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Operation Zarb-e-Azb | Updates, News & Discussions.

So between drone attacks and PAF/PA, there have been roughly 700 terrorists dispatched to hell I presume? I was hoping for at least 2,000. Now I have to lower that down to 1,000 by the time this operation ends.

Any updates on recent activity?
 
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So between drone attacks and PAF/PA, there have been roughly 700 terrorists dispatched to hell I presume? I was hoping for at least 2,000. Now I have to lower that down to 1,000 by the time this operation ends.

Any updates on recent activity?

No Ground operation in Spinwam,Shawal,Boya and degaan yet.

I am more like expecting upto 1500 Talibs sent to hell by the time operation ends
 
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No Ground operation in Spinwam,Shawal,Boya and degaan yet.

I am more like expecting upto 1500 Talibs sent to hell by the time operation ends
Likely not too many of the vermin are left in NWA. But we'll see.
 
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Editorial: The forgotten war
By Editorial
Updated 19 minutes ago

53ed274838638.jpg


For long, years even, a military operation in North Waziristan Agency against militants was considered essential if the country were to ever seriously start down the long road to defeating the militant threat.

Now, with the military’s Operation Zarb-i-Azb under way for over a month and a half, the battle that was billed as a major turning point in the country’s security outlook has nearly vanished from the national conversation.


Neither is there much news from the battle zone — at least in terms of independently and credibly verifiable news — nor, tragically, does there seem to be much interest in political and media circles at the moment to give more than a passing mention to events in North Waziristan and the repercussions beyond.

In part, this is surely because of the spectacle unfolding on TV screens across the country — a so-called long march to Islamabad by the PTI in a bid to perhaps topple the government.

Yet, current events do not fully explain why Operation Zarb-i-Azb has quickly become the forgotten war. Part of the problem is surely the mixed — often outright — confused stances that many mainstream political parties have on the issue of militancy.


The PTI having long argued that dialogue was the only option has perhaps chosen not to keep advocating its long-stated position quite so vehemently now that the military has come out openly and fiercely in support of the operation the PTI was politically opposed to.

The PML-N government having long argued that dialogue was the preferred option appears unhappy that its pursuit of the latter was cut short and is unwilling to take any real ownership of a war that it did not want.

Meanwhile, parties such as the PPP and ANP, which supported a military operation, have been undone by also simultaneously supporting the dialogue option when pursued by the PML-N.

What all of that adds up to is a deafening political silence on North Waziristan. The media, distracted by potentially seismic events in the epicentre of politics, has been unable to sustain any critical interest in North Waziristan, allowing military PR to dominate the narrative on the operation.

Unhappily, even the initial media focus on the humanitarian crisis that is an estimated one million IDPs has now dissipated and there is little light shed on the continuing struggles of a displaced population that is key to the question of whether or not militancy will return and flourish in the tribal areas.

Worryingly, even the military has chosen to shed less and less light on events in the tribal agency thereby leaving the media and the public in the dark about the actual situation. Bland pronouncements of progress being made, events unfolding according to plan and the military remaining on track to victory do not make for meaningful analyses.

The record is one of mixed results with no real exit strategy. Is North Waziristan shaping up to be the same?

Published in Dawn, August 15th, 2014

Editorial: The forgotten war - Pakistan - DAWN.COM



Editorial: The forgotten war - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
 
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North Waziristan Offensive
  • During the Independence Day festivities Chief of the Army Staff General Raheel Sharif said that the army is trying to complete the ongoing North Waziristan offensive soon.[6]
  • On August 14, unidentified militants shot rockets into a Miram Shah security forces camp. No one was harmed in the attack.[7]
Militancy
  • On August 14, a remote-controlled roadside IED hit a security forces vehicle in the Hazar Ganji area of Quetta. The explosion destroyed the vehicle, killed one Foreign Corps personnel and injured another.[8]
  • On August 14, suspected militants attacked and injured two security personnel in Matta sub-district of Swat district.[9]
  • On August 14, suspected militants attacked two security checkpoints in the Isakhel area in the Mohmand tribal region near the AF-Pak border. Security forces retaliated killing two of the suspected militants.[10]
  • On August 13, unknown assailants fired a mortar shell into the house of the chief of an anti-Taliban militia in the Akkakhel area, Bara sub-district of Khyber Agency. The attack injured 15 members of the family.[11]

Editorial: The forgotten war
By Editorial
Updated 19 minutes ago

53ed274838638.jpg


For long, years even, a military operation in North Waziristan Agency against militants was considered essential if the country were to ever seriously start down the long road to defeating the militant threat.
Now, with the military’s Operation Zarb-i-Azb under way for over a month and a half, the battle that was billed as a major turning point in the country’s security outlook has nearly vanished from the national conversation.

Neither is there much news from the battle zone — at least in terms of independently and credibly verifiable news — nor, tragically, does there seem to be much interest in political and media circles at the moment to give more than a passing mention to events in North Waziristan and the repercussions beyond.

In part, this is surely because of the spectacle unfolding on TV screens across the country — a so-called long march to Islamabad by the PTI in a bid to perhaps topple the government.
Yet, current events do not fully explain why Operation Zarb-i-Azb has quickly become the forgotten war. Part of the problem is surely the mixed — often outright — confused stances that many mainstream political parties have on the issue of militancy.

The PTI having long argued that dialogue was the only option has perhaps chosen not to keep advocating its long-stated position quite so vehemently now that the military has come out openly and fiercely in support of the operation the PTI was politically opposed to.

The PML-N government having long argued that dialogue was the preferred option appears unhappy that its pursuit of the latter was cut short and is unwilling to take any real ownership of a war that it did not want.

Meanwhile, parties such as the PPP and ANP, which supported a military operation, have been undone by also simultaneously supporting the dialogue option when pursued by the PML-N.

What all of that adds up to is a deafening political silence on North Waziristan. The media, distracted by potentially seismic events in the epicentre of politics, has been unable to sustain any critical interest in North Waziristan, allowing military PR to dominate the narrative on the operation.

Unhappily, even the initial media focus on the humanitarian crisis that is an estimated one million IDPs has now dissipated and there is little light shed on the continuing struggles of a displaced population that is key to the question of whether or not militancy will return and flourish in the tribal areas.

Worryingly, even the military has chosen to shed less and less light on events in the tribal agency thereby leaving the media and the public in the dark about the actual situation. Bland pronouncements of progress being made, events unfolding according to plan and the military remaining on track to victory do not make for meaningful analyses.

The record is one of mixed results with no real exit strategy. Is North Waziristan shaping up to be the same?

Published in Dawn, August 15th, 2014

Editorial: The forgotten war - Pakistan - DAWN.COM



Editorial: The forgotten war - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

yes the west is busy trying to hide its failures in the ME and Iraq
 
. .
TTP Attack on Airbases

•On the night of August 14, suspected Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants armed with automatic weapons, grenades, and suicide vests attacked the Pakistan Air Force’s Samungli and Khalid airbases in Quetta. Pakistani security forces including Anti-Terrorism Force (ATF) and Frontier Corps (FC) personnel successfully repelled the attack, killed 12 militants and prevented the militants from breaching the perimeter of either base. Eleven security forces personnel were injured in the attacks. The “Fidaeen-i-Islam” TTP faction led by commander Ghalib Mehsud and a South Waziristan faction of the TTP led by Azam Tariq both claimed responsibility for the attack, calling the attack a response to the military operation in North Waziristan. Lieutenant General Nasir Janjua, Quetta’s top army commander, said that militants first attacked Samungli airbase before attacking Khalid airbase, attacking in two separate groups of six. Army and government officials supposedly received information about a possible attack from civilians in the area before the attacks occurred, allowing a team of police, Balochistan Levies, Balochistan Constabulary, FC and Pakistan Army personnel to quickly respond to the attacks. An unnamed military spokesman said that both airbases reopened on August 15.[6]

TTP Commander Steps Down

•According to anonymous sources quoted in press reports on August 15, Maulvi Halim Khan has replaced Hafiz Gul Bahadur as the main militant commander and chief of the Taliban in North Waziristan. The decision was supposedly taken during a recent meeting of the North Waziristan Taliban’s Shura, which maintains links to the TTP and the Afghan Taliban. Maulvi Halim Khan reportedly had cordial relations with the government prior to the launch of Operation Zarb-e-Azb in North Waziristan.[8]

Militancy

•On August 14, unidentified gunmen fired on and killed a guard in the Kharirai area of Matta sub-district, Swat. In a separate incident, unidentified gunmen fired on and injured two security forces personnel as they were conducting a search operation in the Nazarabad area of Matta sub-district, Swat.[10]

•On August 14, unidentified gunmen kidnapped eleven civilians traveling to the Samana area of Hangu to celebrate Independence Day near Hangu’s Anjeer village area. Kidnappers released the driver but are still holding ten hostages.[11]

•On August 15, security forces personnel killed four suspected militants when they fired on an explosives-laden vehicle as it approached their base in the Fort Slope area of Bara, Khyber Agency. The militants reportedly belonged to the Gangriz group of the TTP.[12]

•On August 14, unidentified gunmen planted an IED that detonated near a passing FC vehicle, killing one FC official and injuring two in Quetta’s Hazar Ganji area.[13]

North Waziristan IDPs

•On August 14, dozens of internally displaced persons (IDPs) from North Waziristan protested outside of the Peshawar Press Club, hoping to pressure the government to let them return to their homes.[14]

Anti-Terror Naval Force

•On August 14, the Pakistan Navy assumed command of the counter-terrorism coalition naval force, Combined Task Force-150 (CTF-150), from the United Kingdom’s Royal Navy at the U.S. Naval Forces Central Command Headquarters in Bahrain. The CTF-150 works to counter terrorist operations and movements in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, Indian Ocean, and Gulf of Oman.[15]
 
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Terrorists on the run after Zarb-i-Azb operation, says COAS

RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif while appreciating the bravery of security forces personnel, who foiled an attack on Pakistan Air Force and Army Aviation Base in Quetta, has said that after operation Zarb-i-Azb, terrorists are on the run and making desperate attempts to cause damage to Pakistan.

In a statement issued by the Inter Services Public relations (ISPR), he said terrorists' attempts would not bear fruit and and they will not find any space to hide in the country and added that "With the backing of the entire nation, we will Inshallah eliminate the scourge of terrorism from our soil forever."

COAS said that security forces should continue to remain vigilant and respond promptly as they did in Quetta to defeat nefarious designs of the terrorists.

An ISPR spokesperson giving details of the attack on PAF Base Samungli and Army's Kahlid Aviation Base Quetta, said that "the terrorists attempts to enter both bases were successfully foiled by a prompt action by an integrated security force of Army, PAF, FC and Police at both bases killing 11 terrorists."

He added that three suspected terrorsits had also been apprehended.

Giving further details he also said that five Terrorists were killed outside PAF Base Smungli and three were apprehended whereas six Terrorists were killed outside Khalid Army Aviation Base Quetta.

All PAF and Army Aviation assets remained safe, the spokesman added.

Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Tahir Rafique Butt, has said Pakistan is in a state of war, that too against a hidden enemy.

In a statement issued by a PAF spokesman from air headquarters in Islamabad, the air chief while referring to attack on PAF base Samungli said "These cowardly attacks cannot weaken our resolve to defend our motherland."

“All ranks and file of Pakistan Air Force are focused towards the ongoing operation Zarb-i-Azb and are determined to defend every inch of its Air Bases and infrastructure," Air Chief Butt said.

The spokesman said that the air chief also visited PAF Base Samungli, today where security forces had successfully eliminated the terrorists in an operation last night.

He was briefed about the sequence of operations against the miscreants by Air Commodore Salman Ahsan Bukhari, Base Commander PAF Base Samungli.

The Air Chief while interacting with officers and security officials who directly participated in this operation, commended their courage, valour and spirit to sacrifice for the defence of vital national assets and installations.

"The terrorists were heavily equipped with rockets, hand grenades, petrol bombs, automatic rifles and carried edibles", an air force spokesman said.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Friday also condemned the attack at PAF's Samungli and Khalid airbases in Quetta.

The Prime Minister praised the bravery and courage of the security officials in successfully thwarting the attack.

He prayed for the departed souls of the security officials and condoled with the family members of those security officials, who laid down their lives while defending the bases.

_____________________________________________

Why is there humidity in the forum's atmosphere?

I guess due to all the terrorists and their sympathizers getting their eyes....moist and teary.
 
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and a South Waziristan faction of the TTP led by Azam Tariq both claimed responsibility for the attack, calling the attack a response to the military operation in North Waziristan

that's astonishing
wasn't azam tariq the same spokesperson who announced separation of his group from ttp and mullah fazal ullah?
citing the reason that fazal ulah is playing in foreign hands and he doesn't recognize pak constitution while we do??

there was a general perception that khalid sajna and azam tariq group are willing to talk with govt and are not fighting against pak forces any more and this operation is against fazal ullah and sheharyar mehsud group only

now what??? this statement show that azam tariq n sajna group may have reconcile their differences with fazal ullah group that could only be the reason y they r still fighting

if this is true what i assumed.....that means ttp regained their strength and will continue to be a nightmare for Pakistan..the only reason why they lost their significance is just because they lost their unity
 
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Mubashar Luqman says suspected strikes against high value TTP targets.
 
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