Afghan authorities scrambled Sunday to confirm the fate of Taliban
leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour after US officials said he was likely
killed in drone strikes — a potential blow to the resurgent militant
movement.
The Taliban have so far not commented on the very rare US attack deep
inside Pakistan on Saturday, authorised by President Barack Obama.
Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour...
The apparent elimination of Mansour, who had swiftly consolidated
power following a bitter Taliban leadership struggle over the past year,
could spark new succession battles within the fractious movement.
The attack took place in Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan bordering Afghanistan.
“Mansour was the target and was likely killed” in the remote town of
Ahmad Wal by multiple unmanned aircraft operated by US special
operations forces, an American official said Saturday.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s office on Sunday confirmed the
strike, adding that they were investigating whether Mansour had in fact
been killed.
The deaths of Taliban leaders have often been falsely reported, and
Mansour himself was rumoured to have been killed last December.
“The Afghan government is trying to gather details regarding the fate
of Mullah Mansour,” the presidential palace said in a statement.
“This drone strike shows that terrorists fuelling conflict will not be safe anywhere.”
Two Pakistani intelligence officials told AFP the drones struck a
Toyota Corolla near the city of Quetta, killing two people whose bodies
were burned beyond recognition.
They did not confirm whether Mansour was among them but said the bodies had been moved to a hospital in Quetta.
Mansour was formally appointed head of the Taliban in July last year
following the revelation that the group’s founder Mullah Omar had been
dead for two years.
The group saw a resurgence under the firebrand supremo with striking
military victories, helping to cement his authority by burnishing his
credentials as a commander.
The Taliban briefly captured the strategic northern city of Kunduz
last September in their most spectacular victory in 14 years. The
southern opium-rich province of Helmand is also almost entirely under
insurgent control.
“Mansour posed… an imminent threat to US personnel, Afghan civilians
and Afghan security forces,” US Secretary of State John Kerry told
reporters during a visit to Myanmar Sunday.
“He was also directly opposed to peace negotiations.”
– ‘Fresh infighting’ –
But Mansour’s apparent death was not immediately seen as likely to
push the Taliban closer to peace talks. It could press them to show they
are still able to wage an aggressive battle, observers say.
“The war has been going on for so long, the Taliban has so many
leaders and so much ability to function at the local level even without
strong central guidance, that we would be well advised to keep
expectations in check,” said Michael O’Hanlon of the Brookings
Institution think-tank.
The drone attack came just days after representatives from the US,
China, Pakistan and Afghanistan held another round of negotiations in
Islamabad aimed at reviving long-stalled direct peace talks between the
Afghan government and the Taliban.
However, pressure has been building in recent months for the United
States to return to direct attacks on the Taliban, particularly via air
strikes.
“We need to take the gloves off those forces already in-country,”
namely those belonging to the United States and NATO, and authorise air
strikes, David Petraeus, the ex-CIA director and former commander of
coalition forces in Afghanistan and Iraq, wrote in The Wall Street
Journal in the past week.
NATO ended its combat mission in Afghanistan in December 2014,
pulling out the bulk of its troops, although a 13,000-strong residual
force remains for training and counterterrorism operations.
The Taliban, who announced the start of their annual spring offensive
last month, have already stepped up their campaign against the
Western-backed Kabul government for the season.
“Mansour’s apparent death will trigger fresh infighting and a new
leadership succession battle inside the Taliban,” Kabul-based analyst
Mia Gul Waseeq told AFP.
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