Taliban Use Korean Hostage Cash To Fund Insurgency
Back before anyone as even covering the ransom story, let alone the fact that all the Korean swould be doing is handing the Taliban money to kill Young Americans and others, I ran several stories warning what would happen, and arguing why they should not set a satanic precedent by negoitiating a paid release merely for the sake of domestic Korean politics. Tragically, I was right: ( I wrote several more pieces on the topis, these are but a few.
The Telegraph:
Millions of dollars handed over to secure the release of South Korean hostages in Afghanistan have been used to buy weapons deployed against British and American forces in the country, the Taliban claims.
Frontline: Our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan
Killed: Major Alexis Roberts
Major Alexis Roberts, 32, Prince William’s former platoon commander at Sandhurst, was one of the victims of the Taliban offensive funded by the hostage money.
According to Taliban fighters interviewed by The Sunday Telegraph, the money has also been used to train recruits to carry out terrorist attacks in Britain and America.
South Korea has repeatedly denied claims by Afghan officials that it paid cash to secure the release in August of 21 Christian volunteers who were held for nearly six weeks. But in a recent meeting, three Taliban fighters involved in the conflict with the British in Helmand province said that $10 million cash handed over in two instalments had been used to boost operations in Afghanistan and abroad.
“It was a God-sent opportunity,” said Mullah Hezbollah, 30. “It has helped us to multiply our stockpile of weapons and explosives to wage battle for at least a year or so.
He said the money had been paid in August, shortly before the Taliban’s fugitive spiritual leader, Mullah Omar, ordered Operation Nusrat (victory), an offensive against coalition troops which ran throughout the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which finished last week. During the operation, four British soldiers were killed in southern Afghanistan, including Major Roberts.
“We were really concerned when we received orders to launch Operation Nusrat, because we had hardly any funds to buy weapons to carry out such a major offence,” said Mullah Hezbollah. Thanks to the ransom payments, however, the operation proceeded with “full vigour”.
Hezbollah and his two companions said they were emissaries of Mullah Mansoor, who took over as the Taliban military commander in southern Afghanistan after his one-legged brother, Mullah Dadullah Akhund, was killed by Special Boat Service troops in May.
Their decision to grant a rare interview came after several weeks of negotiations with Taliban intermediaries. The meeting took place in a mud-built Taliban safe house in the town of Kila Abdullah, near the border with Afghanistan in Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt. After a 15-hour delay, the three bearded insurgents – all sporting pistols under their robes – arrived and talked about their movement over cups of green tea.
Their claims will fuel the controversy about the 23 South Koreans, who were seized as they travelled by bus from Kabul to Kandahar on July 19. Two of the male hostages were executed, but the rest were released after direct negotiations between the South Korean government and the Taliban. Seoul subsequently agreed to withdraw its small contingent of troops from Afghanistan and bar any more missionaries from working there, although it has denied widespread reports that a ransom was also paid.
Hezbollah, however, gave what appeared to be precise details of the transactions. “They gave us $7 million as a first instalment the day we released 12 hostages, and the remaining money was paid soon after we released the remaining hostages on August 31,” he said.
He added that another main source of income was opium produced by poppy farmers in Helmand, thanks to a Taliban fatwa, or holy order. “Our scholars have given a religious decree saying that things which are usually abominable in Islam are permitted to wage jihad against the enemies of Islam,” he said.
His comrade, Mullah Mohibullah, 32, disclosed that some of the ransom funds were being used to train volunteers from Britain and America to carry out attacks in their homelands. “We want to destroy them, the way they have destroyed our country,” he said. “Most of these youths are suicide bombers.”
The group said that suicide bombers, either in vehicles or wearing explosive-laden vests, were also becoming the Taliban’s main weapon against occupying forces in Afghanistan. Up to 3,000 volunteers, they claimed, had signed up for the religious training necessary for martyrdom operations.
“We do not have gunship helicopters, nor do we have B-52s,” said Mullah Hameedullah, 48. “We will carry out suicide attacks everywhere in the country, be it by waistcoats, cars or other ways.”
The men said they had been engaged in operations against the British in Helmand province, but were presently on a mandatory break after four months of living mainly on bread and water. They claimed to have been involved in scores of operations in which British and other Nato troops had been killed.
Ruling out any negotiation with coalition forces, Hameedullah said: “We are ready to fight for a hundred years.”
Asked to comment on the Taliban claims, the South Korean embassy in London described them as “lies” put out by the movement’s propaganda wing
The next time some stupid group sticks itself in the middle of a war zone and gets caught we should just bomb both groups before either can capitalize on it.
Lets hope that the taliban come down from the mountains with their new guns so we can kill them faster.
October 14th, 2007 at 12:42 amYou mean they didn’t spend it on school lunches and books and winter coats for the chilluns?
October 14th, 2007 at 2:51 amWeren’t these Taliban surrounded when they released the hostages? Why weren’t they just smoked after the hostages were released?
October 14th, 2007 at 4:20 amBecause, dear Steven D, the lousy United Nothing had a finger in the soup. (As so often, and then nothing is resolved for good, it just stays the same like a bleeding wound that is strongly infected!!!)
Cutting out the source of the infection can’t be done. To many are involved for their own good reasons.
October 14th, 2007 at 5:50 am