Colonel Imam

Brigadier

Amir Sultan Tarar
Birth nameAmir Sultan Tarar
Nickname(s)Colonel Imam
BornChattal, Chakwal District, Punjab, Pakistan
Died23 January 2011 (2011-01-24)
Mir Ali, North Waziristan, FATA, Pakistan
Allegiance Pakistan
Service/branch Pakistan Army
Years of service1966–1994
Rank Brigadier[1][2][3]
Unit14/13 Frontier Force Regiment
Commands heldCO Parachute Training School
Battles/wars
Awards Sitara-e-Jurat
U.S. Special Forces Tab

Brigadier Sultan Amir Tarar, best known as Colonel Imam, (died 23 January 2011) was a one-star rank army general in the Pakistan Army, and a former diplomat who served as the Consul-General of Pakistan at Herat, Afghanistan.[4] He belonged to the Tarar Jatt Muslim family Amir Sultan Tarar was a Pakistan Army officer and special warfare operation specialist. He was a member of the SSG of the army, an intelligence officer of the ISI and served as Pakistani Consul General in Herat, Afghanistan.[4] A veteran of the Soviet–Afghan War, he is widely believed to have played a key role in the formation of the Taliban, after having helped train the Afghan Mujahidin on behalf of the United States in the 1980s.[5]

"Colonel Imam" as Tarar was also known, was a commando-guerrilla warfare specialist, and trained Mullah Omar and other Taliban factions and leaders. Colonel Imam remained active in Afghanistan's civil war until the 2001 United States led War on Terrorism, and supported the Taliban publicly through media.[5]

Tarar was kidnapped along with fellow ISI officer Khalid Khawaja and British journalist Asad Qureshi[6] and Qureshi's driver Rustam Khan on 26 March 2010. Khawaja was killed a month later. Qureshi and Khan were released in September 2010. Amir Sultan Tarar was killed in January 2011.[7][8]

  1. ^ Video on YouTube
  2. ^ Video on YouTube
  3. ^ Mohammed Omar#Aftermath
  4. ^ a b Matinuddin, Kamal (1999) The Taliban Phenomenon: Afghanistan 1994-1997, p 63. Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-579274-2, ISBN 978-0-19-579274-4
  5. ^ a b Carlotta Gall (3 March 2010). "Former Pakistani Officer Embodies a Policy Puzzle". The New York Times.
  6. ^ "No clue of Brit filmmaker kidnapped in Pak". The Gaea Times. 8 April 2010.
  7. ^ Perlez, Jane, "Onetime Taliban Handler Dies In Their Hands", The New York Times, 25 January 2011, p. 6.
  8. ^ "Former ISI official Col Imam killed in North Waziristan ". The Nation. 23 January 2011.

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