Why Afghan Taliban disavows its relationship with movement’s Pakistani wing?
Many researchers link the emergence of the Afghan Taliban
movement with Pakistan, and many even consider it to have a Pakistani origin in
the first place, or that it was launched in its actual beginnings from
Pakistani territory in the 1980s during the reign of former Pakistani President
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, despite this being contrary to the truth. But the
ideological and movement links confirm that the extremist movement has basic
roots in Pakistan, and even the leaders of the Afghan movement have often
confirmed that the Pakistani Taliban is an integral part of the movement and
not just a branch of it. So what has changed
recently that Suhail Shaheen, one of the prominent leaders of the Afghan
Taliban, has disavowed this historical relationship?
After taking power
As soon as the Afghan Taliban movement came to power in
August 2021, the strong relationship between the two wings of the movement in
Pakistan and Afghanistan appeared as if they were one movement, and the leaders
of the Pakistani Taliban appeared to roam freely in the streets of the Afghan
capital, Kabul, less than two weeks after the Taliban seized power, and in a
very ambiguous atmosphere, as the leader of the Pakistani movement, Noor Wali
Mehsud, appeared with a number of Pakistani Taliban leaders exchanging
conversations with Afghan citizens in public, which was impossible before, as
they were not allowed to simply cross the Afghan-Pakistani border under the
previous Afghan government of former President Ashraf Ghani or in the presence
of international forces then on Afghan soil.
The activity of the Pakistani movement on the borders
between the two countries also began to increase, and the clashes between it
and the Pakistani forces expanded and began to pose a serious security threat
to Pakistan, which intensified at the beginning of 2022. On December 10, 2022,
Mehsud announced that his movement is a branch of the Afghan Taliban, and he
refused to extend the ceasefire with the Pakistani forces. He also pledged that
his movement would implement an Islamist system in Pakistan similar to Afghanistan.
These statements and events reveal the close relationship
between the two wings of the movement, as well as the extent of their
congruence. Islamabad has always accused the Afghan Taliban government of
providing a safe haven to the Pakistani wing of the
movement and providing them with support and assistance.
Disavowing the Pakistani wing
With the great convergence between the two wings of the
movement, which was revealed by the actions of the leaders of both wings and
their successive statements since the rise of the Taliban until now, Sheheen,
the head of the Afghan Taliban’s political bureau, came to detonate an
unexpected bomb by disavowing and renouncing the Pakistani Taliban during
statements to Arab News on July 9, during which he confirmed that Pakistani
Taliban militants are present in the Pakistani tribal areas and not in
Afghanistan.
Shaheen denied the presence of Pakistani Taliban fighters on
Afghan soil and described the group as banned, pointing out that the banned
groups are located in the tribal areas of Pakistan,
and therefore it is the responsibility of Islamabad and not the responsibility
of the Afghan Taliban government. He stressed that the Taliban government
maintains its relations with countries and not with the security forces.
Disagreements within the movement
Shaheen’s statements reflect the existence of differences
within the Afghan Taliban between the two wings, namely the doves, represented
by the negotiating leaders or those who prefer the negotiating political line,
and the jihadist wing that is committed to the movement's old approach and does
not accept abandonment of its colleagues.
The first wing sees the inevitability of retreating from the
movement's consistent jihadist approach in light of
the changing circumstances surrounding it, which affect its relations with the
outside and reflects on the interests of the movement, bringing it into a state
of permanent clash with the world, as well as the internal situation in
Afghanistan. As for the jihadist wing, it does not want to give up its
principles.