Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan Resurgence

4)Targeted attack in North Waziristan

Operation Al-Badr:

(Wilayat Bannu - Mir Ali District)

This evening, a Mujahid of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Target Killing Squad skillfully shot dead an FC official in the main bazaar of Mir Ali Tehsil of North Waziristan and managed to reach a safe place. Praise be to Allaah

Mohammad Khorasani
Translator: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

26 Ramadan 1443 AH
April 27, 2022
5)Army ambush in North Waziristan

Operation Al-Badr:

(Wilayat Bannu - Mir Ali District)


This evening, the Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) ambushed a party on foot patrol in Mir Ali Tehsil of North Waziristan, killing one enemy soldier and injuring two others.


Mohammad Khorasani
Translator: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

26 Ramadan 1443 AH
April 27, 2022
 
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6)Mujahideen remote control bomb attack on police station in Charsadda

Operation Al-Badr

(Peshawar Province, Charsadda District)

On Friday, Sher Sifat Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) carried out a mine attack on Nasta police station in Charsadda district in which at least three policemen were killed and several others were injured.

The attack was carried out by a remote controlled bomb planted inside the police station which completely destroyed the gate of the police station, while the interior of the police station was also badly damaged. Praise be to Allah.

Mohammad Khorasani
Spokesperson: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

28 / Ramadan / 1443 AH
April 29, 2022
7)Attackon army in North Waziristan

Operation Al-Badr

(Wilayat-e-Bannu-Mir Ali District)

On Friday 28th of Ramadan, Mujahidin of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) launched a counter attack on a military check post in Khadi area of Mir Ali Tehsil of North Waziristan in which two army personnel were killed and three others were injured.

Mohammad Khorasani
Translator: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

28 / Ramadan / 1443 AH
April 29, 2022
 
On the month of April, TTP killed 97 Pakistani soldiers and injured 100 more. This is the bloodiest month for Pakistan in many years.

Detailed report of the operations of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in April this year (2022)

Total attacks: 54

Operation:

North Waziristan: 14
South Waziristan: 13
Peshawar: 5
Bajaur Agency: 4
Charsadda: 3
Khyber Agency: 3
Kohat: 2
Dera Ismail Khan: 2
Bannu: 2
Mohmand Agency: 2
Crack: 1
Men: 1
Nowshera: 1
Worm Agency: 1


Type of operation:

Bombings: 13
Targeted attacks: 10
Ambush attacks: 9
Counter-attacks: 8
Laser attacks: 6
Responses: 4
Guerrilla attacks: 4


Enemy casualties:

Deaths: 97
Injured: 100
Total killed and injured: 197
Arrests: 10


Losses:

Army: 122
Police: 56
FC: 16
Intelligence: 2


Destruction:

3 police mobiles
4 military vehicles
3 police outposts
1 digit military post


Booty:

13 Kalashnikovs
2 pistols
2 digit G3 gun
1 telescope
Dozens of pistol bullets
10 lakh 52 thousand rupees

Mohammad Khorasani
Spokesperson: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

29 / Ramadan / 1443 AH
April 30, 2022

@_Anonymous_ @Innominate @Ironhide @Butter Chicken @Ankit Kumar
 
One more Jihadist group joined TTP. With TTP scoring success in battlefield, more militant groups are joining TTP.


Another group joined the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.

Eid Marjan (Janati), a well-known jihadi figure from Datta Khel tribe in Spin Wam Tehsil of North Waziristan, today pledged allegiance to Hijrah and Jihad at the hands of Mufti Abu Mansoor Asim Mehsud Hafizullah, the respected leader of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). He vowed to adhere to the guidelines and decisions of the movement in the light of Shariah in all difficulties and difficulties.

Mohammad Khorasani
Spokesman of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan

6 Shawwal 1443 AH
May 6, 2022
 
Pakistani Taliban announced a second merger within 24-hours. A militant group from the Datta Khail tehsil in North Waziristan, “Naib Abdul Rahman aka Ezatullah Khiali” group, under the command of Ahmad Dawar, pledged allegiance to the TTP emir, Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud.
IMG_20220507_110024_193.jpg
 
Pakistan going back to its old barbarian tactics. Pakistan Army ordered the entire Mehsud tribe to leave south Waziristan for a military operation. Now, they will start bombing the region with F-16s to rubles.

As always, Indian government isn't highlighting such indescriminate military tactics to the world 🙄

Mehsud tribe forms body to broker army, TTP talks

Move comes hours after deadline to evacuate area expired



Our CorrespondentMay 07, 2022

representational picture photo reuters file

Representational picture. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

PESHAWAR:
A grand jirga in South Waziristan on Friday formed a 35-member committee to broker talks between Pakistan Army and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan hours after the deadline given by security forces to evacuate the area in order to carry out an operation to cleanse it of threats expired.
The grand jirga of the Mehsud tribe was held in the political compound in which the leaders, including the youth and the people belonging to different walks of life, participated.

The army had given a deadline to the Mehsud tribe to evacuate the area so that they could conduct an operation.
At the jirga, they said: “We want peace in Waziristan and we will play the role of a negotiator between Pakistan Army and the TTP.”
They urged both the security forces and the TTP not to take any negative action for a month.
“We do not want the blood of Pakistan Army soldiers, TTP or civilians to be shed. We do not want any more mischief in the region. The struggle will continue till peace is acquired," they said.
They said that they had many more problems but would not reiterate them. “We will only talks about peace and order.”
 
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(TheDiplomat, may19)

Pakistan’s Relations With Taliban Regime Worsen​

The Afghan Taliban prefer to broker peace rather than crack the whip on the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.


Faced with rising violence, Pakistan is taking a tougher line to pressure Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers to crack down on militants hiding on their soil, but so far the Taliban remain reluctant to take action — trying instead to broker a peace.
Last month came a sharp deterioration in relations between the two neighbors when Pakistan carried out airstrikes in eastern Afghanistan. Witnesses said the strikes hit a refugee camp and another location, killing at least 40 civilians. UNICEF said 20 children were believed to be among the dead.
Pakistan never confirmed the April 17 strikes, but two days later its Foreign Ministry issued a sharp warning to the Taliban not to shelter militants.
The pressure has put the Taliban in a tight corner. The Taliban have long been close to several militant groups carrying out attacks in Pakistan, particularly the Pakistani Taliban, a separate organization known by the acronym TTP. The TTP and other groups have only become more active on Afghan soil since the Taliban takeover in August.

But the Taliban are wary of cracking down on them, fearful of creating more enemies at a time when they already face an increasingly violent campaign by Afghanistan’s Islamic State group affiliate, analysts say. [edit: don’t know why this typo]​

A series of bombings across Afghanistan in recent weeks, mostly targeting minority Hazaras, has killed dozens. Most are blamed on the Islamic State affiliate, known by the acronym ISKP. The bloodshed has undermined the Taliban’s claims to be able to provide the security expected of a governing force.
This week, the Taliban hosted talks between the TTP and a Pakistani government delegation as well as a group of Pakistani tribal leaders, apparently hoping for a compromise that can ease the pressure. On Wednesday, the TTP announced it was extending to May 30 an earlier cease-fire it had called.
The Taliban government’s deputy spokesman Bilal Karimi said it “is trying its best for the continuation and success of the negotiations and meanwhile asks both sides to have flexibility.”

But past cease-fires with the TTP have failed, and already the current one was shaken by violence last weekend.
Pakistan’s frustration appears to be growing as violence on its soil has increased.
The secessionist Balochistan Liberation Army killed three Chinese nationals in late April. The TTP and the Afghan-based IS have targeted Pakistan’s military with increasing regularity.
Militant attacks in Pakistan are up nearly 50 percent since the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, according to the Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies, an independent think tank based in Islamabad that tracks militant activities. The group documented 170 attacks between September and mid-May that killed 170 police, military, and paramilitary personnel and more than 110 civilians.
The United Nations estimates that as many as 10,000 TTP militants are hiding in Afghanistan. So far, Afghanistan’s rulers have done little to dismantle militant redoubts on their territory.
Prominent Afghans from southern Afghanistan, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity, said the Pakistani Taliban and Pakistani Baloch secessionists had established several safe houses in the area during the previous U.S.-backed government’s rule and they have remained since the Taliban takeover.
The Pakistani airstrikes in April marked a dramatically tougher stance. They came after a militant ambush killed seven soldiers near the border with Afghanistan. Pakistani and Afghani border forces often exchange rocket fire amid disputes over the frontier — but it is rare for Pakistan to use warplanes on targets inside its neighbor.
The change came after weeks of political turmoil in Pakistan that unseated Imran Khan as prime minister. Khan had been an advocate of negotiations with militants and had campaigned for the world to engage with the Taliban after their takeover in Afghanistan.
Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Program at the U.S.-based Wilson Center, said Khan “had a soft spot for the Taliban as well as a principled opposition to the use of force in Afghanistan.”
With Khan now out of the picture and TTP attacks continuing, “we can expect a stronger Pakistani readiness to use military operations,” he said.

The Afghan Taliban are warning Pakistan against further military action, threatening retaliation.
The airstrikes “are not acceptable,” Taliban-appointed Defense Minister Mohammad Yaqoob warned Pakistan in late April. “The only reason we have tolerated this attack is because of our national interest, but it is possible we will not be so tolerant in the future.”
The son of the Taliban founder, Mullah Mohammad Omar, Yaqoob is a powerful figure in the Taliban leadership, which is struggling to stay united amid disagreements about how to govern their war-ravaged nation.
The leadership council seems firmly split between two camps: the pragmatists and hard-liners. Pragmatists have pushed for global engagement and opening of schools to girls of all ages. The hard-liners want to return Afghanistan to the late 1990s Taliban rule when women and girls were denied access to most public spaces and a rigid and unforgiving version of Islam and tribal rule was imposed.
A flurry of repressive edicts of late suggest the hard-liners have the upper hand, including an order that women wear all-encompassing veils that leave only the eyes visible and a decision not to allow girls to attend school past the sixth grade.
Yaqoob falls among the pragmatists, according to several prominent Afghans familiar with the Taliban leadership. Still, there seems no decision among the leaders on either side of the divide to oust militants on their territory.
“I do not see any quick fix to the Pakistan-Afghan situation. The Taliban will continue to provide sanctuary to the TTP and hope they can extend their own influence into Pakistan over time,” said Shuja Nawaz, an expert and fellow at the South Asia Center of the U.S-based Atlantic Council.
“So, expect the situation to deteriorate, especially with the (Pakistan) military calling the shots on Afghan policy,” Nawaz said.
(I have quoted TheDiplomat twice today, I need to diversify my sources!)
 
(thediplomat, may02)

Pakistan Sends Team to Kabul to Discuss Ceasefire With Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan​

The TTP wants Pakistani troops to pull out of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and release its fighters in government custody.


Pakistan’s government on Wednesday sent a 50-member delegation of tribal elders to Kabul to negotiate an extension of a truce with the Pakistani Taliban that expired this week, two security officials said. Talks between the two sides that led to ceasefires in the past have been mediated by the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani Taliban — known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP — are a separate group but allied with the Afghan Taliban, who seized power in their country last August, as the U.S. and NATO troops were in the final stages of their pullout from Afghanistan.

The TTP has been behind numerous attacks in Pakistan over the past 14 years and has long fought for stricter enforcement of Islamic laws in the country, the release of their members who are in government custody and a reduction of Pakistani military presence in the country’s former tribal regions.

The development comes after the latest ceasefire expired on Tuesday. A similar truce between the TTP and Pakistan, brokered by the Afghan Taliban last November, lasted a month. However, none of the ceasefires have paved the way for a more permanent peace agreement.

Both sides have remained silent about earlier talks in Kabul, the sticking points between them and also about the chances of an extension to the latest ceasefire. Analysts say a more permanent deal could be possible if either side is willing to show flexibility on what is or isn’t acceptable to them.


Two senior TTP members who are close to the negotiations also confirmed the arrival of the 50-member team in Kabul. They told The Associated Press that a truce extension is linked to a “positive response” from the Pakistani government. They declined to elaborate and like the two security officials, spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media about the negotiations.

There was no official comment from the Pakistani government or the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani Taliban often use neighboring Afghanistan’s rugged border regions for hideouts and for staging cross-border attacks into Pakistan. They have been emboldened by the return to power of the Afghan Taliban, who last ruled Afghanistan in the late 1990s when they imposed their harsh edicts and interpretation of Islamic law, severely restricting the rights of women and minorities.

In Pakistan, the TTP insurgency has been centered in the remote former tribal region, now the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, bordering Afghanistan.

Mahmood Shah, a Pakistani security analyst, said the Islamabad government sent tribal elders to Kabul as intermediaries because under Pakistan’s constitution, the government cannot negotiate — at least not directly — with those waging an insurgency against it.

Pakistani authorities want an extension of the ceasefire in order to continue the talks, he said.

Shah served as a local official in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa when the military launched operations there after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the United States, closely liaising between the military and the government side, which allowed for first-hand knowledge of operations against the TTP and other militant groups.

The negotiations in Kabul are difficult, he told the AP, because for the military, any “government-level talks with TTP are equal to converting the military victory into a defeat.”

Pakistani officials say the talks with the TTP are being overseen by Lt. Gen. Faiz Hameed, a former Pakistani spy chief who is now the top commander in the northwest.

According to the two TTP members, the group asked Pakistani elders during Wednesday’s meeting in Kabul to scrap a 2018 law that did away with the semi-independent status of the former tribal regions that dates back to British colonial rule.

Islamabad is unlikely to give in to such a demand as the law paved the way for granting equal rights to millions of residents in the restive areas once they were incorporated into Pakistan’s authority as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

TTP also wants Pakistani troops to pull out of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, release all the TTP fighters in government custody and revoke all the legal cases against them.

Pakistan has demanded the TTP disband, accept Pakistan’s constitution and sever all its ties with the Islamic State group, another Sunni militant group with a regional affiliate that is active in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

 
(AsiaTimes, jun.22)

Will peace talks with TTP succeed?​

Previous peace talks between Pakistan and the Taliban have always failed

On June 2, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) announced an indefinite ceasefirewith the Pakistani government, which confirmed it had initiated peace talks with the banned group.

This is a decisive step for the Pakistani military establishment. If the talks are successful, many potential threats will be averted. A peace agreement would help to stabilize security, but for that the previous security policies will have to be abandoned. If Pakistan intends to play a new proxy game, it would surely plunge its military into a quagmire.

On condition of anonymity, three people involved in the peace talks with the TTP told me that military officers had pressed them for the withdrawal of only one demand, the restoration of former status of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), where the president of Pakistan was the chief executive authority and the region was administered under the Frontier Crime Regulation (FCR). The rest of the demands of the TTP will be looked at by the military itself.

Pakistan Peoples Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has also expressed concerns on negotiations with the TTP. He said talks with the Taliban should be held within the framework of the constitution by taking Parliament into confidence.

The PPP has issued show-cause noticesto party leaders including the federal minister of overseas Pakistani and human resource development, Sajid Tori, and Akhwanzada Chitan as to why they went to negotiate with the TTP without the permission of the party leadership.

“The ultimate resolution lies in the political and diplomatic domain and never in the military domain,” Omar Mahmood Hayat, a retired three-star general, told me. He added that if the state feels that the time is ripe for such an initiative, then – safeguarding all primary interests – it must engage all groups that feel marginalized and bring them back into the national mainstream through dialogue.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the Afghan Taliban’s interior minister and head of the Haqqani Network, told local news outlets, “We can ask the Pakistani Taliban for talks, but we cannot force them to negotiate. The TTP has made many sacrifices for us in the war against the United States and NATO. They have sided with us in difficult situations, so we can ask them for talks, but cannot put pressure on them.”

In response to my question in the context of Sirajuddin Haqqani’s statement, a senior journalist of Geo News, Saleem Safi, said there was no difference between the TTP and the TTA (Tehreek-e-Taliban Afghanistan). They are two sides of the same coin. The Afghan Taliban will never take any step that may displease the Pakistani Taliban.

Previous peace talks between Pakistan and the Taliban have always failed. On April 24, 2004, the Pakistani military entered the “Shakai agreement” with militant commander Nek Muhammad Wazir. The basic condition of the agreement was that no one would allow foreign terrorists to operate in the tribal areas. Later on, the agreement failed, and Naik Muhammad was killed in a drone attack on June 18, 2004. Baitullah Mehsud began to lead the group.

In September 2006, the efforts of the Afghan Taliban leaders Mullah Dadullah (1966-2007) and Jalaluddin Haqqani (1939-2018) led to the “Waziristan Pact” between Pakistan and militants, which was extended by Mullah Muhammad Omar himself. As a result of the agreement, the Pakistani government released a number of militants. The US criticized the agreement and called it a brazen surrender before the militants.

Baitullah Mehsud was killed in a US drone strike on August 5, 2009. In September 2009, Hakimullah Mehsud of the TTP was elected as the new amir, who paid special attention to suicide attacks. The period from 2009 to 2013 was the worst for suicide attacks in Pakistan.

Hakimullah Mehsud was killed in a drone strike in November 2013, and the new chief became Mullah Fazlullah, alias Mullah Radio. Fazlullah was killed in June 2018 in Kunar province of Afghanistan. Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud was elected as the new amir by the Taliban Shura (Council), and he is still in charge of the TTP.

The Pakistani military was confident enough that the coming into power of the Taliban in Afghanistan will help to counter the TTP operating in the tribal areas from Afghan land. The cold response of the Afghan Taliban made the Pakistani military establishment cognizant that the TTP will not be pressurised and countered by the Afghan Taliban in order to stop terror activities in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

The Pakistani Taliban also gained a new impetus. About 2,300 TTP fighters were released from custody last year after the Afghan Taliban seized Bagram Airbase from the Americans.

After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, the TTP intensified cross-border attacks in Pakistan, and began expanding ties with other banned organizations. Some sources even say that the TTP is also providing guerrilla warfare training to the Baloch Liberation Army in Balochistan. And the two groups have back-door contacts with each other.

Pakistan’s major security concern is the possible emergence of Islamic State–Khorasan Province (IS-KP). If the peace talks fail to end insurgency, and the TTP remains active in the tribal areas, IS-KP and other militant groups will no doubt benefit from the situation, creating more security threats for Pakistan. And for the TTP too, there will be no better option, but to join hands with the IS-KP to fight against the Pakistani military.

Former Lieutenant-General Asif Yaseen told me that along with peace talks with the TTP, the government of Pakistan needs to focus on infrastructure development and education and should give powers to the local bodies. That strategy would help to create a diversified and conducive environment, so that even if negotiations fail, it will be difficult for the TTP to create space for destructive and terror-oriented activities in the tribal areas.
 
(southasianvoices.org [Stimson Center, Washington, D.C.], jun.24)

The Untenable TTP-Pakistan Negotiations​

For much of the duration of the Afghan Taliban’s insurgency against U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan, the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)–formed officially in 2007 and one of Pakistan’s deadliest terrorist groups–was a force multiplier for the Taliban. While the Taliban and Pakistan have long maintained a close strategic relationship, the TTP, a close ally of the Taliban, remains an adversary of the Pakistani state. The Taliban takeover of Kabul in August 2021 was welcomed by Pakistani politicians and celebrated by the TTP. But Pakistan also seemed to expect that the newly formed Taliban government will pressure the TTP to cease its cross-border attacks on Pakistan. However, it quickly became clear that the Taliban is reluctant to crack down on their former brothers-in-arms at Pakistan’s behest. Although the Taliban government is willing to facilitate talks between Pakistan and the TTP, it expects the two adversaries (TTP and Pakistan) to resolve their own issues. In August 2021, the Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, relayedthis clearly by stating, “The issue of the TTP is one that Pakistan will have to deal with, not Afghanistan.”

Although talks between Pakistan and the TTP led to a short-lived ceasefire in November 2021, the TTP continued attacking Pakistani security personnel, eventually catalyzing airstrikes by Pakistan on suspected TTP hideouts in Eastern Afghanistan in April 2022. Weeks later, the two parties reinstated negotiations with another ceasefire declared in early June. This time, Islamabad reportedly sent a negotiatingteam, including tribal elders, politicians, and parliamentarians to support the talks.

The Pakistani military’s dismal track record negotiating with TTP leaders in the past provides little basis for envisioning an optimistic outcome today. Two additional factors make it even more challenging: the transition of the Afghan Taliban’s interests from insurgency and survival to governance and legitimacy, and the TTP’s newly emboldened status and organizational coherence. Overall, the Taliban’s preference for a limited role in the negotiations, and the TTP’s renewed assertiveness in conjunction with Pakistan’s precarious economic and political situation, severely undermine the chances that the outcome of the current Pakistan-TTP negotiations will deviate from previous debacles. Increasingly, a TTP-Pakistan agreement seems possible only if the Pakistani state concedes to some of the group’s core demands. Accommodating a deadly militant group’s demands without any meaningful consideration of societal preferences or public outreach is likely to be ineffective in reframing the group as a legitimate part of society, and risks reversing Pakistan’s previous gains in its battle against militancy.


Shifting Priorities and Enduring Alliances
In the past, the shared goal of waging jihad against international forces in Afghanistan allowed the Taliban and the TTP to remain closely aligned. Ultimately, the Taliban’s priority of expelling international forces from Afghanistan triumphed the two groups’ conflicting relationships with the Pakistani state. The TTP’s relentless support for waging jihad in Pakistan, despite attempts at dissuasion from the Taliban and Haqqani, were the basis of its separate identity.

In theory, the U.S withdrawal in 2021 reduced the need for the Taliban and TTP to remain united, as they no longer faced a common state opponent. From Pakistan’s perspective, the Taliban takeover also created room for them to pressure the TTP to halt its attacks on Pakistani security forces—especially given the Taliban’s eagerness to gain international legitimacy and promises to contain terrorist activity.

Yet, the Taliban’s evolving interests suggest that the group is likely to stay on the sidelines when it comes to the Pakistan-TTP problem. First, the Taliban no longer has a need for safe havens across the border, and has been eager to diversify their international partners. This makes it less likely to comply with Pakistan’s demands. Second, the TTP’s long-standing support for the insurgency in Afghanistan won it loyal supporterswithin the Taliban leadership; any deviation from this loyalty is likely to generate internal strife. Finally, as the Taliban faces a multitude of domestic challenges—including a resurgent Islamic State Khorasan (ISKP) and emerging channels of local resistance –constraining the TTP is likely to be low on the Taliban’s list of priorities.

Though the Afghan Taliban may have fewer reasons to draw on TTP fighters today, they still have incentives to retain their alliance with the group. Setting aside ideological affinities and familial bonds, the Taliban may need the TTP’s support in the future to limit the threat from groups such as ISKP or deter additional TTP defections. Given the intensifying ISKP-Taliban rivalry, it is unsurprising that direct tensions between the TTP and ISKP have also heightened. The TTP condemnedsuggestions of its links with ISKP in mid-2020, and criticized the group’s sectarian attack on a Shiite mosque in Peshawar in March 2022. In April, ISKP claimed to have killed an “apostate” in Bajaur, Pakistan suspected to be Mufti Bashir Muhammad, a former judge within the TTP.

In addition to rejoicing the Taliban’s takeover, TTP’s recent behavior is indicative of its unyielding commitment to its extremist goals. It has attempted to nurture organizational coherence, improve its tarnished image after years of indiscriminate violence, and sway public opinion through actions such as releasing support statements for the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement and for Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan. Other indicators include the adoption of a new code of conduct in 2018, a string of mergers since mid-2020, and public repudiation of assessments on the group, including UN reports. In parallel, its emboldened mood has resulted in an amplification of attacks within Pakistan. In the ninth issue of their Urdu-language magazine, the TTP claimed to have conducted a total of 104 attacks with 346 casualties in just the first three months of 2022. In April 2022, the TTP announced a spring offensivetargeting Pakistani security forces, to include suicide attack missions. Taken together, these developments certainly do not instill confidence in the group’s willingness to compromise.



The Pitfalls of Conceding to the TTP
Given the changed circumstances and priorities of the Taliban and TTP, the Pakistani state must acknowledge its own new realities to understand the limits of peace talks. In the absence of generous flows of military assistance, a shambolic economy, flailing institutions, an enduring Baloch insurgency and a volatile political environment especially after the ouster of Imran Khan, the Pakistani state’s vacillation between airstrikes and negotiations make for poor optics. Pakistani officials can hardly pretend to be negotiating from a position of strength, while the TTP—with Noor Wali Mehsud at its helm—remains emboldened, resolved, and largely unapologetic.

Months after the initial news of talks with the TTP, in mid-June 2022, the Taliban’s spokesperson stated that the latest round of TTP-Pakistan talks in Kabul had concluded, with a declaration of an indefinite ceasefire. Among others demands such as the release of prisoners, the TTP has asked for a full reversal of FATA’s absorption into the Khyber Pukhtunkhwa province along with a withdrawal of Pakistani troops. In other words, the TTP continues to reject the Pakistani constitution. From Pakistan’s side, it seeks the dissolution of TTP, and its transition into a non-violent political party. To renew talks with a proscribed terrorist group, especially when similar attempts in the past have failed, Pakistani officials must be hopeful for a different outcome this time. If this hope is pinned on the Taliban’s ability/willingness to coerce the TTP beyond facilitating talks, it is unlikely to succeed.


Overall, any agreement with the TTP entails high risks, and one that remains highly improbable without any significant concessions from Pakistan. In general, research suggests that civilian support can play an important role in legitimizing the actions of state actors. Civil society organizations also play a critical role in sustaining peace strategies—neglecting to include them in any meaningful capacity can undermine the sustainability of agreements. In the context of Pakistan, given that civilian populations have borne the brunt of terrorism, public opinion (beyond the formation of a 50+ person jirga) should be factored in before any major points are conceded by Pakistani negotiators. It is certainly not a given that those who suffered from TTP’s violence prefer a negotiated settlement rather than a sustained effort by the state to defeat the aggressor.

Thus far, there is little evidence to show the societal costs and benefits associated with a TTP agreement have been carefully considered by Pakistani negotiators, as there is minimal public outreach about the logic of the ongoing talks. Ultimately, any agreement reached with the TTP necessitates a public discourse about whether the TTP can be reframed from a terrorist opponent to a legitimate actor of society. Until then, Pakistani officials would be prudent to focus on leveraging lessons learned from its decade and a half of combating terrorism and insurgency, and addressing the underlying causes of extremism, rather than taking two steps backwards to accommodate the demands of militants.

 
TTP withdraw from it's ceasefire with Pakistan and launched a campaign of attacks against Pakistan army.

photo_2022-12-01_22-33-54.jpg


TTP monthly attack report, November (Google translation)


In the last "November" month, Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan have carried out a total of 59 attacks from major cities to tribal areas of the country, which include retaliatory attacks during army and police raids.

The most attacks were 16 in North Waziristan, 9 in South Waziristan, 6 in Lakhi Marwat, 5 in Khyber Agency and 4 in Dera Ismail Khan, besides 3 in Mardan and Bajaur Agency, 3. Peshawar, Kohat , 2, 2 in Bannu and Tank and one attack each in Momundo Agency, Pushin, Kuchlak, Nowhar and Quetta.

According to the division/province count, 24 attacks were carried out in Bannu province, 15 in Dera Ismail Khan province, 9 in Peshawar province, 3 in Mardan and Malakand provinces, 3 in Kohat province and 2 in Kohat province. Similarly, there have been 3 attacks in Balochistan.

In these attacks, more than 100 personnel of the army, police, FC, SSJ and ISI were killed and injured, including high-ranking officials. Besides this, around five buildings and more than ten cars were destroyed. Mujahideen received 25 weapons and a car as booty. 15 police officers were arrested in South Waziristan and later released due to expediency.

The drone strike in Dera Ismail Khan, the operation in Lakhi Marwat and the new order of the operation by the Ministry of Defense of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan to the Mujahideen were the features of this month. Within 48 hours after the order, Mujahideen carried out 7 attacks, among which the martyrdom attack in Quetta is worth mentioning
 
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1)An FC convoy was ambushed in South Waziristan

Today, an attack was carried out on FC convoy near Army Public School in Azam Warsak area of Wana center of South Waziristan (Dera Ismail Khan Province) in which three vehicles of FC forces were completely destroyed and the personnel inside them. Dead and injured. IG FC along with Colonel were also present in this convoy.

Although the army has taken control of the area and people are still being harassed in the name of search operations, no total casualties have been reported so far.
The Mujahideen have reached their centers and hideouts with the special help of Allah. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman


07/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
01/December/2022


2) A police officer was killed in Charsadda.

On Thursday, a policeman named Zar Mast Khan was shot dead by Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan in Chowantari area of Tangi Tehsil of Charsadda district of Peshawar province. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

7/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
01/December/2022



3)Attack on police in Dera Ismail Khan

Last night, mujahideen attacked the police near Paharpur tehsil park gate in Dera Ismail Khan district of Dera Ismail Khan province, during which two police officers were killed. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman


08/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
02/December/2022
 
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4)An elite Police commando killed in Mardan

Last day, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen attacked the meeting post of Baizai Tahana in Mardan district of Mardan province, in which an elite force commando named Fazal Haq was killed.

The attack was carried out in revenge of the martyred Mujahid Mehmood, may God have mercy on him a few days ago.

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

08/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
02/December/2022



5)Attack on the post of FC forces in Khyber Agency

Last night, Mujahideen attacked the Havaldari post of FC forces in Surkamar area of Jamrud Tehsil of Khyber Agency (Peshwar Province), in which three FC personnel were injured. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

09/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
03/December/2022
 
6)A counter-attack was carried out in Tang.

Today, on Friday, the army tried to attack the Mujahideen in Peng area of Tang district of Dera Ismail Khan province, but two soldiers were fatally wounded in the retaliatory firing by the Mujahideen. Special assistance reached their centers. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

8/Jamadi al-Awwal/1444 AH
2/December/2022


7)FC post was attacked in Khyber Agency.

Last night, an FC post was attacked with hand grenades and laser weapons by Mujahideen in Aziz Khailo area of Bara Tehsil, Khyber Agency, Peshawar province, during which six FC soldiers were killed. Dead and injured. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

09/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
03/December/2022
 
8)Attack on FC in South Waziristan.

Yesterday, on Friday evening, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen attacked the FC check point named Patni in the Shalam area of Wana, the center of South Waziristan, Dera Ismail Khan province, as a result of which two people were killed. FC employees died, Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

09/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
03/December/2022


9)The police were ambushed in Noshahar

In the evening of Khali or Saturday evening, the Mujahideen of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) ambushed the police in the Akura Khattak area of Nowshar District (Peshwar Province), during which three policemen, Manzoor, Amanullah and Ayaz were killed. became Alhamdulillah


Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

09/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
03/December/2022
 
Two soldiers were killed in South Waziristan.

Today, on Sunday/Saturday afternoon, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen carried out a guerilla attack on an army post in Shaktoi Tehsil, South Waziristan, Dera Ismail Khan province, during which two soldiers were killed. . Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

10/Jamadi Al-Awwal/144 AH
December 4, 2022


2) Heavy clashes broke out in North Waziristan.

Yesterday, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen carried out successful and successful operations in two separate areas of Dosli Tehsil of North Waziristan, Bannu province, in response to the raids of the dirty army.

In these raids, one soldier died, six were mortally wounded and others managed to escape.

In this raid, a mujahid friend also reached the high position of martyrdom, nahsba kazalik, wallah haisbah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

11/Jamadi Al-Awwal/144 AH
December 5, 2022
 
1)Update on North Waziristan raid:

Last day, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan attacked the Mujahideen from three sides in the areas of Dosli and Mir Ali Tehsils of North Waziristan, Bannu province. And cope with sacrifice.
According to our information, more than ten soldiers were injured and killed in the said clash.

While our four Mujahideen friends also reached the high position of martyrdom. Ina Allah and I will return to you

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

12/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
December 6, 2022


2)In Dera Ismail Khan, a joint army and police convoy was attacked.

Today, on Tuesday/9th, in Dera Ismail Khan district of Dera Ismail Khan province, the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen ambushed a joint convoy of the army and CTD police. did

At least five soldiers were killed and wounded in the said attack, and the Mujahideen returned safely to their centers with the special help of Allah. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

12/Jamadi/1444 AH
December 6, 2022
 
1)Police were attacked in Charsadda.

Today, on Wednesday, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen attacked the police station of Charsadh district of Peshawar province, in which one policeman was fatally injured. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

13/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
December 6, 2022


2)A police post was attacked in Bannu.

Last night, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Mujahideen attacked the post of Kachkot bridge in Mandan district of Bannu district, during which Havaldar Sardar Ali was killed and another was mortally wounded. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

13/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
December 6, 2022

3)An intelligence officer was killed in South Waziristan.

Today, on Wednesday, an employee of the FIU intelligence agency was killed by the Mujahideen of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan in Ali Khailo village of Shaktoi Tehsil of South Waziristan province. Alhamdulillah

Mohammad Khorasani
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman

13/Jamadi Al-Awwal/1444 AH
December 6, 2022