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Abdul Haq - The "Real" Story - The man, US involvement, betrayal and death
Various news sources | 10-26&27, 2001 | Various, compiled by enlightiator

Posted on 10/27/2001 9:57:46 AM PDT by Enlightiator

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1 posted on 10/27/2001 9:57:46 AM PDT by Enlightiator
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To: Enlightiator; harpseal; Travis McGee; Victoria Delsoul; Spirit Of Truth; Manny Festo...
ping
2 posted on 10/27/2001 10:06:13 AM PDT by Sabertooth
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To: Enlightiator
Excellent wrap-up.

If the CIA Director and anyone else involved in this debacle isn't immediately fired - we're in for a long, long war.

The question I have is whether the US Central Command even knew this guy was in the country or if they only found out after the call from McFarlane. I would imagine the latter.

3 posted on 10/27/2001 10:26:07 AM PDT by Kenyon
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To: Kenyon
If the CIA Director and anyone else involved in this debacle isn't immediately fired - we're in for a long, long war.

I'd say a short, losing war.

4 posted on 10/27/2001 10:35:31 AM PDT by Cachelot
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To: Enlightiator
Bin Laden is the Taliban. IF anyone set this up it was him. We have to be meaner than our enemy if we want to win. And to heck with Afghanistan. We are after terrorists. If the Arab world cannot see what is wrong with the 9-11 attacks and hand the terrorists over then we have no choice. Its either our turf or theirs.
5 posted on 10/27/2001 10:43:29 AM PDT by dalebert
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To: Enlightiator
Disgraceful.
6 posted on 10/27/2001 10:44:35 AM PDT by veronica
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To: dalebert
Bin Laden is the Taliban. IF anyone set this up it was him

Maybe, but I would not rule out certain individuals in the Pakistan Intelligence service (ISI) as being involved in the betrayal at this point, some of them are known to be Taliban sympathizers.

7 posted on 10/27/2001 10:57:40 AM PDT by Enlightiator
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To: Enlightiator
Good research. Here's another

San Jose Mercury

Guerrilla fighter's death a blow to U.S. strategy
Posted 12:15 a.m. EDT Saturday Oct. 27:

By MICHAEL ZIELENZIGER and KARL SCHOENBERGER
Knight Ridder Newspapers

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Afghanistan's ruling Taliban on Friday captured and executed the legendary guerrilla fighter Abdul Haq, a key opponent of the Taliban from Afghanistan's largest ethnic group, the Pashtun.

His death is a significant blow to the U.S. strategy of creating an indigenous opposition in Afghanistan that could revolt against the Taliban leadership and is also an important psychological victory for the Taliban, although Haq no longer commanded troops fighting the hard-line regime.

The burly and bearded Haq gained a fierce reputation as a mujahadi, or holy warrior, fighting the Soviet invasion of his country during the late 1980s, during which he lost a foot.

He had secretly journeyed into Afghanistan last Sunday from Pakistan, his aides said, in hopes of building support among ethnic Pashtun tribes for a transitional government being organized on behalf of former King Mohammed Zahir Shah.

Afghanistan's Foreign Ministry said Haq, 43, and two others were arrested early Friday morning near Jalalabad and had been executed "on the basis of the verdict of the Ulema (Muslim clerics) that anyone who assists the United States is liable to be killed," a spokesman said.

Late Friday evening, a close aide to Haq, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the legendary warrior had been killed. "They hung him and left his body out on the street in Kabul, " the associate said bitterly. "I can't believe they'd be that stupid to kill him. Maybe an Arab might have done it, but no Pashtun would have killed Abdul Haq."

In territory held by the anti-Taliban United Front, also known as the Northern Alliance, response to Haq's death was muted. He was not regarded highly by the United Front because he no longer commanded troops against the Taliban and he was not seen as a major peacemaker.

Haq's aide said Haq and a party of 19 had been ambushed about 10:30 p.m. Thursday while traveling in Logar province.

HAQ CALLED U.S. FOR HELP; IT WAS TOO LATE

In his final hours, Haq called on the United States for help.

He and his party were isolated on a road west of Jalalabad and "knew there were Taliban up ahead of him, and behind," said former national security adviser Robert McFarlane, who, from Washington, was in indirect contact with the Afghan commander. Haq's nephew placed a satellite phone call to James Ritchie, an American with long experience in Afghanistan, in Peshawar. Ritchie called McFarlane, who alerted the U.S. military. They responded, but "it was too late," McFarlane said in a telephone interview Friday.

The Taliban said they had fought off efforts by U.S. helicopter crews to extricate Haq, but Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Stufflebeem said there was no American rescue effort on his behalf.

"He had gone in to coordinate the activities of other military commanders" in the Pashtun region, McFarlane said, adding that Haq's death means "a huge loss of the most charismatic leader in the Pashtun nation."

Haq's aide denied that Haq was a spy.

"The U.S. never offered him any help," the aide complained. "They never gave him any money, even though they often compromised his position, both inside and outside of Afghanistan, by suggesting they were. We spent two years trying to get assistance from the United States, and in the end they never offered him anything of substance."

The aide also denied Taliban reports that Haq was captured after a firefight in which four Taliban soldiers and three civilians were injured: "There was no firefight; the group had only four guns between them. They had nothing to fight with."

"His mission was not against the Taliban," said Haje Din Mohammed, Haq's older brother in Peshawar. "It was a mission for Afghanistan. It was a mission for peace."

'ON A MISSION FOR PEACE, NOT FOR WAR'

Haq had visited Rome recently to confer with the exiled former king, and was trying to organize a variety of other ethnic Pashtun leaders to repudiate the Taliban and form a political movement that could replace the hard-line government. He had been living in Dubai, where he was a businessman, but had returned recently to Peshawar to help organize anti-Taliban opposition.

In Rome, A. Hamid Sidiq, a spokesman for the former king, said Haq "was on a mission for peace, not for war. He was not going to fight anyone, but to talk to tribal elders" and tell them about the peace initiative the former king had undertaken.

Haq was the second important Afghan warrior the Taliban killed in recent months. On Sept. 9, two days before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, suicide bombers masquerading as journalists fatally wounded opposition leader Ahmed Shah Massood, head of the United Front, who died of his injuries several days later.

On Friday, Pakistani government officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also reported that in Pakistan's remote Northwest Frontier Province, about 15,000 armed Muslim radicals loyal to Sufi Mohammed, a local religious leader, would begin marching into Afghanistan on Saturday to take up the Taliban cause.

"They have been waiting on the roadsides for the signal of the Taliban for them to come," one official said. "Tomorrow they will be on the move."

(Knight Ridder correspondents Andrew Maykuth, Warren P. Strobel and Tom Infield contributed to this report.)


8 posted on 10/27/2001 11:13:53 AM PDT by AGAviator
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To: Sabertooth
This is what happens when you set your sights on nation building. I'd rather we bury Taliban and then worry about a replacement government.
9 posted on 10/27/2001 11:16:27 AM PDT by onyx
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To: Enlightiator
This is a Joke , Please first we start this war and let a lawyer save Mullah Mohammed Omar life

then we trust the Pakistani's who setup this Government , who in turn plays us like a fool and let Hag get slaughtered. We have no Miltary plan. Spending 300,000 or more per tank or broken Helicopter and show highlights like we achived anything PLEASE this is a close to Clinton and firing into a tent with missles

WHO IS IN CHARGE OF THESE BLUNDERS

10 posted on 10/27/2001 11:16:42 AM PDT by scooby321
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To: AGAviator
Thanks for the article, AGAviator. Heres another from The Frontier Post (Pakistan):

Major setback for efforts aiming at political dispensation
Syed Anwer
Updated on 10/27/2001 12:16:48 PM

PESHAWAR: Afghanistan’s puritanical Taliban militia Friday mowed down former mujahideen commander Abdul Haq after capturing him in Logar province.

Haq, who had attracted widespread media attention after returning to Peshawar recently and making known his intention to embark on a peace mission, had slipped into Afghanistan to prepare ground for a broad-based government led by former monarch Zahir Shah.

Taliban’s official Bakhtar news agency said he was executed for treason.

Haq was captured early Friday, apparently after one of his sponsors in Afghanistan betrayed him.

The number of his companions executed with him is disputed, put by various media reports at 3, 5, and 8.

Unconfirmed reports from inside Afghanistan say he was accompanied by a squad of 40, all of who were either killed in the skirmish or executed after arrest.

The Frontier Post has learnt that the Taliban security apparatus apprehended the former Mujahideen commander in Logar province, some 30 miles east of Kabul, on a tip-off.

Reports say Haq, who was accompanied by at least 40 fighters, posed resistance, but was overpowered.

The gun battle between Haq’s party and the Taliban left four Taliban soldiers and three civilians were injured, Bakhtar said.

The overwhelmed former commander was charged with espionage for the United States and Britain, and was executed under a religious decree that stipulates death for anyone spying for enemy.

According to Bakhtar, Haq was found with two satellite telephones, some cash in US dollars, and unspecified documents.

Reliable Afghan sources told The Frontier Post that Commander Haq ventured into Afghanistan after contacts with the Taliban administrator of Hisarak Ghilji district of Nangarhar province.

The administrator agreed to hand over conrol of the district to Commander Haq in return for a large sum of money.

But the administrator is said to have informed Taliban intelligence about the deal and due to this secret plot-a move that led to Commander Haq’s death.

Online adds: Taliban leader Mullah Omar said Friday that opposition leader Abdul Haq had been hanged to death.

Omer told the BBC that two of Haq’s men, captured with him, had also been executed.

Taliban forces captured Haq after surrounding his hiding place south of the capital, Kabul.

It is said that US helicopters launched a rescue attempt during the arrest, but failed, and that three Americans who had been traveling with Abdul Haq escaped during the attack.

Haq had been executed at 1300 local time on a religious edict issued by Mullah Omar and Muslim clerics.

The arrest had been described as a major setback in US-backed efforts to replace the Taliban regime with a broad-based and multi-ethnic government.

Naveed Siddiqui reported earlier: Former Afghan Commander and a former security minister, Maulvi Abdul Haq, has been arrested by the Taliban along with eight aides on Thursday night on charges of spying for the US against the Taliban.

His relatives in Peshawar confirming the arrest, denied espionage charges saying that he was on peace mission to Afghanistan, and planned to hold discussion with the Taliban authorities for restoring peace and stability.

Addressing a press conference, brother of arrested former commander, Haji Din Mohammad said Haq was shifted to Jalalabad soon after the arrest.

“However we do not have further information about his fate”, said Din Mohammad.

Rejecting the allegations of spying, he said that Abdul Haq was carrying only a mobile telephone while the Taliban charged him of carrying weapons and big amount of money to get the support of the Taliban commanders.

He said his was also among the arrested persons.

He appealed the Taliban to immediately release Haw and his companions.

He asked for immediate restoration of peace by giving representation to all the ethnic and religious groups.

Other reports quoted a nephew of Haq as saying the commander was alive.

Asked how he knew his uncle was alive, he replied, “We don’t have any source but we know that he’s alive”.

He refused to give details.

11 posted on 10/27/2001 11:20:43 AM PDT by Enlightiator
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To: onyx
Let the Turks deal with setting up the replacement government. They've offered, and they're the only Moslem government with a good track record.

And like the Afghanis, they aren't Arab.

Here are a few links...

Turkey, Bangladesh may lead peace force in Afghanistan
Planned Afghan opposition meeting in Turkey delayed
Turks Want War -- NOW Interesting Pakistani News Article

12 posted on 10/27/2001 11:30:11 AM PDT by Sabertooth
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To: Sabertooth
My vote is with the Turks. Now let's dismantle the Taliban and blow all them into oblivion where even Allah won't be able to recognize them.
13 posted on 10/27/2001 11:36:29 AM PDT by onyx
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To: onyx
Nation-building keeps ***YOU*** from having to go bury the Taliban.

You are welcome to do it on your own.

14 posted on 10/27/2001 11:42:35 AM PDT by AGAviator
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To: AGAviator
You hate FR, why are ****YOU**** still hanging around?
15 posted on 10/27/2001 11:45:50 AM PDT by onyx
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To: AGAviator
He and his party were isolated on a road west of Jalalabad and "knew there were Taliban up ahead of him, and behind," said former national security adviser Robert McFarlane, who, from Washington, was in indirect contact with the Afghan commander. Haq's nephew placed a satellite phone call to James Ritchie, an American with long experience in Afghanistan, in Peshawar. Ritchie called McFarlane, who alerted the U.S. military. They responded, but "it was too late," McFarlane said in a telephone interview Friday.

The more I read about this - the angrier I get.

You mean to tell me that someone of the stature of Abdul Haq on a critical mission on our behalf had to resort to having a Pakistanian business associate call an ex-National Security Advisor to then contact the US Central Command to receive protection?

This is an umitigated disaster. He should have been shadowed with the utmost protection from the outset. He should have been in direct contact with our military (not CIA) the entire time.

A DISGRACE.

16 posted on 10/27/2001 11:47:41 AM PDT by Kenyon
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To: onyx
I hate people like you who stink the place up.
17 posted on 10/27/2001 11:53:18 AM PDT by AGAviator
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To: Enlightiator
bump
18 posted on 10/27/2001 12:02:14 PM PDT by Red Jones
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To: Enlightiator
Looks like an ill-conceived plan from the onset. Perhaps even Haq underestimated the Taliban's willingness to kill. If they searched out his family in Pakistan and killed them, why wouldn't they use him as a trophy inside Afghan borders? We've overestimated the Afghan people, too. The "freedom fighters" of a decade ago are long gone. Afghans are starved, subjugated and apathetic in a land of the walking dead.
19 posted on 10/27/2001 12:03:34 PM PDT by GVnana
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To: Kenyon
I agree. Our military looks lax. They won't take an interest in the fate of this good guy Haq and for the SECOND TIME they bombed that Red Cross depot by mistake. And on both things they act like it's just so ho-hum. This is terrible. We CAN do better. Why don't we?
20 posted on 10/27/2001 12:04:29 PM PDT by Theresa
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