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Is Pakistan’s 'War on Terror' Out of Time?

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Is Pakistan’s ‘War on Terror’ Out of Time? | The Diplomat

With Washington’s patience and money fading, is time running out for Pakistan’s offensive against domestic terrorism?

By Jack Detsch
thediplomat_2014-11-21_15-34-53-386x256.jpg


Barely a month after Secretary of State John Kerry paid a surprise visit to Islamabad to parley with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, floating promises of emergency aid to fight militants, Congress has put its gripes with America’s fickle counterterrorism partner in ink. On February 12, the leaders of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, California Republican Ed Royce and New York Democrat Eliot Engel, wrote a letter to Kerry, urging the State Department to consider travel bans, suspending assistance, and imposing sanctions on corrupt officials until Islamabad can regain the initiative against the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and the Haqqani network. “We appreciate that you and other senior-level Administration officials regularly raised the need to confront these groups with Pakistani officials,” Royce and Engel wrote, referencing Kerry’s January trip. “Yet it does not appear that this engagement has resulted in any real change in Pakistan’s policies.”

Royce and Engel’s concerns stemmed from Pakistan’s muted response to a Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar last December, which left almost 150 people dead. But just hours after Kerry received the note, events in Pakistan continued to inflame that argument. On February 13, three Taliban assailants hurled grenades, exchanged gunfire with police, and detonated a suicide vest at a Shia mosque in Peshawar, leaving 20 dead. The fundamentalists continued their attacks on February 17, when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of people in Lahore, killing five and injuring dozens more.

Those attacks come at a critical time in Pakistan’s fight against the militants. Since June, Islamabad has ramped up operations against Taliban enclaves in North Waziristan, a mountainous slice of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) where Sharif’s government exercises little formal control. Though the effort, dubbed Zarb-e-Azb, has been wracked with false starts and casualties, in welcoming Pakistan’s Interior Minister Ali Khan to Washington on Thursday, Kerry offered praise for the campaign. “They are committed to going after terrorists, all forms of extremism in Pakistan,” Kerry said. “And they are making good on that in their initiatives in the western part of the country and elsewhere, and in their cooperation on counterterrorism.”

But aside from the rhetoric, which has remained strikingly similar for the past eight years, what is Pakistan doing to fight the insurgency in concrete terms? Pakistan claims it has killed more than 2,000 militants since the offensive began in June, sustaining just 129 casualties of its own. Operations in North Waziristan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have pushed militants from Al Qaeda, the Islamic State, and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan over the border into Afghanistan, where they’ve struggled to gain a foothold, clashing with Pashto-speaking tribes in their attempts to force civilians out of their homes.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s military has gotten more adept at fighting insurgents from above: bombings in the Datta Khel area destroyed a terrorist hideout in January, killing 35 insurgents. Those efforts have been abetted by strikes from American predator drones, which have already claimed the lives of 27 militants this year. Islamabad continues to disavow that support, but seems to understand the gravity of the stakes in North Waziristan: the Zarb-e-Azb offensive has been bolstered by a surge of 170,000 troops on the Afghan border, almost a third of Pakistan’s entire military. Islamabad’s tussle with militants has claimed the lives of over 4,400 troops since 2002, nearly twice the number of American casualties in Afghanistan. While doubts about Pakistan’s commitment to the fight remain, there’s no underestimating Islamabad’s war weariness.

That fatigue won’t subside any time soon. Even if Pakistan can manage to get the insurgency under control, it could very easily regroup in Afghanistan or elsewhere. Eastern pressure from India, Pakistan’s military arch-rival, provides a constant distraction from the Western front, despite the resurgence of shuttle diplomacy surrounding the 2015 Cricket World Cup.

But if Pakistan wants help from the U.S. or anyone else in fighting the scourge of terror, they would do well to hurry up. Congress isn’t the only place where patience is waning: aid from the Kerry-Lugar-Berman act, Washington’s cash pipeline to Islamabad for counterterrorism operations, has dried up. Kerry promised another $250 million in January, far short of what’s needed to sustain a full-throated counterinsurgency operation. With President Obama increasingly looking towards Delhi as his chief partner in South Asia, Islamabad may be running out of time to take the fight to Islamic militants.

@Norwegian @karakoram @Pomgranate @WAJsal @45'22' @Dem!god @DRAY @Robinhood Pandey @Mike_Brando @SrNair @TimeTraveller @wolfschanzze @utraash @TejasMk3 @itachiii and all friends :-)
 
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Is Pakistan’s ‘War on Terror’ Out of Time? | The Diplomat

With Washington’s patience and money fading, is time running out for Pakistan’s offensive against domestic terrorism?

By Jack Detsch
thediplomat_2014-11-21_15-34-53-386x256.jpg


Barely a month after Secretary of State John Kerry paid a surprise visit to Islamabad to parley with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, floating promises of emergency aid to fight militants, Congress has put its gripes with America’s fickle counterterrorism partner in ink. On February 12, the leaders of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, California Republican Ed Royce and New York Democrat Eliot Engel, wrote a letter to Kerry, urging the State Department to consider travel bans, suspending assistance, and imposing sanctions on corrupt officials until Islamabad can regain the initiative against the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and the Haqqani network. “We appreciate that you and other senior-level Administration officials regularly raised the need to confront these groups with Pakistani officials,” Royce and Engel wrote, referencing Kerry’s January trip. “Yet it does not appear that this engagement has resulted in any real change in Pakistan’s policies.”

Royce and Engel’s concerns stemmed from Pakistan’s muted response to a Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar last December, which left almost 150 people dead. But just hours after Kerry received the note, events in Pakistan continued to inflame that argument. On February 13, three Taliban assailants hurled grenades, exchanged gunfire with police, and detonated a suicide vest at a Shia mosque in Peshawar, leaving 20 dead. The fundamentalists continued their attacks on February 17, when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of people in Lahore, killing five and injuring dozens more.

Those attacks come at a critical time in Pakistan’s fight against the militants. Since June, Islamabad has ramped up operations against Taliban enclaves in North Waziristan, a mountainous slice of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) where Sharif’s government exercises little formal control. Though the effort, dubbed Zarb-e-Azb, has been wracked with false starts and casualties, in welcoming Pakistan’s Interior Minister Ali Khan to Washington on Thursday, Kerry offered praise for the campaign. “They are committed to going after terrorists, all forms of extremism in Pakistan,” Kerry said. “And they are making good on that in their initiatives in the western part of the country and elsewhere, and in their cooperation on counterterrorism.”

But aside from the rhetoric, which has remained strikingly similar for the past eight years, what is Pakistan doing to fight the insurgency in concrete terms? Pakistan claims it has killed more than 2,000 militants since the offensive began in June, sustaining just 129 casualties of its own. Operations in North Waziristan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have pushed militants from Al Qaeda, the Islamic State, and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan over the border into Afghanistan, where they’ve struggled to gain a foothold, clashing with Pashto-speaking tribes in their attempts to force civilians out of their homes.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s military has gotten more adept at fighting insurgents from above: bombings in the Datta Khel area destroyed a terrorist hideout in January, killing 35 insurgents. Those efforts have been abetted by strikes from American predator drones, which have already claimed the lives of 27 militants this year. Islamabad continues to disavow that support, but seems to understand the gravity of the stakes in North Waziristan: the Zarb-e-Azb offensive has been bolstered by a surge of 170,000 troops on the Afghan border, almost a third of Pakistan’s entire military. Islamabad’s tussle with militants has claimed the lives of over 4,400 troops since 2002, nearly twice the number of American casualties in Afghanistan. While doubts about Pakistan’s commitment to the fight remain, there’s no underestimating Islamabad’s war weariness.

That fatigue won’t subside any time soon. Even if Pakistan can manage to get the insurgency under control, it could very easily regroup in Afghanistan or elsewhere. Eastern pressure from India, Pakistan’s military arch-rival, provides a constant distraction from the Western front, despite the resurgence of shuttle diplomacy surrounding the 2015 Cricket World Cup.

But if Pakistan wants help from the U.S. or anyone else in fighting the scourge of terror, they would do well to hurry up. Congress isn’t the only place where patience is waning: aid from the Kerry-Lugar-Berman act, Washington’s cash pipeline to Islamabad for counterterrorism operations, has dried up. Kerry promised another $250 million in January, far short of what’s needed to sustain a full-throated counterinsurgency operation. With President Obama increasingly looking towards Delhi as his chief partner in South Asia, Islamabad may be running out of time to take the fight to Islamic militants.

@Norwegian @karakoram @Pomgranate @WAJsal @45'22' @Dem!god @DRAY @Robinhood Pandey @Mike_Brando @SrNair @TimeTraveller @wolfschanzze @utraash @TejasMk3 @itachiii and all friends :-)
You can't rush every thing.A minister has said the operation would end at the end of this year.Zarb e Azb is not restricted to tribal areas only,it is to move to the rest of the country,where operations would be conducted on intelligence basis.So yah ,it will take time.
 
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Is Pakistan’s ‘War on Terror’ Out of Time? | The Diplomat

With Washington’s patience and money fading, is time running out for Pakistan’s offensive against domestic terrorism?

By Jack Detsch
thediplomat_2014-11-21_15-34-53-386x256.jpg


Barely a month after Secretary of State John Kerry paid a surprise visit to Islamabad to parley with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, floating promises of emergency aid to fight militants, Congress has put its gripes with America’s fickle counterterrorism partner in ink. On February 12, the leaders of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, California Republican Ed Royce and New York Democrat Eliot Engel, wrote a letter to Kerry, urging the State Department to consider travel bans, suspending assistance, and imposing sanctions on corrupt officials until Islamabad can regain the initiative against the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and the Haqqani network. “We appreciate that you and other senior-level Administration officials regularly raised the need to confront these groups with Pakistani officials,” Royce and Engel wrote, referencing Kerry’s January trip. “Yet it does not appear that this engagement has resulted in any real change in Pakistan’s policies.”

Royce and Engel’s concerns stemmed from Pakistan’s muted response to a Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar last December, which left almost 150 people dead. But just hours after Kerry received the note, events in Pakistan continued to inflame that argument. On February 13, three Taliban assailants hurled grenades, exchanged gunfire with police, and detonated a suicide vest at a Shia mosque in Peshawar, leaving 20 dead. The fundamentalists continued their attacks on February 17, when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of people in Lahore, killing five and injuring dozens more.

Those attacks come at a critical time in Pakistan’s fight against the militants. Since June, Islamabad has ramped up operations against Taliban enclaves in North Waziristan, a mountainous slice of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) where Sharif’s government exercises little formal control. Though the effort, dubbed Zarb-e-Azb, has been wracked with false starts and casualties, in welcoming Pakistan’s Interior Minister Ali Khan to Washington on Thursday, Kerry offered praise for the campaign. “They are committed to going after terrorists, all forms of extremism in Pakistan,” Kerry said. “And they are making good on that in their initiatives in the western part of the country and elsewhere, and in their cooperation on counterterrorism.”

But aside from the rhetoric, which has remained strikingly similar for the past eight years, what is Pakistan doing to fight the insurgency in concrete terms? Pakistan claims it has killed more than 2,000 militants since the offensive began in June, sustaining just 129 casualties of its own. Operations in North Waziristan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have pushed militants from Al Qaeda, the Islamic State, and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan over the border into Afghanistan, where they’ve struggled to gain a foothold, clashing with Pashto-speaking tribes in their attempts to force civilians out of their homes.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s military has gotten more adept at fighting insurgents from above: bombings in the Datta Khel area destroyed a terrorist hideout in January, killing 35 insurgents. Those efforts have been abetted by strikes from American predator drones, which have already claimed the lives of 27 militants this year. Islamabad continues to disavow that support, but seems to understand the gravity of the stakes in North Waziristan: the Zarb-e-Azb offensive has been bolstered by a surge of 170,000 troops on the Afghan border, almost a third of Pakistan’s entire military. Islamabad’s tussle with militants has claimed the lives of over 4,400 troops since 2002, nearly twice the number of American casualties in Afghanistan. While doubts about Pakistan’s commitment to the fight remain, there’s no underestimating Islamabad’s war weariness.

That fatigue won’t subside any time soon. Even if Pakistan can manage to get the insurgency under control, it could very easily regroup in Afghanistan or elsewhere. Eastern pressure from India, Pakistan’s military arch-rival, provides a constant distraction from the Western front, despite the resurgence of shuttle diplomacy surrounding the 2015 Cricket World Cup.

But if Pakistan wants help from the U.S. or anyone else in fighting the scourge of terror, they would do well to hurry up. Congress isn’t the only place where patience is waning: aid from the Kerry-Lugar-Berman act, Washington’s cash pipeline to Islamabad for counterterrorism operations, has dried up. Kerry promised another $250 million in January, far short of what’s needed to sustain a full-throated counterinsurgency operation. With President Obama increasingly looking towards Delhi as his chief partner in South Asia, Islamabad may be running out of time to take the fight to Islamic militants.

@Norwegian @karakoram @Pomgranate @WAJsal @45'22' @Dem!god @DRAY @Robinhood Pandey @Mike_Brando @SrNair @TimeTraveller @wolfschanzze @utraash @TejasMk3 @itachiii and all friends :-)

Pakistan shouldn't accept any US aid. We must fight this war with our own resources. Only that alone will allow us to do it as per our own interests instead of doing American bidding. We've lost too much in America's imperial proxy wars in our region, its time to kiss them goodbye.
 
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With Washington’s patience and money fading, is time running out for Pakistan’s offensive against domestic terrorism?

You can't rush every thing.A minister has said the operation would end at the end of this year.Zarb e Azb is not restricted to tribal areas only,it is to move to the rest of the country,where operations would be conducted on intelligence basis.So yah ,it will take time.

It's not about patience or money, its about tangible results.

  1. Are attacks against American troops and their allies in Afghanistan, organized from Pakistani soil decreasing? Remaining the same or non constructively increasing?
  2. Are terrorist leaders operating from Pakistan put on the run by Pakistani Military and Intelligence?
  3. Are individuals in Pakistan who are promoting 'Jihadi' propaganda being held accountable?

Carrying out Military Ops without an organized political/ economic end plan is just throwing lives away for nothing.

It's one thing to be covertly supporting a militia. It's another thing to be supporting it while it's carrying out attacks against your bigger 'ally' who you want to become more involved in settling a border dispute.
 
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Lashkar-e-Taiba
Pakistan will never do that . and will alwasy support freedom fighters that are fighting in foreign occupation of kashmir .. we respect Freedom fighters and will keep funding them .... There are not Terrorist to us ..
As to TTP .. they are Funded by Ajit Doval as he has already confessed ... so what is this fuzz all about .. stop funding the Terrorists .. India is involved in it . and John Kerry has already given evidence to Modi .
 
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Pakistan will never do that . and will alwasy support freedom fighters that are fighting in foreign occupation of kashmir .. we respect Freedom fighters and will keep funding them .... There are not Terrorist to us ..
As to TTP .. they are Funded by Ajit Doval as he has already confessed ... so what is this fuzz all about .. stop funding the Terrorists .. India is involved in it . and John Kerry has already given evidence to Modi .

Welllllll...if LeT are "freedom fighters" to you , why can't TTP be "freedom fighters" to India? Flip side of the coin
 
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Welllllll...if LeT are "freedom fighters" to you , why can't TTP be "freedom fighters" to India? Flip side of the coin
becasue we are not occupying any land and you are doing it ..Kashmiri people will never accept you ,and dont you worry about ajit dovals TTP we have taken care of them .. most of them are rotten in hell already .. and the rest will be chased by isi .. only a matter of time now ..
 
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becasue we are not occupying any land and you are doing it ..Kashmiri people will never accept you ,and dont you worry about ajit dovals TTP we have taken care of them .. most of them are rotten in hell already .. and the rest will be chased by isi .. only a matter of time now ..
whole Pakistan is illegal concept... keep on supporting terrorism in kashmir and u will feel the same in ur country... its mutual ..
 
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becasue we are not occupying any land and you are doing it ..Kashmiri people will never accept you ,and dont you worry about ajit dovals TTP we have taken care of them .. most of them are rotten in hell already .. and the rest will be chased by isi .. only a matter of time now ..

Nope. Not a 'matter of time'. You have a long drawn out battle ahead of you. You likewise shouldn't stress about the Kashmiri Indians. They are safe and sound and enjoy the benefits of greater India. Using your argument, the TTP should be supported by India. Pakistan was supposed to be an Islamic Republic created for the Muslims of the sub-continent. The TTP's demands for rigid Sharia is therefore justified. Makes them freedom fighters , fighting for the freedom to ensure that the system which was promised to Pakistan is delivered to Pakistan? You can't pick and choose when you want to fight the Muslim fight. If Kashmir belongs to Pakistan since it is a Muslim majority state then the TTP are justified in demanding rigid Sharia. Stop being a 50% Muslim. Be a 100% Muslim and there maybe some credence given to your Kashmir claim
 
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lol... can't defend your country existence... :rofl:
You were banned before and you are a troll why would i waste my time discussing with you ... pass your time somewhere else i have no time for you ...
 
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You were banned before and you are a troll why would i waste my time discussing with you ... pass your time somewhere else i have no time for you ...
lol... saying as if you are an expert in judging others... u are jst out of school kid, studying in clg.. you hv long way to go kiddo...
 
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