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Operation Rah-e-Nijat (South Waziristan)

The battle for Waziristan

By Sayed Bokhari

Sunday, 18 Oct, 2009

The army has spent weeks cutting off militants’ escape routes and softening up targets in the region, using limited intelligence-led ground and air strikes.

Troops face stiff resistance in South Waziristan Troops face stiff resistance in South Waziristan Though military operations are launched unannounced to catch the enemy off guard, the case of Operation Rah-i-Nijaat has been altogether different.

While at the time of writing troop movement and reports emanating from Peshawar indicated that the operation had begun in South Waziristan, since June there have been regular indications that the army was ready to start hostilities against the Taliban in the area.

This strategy may have been initiated to give ample time to the civilian population of Waziristan to leave for safer places and convert the area into a battlefield where the security forces could unleash their arsenal without causing too much collateral damage.

In June NWFP Governor Owais Ghani announced that the government had finally decided to go all out against the (now dead) chief of the banned Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Baitullah Mehsud, and his cronies and that the army and other law-enforcement agencies were being given a free hand to take them on.

The decision was welcomed as the TTP had inflicted severe sufferings on innocent civilians, slaughtered men in uniform, assassinated religious scholars and bombed educational institutions and government infrastructure.

Figures vary, but it is estimated that Waziristan is home to more than 5,000 hardened militants besides some 2,000 Uzbek fighters. The total strength of the enemy in the area is said to be 10,000. The reported death of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) leader Tahir Yuldashev in a drone attack in South Waziristan in August was a big blow to the violent foreign militant group that was waging a fierce campaign against Pakistan and its state agencies. The death of Yuldashev has deprived the IMU of a leader credited with masterminding deadly attacks on military convoys and camps.

On the face of it at least, the prevailing conditions in Waziristan are favourable for Operation Rah-i-Nijaat. It is widely believed that the command structure of the TTP is in disarray. Its dreaded chief Baitullah Mehsud was killed in a US missile strike in August. The success of Operation Rah-i-Raast in Swat has also bolstered the morale of troops and inspired confidence among the people.

Isolating Baitullah’s group from other militant organisations active in the area was an important strategic consideration and perhaps the government has managed to do that vis-à-vis the Maulvi Nazir group in the Wana area in South Waziristan and Hafiz Gul Bahadur in North Waziristan. Past events reveal that some militants of the Nazir group were killed by pro-Baitullah fighters inside Mehsud territory, resulting in a bitter feud between the two groups. Hence winning over the Nazir group would not have been too difficult.

Another commander, Misbahuddin, leads the anti-Baitullah group. This group has assisted the law-enforcement agencies in pointing out militants belonging to the Baitullah group even in Islamabad and Karachi. All this is of course countered by what the military will be up against. There are two major forces which are likely to support the Baitullah group against the army — the Haqqani network, which is mostly active in Afghanistan fighting Nato forces, and the IMU.

To take care of this contingency, additional troops are said to have been deployed to occupy the strategic heights along the Mehsud territory’s border with North Waziristan besides the sealing of four access points in the battle zone from Razmak-Makeen, Wana-Ludda, Jandola-Sararogha and Kanigoram-Jandola. The Shawal mountains would thus be the only escape route available to the militants, but would effectively prove a dangerous one for them because of air and ground firepower.

In view of the operation that appears to have begun, the army placed two divisions consisting of 27,000 soldiers to take on an estimated 10,000 hard-core Taliban militants. The army has spent weeks cutting off militants’ escape routes and softening up targets in the region, using limited intelligence-led ground and air strikes.

It is believed that over the past three months the army has been drawing up plans, holding in-depth deliberations and carrying out critical analyses of past actions in the area. One issue that the army would have deliberated on is that of the peace accords drawn up in the past that only helped the militants gain respite from hostilities and a chance to reorganise. Another measure that has been taken to paralyse the militants in the area is the placement of an economic blockade since last June. This measure is said to have restricted supplies to the Taliban. It is hoped that it would further squeeze the fighting ability of the militants.

One of the fallouts of military operations is the plight of the internally displaced. In Waziristan it is estimated that tens of thousands of persons will be displaced due to the conflict. The IDPs would have to be given shelter and food in safer areas in Tank, Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan. The experience of handling a large number of internal refugees from Malakand division during Rah-i-Raast should come in handy in the care of those displaced by the Waziristan operation.

Weather conditions could play a part in hampering free movement. In the Mehsud area snowfall commences at the end of November. Logistic support to troops would then be restricted. Such weather conditions could be advantageous to the militants, who have intimate knowledge of the terrain and unfrequented routes.

The battle for Waziristan has been characterised as the ‘mother of all battles’. The battle will take place over a formidable terrain covering 2,420 square kilometres. It will take a huge human toll. With the start of the operation the Taliban will try to ignite fires elsewhere in Pakistan as they already appear to be doing. More suicide attacks can be expected in large cities like Peshawar, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore and Karachi. The epicentre of the Taliban and the Uzbek militants lies in South Waziristan. Thus for these militants it is a battle for existence.

The writer is a retired colonel.
 
Rah-e-Nijat means "The way to rescue" in Persian i think it must be the same in Pashto? راه نجات؟
 
Taliban offer stiff resistance in Kotkai
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Four soldiers, 12 insurgents killed in SWA operation
By Irfan Burki & Daud Khattak


WANA/PESHAWAR: Fierce fighting was reported from the Kotkai area where the Taliban were offering stiff resistance to the advancing troops on the fourth day of the operation Rah-e-Nijat on Tuesday.

Sources said seven soldiers lost their lives and as many got injured in an attack on their security post by militants in Kotkai area on the Jandola-Srarogha direction. Both sides are trying to get control of the area, which is the village of militant commander Hakimullah Mahsud and his key lieutenant Qari Hussain.

Sources said 20 militants were killed in fighting in Kotkai. However, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) confirmed the killing of four soldiers and a dozen militants in the fighting.

He political administration officials said the soldiers died when their post established in the Ghundai area near Kotkai came under attack from militants. ìSporadic fighting is still going on in the area and it is expected that the troops will push back the militants tonight,î said an official.

Kotkai village has a population of 5,000 to 6,000 and majority of the people had fled the area after the launch of the operation. Locals said only militants were on the ground in the village. They said army controlover Kotkai would demoralise the militants as it is the village of their leader Hakimullah Mahsud.

The political administration officials also informed about the troopsí advance towards Mandana, Sheikh Ziarat and Murghi Band areas from Spinkai Raghzai side. They said the troops had secured the area up to Murghi Band.

Army soldiers also advanced towards Srarogha after circling Kotkai village and clashes with militants continued all the day on Tuesday. Clashes were also reported in Sherwangai during their advance from Wana towards Shakai.

Sources said after clearing Khaisoor, the troops were now moving towards the villages of Chalweshtai, Kaniguram, Sam and Ladha. They said the forces would establish their positions in a plain area on top of a hill in Asman Manza, Kaniguram.

In their advance from Razmak side, the troops have cleared the area of Nawazkot and on way to reach Makeen. Sources said most of advance had been made from Wana side in the past four days of the operation.

The Sherwangai area is located some 25 kilometres from Razmak on Wana-Razmak road. The village of Chalweshtai is located at a three kilometres distance from Sherwangai while the villages of Kaniguram, Sam and Asman Manza are at seven-kilometre distance from Chalweshtai. Kaniguram is at seven kilometres from Ladha while the distance between Ladha and Makeen is also seven kilometres. The town of Razmak is located at five kilometres distance from Makeen.

Locals and political administration officials said the troops were shelling Mahsud areas with artillery guns from Razmak, Wana, Jandola, Malzai and Sarwakai areas. Spokesman for the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Azam Tariq confirmed fierce fighting in Kotkai village and the nearby areas. He said the militants were offering tough resistance to the troops and had inflicted heavy casualties on them.

Pointing an accusing finger at the local media, the Taliban spokesman complained it was giving the government version of the events. He claimed nearly 40 soldiers were killed in an attack at a security post in Kotkai area. The ISPR confirmed the killing of only four soldiers.

The TTP spokesman also warned pro-government elders from Mahsud tribe against support to the government. He said they would take action if the elders did not quit their pro-government stance.

Meanwhile, the arrival of displaced people continued in Dera Ismail Khan, Tank and the neighbouring North Waziristan. Although some displaced families are living with relatives or rented houses, many are lying under the open sky as the government or relief agencies have yet to provide them the necessary assistance.

The population that arrived here said hundreds of families have been stranded in the conflict-zone as all roads are closed at different locations due to the fighting.

AP adds from Dera Ismail Khan: The Pakistan Army has struck deals to keep two powerful tribal chiefs — Mulla Nazir and Hafiz Gul Bahadur — from joining the battle against the government, officials told The Associated Press on Monday.

Under the terms agreed to about three weeks ago, Mulla Nazir and Hafiz Gul Bahadur will stay out of the current fight in parts of South Waziristan. They will also allow the army to move through their own lands unimpeded, giving the military additional fronts from which to attack the Taliban.

In exchange, the army will ease patrols and bombings in the lands controlled by the two warlords, two Pakistani intelligence officials based in the region told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because revealing their identities would compromise their work.

The United States has responded cautiously to the initial Pakistani strategy, publicly welcoming the offensive but saying little about the specific choice of targets.

ìWe have a shared goal here, and the shared goal is fighting violent extremism,î State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said. Kelly said he was unaware of an agreement to keep some militant factions out of the fight for now, but other US officials said the strategy is not surprising or necessarily worrisome. Because the faction loyal to Taliban leader Hakimullah Mahsud poses the most direct threat to the Pakistani government and army, it is the logical first target, US officials briefed on the offensive said.

While a broad offensive that takes on all comers at once might be ideal, it is not practical, US military officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the United States has no direct role in the operations of another country.

Pakistani security analysts said the army had little choice but to cut deals with rival Taliban factions to have a chance of success. The campaign will likely be far tougher than in the Swat Valley.

ìIf the army opens up multiple fronts, they will be deluged,î said Khalid Aziz, a former top administrator in the northwest.ìItís like having a patient suffering from multiple diseases — you tend to treat those that are life-threatening first,î he observed.

Hafiz Gul Bahadurís area of influence lies in North Waziristan just across the border from South Waziristan. He and his followers come from a different tribe than the Mahsuds, who make up the majority of the Pakistani Taliban. Mulla Nazir controls territory in South Waziristan.

Mulla Nazir is an old-time opponent of the Mahsud tribe, while Hafiz Gul Bahadur is reportedly angry over the appointment of Hakimullah as Taliban chief. Being able to move unimpeded through their territory gives the army a massive boost in its current campaign.

Army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas said there was no agreement with the two men, but ìthere is an understanding with them that they will not interfere in this war.î He said the army ìhad to talk to the devilî to isolate its main target. Asked whether the agreements were holding, he said: ìObviously, they are not coming to rescue or to helpî the Taliban.

Taliban offer stiff resistance in Kotkai
 
ASIA PACIFIC
Date Posted: 20-Oct-2009

Jane's Defence Weekly

Pakistan presses US again for funds payments

Jon Grevatt Jane's Asia-Pacific Industry Reporter - Bangkok

Pakistan has reiterated a call for Washington to expedite what it says are delayed payments of Coalition Support Funds (CSF) and Foreign Military Funds (FMF), according to a statement issued by the Pakistan government on 19 October.

In a meeting with General David Petraeus, commander of US Central Command, Pakistan Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani said the funds were urgently needed to assist military efforts in the restive province of South Warizistan, which borders Afghanistan.

According to the Pakistan government, Gen Petraeus "assured the prime minister that the remaining balance of CSF and FMF payments would be released to Pakistan as soon as possible".

Gen Petraeus added that he welcomed "the new mechanism of streamlining the process of lodging the claims, which was being put in place by the government of Pakistan".

The amount that Pakistan says is outstanding was not disclosed, although in September Islamabad said it was owed USD1.6 billion in CSF: an aid programme which is designed to support Pakistani armed forces in the 'war on terror'.

A report published by the US Government Accountability Office in February this year said Pakistan has received USD8.7 billion in military-related reimbursements and assistance from the US between 2002-08. Seventy-four per cent of this aid is attributed to CSF, with the remainder accountable to FMF, which funds purchases of US military equipment.

Although US officials were not immediately available for comment, in 2008 the US Department of Defense rejected claims that USD800 million under the CSF programme had been delayed.

A spokesman at the time told Jane's : "We haven't delayed money going to Pakistan ... [But] we do have somewhere in the region of USD800 million in a current reimbursement package going through the system now."
 
Refugees see Waziristan operation as pointless



DERA ISMAIL KHAN: Fed up and disillusioned, Sharaf Khan says he has lived in misery for years, a pawn between Taliban gangs and the Pakistani military whose previous offensives ended in stalemate.
‘There is no likelihood of this operation being a success. It’s just for show,’ said the 45-year-old shepherd, whose family’s meagre belongings are crammed into a minivan.
‘We have spent the last four or five years living in misery. As far as we are concerned, neither the army nor Taliban are any good.’ Khan, married with an 18-month-old child, was speaking after an exhausting three-day journey with his family across mountain paths to circumvent army checkpoints, road closures and night-time curfews
He is one of at least 110,500 people who have fled South Waziristan where the army launched a massive operation that Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani says is poised to deliver a ‘decisive blow’ against the Islamist insurgents.
But those who have been caught up in previous military pushes in Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt, which lies outside direct government control and has a fierce warrior culture, are sceptical.
‘It seems like a drama whose characters are troops and Taliban but we are the one who really do suffer in this situation,’ said Aamanullah Mehsud, a father of six children.
The 55-year-old farmer, who comes from the Kanigurram region, a Taliban stronghold of South Waziristan, said he had fled with 15 family members.
‘There was very heavy bombardment in our area. Children were crying because the sound was deafening,’ he said.
Those who make it to Dera Ismail Khan, which neighbours Waziristan, try to stuff as much as they can into the pickup trucks and minivans that ferry them to safety.
As well as wooden cots, bedding and cooking utensils, some have even brought their goats and chicken with them.
Every vehicle had 12-14 passengers crammed inside, most of them women and children.
Many complained of pain and exhaustion after having had to cover part of their journey by foot. Others picked up stomach bugs after having no option but to drink muddy water.
The journey between the towns of Jandola and Tank should normally take six hours but the army closed the main road and Tank itself is under curfew.Mohammad Yasin, another farmer who has made it to Dera Ismail Khan from Kanigurram, said his journey with 14 relatives — including five children — had taken three days.
Limping from the injuries he suffered in a bombing raid in 2004, Yasin said fellow villagers were wounded in front of his eyes as a result of air strikes.
‘People from our village hired six vehicles and the jets started bombing soon after we left. Two vehicles in front of us were totally destroyed. We saw wounded people and we were told 11 people died.
‘Military operations have never been successful in the area. If they want success they need local help but the people do not support the offensive.’ Trying to sow division, the military air-dropped leaflets urging Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud’s own tribe to rise up and fight alongside the army.
‘The aim of the army is to provide an opportunity to the Mehsud tribe to live in peace and tranquility,’ said the flyers.
But rather than stay to fight, large numbers are leaving the war zone to seek shelter with relatives or in rented accommodation.
Pakistani and UN officials say 110,500 people have fled South Waziristan since August. But Gul Afzal Afridi, district police officer in Dera Ismail Khan, believes the number is up to 150,000.
For the moment he expects them to head back to their villages when there is some respite.
‘We have no plan to set up camps because these people do not want to live in camps,’ he told.— AFP
DAWN.COM | Pakistan | Disillusioned Pakistanis uprooted by offensive
 
^^^the unfortunate downside of conflict!!! and it is here the civilian admn can play a positive role by ensuring that their suffering is minimised.
 
Pakistani Taliban recapture leader's birthplace
DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan -- Taliban guerrillas recaptured the birthplace of the Pakistani Taliban leader from the Pakistani army Tuesday, inflicting the heaviest military losses so far in Pakistan's high-stakes offensive in South Waziristan, a refuge for Pakistani extremists, Afghan insurgents and al Qaeda.

A government attempt to foment a tribal uprising against the Pakistani Taliban also failed Tuesday. In a meeting with the top Pakistani official for the tribal areas, elders of the area's Mehsud clan refused a request to form a militia to battle the Taliban who have taken over their territory.

Separately, two suicide bomb blasts at a university in Islamabad, Pakistan's capital, killed six people and wounded at least 20. In response, many educational institutionsannounced that they would close.

The Pakistani offensive appears to be the first serious operation against extremists in South Waziristan since 2004 when the military entered the area for the first time.

However, Kotkai, a town surrounded by mountains in the Sararogha area of South Waziristan, remained in Taliban hands late Tuesday after Pakistani forces were beaten back on the fourth day of the operation. The town is the birthplace of Hakimullah Mehsud, the head of the Pakistani Taliban.
 
Pakistani Taliban recapture leader's birthplace
DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan -- Taliban guerrillas recaptured the birthplace of the Pakistani Taliban leader from the Pakistani army Tuesday, inflicting the heaviest military losses so far in Pakistan's high-stakes offensive in South Waziristan, a refuge for Pakistani extremists, Afghan insurgents and al Qaeda.

A government attempt to foment a tribal uprising against the Pakistani Taliban also failed Tuesday. In a meeting with the top Pakistani official for the tribal areas, elders of the area's Mehsud clan refused a request to form a militia to battle the Taliban who have taken over their territory.

Separately, two suicide bomb blasts at a university in Islamabad, Pakistan's capital, killed six people and wounded at least 20. In response, many educational institutionsannounced that they would close.

The Pakistani offensive appears to be the first serious operation against extremists in South Waziristan since 2004 when the military entered the area for the first time.

However, Kotkai, a town surrounded by mountains in the Sararogha area of South Waziristan, remained in Taliban hands late Tuesday after Pakistani forces were beaten back on the fourth day of the operation. The town is the birthplace of Hakimullah Mehsud, the head of the Pakistani Taliban.

too late mr skeptic !!!
 
Excuse me guys i have a question, does the objectives of this operation include fighting with Rigi as well? Since his base of operation is also in Waziristan?
 
Excuse me guys i have a question, does the objectives of this operation include fighting with Rigi as well? Since his base of operation is also in Waziristan?

If his base is somewhere in the area where current offensive has been launched then it will be finished & if they confront PA, would be killed too. But we have never heard of any Baloch insurgents coming into or having a base in waziristan reason being its much too far away from their operations area in Balochistan, so having a base so far would be very problematic. Balochistan is itself a very large area with a very lengthy border which can easily give them cover to do their activities & infiltrate at will.

But i personally believe Pakistan has to do something about them as this time they have killed very senior & important members of the Iranian govt, which will create a lot of rift between the two governments, we cannot work against them or let other hostile nations use such groups to bother iran as one day these same groups may be used against us too. Iran is a powerful country, have unity & their army is strong too, these insurgents will get nothing out of it except making Pakistan-Iran relations worse, which i believe is the aim. Personally, i don't think ISI is involved as it will serve them or Pakistan no good, and by working with CIA is stupidity as CIA & USA is involved in weakening Pakistan itself by letting India work in Afghanistan & also by helping TTP.

Pakistan should not worsen its relationship with Iran based on Saudi fears or due to US.
 
I read this article (Urdu article) and I like it, so I decided to translate it as best as I can……..and found that how difficult this translation stuff is.

Everyone is talking in the same tone, the same tone that was from George Bush after 9/11. Are you with me or with terrorists, our partner or our enemy?. No one is raising the question that I am with the people who are suffering from both sides in this game of power, loosing their lives and homes. Flares are emitting from the eyes of anchorpersons, no one is shedding tears and no one is sobbing on the loss of their homes. Everyone is speaking the language of power, everyone has a belief on his power, everyone is proud on his abilities. Both sides are avowing to be victorious. One is naming it the writ of govt. and another is calling it struggle against the global terrorist America. Blames from both sides of being a suspect and spy are stirring poison in the lives of common people. On one side, the throats are slitting and on the another side, torturing of captives is as much that they are praying for their death…….These common peoples, the innocent citizens are migrating with the fear that their loved ones might not be lost. These common people are just gathering the parts of their loved ones after 9/11.

I don’t know why in this whole incident I am remembering the terrible and horrifying events of history in which, these common people infuriated one day from all the miseries and “decided to die one day bravely instead of living miserably.”

Before the deadliest pandemics of Black Death, the govt. of England had decided to impose the strict law to save people from thieves, larceny and pirates etc. So many people have lost body organs, hanged or jailed for even being guilty of only minor sins. If police found someone guilty, it was their duty to done justice according to their will…….After sometime, the writ of the govt. has imposed and cities became feasting and celebrating. But, after few months, the whole England was under blaze of barbarism. Looting, depredation of property, kidnaping for ransom ravaged the whole England and all was done by the people for whom……police and thieves were the same thing…….the people who suffered during the government’s strict law………..the revenge ended up Europe under siege for centuries by robbers and pirates even the queen herself became victim.

In the history, the story of power and its dreadful end has repeated itself many times with a same end…….When Rome conquered the Carthage, the city became under control of Roman and they forcefully managed a peace in the city, but the peoples whose loved ones had lost their lives and who suffered, spread all over Rome………Carthage was peaceful……..and Rome was embraced by monstrous conflagration of pirates, looters and kidnapers…..once again by the same people who “decided to die one day bravely instead of living miserably.”

In the history, there is no other end of this story of victory and peace …….are we different from the universe?.......no way.

Peace has been restored in Jamia Hafza, mosque has been rebuilt, worshipers are coming, but the whole country set ablaze. Same peace has been restored in Swat, people are living, bazaars are open, but people of every major city of country have started receiving bodies of their loved ones.………..people are asking what to do? What is the way? Accept the defeat?.....never.

To win a war, one should have to defeat the weapons of enemy. The weapon of terrorist is that Pakistan is fighting for the cause of America, helping Zionist…………America who is a murderer of Afghan Muslims, they are saying that our govt. and army is with them. Common people and youth are influencing by their speeches and with this, when religion involves, the blazes become enormous. Government’s rallying cry that we will not support America, will defeat this weapon of terrorists’. At this time, everything is intermingled and no one knows who is fighting for America and who is fighting for Pakistan. Separate from America and then whoever fights, war with it. In this case, not only common people will be behind you, but enemy will also become visible. But, who will do this…….??????? The people whose bank accounts, property, children and future all belongs to west.

Now I fear about those days when these common people once again “decided to die one day bravely instead of living miserably.”
 
I read this article (Urdu article) and I like it, so I decided to translate it as best as I can……..and found that how difficult this translation stuff is.

Everyone is talking in the same tone, the same tone that was from George Bush after 9/11. Are you with me or with terrorists, our partner or our enemy?.

Are you kidding me? Bush & Co's only agenda since 2000 is money. They started to prep' it when they pull their dirty Monica Lewinsky trick on Clinton.
 
Thanks for the updates guys. We are getting to hear nothing about this latest push on TV out here (except highly censored anemic versions). This thread is a compelling blow by blow account. No photos yet?

Cheers, Doc
 
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