Sunday, February 20, 2011

Shocker: Taliban Leader Hakeemullah Mehsud Seen On Video, Reports of His Death by Hellfire In 2010 Disproved


The video that is out of the Taliban executing a Pakistani Intelligence official clearly shows that Taliban leader Hakeemullah Mehsud did NOT die in a 2010 predator drone strike as was widely reported - Mehsud is clearly shown in the video directing the execution and the video quality is actually pretty good.

From the report at The Long War Journal:

Hakeemullah Mehsud, the leader of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan, appeared on a recent videotape directing the execution of a former intelligence officer who is known as one of the fathers of the Taliban. Hakeemullah's appearance on the tape ends months of speculation and erroneous news reports that the Taliban chief was killed in a US Predator airstrike last fall.

The Pakistani Taliban leader appeared on a videotape that showed the execution of Colonel Imam, one of the original Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence directorate officers who guided and nurtured the Afghan Taliban during their rise to power in the mid 1990s.

On the videotape released today, Hakeemullah is seen standing behind Colonel Imam, who is first seen sitting on the ground. Imam is directed to stand, then one of Hakeemullah's armed henchmen brutally shoots Imam several times. Hakeemullah and the armed men are then seen chanting.

In March of 2010, the Taliban, under the guise of the so-called Asian Tigers, kidnapped Imam, Khalid Kwawaja, a former ISI officer-turned-lawyer who defended numerous jihadis in Pakistani courts, and a British journalist as they visited the tribal agencies of North and South Waziristan. The three men had entered the tribal agencies ostensibly to create a documentary, but are suspected of having attempted to negotiate a peace agreement on behalf of the Pakistani military. The Taliban executed Khawaja in April 2010, having accused him of working for the ISI and the CIA. The British journalist was released five months later.

Note: the first video you see at Holger Awakens today shows Mehsud as is stated above.

Now, I do want to point out something that makes this video revelation so shocking - the fact of the matter is that we have not seen nor heard of Mehsud for nearly five months and the reason for that is clear. That predator drone strike that supposedly took him out came very close and this peon has been hunkered in a cave or mud hut for five months crying like a baby...shaking like a leaf.

Well Hakeemullah, now we know you are alive and well and the hunt is back on dude. I wonder if today old Hakeemullah is regretting this 5 minutes of new fame. Sure, he's got a lot of his minions cheering him for this execution but you can't tell me this guy isn't hearing the roar of predator drone engines in his sleep again and he's not keeping his eyes on the sky as he walks the trails of the Pakistani mountains (tripping and falling because he doesn't dare look down).

Good luck Hakeemullah....you're gonna need it.



Hakeemullah Mehsud alive, shown on tape executing former ISI officer


Hakeemullah Mehsud, the leader of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan, appeared on a recent videotape directing the execution of a former intelligence officer who is known as one of the fathers of the Taliban. Hakeemullah's appearance on the tape ends months of speculation and erroneous news reports that the Taliban chief was killed in a US Predator airstrike last fall.

The Pakistani Taliban leader appeared on a videotape that showed the execution of Colonel Imam, one of the original Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence directorate officers who guided and nurtured the Afghan Taliban during their rise to power in the mid 1990s.

On the videotape released today, Hakeemullah is seen standing behind Colonel Imam, who is first seen sitting on the ground. Imam is directed to stand, then one of Hakeemullah's armed henchmen brutally shoots Imam several times. Hakeemullah and the armed men are then seen chanting.

In March of 2010, the Taliban, under the guise of the so-called Asian Tigers, kidnapped Imam, Khalid Kwawaja, a former ISI officer-turned-lawyer who defended numerous jihadis in Pakistani courts, and a British journalist as they visited the tribal agencies of North and South Waziristan. The three men had entered the tribal agencies ostensibly to create a documentary, but are suspected of having attempted to negotiate a peace agreement on behalf of the Pakistani military. The Taliban executed Khawaja in April 2010, having accused him of working for the ISI and the CIA. The British journalist was released five months later.

Before the execution of Khawaja, the Taliban demanded that Pakistan release Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the former leader of the Afghan Taliban's Quetta Shura; Maulvi Abdul Kabir, the former leader of the Afghan Taliban's Peshawar Regional Military Council; and Mullah Mansur Dadullah Akhund, a former military commander in the Afghan south.

Since that time, Baradar and Kabir appear to have been released, but Dadullah is thought to still be in custody.

Today's videotape is the first in which Hakeemullah has appeared since the summer of 2010. Although it was rumored that Hakeemullah had been killed in an early October Predator airstrike in North Waziristan along with Qari Hussain Mehsud, his deputy and the Taliban's master trainer of suicide bombers, The Long War Journal has been skeptical of such reports from the beginning. Azam Tariq, the Taliban's top spokesman, has insisted throughout that Hakeemullah and Qari Hussain were alive. In January, the US State Department said that Qari Hussain was alive after adding him to the list of specially designated global terrorists.

Hakeemullah is a close ally of al Qaeda, and has sworn allegiance to Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar. Hakeemullah directs terror attacks against the Pakistani state, supports attacks against US and Afghan forces across the border, and ordered the failed Times Square bombing that took place on May 1, 2010. Both Hakeemullah and Qari Hussain appeared in videotapes claiming responsibility for the attack, while Faisal Shahzad, the failed bomber, was traced back to Pakistan and was later seen on a propaganda tape with Hakeemullah.

Hakeemullah also aided in the Dec. 30, 2009 suicide attack at Combat Outpost Chapman in Khost province, Afghanistan, that killed five CIA officials, including a base chief, as well as two bodyguards and a Jordanian intelligence officer. Hakeemullah was featured on the martyrdom tape with the suicide bomber, Abu Dujana al Khorasani.

The CIA has targeted Hakeemullah and Qari Hussain in several Predator strikes over the past several years for their involvement in multiple terror attacks in South Asia and the attempted Times Square bombing. Hakeemullah has promised he would continue to strike at the US.





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