television network in which he said Omar and bin Laden were alive and well. He claimed to be receiving instructions from Omar.
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