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India-Pakistan
Who is Baitullah Mehsud?
2007-12-30
Thought this might be timely given the Benazir Bhutto investigation. Mehsud is a part of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and has links to Matiur Rehman. If al-Qaeda indeed ordered the assassination of Bhutton, Rehman very likely was involved, and that makes Mehsud's involvement possible. So here is some background on the man.
By Anthony Bruno

"Allah on 480 occasions in the Holy Koran extols Muslims to wage jihad. We only fulfill God's orders. Only jihad can bring peace to the world...We will continue our struggle until foreign troops are thrown out. Then we will attack them in the US and Britain until they either accept Islam or agree to pay jizya (a tax in Islam for non-Muslims living in an Islamic state)." These are the words of Baitullah Mehsud, militant leader of the Mehsud tribe of the Pashtun ethnic group, from a BBC interview in January 2007.

Baitullah Mehsud is not a household name—yet. Terrorist leaders tend to be nameless and faceless until their deeds earn them infamy. Osama bin Laden's name was largely unknown to the public until Sept. 11, 2001. But with General Pervez Musharraf's recent imposition of emergency rule in Pakistan and his desperate struggle to hang onto power, Baitullah's name has begun to emerge in daily news reports coming out of Pakistan. Some portray him as an annoying stone in Musharraf's shoe, just one of several problems confronting the general. But others see Baitullah as a pivotal figure who could tip the political balance in Pakistan toward militant Islam and spark terror attacks throughout the world.

Baitullah commands a force of 20,000 to 30,000 fighters in the tribal areas of northwest Pakistan. He has dispatched suicide-bombers to kill Pakistani police and soldiers in Swat, Kohat, Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan, and Peshawar. On August 30, his forces brazenly captured 213 Pakistani soldiers and held them hostage for two months until his demands were met. One day after declaring the current state of emergency, General Musharraf reached a settlement with Baitullah, exchanging 25 militants in government custody for the captured troops. Musharraf later admitted that these men were trained suicide bombers, and one of them was under indictment for participating in a suicide bombing. As part of the deal, Baitullah agreed to expel foreign militants from his territories and stop attacking the army. But Baitullah has signed peace accords with the Pakistani government before and reneged on his word.

Baitullah has no formal education or religious schooling but is a natural leader with keen political instincts. He controls a critical battleground in the war on terror, South Waziristan, a tribal territory in Pakistan on the Afghanistan border about the size of New Jersey. The Taliban currently thrive in this region and Al Qaeda is welcome there. There's a better than even chance that Osama bin Laden is living somewhere in Waziristan under Baitullah's protection.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  sorry. The article was a great find! I wasn't my intention to criticize the info, - I just was expressing frustration how they always make these goat-herders look like these super-hero warriors. Please forgive!
Posted by: Whomong Guelph4611   2007-12-30 16:37  

#4  WG, I agree with your comments. Mehsud will get whacked at some point, either because he's insufficiently loyal to al-Q, or because he starts to imagine himself as the new emir with the gold-pipped, curly-toed slippers (these two possibilities are not mutually exclusive), or because someone in the Coalition forces just across the border finally is allowed to turn the man into cranberry jam.

In the meantime, this was the best background piece I could find.
Posted by: Steve White   2007-12-30 12:13  

#3  sorry, I guess I was being a bit tired and cranky. It's an interesting and informative article. But these guys are little more than intelligent barbarians. And as soon as their name and atrocities become known by the civilized west, they are dead men walking. It's spears v/s laser guided munitions. They aren't even close to being as big and important as they think they are.

Your days are numbered, bait-breath.
Posted by: Whomong Guelph4611   2007-12-30 11:13  

#2  Blah, blah. What a puff piece. I've seen this before. He killed Bhutto and now he's in the cross hairs. Bad news, Baitullah, as soon as you become a household name, it means your days are limited.

There's a better than even chance that Osama bin Laden is living somewhere in Waziristan under Baitullah's protection I suspect within a year or two at most, Baitullah will be "living" with him.
Posted by: Whomong Guelph4611   2007-12-30 05:04  

#1  I say we nuke them from orbit. Its the only way to be sure.
Posted by: Bunyip   2007-12-30 04:37  

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