Taliban in new escalation against Pakistan
The world has been keeping its eyes on Afghanistan, since the Taliban's takeover of power in the country in August this year.
Everybody has been watching since
then how the movement would manage the affairs of Afghanistan.
In other words, the Taliban has been
under the test since then.
This might explain why the
international community has not recognized the Taliban government until now.
The same community wants to see
whether the movement will honor the pledges it made in the past, namely of reining
in terrorist and armed groups in Afghanistan and preventing the country from
turning into a safe haven for these groups.
However, the Taliban's actions have
started taking a new turn and this turn has been evident in the remarks made by
its leaders in recent weeks.
This is especially true in the case
of the Taliban's leaders' statements about neighboring Pakistan which accommodated
the movement for a long time in the past.
Early threats
The Taliban has been making threats
against Pakistan for some time now.
These threats came from the mother
movement in Afghanistan as well as from its branch in Pakistan.
The frequency of these threats
increased after the failure of negotiations between the Pakistani Taliban and
the government.
The Pakistani branch of the movement
wanted to hammer out a permanent ceasefire agreement with the Pakistani
government as of the beginning of this month.
The chief of the Taliban branch in
Pakistan, Noor Wali Mehsud, highlighted links on December 10
between his movement and the mother movement in Afghanistan.
The mother movement, he said,
rejected the ceasefire idea with the Pakistani government.
This is why, Wali Mehsud
said, the Taliban Pakistan would move ahead with its struggle for the
establishment of an Islamic system in Pakistan.
He added that his movement would
work to implement the Afghan model in Pakistan.
Support for Wali Mehsud's
position came from Afghanistan, particularly after the Taliban's seizure of
power in the country in August.
The Taliban even said that it might
deploy its forces along the border with Pakistan, for the first time since the
withdrawal of US and NATO troops from Afghanistan.