The new Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour has a reputation as a relative moderate who favours peace talks with the government - but his leadership already faces challenges to its legitimacy. For some Mansour was the obvious choice to succeed Mullah Omar, the one-eyed warrior-cleric who led the Taliban from its rise in the chaos of the Afghan civil war of the 1990s.
Born in the same southern province, Kandahar, some time in the early 1960s, Mansour was part of the movement from the start and has effectively been in charge since 2013, according to Taliban sources. Like Omar, he shuns public appearances. The few pictures believed to be of him show a thickset man with the dark beard and turban that are virtually the uniform for senior Taliban cadres.
Mansour spent part of his life in Pakistan, like millions of Afghans who fled the Soviet occupation. He served as civil aviation minister in the Taliban government which ruled Afghanistan from 1996 until it was ousted by the US-led invasion in 2001, when he fled again to Pakistan. In 2010 his name came up in a bizarre episode in which an impostor claiming to be Mansour duped US and British intelligence, reportedly receiving tens of thousands of dollars from them in goodwill payments, before disappearing. Doubts, discontent Officials and militants have said Mansour is a pragmatic man strongly in favour of pursuing dialogue with Kabul to try to end Afghanistan's long, bloody war.
He has shown his ability to navigate between different currents in the Taliban movement, from the Quetta Shura to the "political office" in Qatar to commanders on the ground in Afghanistan. "He is very experienced in the Taliban rank, and has a broad knowledge about the insurgent movement," said Waheed Muzhda, a Kabul-based analyst who served in the 1996-2001 Taliban regime's foreign ministry.
To take the leadership he out-manoeuvred Mullah Yakoub, Omar's son who was favoured by some commanders as the new leader but judged too young and inexperienced at 26. But there are already rumblings of discontent - some Taliban are unhappy at the thought Mansour may have deceived them for over a year about Omar's death and others accuse him of riding roughshod over the process to appoint a successor.
While Mansour was close to his predecessor, he does not have Omar's aura of religious authority though the Taliban announcement does confer upon him the title "leader of the faithful", by which the old chief was known. He faces a huge challenge in trying to unite a movement that is already showing signs of fragmenting and questions about his legitimacy at the highest echelon of the Taliban will not bolster his position. As well as fighting on the ground and coming under pressure from all sides to negotiate, the Taliban also face the challenge of halting the expansion of the Islamic State group in Afghanistan, which has been recruiting disaffected fighters.
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