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Operation Rah-e-Nijat (South Waziristan)

Viewing cable 10ISLAMABAD175,

FATA CLEARING OPERATIONS CONTINUE, DISPLACED

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin

10ISLAMABAD175 2010-01-25 09:09 2010-11-30 21:09 SECRET//NOFORN Embassy Islamabad
VZCZCXRO6639
PP RUEHLH RUEHPW
DE RUEHIL #0175/01 0250903
ZNY SSSSS ZZH
P 250903Z JAN 10
FM AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 7024
INFO RUEHBUL/AMEMBASSY KABUL PRIORITY 1400
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 2230
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 6010
RUEHKP/AMCONSUL KARACHI PRIORITY 2808
RUEHLH/AMCONSUL LAHORE PRIORITY 8408
RUEHPW/AMCONSUL PESHAWAR PRIORITY 7468
RUMICEA/USCENTCOM INTEL CEN MACDILL AFB FL PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEAHQA/OSAF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 ISLAMABAD 000175

NOFORN
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/22/2020
TAGS: PGOV PREL PTER MARR MASS PK
SUBJECT: FATA CLEARING OPERATIONS CONTINUE, DISPLACED
RECEIVING ASSISTANCE, AMPLE FOOD

REF: A. ISLAMABAD 2591
¶B. ISLAMABAD 2607
¶C. ISLAMABAD 2672
¶D. ISLAMABAD 2708
¶E. ISLAMABAD 2780
¶F. ISLAMABAD 2801
¶G. ISLAMABAD 2837
¶H. ISLAMABAD 2972

Classified By: Anne W. Patterson for reasons 1.4 (b) (d)

¶1. (S/NF) Summary: The Pakistani military is continuing its
counterinsurgency efforts along the main corridors of South
Waziristan and the northern and central FATA with low level
search and clear operations. Frontier Corps operations in
Bajaur remain on hold, awaiting additional forces.
Meanwhile, humanitarian assistance (food and non-food items)
is reaching both the approximately 12,000 families displaced
from Orakzai and the approximately 38,000 families displaced
from South Waziristan. Of the displaced, only a few, perhaps
one hundred families, are in a camp. End Summary.

SOUTH WAZIRISTAN: CLEARING OPERATIONS CONTINUE
--------------------------------------------- -

¶2. (S/NF) In South Waziristan, units assigned to the 11th
Corps continue to conduct small-scale clearing operations on
major and secondary line of communication (LOCs) and in
built-up areas. Units of the 7th Division hold Makin and
Razmak on the northern axis; the 9th Division holds the
southwest axis from Wana while the 14th Division continues to
secure the LOC to Jandola in the south east. All division
continue to conduct search and clear operations. We do not
expect any major new operations in South Waziristan for the
moment. There has been talk of an additional push, but
Pakistani military contacts have indicated to us that troop
rotations and resupply requirements mean any additional
effort would not happen before March.

BAJAUR: WAITING FOR A MAJOR OFFENSIVE
-------------------------------------

¶3. (S/NF) In Bajaur Agency, Pakistan Army troops remain
deployed along the Charmung and Watalai Valley, with
additional checkpoints in place near Khar to screen vehicles
entering and leaving the Watalai Valley -- an indication of
possible preparations for a future operation. U.S. provided
Intelligence targets of interest in Bajaur Agency's Mamund
Valley and provide coordinates for artillery strikes and
future Pakistan Air Force air strikes. It is likely these
operations will continue through the end of January.

¶4. (S/NF) Pakistan Military and Frontier Corps forces
appear to be delaying the start of a planned three-week
offensive in the Mamund Valley, originally scheduled to start
on January 6, because of a request for two additional Army
battalions for clearing operations. The additional forces
are the 14th Punjab Battalion (from Kwazakhela, Swat, the
12th Northern Light Infantry Battalion (from Sialkot, Punjab)
and the 4th Commando Battalion and Karrar Company of the
Special Services Group battalion (the Pakistan Army's Special
Forces). In addition, the 2nd Wing of the Tocho Scouts
(currently in Bajaur) may be relieved by a wing of the
Chitral Scouts, who just completed FCTC training at Warsak.

INCREASED CHECKPOINTS
---------------------

¶5. (S/NF) Access to Orakzai Agency from the surrounding four
agencies and districts has been blocked by security forces,
and artillery and armor have moved to the Khyber and Kurram
borders with Orakzai. This coupled with the repositioning of
artillery and armor assets in Kurram and Khyber suggests
additional operations are imminent against TTP insurgents in
western Orakzai or Tariq Afridi militants in the Darra Adam
Khel region of NWFP.

INFRASTRUCTURE RECONSTRUCTION
-----------------------------


ISLAMABAD 00000175 002 OF 002


¶6. (U) On December 31, 2009, USAID signed and Implementation
Letter (IL) with the FATA Secretariat for the rehabilitation
and reconstruction of water, road and energy infrastructure
in South Waziristan. USAID will
reimburse the FATA Secretariat for work completed according
to pre-agreed costs and specifications. The GOP is currently
preparing the specifications and cost estimates for the
projects, with an initial emphasis on a major road between
Tank and Makeen. Once the design and cost estimate has been
completed and approved, USAID will advance the FATA
Secretariat 15 percent of the cost to cover mobilization
expenses, with additional funding to be disbursed after the
work is completed. The FATA Secretariat is contracting the
Frontier Works Organization (FWO) to implement the road
projects. In a January 14 meeting with USAID, FWO confirmed
that it had mobilized a team in South Waziristan to complete
the design and cost estimates.

ASSISTANCE TO ORAKZAI AND SWA DISPLACED
---------------------------------------

¶7. (SBU) Humanitarian assistance - food and non-food items
(NFI) - is reaching both the approximately 12,000 families
displaced from Orakzai and the approximately 38,000 families
displaced from South Waziristan. Of the Orakzai displaced,
the 8,000 families in Kohat have received NFI through UNHCR,
and the rest, who are in Hangu, are supported by ICRC. Only
a very few -- perhaps one hundred families -- are in a camp.
While the Orakzai displaced do not receive cash payments from
the Government of Pakistan, they are supported with food from
the World Food Program (WFP).

¶8. (C) Those registered displaced (members of the Mehsud
tribe) from South Waziristan are primarily in DI Khan and
Tank where they have received ample non-food items from
UNHCR. They receive a one-month food distribution from WFP
upon registration and then are entitled to government
payments of PKR 5,000 (about $60) a month. Those who do not
yet have activated government cash cards continue to receive
WFP food.

¶9. (C) For military and strategic purposes, the GOP does not
recognize members of the neighboring Bhittani tribe as
conflict-displaced IDPs and hence has not designated them as
eligible for government payments. Recently, however, UNHCR
was pleased to be able to win government permission to
register the Bhittani displaced unofficially and to see that
they receive humanitarian assistance. A total of some 2,000
Bhittani families are being registered in DI Khan and Tank,
and when this registration is completed in the next few days,
this group will benefit from NFI and food distributions.

¶10. (SBU) Even prior to the security forces' blocking of
access to Orakzai Agency, humanitarian actors have not been
able to provide assistance within Orakzai or South
Waziristan. Humanitarian organizations have begun planning,
however, for possible assistance upon the eventual return of
IDPs to areas of displacement. They have received some
indications from the military to expect the beginning of this
return in March.

¶11. (S/NF) Comment: As we have previously noted, the Army's
South Waziristan campaign has significantly eroded the TTP's
command and control, but has not destroyed the TTP network,
whose fighters melted away in South Waziristan or fled to
other FATA agencies, rather than put up stiff resistance.
The Army still faces a long road ahead in rooting out the TTP
in South Waziristan and pursuing TTP elements elsewhere in
the FATA.
PATTERSON
 
. . .
PESHAWAR/MINGORA – At least five militants were killed and two others got injured when a US drone fired four missiles in Datta Khel area of North Waziristan Agency on Friday evening.

On the other hand, five terrorists were killed in two different incidents in Swat.

In the incident in NWA, Sources said that US unmanned aircraft fired at least four missiles two each at a vehicle allegedly carrying militants and a militant compound at Khadar Khel village in Datta Khel, some 35 kilometres away from Miranshah, headquarters of NWA.

Resultantly five militants were killed and two others received injuries. The vehicle and compound were completely destroyed in the attack.
The latest attack is the fourth of its kind in the current month while 21 such attacks were reported in November.

Meanwhile, five more terrorists were killed in two different incidents in Swat. According to military sources, they were informed that two militants were present in a house at Roorian area of Charbagh.

Responding to it security forces cordoned off the area and started search operation. During the search operation militants started indiscriminate firing from a house. Security forces retaliated in the same tone, raided the house and killed Muhammad Zeb and Gul Zarin after a gun battle.

In the second incident, three militants including two brothers identified as Munsif, Muhammad Parvaiz and Zar Wali were killed by security forces in a clash at Khuza Khela area, some 30 km from Mingora city. Sophisticated weapons were recovered from these militants.

Five militants dead in Swat gunbattles | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
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Trickling Home to South Waziristan

By Reza Nasim Jan

Last weekend, the Pakistani military began implementing the most important phase of its anti-Taliban operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA): the return of internally displaced people (IDPs) to their homes in the South Waziristan tribal agency. The tribesmen's long-delayed return is significant because their successful resettlement will do far more to re-establish stability and deny the Taliban a safe haven in the agency than any number of military operations could. The delay in IDP repatriation has been a contributing factor to the difficulty the Pakistani military has faced in bringing about a lasting peace in South Waziristan since it launched a major operation to clear the region of Taliban militants in October 2009.

A small number of families began the journey home to South Waziristan on Saturday. According to an Associated Press report, 140 people from 16 different families were the first civilians to make their return. Brigadier Shahzad Raza, the senior Pakistani officer in charge of repatriation efforts, said "families from six villages had been selected to return, as their areas had been cleared of militants and secured by the military." The same report quoted him as saying "it was disappointing that so few decided to make the trip." While the IDPs' return is symbolically significant, they represent far fewer than the 200 families the army intended to initially repatriate and are only a small fraction of the estimated 364,000 people displaced by military operations late last year. Nevertheless, the army plans to institute a phased repatriation campaign and expects to have returned 8,000 families (approximately 64,000 people) to their homes by year's end.

On October 17, 2009, three divisions of the Pakistani military surged into the Mehsud tribal areas of South Waziristan from multiple directions. The objective was to cut-off, contain, and eventually defeat the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and evict it from its traditional strongholds in the region. Since December 2007, the TTP under its leader, Beitullah Mehsud, and his successor, Hakimullah Mehsud, held complete sway over much of South Waziristan. The TTP inflicted a campaign of violence upon the rest of the country from its stronghold, and was responsible for some of the worst terrorist attacks in Pakistan's history. The army announced its intentions to launch an operation well in advance of hostilities, allowing civilians (as well as militants) a chance to flee. A number of TTP fighters, including the movement's top leadership, escaped in the exodus and found shelter in the mountains of South Waziristan and in neighboring tribal agencies, from where they have continued to stage attacks inside Pakistan and globally.

The operation was successful in quickly clearing out the TTP but the pace of the non-military phases of the operation has been much more sluggish. The Pakistani government's failure to come to agreement with the Mehsud tribe's elders over the conditions of their return delayed plans to begin IDP repatriation in early spring of 2010. The major haggling point was security: after living for nearly two traumatic years under the TTP's oppressive yoke, the elders remained unconvinced of the permanence of the security situation. They were also unwilling to submit to the army's condition that they be responsible, upon return, for preventing the TTP's re-infiltration into their areas.

By contrast, the army achieved conditions of success much more quickly in the Swat Valley, a scenic tourist destination, also in Pakistan's northwest. More than 2.5 million people fled when the army launched a comprehensive assault to retake the valley in April 2009 from the TTP. By July of the same year, over 90 percent of those IDPs had returned home. The army coordinated closely with locals and village councils, expanded the local police force on an emergency basis, and established an intelligence sharing and informant network that successfully allowed it to prevent any attempt by Taliban militants to return. Swat locals had confidence in the new security environment and enthusiastically contributed to law-enforcement efforts; the population became a force-multiplier that allowed the military to maintain security in an area much larger than it could police by itself.

The situation is still lamentably different in South Waziristan. As one FATA administration official put it to the author earlier this year, "all that's left in South Waziristan is the army and dogs." The army is responsible for ensuring security over an area that is likely beyond its capacity to police without local allies. A White House assessment, published by the Wall Street Journal in October 2010, criticized the Pakistan army's progress in South Waziristan, saying that the army was unable to protect much more than the roads it patrolled and was not engaging TTP fighters that were now re-infiltrating the region.

This increase in militant activity in South Waziristan has unsettled many IDPs. There were two ambushes on soldiers in October and another ambush and a suicide bombing targeting a local peace committee in the agency's Shakai valley in November. The TTP has circulated pamphlets in IDP camps intimidating locals and warning them against returning. The government has promised to give returnees a cash stipend, living essentials, and assistance for rebuilding homes damaged or destroyed in the fighting, but the lethargic pace of compensation and reconstruction in Swat will not give Mehsud tribesmen much confidence in those claims.

All things considered, the start of repatriation for South Waziristan's IDPs is a positive step forward, long overdue, and could be the first concrete move towards making peace permanent in the region. Pakistan's government and army will need to go out of their way to make the repatriation a successful one, and to follow the example they set for post-conflict operations in the Swat valley. The army will need to maintain a strong physical presence and respond rapidly to calls for help; locals will not inform on the Taliban if they do not think anyone will come to their assistance. The army will also need to be much more discriminate in the use of force when responding to Taliban attacks with civilians returning.

Displaced Mehsuds will be watching this process very carefully: how the military handles and protects the first returnees will likely decide whether other people choose to join their kinsmen now at home. The majority of Mehsud IDPs recently polled by the UN High Commission on Refugees is eager to return home, but will not do so recklessly. If the government and the army are able to prove to the Mehsuds that security forces can protect them as they return, more are likely to go back, and more are likely to start taking part in the provision of that security, either by forming village defense committees or by informing on militants seeking return.

The Pakistani government and the army have the opportunity to cultivate local allies in the population of South Waziristan and to deny terrorist groups sanctuary in a critical region-if they can create the right conditions. Repatriation is a critical step in making permanent military gains in Pakistan's counterinsurgency campaign. That campaign's success or failure will have significant implications for security in South Asia and beyond. It cannot afford any more delays.





Reza Nasim Jan is the Pakistan Team Lead at the American Enterprise Institute’s Critical Threats Project.


South Waziristan's Displaced Populations Trickle Back Home - by Reza Nasim Jan | The AfPak Channel
 
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Waziristan offensive may see further delays

Washington has of late been pushing Pakistan to send troops into the region.

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Army’s embryonic plans to launch a full-scale offensive in North Waziristan may hit further delays after an apparent resurge of Taliban attacks in some other tribal regions.

A top army official said on Monday that the weekend terror strikes in Mohmand and Bajaur have indicated that areas already ‘cleared’ by the military were still to be consolidated.

“And before we have done that, it is impossible to rush into another campaign,” military spokesperson Major General Athar Abbas told The Express Tribune.

The administration in Washington has of late been pushing Pakistan to send troops into North Waziristan, a tribal badland Americans believe is the main source of trouble for international forces that are fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan.

But Islamabad has so far been resisting pressures to go against the Haqqani network, a group of Afghan jihad veterans based in North Waziristan that allegedly has strong ties with the Pakistani security establishment.

At least 80 people were killed in a couple of separate incidents on Saturday in Bajaur and Mohmand – two of the seven tribal districts the military had earlier claimed to have cleared of militants. A burqa-clad female suicide bomber struck outside a United Nations food distribution centre in Bajaur, killing more than 45 people in the latest of attacks in the region claimed by the Taliban.

Separately in Mohmand, at least 150 insurgents attempted to overrun half a dozen checkposts of paramilitary Frontier Constabulary in coordinated attacks in which 11 troops and 40 militants were killed.

“We have always been emphasising on consolidation in these regions … we have been saying let’s first secure our trail before going for something else,” Abbas said, referring to a ‘pending’ operation in North Waziristan.

After resisting calls from Washington initially, there were indications recently that the Pakistani army might have made up its mind to send troops into what is known as one of the hardest battlefields in the world.

Abbas said that fresh threats to Mohmand and Bajaur emanate from Afghanistan’s Nuristan and Kunar provinces where the Pakistani Taliban have their hideouts.

He said Maulvi Fazlullah or Radio Mullah of Swat, Maulvi Faqir Muhammad of Bajaur and Commander Omar Khalid of Mohmand were leading their groups between Kunar River and the Pakistan border.

Besides these insurgency leaders from Pakistan, al Qaeda commander like Qari Ziaur Rehman and Mufti Misbahuddin were also supporting militants with manpower and arms from their stronghold of Nuristan, Abbas added.

But an operation in North Waziristan doesn’t seem imminent now, remarked a Peshawar-based defence analyst. “One would have thought two weeks ago it was about to happen … but now things seem to have changed a lot,” said Brig. (retd) Muhammad Saad.

Saad appeared to be backing Abbas’ views and feared that Taliban might try to make a comeback in Swat as well – although he didn’t see any significant chance for them to regain the valley the Pakistani military lost in the summer of 2009.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 28th, 2010.
 
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‘Pakistan moving ahead methodically on NWA operation’

* FO says US understands Pakistan’s position with regard to full-scale operation in North Waziristan

* Zardari asked Biden for transfer of drone technology to Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: With regards to an operation in North Waziristan, Islamabad is moving ahead methodically and firmly keeping in view its strategic objectives, the Foreign Office said on Thursday.

Talking at the weekly news briefing, FO spokesman Abdul Basit said the US understood Pakistan’s position very well with regard to a full-scale operation in the agency.

“Pakistan is moving ahead methodically and firmly keeping in view its strategic objectives,” he said.

He emphasised that all regional countries should work towards maintaining state-to-state relations with Afghanistan and should not allow any great game to be played out in the country, adding that all regional countries need to adhere to the policy of “non-interference and non-intervention in Afghanistan”.

The spokesman said the people of Afghanistan and Pakistan had suffered heavily and there was no room for a new “great game” pertaining to Afghanistan.

“Being an immediate neighbour, Pakistan understands its implications and consequences not only for Afghanistan and Pakistan, but for the entire region. Pakistan has always desired working for peace and tranquility in the region and along its borders,” he said.

“Pakistan is firmly committed to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Afghanistan and working closely for normal state-to-state relations with its neighbour.”

To a question, he said the issue of drone attacks was raised during the visits of US Vice President Joe Biden and Acting Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Frank Ruggiero.

He said President Asif Ali Zardari also took up the issue with Biden and insisted on the transfer of the technology to Pakistan.

To another question, he said President Asif Ali Zardari had left for the US to attend the memorial service being held in honour of late ambassador Richard Holbrooke.

Taking advantage of his presence in Washington, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton will also call on him, he added.

About the pope’s remarks on the blasphemy law, he said the PM had already made it clear that there was no move on the cards to repeal the law.

Answering another question, he said the government would defend its officials in a US court in the Mumbai attack case. He said Pakistan was still awaiting New Delhi’s response to the suggestion of sending a judicial commission to India as is required legally in the ongoing Mumbai attack trial in Pakistan. The spokesman once again asked India to share, at the earliest, investigations into the Samjhota Express terrorist attack carried out by Hindu extremists, in which 42 Pakistani nationals were killed.

To another question, he said Pakistan had been vigorously pursuing the Kashmir issue at diplomatic and political fronts. app
 
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Give us what we want then we will think about what u want..........
"DOUBLE CROSSSING" is not allowed otherwise u will disqaulify.....
we should convey this message to America clearly
:coffee: :sniper: :usflag:
 
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Tank police imparted anti-terrorism training

TANK: Pakistan Army imparted anti-terrorism training to 200 Tank police personnel in mountainous areas of the district.
The training courses were conducted in the areas attached to mountains of South Waziristan Agency, aimed at carrying out successful operation against terrorists hidden in mountainous areas of the district.
Police were trained in disposal of bombs, use of rocket launchers, mortar shells and other modern weapons. Besides, they were also given training to fight against terrorists in mountains and plan areas. At certificate distribution ceremony, DSP Operation Tank Malik Abdul Hai told reporters that the trained police personnel would be deployed at check posts, police stations, police lines and other sensitive places of the district. He said that Tank was a sensitive settled area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa that bordered with South Waziristan and the training would help the police force to combat terrorist and miscreants coming from the agency. staff report
 
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Vital success achieved in FATA operations: army

* Peshawar corps commander says all major military operations completed

* Rejects reports about human rights violations by army


PESHAWAR: All major operations have successfully been completed in FATA and momentous success has been achieved, Peshawar Corps Commander Lieutenant, General Asif Yasin Malik, said on Friday.

He said that all major operations have successfully been completed in FATA and no force could match Pakistan army’s triumph in the war against terror.

Addressing the concluding ceremony of the 5-day workshop on human rights laws and rules of engagements, organised by the army as part of its awareness, education and capacity building programmes for officers and jawans, Malik said no force or army could match Pakistan’s efforts, achievements and sacrifices in the war against terror. Hundreds of soldiers were martyred and thousands were injured in the war against terrorism, he said, adding, we have the resolve and strong determination to sacrifice more for the protection of our motherland.

Malik said that more than eighty percent of the tribesmen want the Pakistan Army to stay in the Tribal Areas.

The corps commander said that the Pakistan Army highly valued human rights laws and international obligations.

A handful of elements and a section of the western media to hide its failure, are indulging in malicious propaganda about human rights violations against the army to undermine our matchless sacrifices in the war against terror, he said. Malik said that the Pakistan Army held human rights in high esteem and such baseless propaganda would not deter our determination and resolve.

“The Pakistan Army is a highly professional and powerful army of the world and is fully capable to tackle any kind of situation,” Malik said. Our religion, he said, also gives us the message of peace, brotherhood, love and respect to human rights and the Pakistan Army upholds human rights and international humanitarian laws in high esteem.

Malik said that our policy about the human rights issue is clear and strict disciplinary action would be taken against officials found guilty of violating human rights.

Being part of a civilised society, he said, human rights issue was serious for us and the holding a seminar on the subject is part of our policy to appraise the participants, army officers and jawans about human rights issues and humanitarians laws.

He said that professionalism, taking initiatives, truthfulness and prompt actions are some of the qualities a solider should have. app
 
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Till when Pakistan will fight this shitttt against own people for the sake of USA why couldn't Pakistan secure and cover its borders kick out all Indian Israeli black water Russian secret agents and specially all afghans some under cover agents of other European states mi 8 of UK etc rather then doing all which have bad reactions for innocent and precious people from all fields of Pakistan and special all forces r spoiled wasted daily blasts r gifted in beautiful assets of Pakistan like Lahore Peshawar Karachi quetta Islamabad etc etc etc and every thing was fine before American intrusion into Afghanistan we should think for long term over all: :china::pakistan:
 
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Till when Pakistan will fight this shitttt against own people for the sake of USA why couldn't Pakistan secure and cover its borders kick out all Indian Israeli black water Russian secret agents and specially all afghans some under cover agents of other European states mi 8 of UK: :china::pakistan:

its Mi6 not Mi8..
by the way you missed Khad, Klingons, Mossad, Telli tubbies, Nazis, werewolves, free masons, Anuk wala jin,vampires.

if this is not the time to own up to our own monsters then tell me when it would be?
the cowards of Lal masjid, the Sipah Sahabah and Lasker Jhangvi of Jhang, the TTP of Mullah Sawati are not Israeli/ Indian or Russian nationals but our very own people who have so proudly kidnapped, tortured, murdered, beheaded and mutilated the bodies of our soldiers, teachers, doctors, and ordinary civilians including men, women and children of all ages. in front of the crowd and on the videos.

the foreign hostile forces are just a catalyst, the actual fuel is this intolerant brand of Islam that sees every other human being muslim or nonmuslim as punishable for death for not being on their side.
 
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HANGU: Security forces on sunday killed twenty eight militants and destroyed their two hideout in Lower Kurram and Mohmand Agencies. - AFP
 
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Gunships destroy 5 bases of terrorists

LANDIKOTAL: Pakistan Air Force gunship helicopters bombed and destroyed five bases of alleged terrorists in various areas of Tirah Valley, Zakha Khel and Sepah tribes in the far-flung areas of Khyber Agency on Sunday. According to reports, more than five suspected terrorists were killed and many others were injured in the shelling of the gunship helicopters. The armed lashkar of Zakha Khel had attacked the headquarter of Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) in Nari Baba, a far-flung area of Tirah. Twenty-six prisoners have also reportedly fled from the privately-owned jails of LI, led by Mangal Bagh, who had been kidnapped from various parts of Khyber Agency for ransom, local sources said. The former rebel commanders of LI have also covertly joined the Zakha Khel tribe fighters to fight Mangal Bagh-led forces in Tirah Valley, sources from Zakha Khel revealed. sudhir ahmad afridi
 
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