PESHAWAR,
Pakistan — After months of violent infighting, an influential faction
of the Pakistani Taliban said Wednesday that it was breaking away
because of differences with the Taliban leader Maulana Fazlullah, in
what was seen as a major boost to Pakistani efforts to divide the
country’s most formidable militant group.
Azam
Tariq, a spokesman for the faction led by Khan Sayed, who is known as
Sajna, said in a statement that the group was splitting from the
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan because “the present leadership has lost its
path” — with the suggestion that foreign intelligence groups had undue
influence with Mr. Fazlullah.
For
the Pakistani Taliban, which has killed thousands of people in suicide
attacks across Pakistan since it was officially formed in December 2007,
the split is formal evidence of a profound factional struggle. And the
move is likely to shake up the web of operational and fund-raising
alliances that have made North Waziristan such a formidable hub of
international Islamist militancy.
The
schism also spells a probable end, at least for now, to efforts by
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to end the Taliban insurgency through
negotiation. A tentative peace process that started in February had
already ground to a halt amid tensions with the military leadership over
how best to proceed. A series of airstrikes last week against militant
targets in Miram Shah and Mir Ali, the main towns in North Waziristan, a
tribal region where many militants are based, suggested the military
had lost patience with talks.
The
very public nature of the split gave cause for celebration to Pakistani
intelligence and security officials who have been quietly encouraging
division in the Taliban ranks for months.
“The
split will have a far-reaching impact, in Waziristan and elsewhere,”
said a senior security official in Peshawar, speaking on the condition
of anonymity.
More
broadly, the split is the most significant sign yet that militants may
be struggling with strategic differences about how to proceed both in
the Afghan war, where American troops are withdrawing, and in the
struggle against the government and military of Pakistan.
And it is a personal blow to Mr. Fazlullah,
the Afghanistan-based militant chief who has struggled to keep the
group united since he took control last year, following an American
drone strike that killed his predecessor, Hakimullah Mehsud.
Although
Mr. Fazlullah, who hails from Pakistan’s Swat Valley, was seen as a
relatively weak commander, the Taliban had hoped he could contain a
violent dispute between rival factions of the Mehsud tribe. But that
infighting only intensified in recent months, pitting fighters loyal to
Mr. Sayed, who is known as Sajna, against those of another commander,
Shehryar Mehsud. Gun battles erupted in South and North Waziristan as
rival groups attacked bases and ambushed one another, leading to the
deaths of dozens of fighters.
The
tit-for-tat violence also spilled over into Taliban cells that operate
in the port city of Karachi, where the militants have become
increasingly powerful in ethnic Pashtun neighborhoods over the past 18
months.
Mr.
Tariq, the militant spokesman, held a news conference in North
Waziristan then issued a two-page statement outlining the Sajna group’s
grievances with Mr. Fazlullah and a rival faction from the Mehsud tribe.
The statement said the split was motivated partly by the feud with the
other Mehsud group — Mr. Fazlullah was seen as siding with their rival —
but also by his broader stewarding of the Taliban. The militant
movement had fallen under the control of “invisible hands,” the group
said — a likely reference to Afghan intelligence, which has been quietly
supporting Mr. Fazlullah at his base in the mountains of Kunar Province
in eastern Afghanistan.
The
most immediate effect of the split may be further fighting inside the
Mehsud camp. A senior aide to Shehryar Mehsud, speaking by telephone
from Miram Shah in North Waziristan on the condition of anonymity,
because he is not the appointed spokesman, stressed that his group
remained loyal to Mr. Fazlullah.
“We
were expecting this from Sajna because his group has long been
violating the central shura’s decisions,” the aide said, referring to
the governing council of the Pakistani Taliban. “We are still part of
the T.T.P. and will continue to work under our emir, Fazlullah.”
The
emergence of rivaling Pakistani Taliban groups echoes another shadowy
struggle across borders: one between the nascent Afghan intelligence
agency, the National Directorate of Security, and the Pakistani
military’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency.
Pakistani
officials and militant commanders said the incipient Sajna faction
enjoys the backing of the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network, both
of which use the tribal belt as a base to carry out attacks on military
and civilian targets in Afghanistan, and which have links to Pakistani
intelligence.
On
the other side is Mr. Fazlullah and the factions still allied with him.
Earlier this year, Afghan officials in Kabul said that the Afghan
N.D.S. had been quietly assisting Mr. Fazlullah at his hiding place in
the mountains of the eastern Afghan province of Kunar.
In
any case, Mr. Tariq, the Sajna spokesman, blamed that Afghan
intelligence support as the reason the Pakistani Taliban had
assassinated innocent religious scholars, carried out bombings under
pseudonyms, and turned against its fellow jihadi fighters in the Afghan
Taliban. “They are using the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan platform for
their own vested interest,” he said.
Mr.
Tariq added that Qaeda and Punjabi Taliban fighters, who are also
sheltering in Waziristan, had been “unnecessarily interfered with” under
Mr. Fazlullah’s leadership.
He
said that Mr. Sayed would from now on operate under the pseudonym
Khalid Mehsud — a change that may represent a reach for militant
gravitas, given that the nickname Sajna means “beloved.”
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