Roggio, Bill. "Swat joints Talibanistan." The Long War Journal, July 7, 2007 http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2007/07/swat_joins_talibanis.php
Wikipedia. "Maulana Fazlullah": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maulana_Fazlullah
Khan, Afzal. "Revolt in Pakistan’s NWFP: A Profile of Maulana Fazlullah of Swat." Global Terrorism Analysis, Volume 4, Issue 38, Jamestown Foundation (November 20, 2007) http://www.jamestown.org/terrorism/news/article.php?articleid=2373799
WordPress. "Blogs About: Maulana Fazlullah": http://wordpress.com/tag/maulana-fazlullah/
The Detective's War, also The War for Linguists, would seem as much a war for Boots on the Ground.
Maulana Fazlullah, mentioned in the previous post, has been the roving "FM Mullah" of the Swat Valley, possibly the only FM broadcaster on earth intent on doing away with music, all but anthems and Jihadi calls, first by wrecking the retail trade in Mingora.
Whatever his stance as regards the world's foremost recognized "universal language"--music, if I must spell it out--Fazlullah is Out There somewhere with a cook fire and a patch of earth to rest his Jihadi head, but now with militants assaulting Mingora and villagers fighting back, one may wonder whether tracks, caves, and roads in the region are so impregnable and numerous as to make the under-30-year-old equivalent of a general virtually invisible.
Through whose hands are money and Kalashnikov (and RPG's) passing and where?
From how many locations in the vicinity may messages be prepared and disseminated by this one figure?
When the land wants Fazlullah, it will swallow him.
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