"Yet even by Mullah Omar's standards, his elusiveness in his final years was remarkable. Only a handful of high-ranking Taliban had any access to their leader, and by the middle of 2013 that number had been winnowed to one: Mullah Akhtar Mansour, effectively the No 2 in the insurgency," a report in the New York Times said.
"That means that Mullah Mansour may have spent most of the past two years deceiving his fellow insurgents by claiming to pass on orders and messages from Mullah Omar," it cited officials as saying.
Mullah Mansour's statements appear to have "aroused the suspicion" of Mullah Omar's son Mullah Yaqoub and his brother Mullah Abdul Manan.
The report said both had previously had access to Mullah Omar, and they began telling people that they believed they were being kept away because he was dead.
Their discussions led to the initial tip picked up by the National Directorate of Security, Afghan officials said.
The report highlighted that Mullah Omar, the secretive leader of the Taliban, spent the final years of his life in "remarkable obscurity" and his death was confirmed only by "chatter" among Taliban officials.
An Afghan with links to top Taliban leaders had approached Afghanistan's intelligence service in the winter of 2014 with the "startling tip" that Mullah Omar had died in a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan.
The tip had left the intelligence service, the National Directorate of Security, with a mystery that would take 18 months to begin unraveling.
American officials said they had long ago come to believe that Mullah Omar's role in the insurgency was primarily spiritual, and that he had little to no operational control over the Taliban.
"It's not that we weren't trying to find him; we just never had the lines to do it," former American ambassador to Afghanistan James Cunningham said in the report "Even most of the Taliban didn't know where he was".
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