http://www.bahraintribune.com/ArticleDetail.asp?ArticleId=132781&CategoryId=3

'Taliban regrouping on Pakistan border'

ISLAMABAD (AP)
Peace deals causing more attacks: Think-tank

A peace deal between Pakistan's government and Islamic militants in 
North Waziristan has created a virtual Taliban mini-state where mullahs 
dispense justice and fighters are launching cross-border attacks into 
neighbouring Afghanistan, a think tank reported yesterday.
The US military confirmed that attacks have risen sharply since the deal 
was reached earlier this year despite concerns it would give a freer 
hand to Taliban and Al Qaeda-linked militants who fled to Pakistan after 
the fall of the hardline regime in Afghanistan in 2001.
"Over the past five years, the (President Gen. Pervez) Musharraf 
government has tried first brute force, then appeasement. Both have 
failed," said Samina Ahmed of the International Crisis Group that 
published the report.
"Islamabad's tactics have only emboldened the pro-Taliban militants."
That grim assessment came against the backdrop of an alarming surge in 
violence in southern and eastern Afghanistan this year that has killed 
close to 4,000 people, threatening the Western-backed project to build 
rebuild the country and establish democracy.
Government policy has allowed militants "to establish a virtual 
mini-Taliban-style state," the Crisis Group said, citing reports of 
pro-Taliban militants attacking music, video and CD stores, closing 
barber shops, imposing taxes and establishing courts to impose summary 
justice.
The Pakistani government rejected the Brussels-based group's report as 
"baseless allegations" and described the violence across the border as 
Afghanistan's internal problem.
"There are no camps or centers where terrorists are being trained in the 
tribal areas," said Arbab Mohammed Arif Khan, secretary for law and 
order in Pakistan's semiautonmous tribal regions.
Pakistan, a key US anti-terror ally, has deployed about 80,000 forces at 
the Afghan border and launched numerous military operations against Al 
Qaeda-linked militants in the past five years, but with mixed results. 
In North Waziristan, heavy-handed offensives this year left hundreds 
dead and stoked local anger and support for pro-Taliban religious leaders.
The peace deal, inked in September after a June cease-fire, capped the 
fighting in Pakistan. But the Crisis Group reported "increasingly severe 
cross-border attacks on Afghan and international military personnel, 
with the support and active involvement of Pakistani militants." It said 
the ambivalent approach of the Musharraf government was "destabilising 
Afghanistan."
A senior tribal elder confirmed the Taliban had gained sway in North 
Waziristan. Tribesmen were bypassing the government and traditional 
tribal leaders and approaching their pro-Taliban leaders in the towns of 
Miran Shah and Mir Ali to settle land and money disputes. Religious 
students were even helping to direct traffic, he said. The elder 
requested anonymity because he had been threatened by militants for 
meeting government leaders.
Access to the heavily Pashtun tribal regions, a possible hiding place 
for Osama bin Laden, is restricted. Foreign journalists are not 
permitted there unless under government or army escort, and reports of 
militant activities are often difficult to verify.
In Afghanistan, US military spokesman Lt. Col. Paul Fitzpatrick said US 
and Afghan security posts along the eastern border with Pakistan had 
seen a spike in attacks from 17 in May, to 50 in August and 57 in 
October -- a more than threefold increase. Most of the attacks were in 
Paktika province, which lies opposite North and South Waziristan.
Attacks leveled off to about one a day in November, possibly because of 
the winter weather settling in, Fitzpatrick said.
He said the data were not conclusive but that the increase could have 
been influenced by the North Waziristan peace deal or by US military 
operations forcing more militants to operate close to the Pakistan border.

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