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Pakistan Taliban chief says group will negotiate, but not disarm

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Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud (C) sits with other millitants in South Waziristan October 4, 2009 in this video grab taken from footage released October 5, 2009. REUTERS/Reuters TV

Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud (C) sits with other millitants in South Waziristan October 4, 2009 in this video grab taken from footage released October 5, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Reuters TV

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan | Fri Dec 28, 2012 6:38am EST

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - The head of Pakistan's Taliban said his militia is willing to negotiate with the government but not disarm, a message delivered in a video given to Reuters on Friday.

The release of the 40-minute video follows three high-profile Taliban attacks in the northern city of Peshawar this month: an attack by multiple suicide bombers on the airport, the killing of a senior politician and eight others in a bombing and the kidnap of 22 paramilitary forces on Thursday.

The attacks underline the Taliban's ability to strike high-profile, well-protected targets even as the amount of territory it controls has shrunk and its leaders are picked off by U.S. drones.

"We believe in dialogue but it should not be frivolous," Hakimullah Mehsud said. "Asking us to lay down arms is a joke."

In the video, Mehsud sits cradling a rifle next to his deputy, Wali ur-Rehman. Military officials say there has been a split between the two men but Mehsud said that was propaganda.

"Wali ur-Rehman is sitting with me here and we will be together until death," said Mehsud, pointing at his companion.

Pakistani officials did not immediately respond to calls seeking comment.

The Taliban said in a letter released Thursday that they wanted Pakistan to rewrite its laws and constitution to conform with Islamic law, break its alliance with the United States and stop interfering in the war in Afghanistan and focus on India instead.

Mehsud referred to the killing of the senior politician in his speech and said the political party, the largely Pashtun Awami National Party, would continue to be a target along with other politicians.

"We are against the democratic system because it is un-Islamic," Mehsud said. "Our war isn't against any party. It is against the non-Islamic system and anyone who supports it."

Pakistan is due to hold elections next spring. The current government, which came to power five years ago, struck an uneasy deal with the Taliban in 2009 that allowed the militia to control Swat valley, less than 100 km (60 miles) from the capital, Islamabad.

A few months later, the military launched an operation that pushed the militants back. The U.S. military also intensified its use of drone strikes.

Now the Taliban control far less territory and the frequency and deadliness of their bombings has declined dramatically.

The Taliban's key stronghold is in North Waziristan, one of the tribal areas along the Afghan border and the site of most of the hundreds of drone strikes by the United States.

Mehsud said in his interview that although he was open to dialogue, the Pakistani government was to blame for the violence because it broke previous, unspecified deals.

"In the past, it is the Pakistani government that broke peace agreements," he said. "A slave of the U.S. can't make independent agreements; it breaks agreements according to U.S. dictat."

Mehsud said that the Pakistan Taliban would follow the lead of the Afghan Taliban when it came to forming policy after most NATO troops withdraw from Afghanistan in 2014.

"We are Afghan Taliban and Afghan Taliban are us," he said. "We are with them and al Qaida. We are even willing to get our heads cut off for al Qaida."

(Writing By Katharine Houreld; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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Comments (6)
americanguy wrote:
Drone meat.

Dec 28, 2012 7:18am EST  --  Report as abuse
huckl wrote:
The sad thing is some people actually believe that type of abuse is right according to religion. Look at how Afghanistan was under their rule. They can kill any one but yell if one of their family members is killed. We can kill people an it’s justified but don’t hurt my family that I put at risk because of my actions. Their justice is if a woman is raped her family can kill her for shaming them but very little or nothing is done to the rapest. In some places all he needs to do is offer to marry her. Right that sounds fair.

Dec 28, 2012 10:33am EST  --  Report as abuse
PenRumi wrote:
The Taliban, Pakistani or Afghan, are Pushtoons. Pushtoons proscribe to the Pakhtunwai code of conduct. The Pushtoons cannot be bought; they will accept inducements as a temporary measure and return to their original stance. The Pushtoons do not believe in deals. Hakimullah Mehsud knows the Pakistan Taliban have the upper hand in view of the fact that they have the momentum in their asymmetrical war against the Pakistan army. The Taliban are using the same tactic employed by the Viet Cong during the Paris Peace talks between North and the United States, which began in 1968 and ended in a peace accord in July 1973. The Viet Cong came to the negotiating table and kept on talking; during this period, the US military suffered the heaviest losses of the Vietnam War, eventually leading to the total withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam in September 1973. If there is a peace accord, the Taliban will use it to consolidate their position.

The only factor keeping the Taliban and extremists from taking over Pakistan is the Great Satan (United States of America), which keeps shoring up the Pakistan government in an effort to keep anarchic elements from destroying human civilization. Without ‘Amrika’, Pakistan is history; the sooner the people of Pakistan realize it, the better. However, majority of Pakistanis hate the US. Sadly, these people are incorrigible; they continue to think the US is intent on bringing down Pakistan and Islam.

Dec 28, 2012 1:18pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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