By Christopher Orlet on 7.22.09 @ 6:07AM
It didn't work with Bill and it won't work with Islamic
militants.
You don't want to get Hillary Clinton riled up. Speaking this
week to ABC News about the capture of a U.S. soldier by Islamic
militants, the secretary of state took off her gloves: "It's just
outrageous. It's a real sign of desperation and inappropriate
criminal behavior on the parts of these terrorist groups."
I wouldn't be surprised if Mrs. Clinton said something comparable
to her husband after word of his affair with a White House intern
leaked out: "Bill, that's just outrageous. That's a real sign of
disrespect and inappropriate sexual behavior on the part of the
president."
Mrs. Clinton went on to say the State Department was going to do
"everything we can to get him." Everything we can should entail
getting rid of the kingpins responsible for this abduction and
the recent kidnapping of New York Times reporter David
Rohde (after seven months in captivity Rohde escaped last June).
I mean the Taliban's Al-Qaeda-linked Haqqani faction, headed by
Jalaluddin Haqqani and his son Sirajuddin. After all the
Christian Science Monitor called the Haqqani faction
"Afghanistan's most dangerous insurgent group."
The Haqqanis, like Osama bin Laden, Mullah Omar, and Ratko
Mladic, are prime examples of the kind of shadowy figures that
have for years -- going on decades now -- eluded U.S. capture.
They creep from hidey-hole to cubbyhole and cannot be found.
Unless you are NBC news producer Mushtaq Yusufzai. Yusufzai has
had no trouble finding Sirajuddin Haqqani. Twice (this April and
last July) he sat down with Haqqani fils for a
tête-à-tête. Incredibly the State Department doesn't
even appear to have a photograph
of Sirajuddin.
Here's what we know about the Haqqanis. Like all good organized
crime families, the Haqqani faction is a family venture, based in
Afghanistan's eastern border regions. Jalaluddin Haqqani was, for
a time, one of "our sons of bitches," working with the CIA to
help defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan. Once the Taliban were
driven from Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai reportedly
invited Haqqani to become Prime Minister. Congressman Charlie
Wilson was so taken with Haqqani that he once referred to him as
"goodness personified." In the mid-'90s, Haqqani threw his lot in
with the Taliban, becoming a regional military commander, at
which time he led a bloody ethnic cleansing campaign against the
northern Tajik population. On the eve of the American invasion in
October 2001, he was named supreme Taliban commander. Early and
repeated attempts to kill Haqqani failed, though coalition forces
did manage to irritate him by killing members of his family.
The Haqqanis are said to have introduced suicide bombing to
Afghanistan and Pakistan and are responsible for the more
devastating bombing attacks over the past two years, and likely
were behind Tuesday's deadly attack
in Gardez in which six Afghan security forces died.
Haqqani's faction now works independently of the Taliban while
maintaining close ties with members of the Pakistani intelligence
services. Imagine an entire wing of the CIA working to overthrow
the Obama administration. And everyone knows it. That's Pakistan
for you.
THE AMERICAN CAPTIVE, PVT. BOWE R. BERGDAHL, 23, of Ketchum,
Idaho, went missing from his base in southeastern Paktika
province on June 30. It was the first time militant Islamists
have abducted a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan since the war began.
However, it is unclear what the circumstances of the kidnapping
or capture were. The Daily Telegraph notes that "[w]hen
he first disappeared, a military official left open the
possibility that [Bergdahl] was a deserter," saying that soldier
had "just walked off" his base with three Afghans after his
shift. The captors subsequently released a statement saying, "a
drunken American soldier had come out of his garrison" and was
subsequently captured by militants. Independent journalist and
blogger P.J. Tobia reported from Afghanistan that unnamed sources
told him Bergdahl had left behind a note saying that he was
"going to mountains to find himself." In a propaganda video
posted online this week Bergdahl says that he was captured after
trailing behind while on foot patrol. Fox News' Strategic Analyst
Lt.
Col. Ralph Peters told anchor Julie Banderas that Bergdahl
was lying about having been kidnapped while on foot patrol, and
worse, he seems to be "collaborating with the enemy" and should
not be portrayed as a hero. If he is a deserter, Peters said, the
kidnappers could save the U.S. a lot of time and trouble. (I
might add that Banderas seemed a bit flustered by Peters' bold
statements. "Regardless of what the situation is we do not want
to see any U.S. soldier in harm's way and we hope this guy he
gets out of there," she said. "He's an American, he's one of
ours." Gets out of there and what, faces a military firing
squad? Apparently Ms. Banderas thinks soldiers shouldn't be
put in harm's way, and it's okay if one of them deserts because,
after all, "he's an American, he's one of us.")
A strange twist to this story, but it is still too soon to pass
judgment. As for Mrs. Clinton and the Islamic militants who
captured Bergdahl, let me just add that playing the scold didn't
work very well with Bill, and it's unlikely to have much effect
on the Haqqanis.
topics:
Hillary Clinton, Afghanistan, Taliban