BARA, Pakistan – The only thing standing between Pakistan’s Taliban and the lifeline for U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan may be an Islamist warlord who controls the area near Pakistan’s famed Khyber Pass. In an interview with McClatchy, Mangal Bagh, who leads a group called Lashkar-i-Islam, voiced his disdain for America but said he’s rebuffed an offer from the Taliban to join them. Truckloads of food, equipment and fuel for NATO troops wind through the Khyber Pass daily to the bustling border at Torkham. Last month, Taliban fighters bombed fuel trucks waiting at Torkham to cross into Afghanistan, and last week, fighting between Bagh’s men and a pocket of Taliban resistance closed the highway for several days. Locals said that Bagh wouldn’t allow Taliban fighters to cross into the Khyber agency, which is part of Pakistan’s tribal belt and is now largely under his control. Bagh’s stronghold, the market town of Bara, is a half-hour drive from the center of Peshawar, the provincial capital, but an escort of his heavily armed followers is needed to reach his fortified compound in the countryside. ‘I’m not the ruler of Khyber, I’m the servant,’ said Bagh, 35, […]
Sunday, April 27th, 2008
U.S. Afghan Supply Lines Depend on Islamic Militant
Author: SAEED SHAH
Source: McClatchy Newspapers
Publication Date: Sat, Apr. 26, 2008
Link: U.S. Afghan Supply Lines Depend on Islamic Militant
Source: McClatchy Newspapers
Publication Date: Sat, Apr. 26, 2008
Link: U.S. Afghan Supply Lines Depend on Islamic Militant
Stephan: How is it, one might ask, that after expending trillions of dollars, and thousands upon thousands of lives, America's position boils down to one warlord in a tent on a treeless mountain, living a life little changed from the 16th century?