Pakistan Taliban name new leader but doubts remain
(For more on Pakistan and Afghanistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK]) (Adds minister says Taliban kill Mehsud's captured relatives)
By Kamran Haider
ISLAMABAD, Aug 23 (Reuters) - The Pakistani Taliban announced a successor to slain commander Baitullah Mehsud, but intelligence officials said on Sunday it was probably a smokescreen meant to hold together a movement left leaderless for almost three weeks.
Taliban officials rang journalists in northwest Pakistan on Saturday to say Hakimullah Mehsud, a young militant who commands fighters in the Orakzai, Khyber and Kurram tribal regions, had been chosen as the new chief by a leadership council, or shura.
Western governments with troops in Afghanistan are watching to see if any new Pakistani Taliban leader would shift focus from fighting the Pakistani government and put the movement's weight behind the Afghan insurgency led by Mullah Mohammad Omar.
A BBC report quoted Faqir Mohammad, head of the Taliban in the Bajaur tribal region, as saying Hakimullah was selected.
Tribal elders told Reuters that Hakimullah was named after Faqir Mohammad was dissuaded from taking the leadership, although earlier he had said he was assuming temporary command.
"There's confusion. Two days ago, Fariq Mohammad claimed he's acting chief and now he says Hakimullah is," one senior intelligence officer in northwest Pakistan said. "It's a trick."
Intelligence officials insisted Hakimullah was killed or gravely wounded in a shootout with a rival days after Baitullah Mehsud was killed by a U.S. missile strike on Aug. 5.
"The announcement is real, but the man isn't," the officer said. "The real Hakimullah is dead."
Another senior officer, who requested anonymity, speculated the Taliban leadership was trying to buy time until one of Hakimullah's brothers returned from fighting in the Afghan insurgency to take command of his men.
TRUE OR FALSE?
Verifying anything in the Taliban-held tribal regions is difficult and the past few weeks have seen a spate of claims and counter-claims by the Pakistani authorities and the militants.
Taliban officials say Pakistani intelligence agents were spreading misinformation to create divisions in the movement.
The Pakistani authorities say the Pakistani Taliban is in disarray and its statements are meant to preserve some sense of unity until a new leader emerges.
The Taliban have denied Baitullah Mehsud was killed in the missile strike on the house of his father-in-law, but say he is seriously ill.
After the reports of a shootout between Hakimullah and a rival a Reuters journalist subsequently received calls from both of them denying that there had been any fight.
Intelligence officials doubt whether the callers were who they said they were, even though the journalist knew both men's voices and believed they were genuine.
Baitullah Mehsud had united 13 militant factions in northwest Pakistan to form the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan in late 2007, and Pakistan authorities hope his death hastens disintegration of the loose-knit alliance.
A virtual silence over the succession issue in South Waziristan, the stronghold of Mehsud and the region where the largest number of fighters are concentrated, made intelligence officials doubt if consensus on a new leader had been reached.
South Waziristan lies at the southwest end of the tribal lands bordering Afghanistan, and Bajaur is at the northeast end.
Tribal elders said Faqir Mohammad was told to drop ideas of leading the Taliban as it would only bring more trouble to Bajaur, a region where the army declared victory in March after a six-month campaign against the militants.
Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik told the BBC Urdu Service on Sunday he had information militants had killed Baitullah Mehsud's father-in-law and nephew on suspicion of leaking information to authorities about the whereabouts of their chief commander.
Four relatives of Mehsud were detained by Taliban over the suspicion but Rehman did not give details about the other two. (With additional reporting by Alamgir Bitani and Sahibzada Bahauddin; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Alex Richardson and Jerry Norton)
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