http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/SOU-01-261113.html
Afghan spies take fight to IslamabadBy Shahab Jafry 
The
 November 1 drone attack that killed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (the TTP 
or Pakistani Taliban) leader Hakimullah Mehsud, and the subsequent 
appointment of Mullah Fazlullah in his place, was an Afghan intelligence
 maneuver aimed at "ending the talk of talks" and recommitting the TTP 
to its insurgency, Pakistani counterinsurgency officials have revealed 
on condition of anonymity. 
Chatter about possible TTP collusion 
with the NDS (Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security), long a 
concern for Pakistani intelligence, was not taken seriously till the New
 York Times' October 28 account of a US special forces raid on an Afghan
 intelligence convoy carrying Hakimullah's number two, Lateef
Mehsud, as he was headed for secret talks in Kabul. [1] 
Kabul's vendetta wars"The
 NYT story was not new information", said Pakistani intelligence 
officials who refused to be named. "We, and the Americans, have known 
this for a long time". 
Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence 
(ISI) believes that Fazlullah's track record made him the most 
convenient conduit for this arrangement. His group joined the TTP amid 
the chaos following the July 2007 Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) operation, 
which sparked unprecedented militant attacks and marked a major turning 
point in the insurgency. He portrayed the operation, along with drone 
attacks, as proof that Pakistan was playing into US hands in the garb of
 a war against terror. 
When his parallel sharia courts and 
public beheadings provoked military action in the Swat Valley in 2009, 
he was pushed into the Kunar-Nooristan mountain range across the Afghan 
border, from where he has continued to mount attacks inside Pakistan. 
These included the September 15 assassination of General Officer 
Commanding for Malakand Division General Sanaullah Niazi, Lieutenant 
colonel Tauseef Ahmed and Lance Naik Irfanullah. (Lance Naik is the 
equivalent rank to lance corporal in the Pakistan, Bangladesh and Indian
 Armies). [2] 
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces 
abandoned the Kunar-Nooristan area in mid-2009 after repeated attempts 
to secure the border, and it was here, according to tribal sources, that
 Fazlullah's association with the NDS matured. The accompanying 
photograph, obtained from an information source in the tribal area, 
allegedly shows the NDS deputy director Kunar, Ghafoor (far right), 
holding talks with two Fazlullah group commanders for Kunar region. This
 is the first time such evidence has been presented in the international
 media. 

Pakistan's
 intelligence officials say the NDS is not acting alone, but is rather 
the lynch pin of a deeper proxy network involving Indian and even 
American intelligence agencies. That is why the NYT story's novelty was 
not so much in its content but its timing. 
"If you look at it 
closely, you'll see the insurgency here suiting the Americans. The more 
the militants are engaged in Pakistan, the less hurdles the Americans 
face wrapping up in Afghanistan", said the intelligence officials. 
"In
 Hakimullah's case, it was pretty clear that those who invested large 
sums in arming the TTP would not allow it to submit to a negotiated 
settlement. It makes no sense for the handlers, except in buying time 
for it to re-arm". 
A typical security concern in such operations
 is fear of the proxy going rogue, or offering too much during talks 
with the enemy. Lateef's interrogation revealed doubts over Hakimullah, 
it is believed in Pakistan's covert networks. 
Isolated and 
paranoid, and besieged by commanders urging talks, there were concerns 
that Hakimullah might spill a few beans about his patrons in exchange 
for concessions - hence the hellfire missiles. 
"Why do you think
 they always know just where to find the man that matters most at the 
time with regard to peace initiatives?" they asked. "From Nek Mohammed 
to Baitullah Mehsud to Molvi Nazir to Waliur Rehman to now Hakimullah, 
there is definitely a pattern that cannot be ignored". 
The hit 
allowed the US to score political points at home and replace Hakimullah 
with Fazlullah, and gave the NDS greater leverage in the Pakistani 
theatre. 
The timing is seen as a warning for Pakistan from 
Kabul: As the US leaves, Afghans will not shy away from using the same 
dirty tactics they have long accused Islamabad of - such as offering 
their territory to launch cross-border operations and arming and funding
 militant proxies. The Indians, meantime, can wear down Pakistan's 
military in an internal fight, while keeping it engaged on the western 
border. 
Such a "mutually beneficial relationship" as another 
Afghan official is quoted as describing the arrangement, has deeper 
implications that have not been explained. Despite a measured public 
alliance, the TTP and Afghanistan's Taliban have been at loggerheads for
 some time. 
The Pakistani reaction has not helped clarify 
matters. Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar was livid at the Hakimullah 
strike, accusing the US of "sabotaging the peace process". [3] An 
official visit to the tribal areas to formally deliver the talks offer, 
he said, would no longer go ahead. The northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 
province's government threatened to block NATO supply routes if drone 
strikes were not called off by November 20. 
Yet the Taliban 
publicly denied any contact with the government, exposing the home 
minister's antics as "not so smart face-saving", according to Rasheed 
Safi, head of news at Radio Burraq, a trusted news source across the 
northern areas. 
Despite its open opposition to drone strikes, 
the federal government is not likely to support the threats of the 
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has already 
ruled out upsetting ties with the US, despite Nisar's remarks. 
What about the talks?Strangely,
 Islamabad seems completely unfazed by TTP's rejection of peace talks 
and promise of revenge attacks targeting Sharif's family and senior 
party members. The military and other security personnel, not to mention
 minorities, are, of course, fair game as well. Still, the center 
continues are posturing for peace, while center-right parties insist 
only drone attacks are preventing negotiations. 
The military, on
 the other hand, seems to have interpreted recent events more 
profoundly. For TTP's patrons in Kabul and Delhi, Fazlullah brings the 
double advantage of not only being physically closer to his handlers, 
but also boasting a network with greater penetration in settled areas. 
While
 senior Pakistani officers realize the inevitability of talks, they 
stress the right approach is first cutting off the insurgents' lifeline,
 which means disrupting their foreign funds and arms. Without isolating 
the TTP, talks can never be approached form a position of strength. 
But
 so far neither the government nor the military has succeeded in 
exposing the TTP's plans. Fazlullah is very good at influencing public 
opinion. As TTP chief of Swat, he bombarded traditionally conservative 
listeners with Takfiri extremism through illegal radio channels, earning
 him the nickname Mullah FM. The TTP is expected to have a far more 
aggressive disinformation campaign under Fazlullah, which will engage 
the Pakistani government's information machinery, and the military's PR 
wing. 
For now, though, the country remains bitterly divided. The
 uncertainty regarding talks, the constant criticism of the war - to the
 point of hardliners openly sympathizing with militants - have left 
Pakistan's political, social, military and media circles badly split. If
 foreign powers are indeed colluding to help paralyze Islamabad, their 
script is playing out well.