Afghan officials say mullah omar, taliban leader, may be dead
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Afghan officials are working to confirm reports that Taliban leader Mullah Omar is dead, just ahead of a new round of peace talks in Pakistan between the Afghan government and the Taliban.
At a last-minute press conference, Zafar Hashemi, a deputy spokesman for the president, said that they were “aware of the reports of the passing of Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader. We are
still in the process of checking those reports,” according to the Associated Press. The BBC says that "top sources within the Afghan administration and intelligence agency" had
made the claims. The Taliban haven't yet commented on the reports. Mullah Omar hasn’t been seen in public for years, and rumors of his death periodically crop up. An Afghan official
told The Wall Street Journal that Kabul was informed of his death by Pakistan two years ago. A Pakistani official told AP that this latest report is “'speculation' designed to
disrupt peace talks.” The Taliban reportedly are divided over the talks, with some wanting to continue the insurgency they have been waging since the US came in 2001. > "Whether he
is dead or alive is important because he is the > collective figure for the Taliban," said a Western diplomat with > connections to the Taliban leadership. "If he is dead, it
would be > much more difficult to get negotiations with the Taliban because > there would be no collective figure to rally around and take > collective responsibility for entering
peace talks." The peace talks come as the Taliban are struggling to hold on to their fighters, some of whom are attracted to the high-profile success of the so-called Islamic State. The
Taliban have staged a series of “audacious attacks” to try and stave off defections, The Christian Science Monitor reported last month after a suicide attack in Kabul. > With its new
activity, the Taliban is out to show restless > commanders and fighters, as well as the Afghan people, that it > remains a force to be reckoned with. … > > “ISIS is now seen as
the winning horse in the race. It has imposed > itself as the most powerful subversive Islamist movement – one > that has been tremendously successful at accomplishing what it set >
out to do – and that is posing a serious challenge to other > militant Islamist organizations from the Taliban to Hamas,” says > Fawaz Gerges, a professor of contemporary Middle
Eastern studies at > the London School of Economics and Political Science. Last month Mullah Omar supposedly wrote a message backing the peace talks, but because the text posted on the
Taliban website did not include any audio or video, it fueled rumors of his death, according to the BBC. The assumption that he is dead helped drive several Taliban leaders to defect to IS,
according to the BBC. And any confirmation of his death could spur more defections, particularly among those opposed to peace talks with the Afghan government. Mullah Omar came to power
after the Taliban emerged as the strongest force in the civil war that followed the pullout of Soviet forces. He later allied with Osama bin Laden, which put the Taliban in the crosshairs of
the US after the 9/11 attacks. He has barely been heard from since then and has a $10 million bounty on his head. The Taliban are not the only organization struggling to prove their
continued relevance. The surging power and influence of IS has also sidelined Al Qaeda, which is trying to stem a wave of defections. > “Jihadists are more action-oriented today, they
want and are drawn > to results, and in that context ISIS’s actions speak louder than > words,” says Gerges, who will publish in the fall a book on the > Islamic State as the third
generation of jihadism. “They look at > what Al Qaeda and the Taliban have done and they see that > essentially they have failed – while at the same time ISIS is > winning.” >
> The Taliban leadership is “trying to nip this thing in the bud” > by reasserting itself with spectacular acts like the suicide attack > on parliament and threatening to take a
major Afghan city for the > first time since surrendering power more than a decade ago.