Qaeda leaders are forging deeper relationships with Pakistani militants and often operating from their camps inside the Pakistan border, fueling Obama administration arguments for a shift in the Afghan war strategy that more narrowly targets the terrorists. For eight years since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the US has focused mostly on Afghanistan's Taleban as an unabashed ally of Al-Qaeda. Now, however, forced to choose between sending more troops in an intensified counterinsurgency campaign against Afghanistan's Taleban or largely maintaining troop levels and using more drone strikes to take out Al-Qaeda along the border, US officials must first determine which enemy is the greater priority. That dilemma is complicated by the recent rise of a Pakistani faction of the Taleban that operates in close proximity with Al-Qaeda, even as Al-Qaeda has lessened activities with its former Afghan Taleban hosts, according to some administration officials. US officials face a tough challenge in dissecting the structure and leanings of the militant organizations on both sides of the often indiscernible Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and understanding their murky and evolving ties to Al-Qaeda. “You cannot meaningfully distinguish between Al-Qaeda and the co-linked (militant) networks, either in terms of understanding the landscape or crafting a policy response,” said Vahid Brown, a researcher at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. “If you think you can kill Al-Qaeda leaders, as opposed to doing a broader scale effort against the militant environment, that notion is based on a fundamental misapprehension of the nature of the terrain,” said Brown, describing the complexity of the networks along the border and their threat. With concerns about Pakistani militants growing, an influential faction inside the administration that includes Vice President Joe Biden is pushing for the US to concentrate more on Al-Qaeda and less on the Afghan Taleban. But the push for that strategy butts up against the long-perceived union between Al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taleban, ingrained in America's consciousness since the Sept. 11 attacks and the ensuing war in Afghanistan. The 19 Al-Qaeda members behind the hijackings that sent planes into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and the Pennsylvania countryside plotted their attacks from Taleban-protected safe havens in Afghanistan. The Afghan Taleban took over Afghanistan in 1996. United in Islamic ideology, they sheltered Osama bin Laden and his Al-Qaeda followers. Al-Qaeda terrorist training camps flourished openly in the 1990s and the two groups shared weapons, financing and tactics. In the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, the Bush administration repeatedly linked Al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taleban in rhetoric and policy, pairing them in enemies' lists and economic penalties. President Barack Obama and his advisers are debating whether US policy should sever that linkage and target Al-Qaeda, which has appeared to have found new allies inside the Pakistani border. Over the past 18 months, according to several analysts, Al-Qaeda leaders have deepened and solidified their relationship with Pakistan's Taleban and with other violent homegrown militant groups, including Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Janghvi, that are based in the northeastern Punjab province. Al-Qaeda also has strong ties with the network run by Jalaluddin Haqqani and his son Siraj, who direct the fight against US forces in eastern Afghanistan from the Waziristan tribal region in Pakistan. Brown pointed to the Haqqani network operating in Pakistan's tribal areas as an example of militants linked to Al-Qaeda who have demonstrated a growth in technical innovation. Its increased use of roadside bombs and different types of suicide attacks, and the employment of other international jihadists are evidence of the Al-Qaeda influence, he said. According to US officials and analysts, Al-Qaeda leaders have provided training and resources to these groups in camps along the border. The stronger ties are also evident, the analysts said, in suicide bombings and other violent battlefield tactics long known to be associated with Al-Qaeda that are showing up more frequently in attacks staged by those Pakistan-based groups. Pakistan's Taleban have unloosed a spree of violence inside the country over the past year, attempting to take over the Swat Valley region before being ousted by Pakistan's army. In recent weeks, the Pakistani Taleban, aided by other militants, have targeted military and government installations in suicide bombings aimed at forcing the government to back off from its recent push into South Waziristan, the border area where many militants are based. Despite those attacks, the offensive began. At the same time, said Richard Barrett, coordinator of the monitoring team for the UN's Al-Qaeda and Taleban Sanctions Committee, said there are hints of fracture between Al-Qaeda and its longtime Afghan Taleban allies. Barrett said that Afghan Taleban leaders, including the reclusive, one-eyed Mullah Omar, may have changed their once-approving view of Al-Qaeda. Barrett said the Afghan Taleban may worry about US repercussions if they “are seen as very closely wedded to Al-Qaeda” and likely to allow that group to re-establish sanctuaries there. Some US military and intelligence officials, however, warn against underestimating the relationship between Al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taleban. While the Taleban and Al-Qaeda may have differences, senior counterterrorism officials say that Al-Qaeda still has strong historical ties to Mullah Omar and that is not likely to go away. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, is arguing for an additional 10,000 and 80,000 troops to mount a counterinsurgency campaign against the Afghan Taleban to stabilize the country and boost Afghan security forces. But rising US casualties, escalating violence and declining American support for the war have put political pressure on the White House to rethink that strategy. The counterproposal urged by Biden and others would maintain current troop levels and use special operations forces and targeted unmanned aircraft strikes against Al-Qaeda and other insurgents. Recent US government estimates put the number of Taleban fighters in Afghanistan at about 25,000, while analysts and other officials say there are only about 100 Al-Qaeda members in the country. Totals for Al-Qaeda in Pakistan are more difficult to pin down, but estimates are in the low hundreds, while Taleban there number also in the thousands. Biden and others argue that if the aim is to prevent future attacks against the United States, then the goal must be to defeat Al-Qaeda. Military analyst Frederick Kagan told Congress that any move to defeat Al-Qaeda cannot be separated from efforts to defeat its allies and proxies. The Afghan Taleban may not be planning terrorist attacks against the United States now, but he said that, with continued association with Al-Qaeda, the Taleban eventually may pursue global militancy. Bruce Hoffman, a counterterrorism expert at Georgetown University and a longtime government adviser, said Al-Qaeda continues to work with the Taleban and other insurgents on both sides of the border, providing resources and training to bolster their fight. He and others argue that to narrowly focus the fight on Al-Qaeda leaders, particularly those targeted by drone strikes inside the Pakistan border, would be to oversimplify a complex enemy, and ultimately fail.