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Renewed Taliban strength seen

Pakistan officials, disgruntled Afghans said to aid militia

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- The Taliban are no longer on the run and have teamed up with Al Qaeda once again, according to officials and former Taliban who say the religious militia has reorganized and strengthened since their defeat at the hands of the US-led coalition nearly two years ago.

The militia, which ruled Afghanistan espousing a strict brand of Islam, is now getting help from some Pakistani authorities and an Afghan population fed up with lawlessness under the US-backed interim administration, according to a former Taliban corps commander.

"Now the situation is very good for us; it is improving every day. We can move everywhere," said Gul Rahman Faruqi, a corps commander of the Gardez No. 3 garrison during the Taliban's rule.

"Now if the Taliban go to any village, people give them shelter and food. Now the people are tired of the looters and killers," Faruqi said, referring to regional warlords aligned with President Hamid Karzai's government.

In most parts of Afghanistan, regional powers operate with relative impunity, terrorizing residents, extorting money, dealing in drugs, and running lucrative smuggling routes.

"Before, people didn't believe the Taliban were around; they thought we were finished, so they were afraid. But now they see that we are active, and they see there is no other alternative to the looters and killers," said Faruqi, who was interviewed Monday in Pakistan.

"We know they don't like the Taliban, but they hate the looters and killers even more."

In the Afghan capital, a Western diplomat, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the religious militia, working with Al Qaeda, has regrouped, changed tactics, and now operates in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Faruqi scoffed at suggestions that coalition forces have them on the run.

"We have new bases all over Afghanistan. We have just reached to Faryab Province," Faruqi said. "There are 10,000 American soldiers; they can't be everywhere. We are not afraid . . . we know we can move freely."

The Taliban have appointed military councils in each Afghan province, reestablished military bases in the country, developed a command structure, and injected discipline into the ranks, he said.

The Zabul provincial chief of intelligence for Karzai's government, Khalil Hotak, confirmed that the Taliban have strengthened. "The Taliban are regrouping, having meetings in districts. In Zabul Province 80 percent of the people in every district are loyal to the Taliban," Hotak said yesterday.

"They are uneducated people. They are close to the religious people," he said. "The Taliban are preaching in the districts and have convinced people that the US people are infidels and that the Afghan government is supporting infidels against Islam."

An incident one month ago in a village in southern Afghanistan was evidence of the Taliban's propaganda campaign.

When the US military entered the village to search for suspected Taliban, residents wrapped copies of the Koran in white cloth and hid them in a dry riverbed. They were frightened that the American soldiers would arrest or kill them because they were Muslims, said a US military statement.

American soldiers reassured village elders that they had nothing to fear because of their religion.

In recent months, the Taliban have targeted Afghan police, blowing up vehicles, ambushing patrols, and attacking stations.

Faruqi said they draw support from some conservative tribal people and from the Pakistani military and intelligence community. "There are some in the army who are under the influence of the CIA and they will hand us over, but there are many who are Muslims and will not," he said.

Small training camps exist in Pakistan and Afghanistan, he said.

Bomb making is taught in camps in Pakistan, he said, gesturing to indicate that the explosions are carried out in Afghanistan.

A second former Taliban, who identified himself only as Abdullah, was interviewed in northwest Pakistan, where he had come to buy old, broken radios and televisions and circuitry to use in making remote-control devices.

"There will be more explosions," the man said. "You should know we will not stop."

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