The whole notion that most of the Taliban leadership was stationed in Quetta was a "proxy; in reality it's the Karachi Shura," the Daily Times quoted a top North Atlantic Treaty Organisation source as saying.
The Taliban are known to have moved elements of their command to Karachi to avoid potential United States targetting in predator air strikes, and even elusive Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar is thought to be in a safe house in Karachi, under the protection of the Inter-Services Intelligence, the paper said.
Intense investigations reveal that the whole project, which initially started as "India-centric", has actually taken a global dimension, the paper added.
It was only after the Forward Section 23 in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, which provided cover and refuge to top militants, was closed under intense US pressure, that the ISI section in Karachi became the hub for anti-India activities, from where the 2006 Mumbai train bombing to 26/11 attacks were orchestrated, said the paper, recalling that the boat used to travel to Mumbai to carry out the terrorist strike was bought from Karachi as well.
The 'Karachi Project' was confirmed by recent revelations made by a double agent David Headley, who had been involved in carrying out the 26/11 massacre in Mumbai, the paper said.
In a recent testimony, Headley said he worked under the direct supervision of Pakistan's top intelligence agency, the ISI, which shelters infamous Mumbai gangsters -- Dawood Ibrahim to Tiger Memon, and the top tier leadership of the Taliban, including Mullah Omar, the paper added.
This explains a top Middle Eastern intelligence official's secret visit to Karachi, who was actively facilitating the negotiation process between Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the US and the Afghan Taliban, the paper said.
It also pointed out that Quetta Shura's number two -- Mullah Baradar -- was caught from a Sunni-Deobandi-run religious seminary in Karachi, which is under the influence of Jamaat-e-Islami and the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl, whose leaders had previously been caught sheltering high-profile Al Qaeda leaders including Sheikh Khaled Muhammad, the 9/11 mastermind.
It is shelters like this particular seminary, along with many other "safe houses", which are termed as "strategic assets" by the Pakistani security establishment, the paper added.