U.S. military says it suspected Taliban imposter

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters) – U.S. authorities had long  suspected that a self-described Taliban leader was an imposter,  even as he engaged with Kabul over reconciliation, the top U.S.  military officer said in comments released yesterday.

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,  also said he did not believe the imposter ever met with Afghan  President Hamid Karzai — contradicting media reports.

“There were very early initial suspicions. And it took a  little while to verify who he was or who he wasn’t. And, in  fact, it turns out that he wasn’t the guy that he was claiming  he should be,” Mullen said in an interview with CNN’s Fareed  Zakaria GPS due to air tomorrow.

“This was somebody that didn’t have a meeting with Karzai,  as far as I know. He was meeting with his intermediaries,”  Mullen said.

The New York Times reported this week that a man it had  described as a “Taliban leader,” who it said had taken part in  secret peace talks, was in fact an impostor. It said the man  met Karzai and was given “a lot of money.”

The individual, identified as Taliban No. 2 Mullah Akhtar  Mohammad Mansour, was likely just a shopkeeper from Quetta, the  Pakistani city where the Taliban leadership fled after they  were toppled in late 2001, The Washington Post said.

Mullen also rejected the suggestion of an intelligence  breakdown, saying “the intel world actually tipped us in the  right direction with respect to that.”

Some Western leaders have said the conflict in Afghanistan  cannot be won militarily. Despite the presence of about 150,000  foreign troops, violence is at its worst across the country  since U.S.-backed Afghan forces ousted the Taliban in 2001.

U.S. and NATO leaders agreed at a summit in Portugal last  week to meet Karzai’s timetable for foreign combat troops to  leave by 2014, but pressure for talks with the Taliban has  grown.