Toronto Star

Charting Taliban’s road back to power

Mullah is expected to play a key role in negotiatio­ns with the Afghan government the militants deposed

- KATHY GANNON

The Taliban’s top political leader, who made a triumphal return to Afghanista­n last week, battled the U.S. and its allies for decades but then signed a landmark peace agreement with the Trump administra­tion.

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar is now expected to play a key role in negotiatio­ns between the Taliban and officials from the Afghan government that the militant group deposed in its blitz across the country. The Taliban say they seek an “inclusive, Islamic” government and claim they have become more moderate since they last held power.

But many remain skeptical, and all eyes are now on Baradar, who has said little about how the group will govern but has proven pragmatic in the past.

Baradar’s biography charts the arc of the Taliban’s journey from an Islamic militia that battled warlords during the civil war in the 1990s, ruled the country in accordance with a strict interpreta­tion of Islamic law and then waged a two-decade insurgency against the U.S. His experience also sheds light on the Taliban’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with neighbouri­ng Pakistan.

Baradar is the only surviving Taliban leader to have been personally appointed deputy by the late Taliban commander Mullah Mohammed Omar, giving Baradar near-legendary status within the movement. And he is far more visible than the Taliban’s current supreme leader, Maulawi Hibatullah Akhunzada, who is believed to be in hiding in Pakistan and only releases occasional statements.

When Baradar landed in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban movement he helped found in the mid-1990s, it ended 20 years of exile and he was thronged by well-wishers as he stepped off a Qatari government aircraft and drove off in a convoy.

Baradar, who is in his early 50s, was born in the southern Uruzgan province. Like others who would eventually become Taliban leaders, he joined the ranks of the CIA- and Pakistanba­cked mujahedeen to fight against the Soviet Union during its decadelong occupation of the country that ended in 1989.

In the 1990s, the country slid into civil war, with rival mujahedeen battling one another and carving out fiefdoms. Warlords set up brutal protection rackets and checkpoint­s in which their forces shook down travellers to fund their military activities.

In 1994, Omar, Baradar and others founded the Taliban, which means religious students. The group mainly consisted of clerics and young, pious men, many of whom had been driven from their homes and had known only war. Their unsparing interpreta­tion of Islam unified their ranks and set them apart from the notoriousl­y corrupt warlords.

Baradar fought alongside Omar as he led the Taliban through its seizure of power in 1996 and its return to an insurgency following the 2001 U.S.-led invasion.

During the group’s 1996-2001 rule, the president and governing council were based in Kabul. But Baradar spent most of his time in Kandahar, the spiritual capital of the Taliban, and did not have an official government role.

The U.S. invaded Afghanista­n after the 9/11 attacks, which had been planned and carried out by Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida while it was sheltering under Taliban rule. Baradar, Omar and other Taliban leaders fled into neighbouri­ng Pakistan.

In the ensuing years, the Taliban were able to organize a potent insurgency based in rugged and semi-autonomous tribal areas along the border. Baradar was arrested in Pakistan’s southern city of Karachi in 2010 in a joint raid by the CIA and Pakistan’s counterter­rorism forces.

At the time, he had been making peace overtures to Afghanista­n’s then-president Hamid Karzai, but the U.S. was bent on military victory and it appeared that Pakistan wanted to ensure control over any political process. Baradar’s removal empowered more radical leaders within the Taliban who were less open to diplomacy.

Karzai later confirmed the overtures to The Associated Press and said he had twice asked the Americans and the Pakistanis to free Baradar from prison, but was rebuffed. Baradar himself refused an offer of release in 2013, apparently because the U.S. and Pakistan conditione­d it on his co-operation.

Karzai, who is now involved in talks with the Taliban about shaping the next government, could once again find himself negotiatin­g with Baradar.

By 2018, the Taliban had seized effective control over much of Afghanista­n’s countrysid­e. The Trump administra­tion, looking for a way out of America’s longest war, persuaded Pakistan to release Baradar that year and began pursuing peace talks with the Taliban.

Baradar led the Taliban’s negotiatin­g team in Qatar through several rounds of those talks, culminatin­g in a February 2020 peace agreement. He also met with then-U.S. secretary of state Mike Pompeo.

Under the deal, the Taliban agreed to halt attacks on internatio­nal forces and prevent Afghanista­n from again becoming a haven for terror groups in return for a full U.S. withdrawal, now planned for next week.

In his first comment after the capture of Kabul on Sunday, Baradar acknowledg­ed his surprise, saying that “it was never expected that we will have victory in Afghanista­n.”

“Now comes the test,” he said. “We must meet the challenge of serving and securing our nation, and giving it a stable life going forward.”

 ?? KARIM JAAFAR AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Abdul Ghani Baradar is the lone surviving leader to have been appointed deputy by late commander Mullah Omar, giving him elevated status within the movement.
KARIM JAAFAR AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Abdul Ghani Baradar is the lone surviving leader to have been appointed deputy by late commander Mullah Omar, giving him elevated status within the movement.
 ?? AL HIJRAT TV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGE ?? Footage from Al Hijrat TV shows Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar’s arrival in Afghanista­n on Aug. 17. The Taliban leader chose to touch down in Afghanista­n's second biggest city, Kandahar.
AL HIJRAT TV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGE Footage from Al Hijrat TV shows Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar’s arrival in Afghanista­n on Aug. 17. The Taliban leader chose to touch down in Afghanista­n's second biggest city, Kandahar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada