http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/4750.htm
<http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/4750.htm>

November 9, 2010                                                      
Special Dispatch No.3363

Pakistani Daily: Sophisticated Terrorist Group,         a Splinter of
Lashkar-e-Taiba, is Fighting in Afghanistan



An           investigative report in a leading           Pakistani
newspaper notes that a highly sophisticated           terrorist
organization,           which allegedly split from Lashkar-e-Taiba, is
reportedly           fighting against U.S. and NATO troops in
Afghanistan.

The           report in the Lahore-based Daily Times newspaper confirmed
that the U.S.           and NATO troops have recently witnessed a new
enemy which "is           not the           Taliban or the Haqqani
group."

Following           are excerpts from the           report:[1]
<http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/4750.htm#_edn1>

"Officials         confirm the presence         of a new, more modern
and sophisticated Punjabi Taliban in Kunar         province of
Afghanistan. They are a more militant         section of the
Pakistan-backed Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) who had         broken off from
their mother organization and refused to take orders from LeT        
supremo Hafiz         Muhammad Saeed.

"In         reality, this rebellious         group, which had just split
from the LeT, is the old Tehreekul         Mujahideen (TM)         and a
faction of the previously split Kairun Naas (KN) of the         LeT,
which had         been formed by the more fanatical Ahl-e-Hadith that
held the         Kashmir Conference         in 1990, attended by both
Hafiz Saeed and Professor Sajid Mir         [leading to the        
beginning of terrorism in Indian Kashmir].

"Daily           Times         investigations reveal two reasons behind
the split: Pakistani         intelligence         agencies have finally
decided to split the jihadi groups as a         policy to make        
them weaker, and Jamaatud Dawa (JD), LeT, TM, and KN split as        
they had become         too powerful; sectarian and ideological tensions
within the         Ahl-e-Hadith         faction about the concept of
jihad, as the more fanatical group         fighting in        
Afghanistan is more into the Arab mujahideen camp.

"It is to         be noted that         previously a faction split from
the JD in 2004 when armed         clashes broke out in         the
premises of its headquarters [at Muridke in Lahore], and the        
breakaway         faction, KN, vowed to kill Hafiz Saeed, the JD head.
Saeed had         previously         joined the Afghan jihad pretty late
in 1987 on the insistence of         Zakiur Rehman         Lakhvi, who
had traditionally headed the operational part of the         LeT [and
Lakhvi is now under Pakistani custody for his role in the 2008        
Mumbai terror         attacks].

"Organizational         structures of         the JD and LeT were
severely hurt by accusations from within the         JD about Hafiz
Saeed's involvement in nepotism, corruption, his second marriage        
to a fallen         comrade's widow, which became a personal issue with
Prof Iqbal,         a top JD         council member, who himself married
an underage Baltistani girl.         In a series of         blunders,
Saeed appointed his brother-in-law, Maulana Abdul         Rehman Makki,
then         a teacher at Medina University in Saudi Arabia, second in
command of         JD, which did not go down well with a lot of people,
especially         with Lakhvi, as         it was seen as an attempt by
Saeed to control the finances of         JD.

"In 2001,         Saeed also came under         fire when he renamed
Markaz Dawat Wal Irshad as Jamaatud Dawa,         and separated it
from LeT. Lakhvi disapproved of the decision then and Daily        
Times can confirm         that he has finally fallen out with the JD
chief now and is         in-charge of most         of JD's properties in
Sindh and directly controls the Muridke         centre, popularly
known as 'Markaz-e-Tayyaba.'

"Lakhvi,         said to be the         mastermind behind the Mumbai
attacks, has developed links with         Arab militants         in
Pakistan,         where he married his sister off with the top Al-Qaeda
terrorist,         Abdul Rehman         Sherahi. He was the one who
helped Lakhvi connect with top         Al-Qaeda and Arab        
leaders, and heavily invested in LeT's infrastructure.

"It should         also be taken into         account that the Jamaat
Ahl-e-Hadith also opposed the formation         of Markaz Dawat        
Wal Irshad (JD) because of possible Saudi support to it, which        
did not happen. JD         was also barred from recruiting students from
the Ahl-e-Hadith         madrassas as         they were under the
control of Jamiat Ahl-e-Hadith and openly         supported by the
Saudis. And it looks now, confirmed a former spy chief, 'that        
the new rogue         part of JD fighting in Pakistan         could well
be those who were behind 26/11 in Mumbai, you never         know'..."

Endnote:


[1] <http://www.memri.org/report/en/0/0/0/0/0/0/4750.htm#_ednref1> 
Daily Times           (Pakistan),           November 2, 2010. The text
of the report has been lightly           edited for clarity.





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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