"Murmurs of discontent have broken out on the Haqqanis' home turf. As the Haqqanis themselves - Jalaluddin and Sirajuddin, his son, who now leads the group - shelter across the border in Pakistan, support has turned to resentment in some corners," the New York Times reported today.
It said that for more than a generation, the remote mountains of Khost and Paktia in eastern Afghanistan have been Haqqani country but of late leaders of Haqqani's native Zadran tribe in Khost Province say they have formally broken with the feared militant network.
Rahim was referring to Pakistan's support for the network. "His war is not a holy war. It's a war for dollars, for Pakistani rupees and for power."
The NYT said the Haqqani network has come to resemble a mob in recent years, with a wide range of funding sources - from basic donations to businesses in the Persian Gulf states - and a sharp sense of how to protect its interests.
"But the foreign support, particularly within Pakistan, has come at a cost among Afghans in Khost and Paktia. Many view Pakistan as a sovereign enemy, and the Pakistani security forces' implicit support for the Haqqanis has tested the loyalty of some people here," it said.
"We are no longer that older generation who followed him blindly," Zadran said, adding that Haqqani was a hero because he had defeated the Communists but "now he is an insurgent and a terrorist. We don't know who made him a hero back then or a terrorist now.
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