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Word: haq (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...this shadowy war, the Taliban's intelligence chief, Qari Ahmadullah, has scored some impressive hits. His biggest coup: catching Abdul Haq, 43, the Pashtun commander who slipped into Afghanistan two weeks ago to lay the groundwork for a revolt against the Taliban. Afghan sources tell TIME that Taliban spies dangled a juicy piece of bait in front of Haq: several regional Taliban commanders were ready to defect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taliban Spies: In The Cross Hairs | 11/12/2001 | See Source »

...trap. As soon as Haq crossed over the mountains on horseback into Logar province, he was tailed by Taliban operatives who captured him on Oct. 21 and, after hours of interrogation, shot him and two of his comrades. Six of Haq's men are still under arrest, along with 20 other supporters--dousing U.S. and Pakistani hopes of an uprising among the country's Pashtun tribesmen. Haq's execution, says a foreign diplomat in Islamabad, "will make any tribal chieftain hesitate before turning against the Taliban." Ahmadullah couldn't hide his glee. In a satellite-telephone interview with a Peshawar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taliban Spies: In The Cross Hairs | 11/12/2001 | See Source »

Karzai's foray into Afghanistan was more discreet than Haq's. On Oct. 8, Karzai spread word that he was traveling to Rome to confer with the aging King. Instead, Karzai and a group of armed and loyal tribesmen grabbed a sat-phone and headed into southwest Afghanistan, the Taliban stronghold. For weeks, Karzai met with tribal elders, probing what success an insurrection backed by U.S. firepower might have against Taliban leader Mullah Omar. Karzai eluded the Taliban until last week, when its network of spies picked up his movements along the mountain trails of Uruzgan. On Thursday, Karzai...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taliban Spies: In The Cross Hairs | 11/12/2001 | See Source »

...Bush administration made a mistake in not channeling the war on terrorism through the United Nations. The bombing of Afghanistan, he tells TIME, is "really affecting people's consciences" and "creating opposition to the U.S. position." In concrete terms, Turki says, "if someone like (assassinated rebel leader) Abdul Haq comes and says, 'Join us in supporting the U.S. against Al Qaeda,' it won't make sense... for an Afghan who sees his neighbor's house being destroyed by an American bomb." Turki says that a U.N. effort to support an alternative Afghan government would have rallied Afghans against Bin Laden...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saudi Prince: Afghans Could Have Sold Out bin Laden | 11/10/2001 | See Source »

...last month nearly ended in disaster when, as TIME reported last week, U.S. commandos were ambushed by Taliban guerrillas. A central piece of the U.S. strategy--to grease the gates of entry into southern Afghanistan by turning tribal leaders and warlords against the Taliban--may have died along with Haq. His capture also highlighted the treachery of the Taliban's network of spies in Pakistan, who will try to tip off holy warriors in Kandahar to pending U.S. raids. In American war rooms, that reality--and the memories of Beirut and Mogadishu--haunts military strategists. As long as the public...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Rules of Engagement | 11/5/2001 | See Source »

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