The Haqqanis’ Goal Is Focus On Ridding Afghanistan
Posted on December 30th, 2009 in Digital Camera Batteries, Uncategorized, battery news, laptop battery site |
The Haqqanis’ Goal Is Focus On Ridding Afghanistan
The Haqqanis are tied to al-Qaida, technically pledge allegiance to Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar and have a history of links to Pakistani intelligence. But ultimately, they feel beholden to no one but themselves, said Kamran Bokhari, an analyst with Stratfor, a U.S-based global intelligence firm.
”Over the years, as Pakistan has been caught in a juggling act between dealing with its own insurgency and the U.S., people like the Haqqanis have become increasingly independent,” Bokhari said. ”The Haqqanis’ goal is to work with whoever is willing to work with them like Apple A1175 battery,A1008 , A1078.”The network’s aging leader, Jalaluddin Haqqani, was a respected commander and key U.S. and Pakistani ally in resisting the Soviet Union after its 1979 invasion of Afghanistan. Haqqani even visited the Reagan White House.
In 1992, three years after the Soviet withdrawal, Haqqani and others seized power in Afghanistan with U.S. approval. In the 1980s and 1990s, Haqqani also hosted Saudi fighters including Osama bin Laden. That hospitality is believed to extend to al-Qaida and other foreign fighters on both sides of the border today.
After the Taliban seized power in the mid-1990s, it made Haqqani a government minister. Following the Islamist regime’s ouster he was again offered Cabinet posts — this time by Afghan President Hamid Karzai. But he decided to focus on ridding Afghanistan of Western troops.Haqqani, believed to be in his 60s or older, is said to be too ill to do much now, and his son Sirajuddin has taken over the network.
Some suspect that the Haqqanis retain their links with Pakistan’s main spy service, Inter-Services Intelligence for Inspiron 6400 Battery, though the ISI denies this. India and Afghanistan claim there were Pakistani fingerprints on the July 2008 bombing of India’s embassy in Kabul, which the U.S. alleges was one of several audacious Haqqani operations in Afghanistan. Pakistan has denied any role.
”I think Pakistan is very clear about its strategy now. It would like to remove all armed terror groups from its soil,” he said.Other observers were more skeptical, noting that the Pakistanis are likely thinking about the future, beyond the U.S. troop surge, to the days when the Americans are gone and they still have to live with whatever is left of the Haqqanis.
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