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Pakistan blames Afghanistan for the attack on Peshawar air force base

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Pakistan blames Afghanistan for the attack on Peshawar air force base | News | DW.COM | 18.09.2015

Pakistan's army claims that the militants who attacked an air force base in Peshawar had come from Afghanistan. The assault has also raised doubts about the success of a military operation in the country's northwest.

Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa, the Pakistani army spokesman, told the media on Friday that the security forces had secured the Badaber air force compound after an hours-long firefight, killing all 13 militants. The Taliban have claimed responsibility for the assault.

"At least 23 air force personnel, three army soldiers and four civilians" have also been killed, according to Bajwa.



Gunmen stormed the air base on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar early on Friday, triggering a shootout with security forces. The military spokesman said the militants forced their way into the compound's mosque and gunned down people.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital. TV footage showed helicopters hovering above the base as police and troops searched for militants in the area surrounding the compound.

The Afghan 'connection'

Bajwa was quick to point fingers at neighboring Afghanistan at a press conference in Peshawar soon after the end of the assault.

"The attackers came from Afghanistan," he said, without providing details on his claim.

The military spokesman, however, said he did not mean that the Afghan government was involved in the attack.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital

"The government in Kabul likes to blame every terrorist attack on Pakistan, but we don't think that the Afghan state had a role in Friday's attack," Bajwa told reporters, adding that the areas where the militants came from were not under Kabul's control.

But Islamabad-based journalist Abdul Agha disagrees with Bajwa and insists that the Pakistani military must admit the fact that it has not been able to secure the northwestern areas.

"Bajwa and the army have repeatedly been saying that the ongoing military operation, Zarb-e-Azb, has destroyed the terrorists' networks and hideouts in the northwestern areas, but the Friday attack at the heart of the army's own base has proven all these claims wrong," Agha told DW.

Blaming Afghanistan was probably the easiest way to hide this failure, he added.

A dubious operation

Experts say that a crackdown on militancy and an army offensive targeting Taliban bases have both led to a decline in attacks in the country this year. Last December, Taliban gunmen massacred around 150 children and teachers at a military-run school in Peshawar.

Iliyas Bilor, a leader of the opposition Awami National Party, admits that the Peshawar attack "appears to be a reaction against the ongoing military operation," however, he believes that the security forces have been quite successful in eliminating terrorists. "I think the operation must continue," he told DW's Peshawar correspondent, Faridullah Khan.

Yet a number of analysts remain skeptical about the army operation. They say that Pakistan's highly influential generals still distinguish between the "good and bad Taliban" and want to use Islamists to increase their influence in Kabul. That is why, they say, Islamabad has not been able to defeat the jihadist groups.

Islamabad and Kabul regularly blame each other for terrorists attacks

"We now discover that Zarb-e-Azb was aimed at weakening political parties and not eliminating terrorists. Some of the top global terrorists such as Hafiz Saeed and Hizbul Mujahideen's Yusuf Shah are openly leading public rallies, recruiting jihadists, and fundraising," Arif Jamal, a US-based journalist and author of several books on Islamic terrorism and Pakistan, told DW.

Siegfried O. Wolf, a political science expert at Heidelberg University, is of the same view. He told DW that he was convinced that several elements within the Pakistan security apparatus still believe that the Taliban could be used as a strategic tool to counter Indian presence in Afghanistan.

The attacks won't stop until Islamabad overhauls its policies and stops backing Islamists to maintain pressure on Afghanistan and India in the region, Agha emphasized.
 
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Pakistan blames Afghanistan for the attack on Peshawar air force base | News | DW.COM | 18.09.2015

Pakistan's army claims that the militants who attacked an air force base in Peshawar had come from Afghanistan. The assault has also raised doubts about the success of a military operation in the country's northwest.

Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa, the Pakistani army spokesman, told the media on Friday that the security forces had secured the Badaber air force compound after an hours-long firefight, killing all 13 militants. The Taliban have claimed responsibility for the assault.

"At least 23 air force personnel, three army soldiers and four civilians" have also been killed, according to Bajwa.



Gunmen stormed the air base on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar early on Friday, triggering a shootout with security forces. The military spokesman said the militants forced their way into the compound's mosque and gunned down people.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital. TV footage showed helicopters hovering above the base as police and troops searched for militants in the area surrounding the compound.

The Afghan 'connection'

Bajwa was quick to point fingers at neighboring Afghanistan at a press conference in Peshawar soon after the end of the assault.

"The attackers came from Afghanistan," he said, without providing details on his claim.

The military spokesman, however, said he did not mean that the Afghan government was involved in the attack.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital

"The government in Kabul likes to blame every terrorist attack on Pakistan, but we don't think that the Afghan state had a role in Friday's attack," Bajwa told reporters, adding that the areas where the militants came from were not under Kabul's control.

But Islamabad-based journalist Abdul Agha disagrees with Bajwa and insists that the Pakistani military must admit the fact that it has not been able to secure the northwestern areas.

"Bajwa and the army have repeatedly been saying that the ongoing military operation, Zarb-e-Azb, has destroyed the terrorists' networks and hideouts in the northwestern areas, but the Friday attack at the heart of the army's own base has proven all these claims wrong," Agha told DW.

Blaming Afghanistan was probably the easiest way to hide this failure, he added.

A dubious operation

Experts say that a crackdown on militancy and an army offensive targeting Taliban bases have both led to a decline in attacks in the country this year. Last December, Taliban gunmen massacred around 150 children and teachers at a military-run school in Peshawar.

Iliyas Bilor, a leader of the opposition Awami National Party, admits that the Peshawar attack "appears to be a reaction against the ongoing military operation," however, he believes that the security forces have been quite successful in eliminating terrorists. "I think the operation must continue," he told DW's Peshawar correspondent, Faridullah Khan.

Yet a number of analysts remain skeptical about the army operation. They say that Pakistan's highly influential generals still distinguish between the "good and bad Taliban" and want to use Islamists to increase their influence in Kabul. That is why, they say, Islamabad has not been able to defeat the jihadist groups.

Islamabad and Kabul regularly blame each other for terrorists attacks

"We now discover that Zarb-e-Azb was aimed at weakening political parties and not eliminating terrorists. Some of the top global terrorists such as Hafiz Saeed and Hizbul Mujahideen's Yusuf Shah are openly leading public rallies, recruiting jihadists, and fundraising," Arif Jamal, a US-based journalist and author of several books on Islamic terrorism and Pakistan, told DW.

Siegfried O. Wolf, a political science expert at Heidelberg University, is of the same view. He told DW that he was convinced that several elements within the Pakistan security apparatus still believe that the Taliban could be used as a strategic tool to counter Indian presence in Afghanistan.

The attacks won't stop until Islamabad overhauls its policies and stops backing Islamists to maintain pressure on Afghanistan and India in the region, Agha emphasized.
Pakistan time to close its eyes again
 
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We have our Claim on Kashmir so we cannot and will not stop supporting Kashmiri freedom fighters. India may continue calling them Islamic terrorists or may give some other fancy name.

About Afghanistan,yes i agree the borders should be sealed and we should cut off all ties with the cancer called Afghanistan. They have never seen peace,history is evident and addicted to chopping off each others heads and proudly so. We should block them off in their misery.
 
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The attacks won't stop until Islamabad overhauls its policies and stops backing Islamists to maintain pressure on Afghanistan and India in the region, Agha emphasized.

In nutshell the attackers were fighting for the Indian and Afghan cause then? Mr. Agha is this what you implied here? Or you want us to forget that TTP's number two was arrested while traveling with Afghan agencies? Or the fact that India has no influence on Afghan agencies? And Radio is not in Afghanistan? And Afghans could Singlehandedly fight the AT?

Or

You want us to believe Radio is some PA General who occasionally wears a fake beard to make an appearance and they are themselves hell bent on killing their own soldiers and attacking their installments and establishment? And if this is not the case then what the fck are you trying to say Mr. Agha?
 
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In nutshell the attackers were fighting for the Indian and Afghan cause then? Mr. Agha is this what you implied here? Or you want us to forget that TTP's number two was arrested while traveling with Afghan agencies? Or the fact that India has no influence on Afghan agencies? And Radio is not in Afghanistan? And Afghans could Singlehandedly fight the AT?

Or

You want us to believe Radio is some PA General who occasionally wears a fake beard to make an appearance and they are themselves hell bent on killing their own soldiers and attacking their installments and establishment? And if this is not the case then what the fck are you trying to say Mr. Agha?
There is no government by the name of Afghan govt..Poor Afghanistan is lying under the slavery of America and her other cohorts. I think we must not react back to Afghanistan or Afghans. The real Afghans are themselves oppressed people under the tyranny of America and her cohorts.
 
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We have our Claim on Kashmir so we cannot and will not stop supporting Kashmiri freedom fighters. India may continue calling them Islamic terrorists or may give some other fancy name.

About Afghanistan,yes i agree the borders should be sealed and we should cut off all ties with the cancer called Afghanistan. They have never seen peace,history is evident and addicted to chopping off each others heads and proudly so. We should block them off in their misery.
It's not India alone which call them terrorist ,it's the world which do not distinguish between good and bad terrorist.
 
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There is no government by the name of Afghan govt..Poor Afghanistan is lying under the slavery of America and her other cohorts. I think we must not react back to Afghanistan or Afghans. The real Afghans are themselves oppressed people under the tyranny of America and her cohorts.

There is a person in Kabul surrounded by warlords and thugs, he is supposed to rule Afghanistan. We will be idiots if we believe that there can be any peace deal for Afghanistan in presence of NA thugs in Kabul. Last time it was Afghanistan itself, this time it is Pakistan.
 
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We have our Claim on Kashmir so we cannot and will not stop supporting Kashmiri freedom fighters. India may continue calling them Islamic terrorists or may give some other fancy name.

About Afghanistan,yes i agree the borders should be sealed and we should cut off all ties with the cancer called Afghanistan. They have never seen peace,history is evident and addicted to chopping off each others heads and proudly so. We should block them off in their misery.

What a bullcrap!! Cancer is extremism n that's within you.
 
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What a bullcrap!! Cancer is extremism n that's within you.
they know it, but they don't want to accept it. ever heard of Pakistan accepting its mistakes?? No.. they want to blame other for their mistakes.
 
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And here comes another one.

Not worth to be discussed as the 2nd sentence of the article shows the capability of the one who wrote it.

And who said we have blamed Afghanistan, its just mentioned that they came from Afghanistan side since we all know majority of Afghanistan is not under the control of Afghan govt. Even the article mentions that but just for inflaming, its given the title that Afghanistan is accused.

Pathetic.
 
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Pakistan blames Afghanistan for the attack on Peshawar air force base | News | DW.COM | 18.09.2015

Pakistan's army claims that the militants who attacked an air force base in Peshawar had come from Afghanistan. The assault has also raised doubts about the success of a military operation in the country's northwest.

Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa, the Pakistani army spokesman, told the media on Friday that the security forces had secured the Badaber air force compound after an hours-long firefight, killing all 13 militants. The Taliban have claimed responsibility for the assault.

"At least 23 air force personnel, three army soldiers and four civilians" have also been killed, according to Bajwa.



Gunmen stormed the air base on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar early on Friday, triggering a shootout with security forces. The military spokesman said the militants forced their way into the compound's mosque and gunned down people.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital. TV footage showed helicopters hovering above the base as police and troops searched for militants in the area surrounding the compound.

The Afghan 'connection'

Bajwa was quick to point fingers at neighboring Afghanistan at a press conference in Peshawar soon after the end of the assault.

"The attackers came from Afghanistan," he said, without providing details on his claim.

The military spokesman, however, said he did not mean that the Afghan government was involved in the attack.

A rescue officer said at least 20 wounded were taken to hospital

"The government in Kabul likes to blame every terrorist attack on Pakistan, but we don't think that the Afghan state had a role in Friday's attack," Bajwa told reporters, adding that the areas where the militants came from were not under Kabul's control.

But Islamabad-based journalist Abdul Agha disagrees with Bajwa and insists that the Pakistani military must admit the fact that it has not been able to secure the northwestern areas.

"Bajwa and the army have repeatedly been saying that the ongoing military operation, Zarb-e-Azb, has destroyed the terrorists' networks and hideouts in the northwestern areas, but the Friday attack at the heart of the army's own base has proven all these claims wrong," Agha told DW.

Blaming Afghanistan was probably the easiest way to hide this failure, he added.

A dubious operation

Experts say that a crackdown on militancy and an army offensive targeting Taliban bases have both led to a decline in attacks in the country this year. Last December, Taliban gunmen massacred around 150 children and teachers at a military-run school in Peshawar.

Iliyas Bilor, a leader of the opposition Awami National Party, admits that the Peshawar attack "appears to be a reaction against the ongoing military operation," however, he believes that the security forces have been quite successful in eliminating terrorists. "I think the operation must continue," he told DW's Peshawar correspondent, Faridullah Khan.

Yet a number of analysts remain skeptical about the army operation. They say that Pakistan's highly influential generals still distinguish between the "good and bad Taliban" and want to use Islamists to increase their influence in Kabul. That is why, they say, Islamabad has not been able to defeat the jihadist groups.

Islamabad and Kabul regularly blame each other for terrorists attacks

"We now discover that Zarb-e-Azb was aimed at weakening political parties and not eliminating terrorists. Some of the top global terrorists such as Hafiz Saeed and Hizbul Mujahideen's Yusuf Shah are openly leading public rallies, recruiting jihadists, and fundraising," Arif Jamal, a US-based journalist and author of several books on Islamic terrorism and Pakistan, told DW.

Siegfried O. Wolf, a political science expert at Heidelberg University, is of the same view. He told DW that he was convinced that several elements within the Pakistan security apparatus still believe that the Taliban could be used as a strategic tool to counter Indian presence in Afghanistan.

The attacks won't stop until Islamabad overhauls its policies and stops backing Islamists to maintain pressure on Afghanistan and India in the region, Agha emphasized.
What load of bullshit. In the press conference he clearly stated that Afghan government had no connection-none that could be found with the present evidence.

The title contradicts with the article: where have we blamed Afghanistan for it, yes in sense that it has failed to control terrorist operating from within it's territories.
"The government in Kabul likes to blame every terrorist attack on Pakistan, but we don't think that the Afghan state had a role in Friday's attack," Bajwa told reporters, adding that the areas where the militants came from were not under Kabul's control.


"We now discover that Zarb-e-Azb was aimed at weakening political parties and not eliminating terrorists. Some of the top global terrorists such as Hafiz Saeed and Hizbul Mujahideen's Yusuf Shah are openly leading public rallies, recruiting jihadists, and fundraising," Arif Jamal, a US-based journalist and author of several books on Islamic terrorism and Pakistan, told DW.
:hitwall:

And here comes another one.

Not worth to be discussed as the 2nd sentence of the article shows the capability of the one who wrote it.
Could you edit that stupid title!
 
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The 2nd sentence shows the analytical skills of this author. Has terrorism dropped by 70% or not? Or does he expect every single terrorist attack to stop overnight? Didn't bother reading further.
 
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Its not Afghanistan's fault, the govt has no real control outside 50^2 of Kabul. They can't protect their capital from insurgents how will they protect Pakistan? - Its about time we either had a joint command with Afghans to clean the border areas or took unilateral action.
 
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