Taliban in PR Scramble After Attacks - WSJ.com
KABULThe Taliban leadership is scrambling to stem the public-relations fallout from recent suicide attacks that killed scores of Afghan civilians. The insurgent movement has launched an internal investigation, and some commanders now are blaming an autonomous radical faction for these "massacres" of civilians.
This dissension within the Taliban, described by multiple insurgent commanders and officials, illustrates a similar problem faced by the U.S.-led coalition: How to fight a war where winning over Afghan public opinion matters more than killing your foes.
Taliban commanders said the insurgent movement's unusual effort to distance itself from attacks for which it has publicly claimed credit is partially due to the TV broadcast of closed-circuit security-camera footage documenting a particularly gruesome killing spree.
The footage, aired this week on private Tolo TV, shows the Feb. 19 attack in which insurgent gunmen and suicide bombers killed at least 38 people in a bank in the eastern city of Jalalabad, one of the deadliest strikes ever perpetrated by the Taliban.
The footage, which has provoked widespread outrage here, shows a young man dressed in an Afghan police uniform casually shooting people at point-blank range with an AK-47 assault rifle. As the first victims crumple to the floor, others begin running for the exits while the gunman continues to carefully pick off some of the men.
A day after the Jalalabad attack, a Taliban suicide bomber detonated his explosives at a government office in northern Afghanistan where people had lined up to obtain identification papers, killing at least 30 people.
The U.S.-led coalition and its Afghan supporters have long maintained that brutality is the hallmark of the insurgency, citing statistics from the United Nations and human-rights groups that show the Taliban and its allies are responsible for the vast majority of civilian deaths.
Yet ordinary Afghans largely blame the coalition for civilian casualties, arguing that there wouldn't be a war and the deaths that come with it if the U.S.-led coalition hadn't invaded the country in 2001.
The Taliban commanders said Thursday that the insurgents' leadership is eager to maintain such public perceptionswhich explains the sudden rush to decry the bloodshed caused by its own fighters.
"These attacks will turn the people against us," said a Taliban commander in eastern Afghanistan. "We will lose our influence among the people if we continue targeting civilian places."
The commander and others blamed the bloodiest of the recent attacks on the Haqqani network, a particularly violent insurgent faction led by Sirajuddin Haqqani. The Haqqanis, who operate autonomously of the Taliban's leadership even while recognizing the overall authority of Taliban leader Mullah Omar, are believed by U.S. and Afghan officials to have particularly strong ties to Pakistan's intelligence service.
The Haqqanis, who unlike the mainstream Taliban do not have a spokesman, couldn't be reached to comment.
The Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said his movement takes civilian casualties seriously. "An investigation is going on right now," he said in a telephone interview, offering an unusually direct acknowledgment of possible wrongdoing by the insurgents. "We have a code of conduct and everyone has to obey it. If someone violates the code he must be punished."
Mr. Mujahid was referring to a set of orders issued in 2009 by Mullah Omar, who instructed his fighters to avoid killing civilians. The Taliban code of conduct was issued after the coalition began tightening its own rules of engagementlimiting the use of air power, for examplein an effort to cut down on civilian deaths.
Although coalition commander U.S. Gen. David Petraeus has relaxed the rules since taking charge in June, the overall effect has been a drop in the number of civilians killed by coalition forces.
Yet civilians continue to be killed as coalition operations go awry. The latest high-casualty incident appears to have come over the weekend when Afghan officials say more than 60 people, many of them women and children, were killed when coalition helicopter gunships bombarded a remote northeastern district.
Coalition officials say they are investigating. But they say video footage from the helicopters shows 36 people were killed, all of them armed. Some coalition officials have even suggested publicly that people burned their own children in an effort to pin the blame on foreign troops. Waheed Omar, a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai, called the comments "racist."
Whenever civilian-casualty accusations are leveled against the Taliban, the insurgent movement usually defends its actions in public while privately meting out punishment to guilty commanders, said Kate Clark of the independent Afghan Analysts Network.
She cited the beheading by the Taliban of a busload of laborers bound for Iran in October 2008. At the time, the Taliban publicly insisted the dead were all police recruits, and thus legitimate targets.
"Often they will swear black is white; in that case they swore the laborers were in police, but then quietly disciplined the commander," who was relieved of his duties, said Ms. Clark, who maintains contacts with insurgents and is currently preparing a study on the Taliban's code of conduct.
Mr. Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, did try to shift some of the blame for recent attacks away from the Taliban in his comments Thursday. He suggested two of the strikesa suicide bombing at Kabul's only Western-style shopping mall that killed two security guards and a suicide car bombing in the eastern city of Khost that left 11 people deadwere the fault of Afghan security forces, who intercepted the attackers, thus forcing them to detonate their explosives near civilians.
As for civilian deaths, he said: "Sometimes it happens."
KABULThe Taliban leadership is scrambling to stem the public-relations fallout from recent suicide attacks that killed scores of Afghan civilians. The insurgent movement has launched an internal investigation, and some commanders now are blaming an autonomous radical faction for these "massacres" of civilians.
This dissension within the Taliban, described by multiple insurgent commanders and officials, illustrates a similar problem faced by the U.S.-led coalition: How to fight a war where winning over Afghan public opinion matters more than killing your foes.
Taliban commanders said the insurgent movement's unusual effort to distance itself from attacks for which it has publicly claimed credit is partially due to the TV broadcast of closed-circuit security-camera footage documenting a particularly gruesome killing spree.
The footage, aired this week on private Tolo TV, shows the Feb. 19 attack in which insurgent gunmen and suicide bombers killed at least 38 people in a bank in the eastern city of Jalalabad, one of the deadliest strikes ever perpetrated by the Taliban.
The footage, which has provoked widespread outrage here, shows a young man dressed in an Afghan police uniform casually shooting people at point-blank range with an AK-47 assault rifle. As the first victims crumple to the floor, others begin running for the exits while the gunman continues to carefully pick off some of the men.
A day after the Jalalabad attack, a Taliban suicide bomber detonated his explosives at a government office in northern Afghanistan where people had lined up to obtain identification papers, killing at least 30 people.
The U.S.-led coalition and its Afghan supporters have long maintained that brutality is the hallmark of the insurgency, citing statistics from the United Nations and human-rights groups that show the Taliban and its allies are responsible for the vast majority of civilian deaths.
Yet ordinary Afghans largely blame the coalition for civilian casualties, arguing that there wouldn't be a war and the deaths that come with it if the U.S.-led coalition hadn't invaded the country in 2001.
The Taliban commanders said Thursday that the insurgents' leadership is eager to maintain such public perceptionswhich explains the sudden rush to decry the bloodshed caused by its own fighters.
"These attacks will turn the people against us," said a Taliban commander in eastern Afghanistan. "We will lose our influence among the people if we continue targeting civilian places."
The commander and others blamed the bloodiest of the recent attacks on the Haqqani network, a particularly violent insurgent faction led by Sirajuddin Haqqani. The Haqqanis, who operate autonomously of the Taliban's leadership even while recognizing the overall authority of Taliban leader Mullah Omar, are believed by U.S. and Afghan officials to have particularly strong ties to Pakistan's intelligence service.
The Haqqanis, who unlike the mainstream Taliban do not have a spokesman, couldn't be reached to comment.
The Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said his movement takes civilian casualties seriously. "An investigation is going on right now," he said in a telephone interview, offering an unusually direct acknowledgment of possible wrongdoing by the insurgents. "We have a code of conduct and everyone has to obey it. If someone violates the code he must be punished."
Mr. Mujahid was referring to a set of orders issued in 2009 by Mullah Omar, who instructed his fighters to avoid killing civilians. The Taliban code of conduct was issued after the coalition began tightening its own rules of engagementlimiting the use of air power, for examplein an effort to cut down on civilian deaths.
Although coalition commander U.S. Gen. David Petraeus has relaxed the rules since taking charge in June, the overall effect has been a drop in the number of civilians killed by coalition forces.
Yet civilians continue to be killed as coalition operations go awry. The latest high-casualty incident appears to have come over the weekend when Afghan officials say more than 60 people, many of them women and children, were killed when coalition helicopter gunships bombarded a remote northeastern district.
Coalition officials say they are investigating. But they say video footage from the helicopters shows 36 people were killed, all of them armed. Some coalition officials have even suggested publicly that people burned their own children in an effort to pin the blame on foreign troops. Waheed Omar, a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai, called the comments "racist."
Whenever civilian-casualty accusations are leveled against the Taliban, the insurgent movement usually defends its actions in public while privately meting out punishment to guilty commanders, said Kate Clark of the independent Afghan Analysts Network.
She cited the beheading by the Taliban of a busload of laborers bound for Iran in October 2008. At the time, the Taliban publicly insisted the dead were all police recruits, and thus legitimate targets.
"Often they will swear black is white; in that case they swore the laborers were in police, but then quietly disciplined the commander," who was relieved of his duties, said Ms. Clark, who maintains contacts with insurgents and is currently preparing a study on the Taliban's code of conduct.
Mr. Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, did try to shift some of the blame for recent attacks away from the Taliban in his comments Thursday. He suggested two of the strikesa suicide bombing at Kabul's only Western-style shopping mall that killed two security guards and a suicide car bombing in the eastern city of Khost that left 11 people deadwere the fault of Afghan security forces, who intercepted the attackers, thus forcing them to detonate their explosives near civilians.
As for civilian deaths, he said: "Sometimes it happens."