Limits of Usefulness

Explored by Musharraf, as he rewards Taliban hostage takers/beheaders with the release of a top Taliban leader, while imprisoning lawyers and dissidents. Newsweek

Pakistani lawyers, human-rights activists and opposition-party members can scarcely ignore the irony of their situation: while thousands of them are being beaten and locked up under 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 NEWSWEEK that the top man on the list was Mullah Obaidullah Akhund—the highest-ranking Taliban official ever captured by the Pakistanis.

… 

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.

Obaidullah, Haqqani and the 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.

Intelligence reports of Obaidullah’s release have raised concern among American officials. At the moment they’re still checking whether it was in fact the senior Taliban official who was freed and not someone else by the same name. A Pakistani military source denied to NEWSWEEK that Obaidullah had been released—but in the next breath claimed to be unaware that Obaidullah had ever been captured. At least two important Taliban commanders have confirmed to NEWSWEEK that Mullah Omar’s third in command is back on the loose. Another Taliban operative says Obaidullah spoke to one of his fellow fighters on the phone several days ago.

In any case the prisoner swap is a severe setback for U.S. efforts in the region. The Taliban and their Pakistani tribal allies have learned that hostage taking can yield big rewards

Topics: Pakistan, Taliban

  Posted by Jules Crittenden at 10:19 am on Sunday, November 11, 2007

2 Responses to “Limits of Usefulness”

  1. Dandaman Says:

    What’s the problem here? For decades America has been encouraging Israel to release terrorists, and it seems to work out for them, doesn’t it?

  2. kipwatson Says:

    I’m a bit dubious about criticism of allied leaders who are not democratic enough for our tender sensibilities, or whose successes are not instantaneous and overwhelming enough for a culture that draws more role models from fiction than history.

    There are other parallels (the Shah for example), but I would have thought the eventual catastrophe that followed the undermining and abandoning of President Diem of South Vietnam is lesson enough of the danger of this sort of thinking.

    We in the West ought to be careful we don’t exceed the limits of _our_ usefulness in this respect.

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