Anonymous ID: 0be905 Aug. 20, 2021, 10:50 a.m. No.14407558   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7572

>>14374424 pb

 

>>14374016 pb

 

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar co founded the Taliban with Mullah Omar.

 

When Baradar was arrested in Pakistan, Mullah Omar apparently appointed 2 other deputies who had been held at Guantanamo Bay

 

wtf

 

needs more digging

 

March 29, 2010 22:20 IST

 

Taliban supreme leader Mulla Mohammad Omar has appointed Abdul Rauf Khadim and Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor as his two deputies to replace Mulla Abdul Ghani Baradar, who was arrested by Pakistani and US intelligence agents near Karachi in February, reports The News' veteran correspondent Rahimullah Yusufzai..

 

Earlier, it was reported that Abdul Qayyum Zakir had been named as one of the two new deputies to Mulla Omar, but Taliban sources clarified that Khadim and not Zakir had been made a deputy leader of the Taliban movement.

 

Incidentally, both Khadim and Zakir had been captured in Afghanistan and then held for a number of years in the notorious US detention centre inGuantanamo Bay.And both became well-known and earned respect from Taliban members after their release from prison.

WTF

 

 

https://www.indiatvnews.com/news/world/mullah-omar-appoints-two-deputies-to-replace-baradar-1124.html

Anonymous ID: 0be905 Aug. 20, 2021, 10:51 a.m. No.14407572   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14407558

>>14379114 pb

 

 

all I can tell is nothing is what it appears to be. I tend to think Trump and Q team swapped in this guy. Taliban is likely a Pakistani ISI and CIA creation.

 

Who else was found in living in Pakistan? Bin Laden

 

Pakistan is always involved. They see Afghanistan as part of their strategic depth. If war breaks out with India, they can retreat there or whatever. it's fucked up

 

Taliban, Pashto Ṭālebān (“Students”), also spelled Taleban, ultraconservative political and religious faction that emerged in Afghanistan in the mid-1990s following the withdrawal of Soviet troops, the collapse of Afghanistan’s communist regime, and the subsequent breakdown in civil order. The faction took its name from its membership, which consisted largely of students trained in madrasahs (Islamic religious schools) that had been established for Afghan refugees in the 1980s in northern Pakistan.

 

Although expelled from Kandahār by the invasion, Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar reportedly continued to direct the insurgency from an unknown location; he was thought by some to be in Pakistan, although the Taliban denied that. In July 2015 the Afghan government discovered that Omar had died in 2013 in a hospital in Pakistan Mullah Akhtar Mansour was appointed as his successor, and he was killed in a U.S. air strike in Pakistan in May 2016. Haibatullah Akhundzada took leadership later that month, though his role remained largely confined to the political and religious spheres. The militant wing of the Taliban came increasingly under the direction of the Haqqani network whose leader Sirajuddin served as deputy leader of the Taliban.

 

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Taliban

 

The Haqqani network pledged allegiance to the Taliban in 1995,[23] and have been an increasingly incorporated wing of the group ever since.[24] In the past, the Taliban and Haqqani leaders have denied the existence of the "network", calling it no different from the Taliban.[25]

 

In the 1980s, the Haqqani network was one of the most favored CIA-funded anti-Soviet guerrilla groups by the Reagan administration.[26][3] In 2012, the United States designated the Haqqani network a terrorist organization.[27] In 2015, Pakistan also banned the Haqqani network as part of its National Action Plan.[28]

 

Haqqani family

 

The Haqqani family hails from southeastern Afghanistan and belongs to the Mezi Clan of the Zadran Pashtun tribe.[11][32][33] Jalalludin Haqqani rose to prominence as a senior military leader during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.[33]

 

Like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Haqqani was more successful than other resistance leaders at forging relationships with outsiders prepared to sponsor resistance to the Soviets, including the CIA, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and wealthy Arab private donors from the Persian Gulf.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haqqani_network