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Pakistani Forces against Militants.

Pakistani Taliban commander shot dead in tribal region


IRNA - Islamic Republic News Agency



Islamabad, July 6, IRNA -- Unidentified gunmen have shot dead a Pakistani Taliban commander in South Waziristan tribal region, official sources said.

Muhammad Wali was killed in Bermal area of South Waziristan late Wednesday night, they said. His guard was also killed in the attack.

Wali was the brother of the former chief of Taliban movement, Nek Mohammad, who was also killed in a US drone strike in 2004
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Sources said that Wali was staying at the house of a relative and gunmen opened fire at him and his guard when they were asleep. They died at the scene.

Wali was appointed commander of the Taliban group after killing of his predecessor, Maulvi Omar. Maulvi Omar was appointed commander of the group after killing of Nek Mohammad.

According to sources, Wali had left South Waziristan and settled in North Waziristan due to differences within Taliban groups.

He had returned to South Waziristan after successful talks among Taliban groups November last year.

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Islamic Republic News Agency/IRNA NewsCode: 80216493
 
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Security forces kill 8 militants in Bajaur

PESHAWAR: Dozens of militants from Afghanistan crossed the border into Pakistan and attacked a village on Thursday, Pakistani military officials said, an incident likely to increase tensions between Islamabad and Kabul.

Eight militants were killed in the ongoing skirmish in the tribal region of Bajaur, officials said, and two Pakistani soldiers were wounded.

Local military officials said the militants had taken up positions in the village of Katkot in the Mamund area, and were surrounded by Pakistani forces.

“The militants attacked the village, focusing on government buildings. Security forces have surrounded them and have called in gunship helicopters as well, but are not resorting to heavy weapons because of the presence of civilians,” said Abdul Jabbar Shah, the top government official in Bajaur.

“They are effectively holding the village hostage.”

Bajaur is one of the tribal regions near the Afghan border. The Pakistan military has mounted recent offensives there against the al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban, which is considered the country’s biggest security threat.

Last month Pakistan blamed NATO and the Afghan military for failing to act against militant safe havens in Afghanistan, following a cross-border attack that killed 13 Pakistani troops.

The attack followed years of calls by the United States for Pakistan to eliminate safe havens for militants on its side of the border.

Pakistan says it is being unfairly blamed for supporting insurgents in Afghanistan, and that the attacks from Afghanistan show how hard it is for any government to control the mountainous region along the border.


Security forces kill 8 militants in Bajaur – The Express Tribune
 
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Police arrested Inam mullah, a member of banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) from Karachi today. Another person, belonging to a political militant group, was arrested with hand grenades and 5KG of Hashish.
 
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HANGU: At least five suspected terrorists were killed in retaliatory action by Pakistan Army after terrorists fired two rockets on security forces’ checkpost, official sources said on Tuesday. According to security force sources, suspected terrorists of banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) fired two rockets on an army checkpost, however, they did not cause any loss of life. In response, army retaliated with full power and killed five terrorists and wounded many others. The incident took place a day after Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister escaped a terror bid. Police, on Monday, seized a truck from Hangu Road laden with 200 kilogrammes of explosive material minutes before the chief minister's convoy was to pass through the area.
 
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Pakistani jets have struck hideouts of fighters in the northwest of the
country, killing 15 people and wounding several others, military
officials said. The airstrikes on Sunday targeted four hideouts in the remote Ghaljo
and Dabori areas of the northwestern Orakzai tribal region, according
to the officials. The locations were being used by members of the
Pakistan Taliban, they said. The death toll could not be independently verified and fighters often
dispute official figures. The Pakistan military has been conducting operations against fighters
in Orakzai for months. Several groups are active in the northwestern
semi-autonomous tribal regions near the border with Afghanistan,
including the Pakistan Taliban responsible for many of the bombings
across the country in recent years.
 
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14 militants killed in Orakzai | The Nation

At least 14 militants were killed and several others injured during military operation in Upper Orakzai Agency of country’s northwestern tribal region, security force’s sources said on Sunday.

The official sources said that the armed forces pounded safe houses of the militants in Mamozai, Khadizai and other areas of upper Orakzai region, destroying at least 3 hideouts of terrorists.

“At least 14 militants were killed in the operation,” officials added.

Orakzai is the only tribal agency of the region which does not border Afghanistan. The security forces have been battling in the region since 2008 against TTP led anti-state actors.

Fighter jets of Pakistan Air Force also used to bombardment on militants sanctuaries in this region to help ongoing military operation against the terrorists.
 
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ORAKZAI AGENCY: At least nine militants were killed and three other wounded in retaliate action by Pakistan army after its two soldiers were hurt in suspected Taliban ambush on their check post in Dabori area of lawless Orakzai tribal agency bordering Afghanistan, officials said.

According to security force officials, a group of local militants ambushed army check post in Dabori area of tribal agency of Wednesday morning, injuring at least two personnel.

In retaliate action, security forces killed 9 militants who were trying to escape from the scene in vehicles.

Three militants were also injured in operation, officials added.
 
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ANALYSIS Date Posted: 01-Mar-2012


Pakistan spells out need to reason with the Taliban


Negotiating a deal with the Taliban is key to a stable Afghanistan, say Pakistani officials who point to security gaps when the International Security Assistance Force draws down. Farhan Bokhari reports

When a senior US commander in Afghanistan revealed on 8 February that only one per cent of the country's police force and army personnel were capable of operating independently from Western forces, many Pakistani security officials felt vindicated.

Pakistani officials have also pointed out that wide-ranging and large-scale gaps will appear in Afghanistan's security framework following the drawdown of International Security Assistance Force troops (ISAF) by 2014.

It is these issues that drive Pakistan's justification for its links with the Afghan Taliban, despite opposition from the US and other Western countries.

"We have argued for years there has to be some reasoning with the Taliban," a senior Pakistani security official told IHS Jane's . "No matter how much you try, there cannot be a security arrangement in Afghanistan which will hold the country together unless the Taliban are included."

For Pakistan, negotiating a settlement with the Taliban holds the key to stabilising one of the world's most contentious regions - a place where a decade-long US-led military campaign has, so far, been unsuccessful in crushing the Taliban. According to Islamabad, a failure to resolve the conflict before Western forces leave will inevitably see the war in Afghanistan continuing to spill over Pakistan's borders. While Western officials claim that the Taliban has been significantly weakened, Pakistani officials insist that a 'weakening' provides no assurance against Islamic militants re-emerging to challenge the Afghan state.

In 2011 a number of Taliban attacks in Afghanistan using improvised explosive devices underlined the growing reliance by the Taliban on guerrilla-style tactics. This, in combination with reports of continued grassroot support for the insurgents from parts of rural Afghanistan, is a powerful reminder that the Taliban is far from becoming a peripheral entity.

For Pakistan, such a view reinforces the argument that the Taliban will not be wiped out through a military campaign. However, unlike in the late 1990s, when the Taliban ruled over Afghanistan and Pakistan was the only country to maintain an embassy in Kabul, Pakistani officials accept a different future in which the Taliban will be one of the most significant players, though not the only one.

"The Taliban still have the capacity to dictate many of their terms [but] not all [of their terms]," the security official told IHS Jane's . "They will have to be accepted among key players along with others who may be anti-Taliban. Going forward, it would be foolish to ignore the Taliban as a spent force," he added.

At the same time Pakistan sees efforts such as the US establishing a dialogue with the Taliban in the Persian Gulf state of Qatar as a useful, but also potentially futile, venture. Although face-to-face discussions are in line with Islamabad's support for a US-Taliban negotiated settlement, Pakistani officials see at least three pitfalls.

First, a Taliban demand for the US to relocate at least five of its compatriots from the Guantanamo Bay facility to the custody of the Qatari authorities has failed to move forward. This initiative was meant to act as a confidence-building measure, demonstrating to the Taliban that the US is serious about carrying the negotiations forward. Another advantage of releasing Taliban members from Guantanamo Bay would be the leverage it could offer to senior members of the Islamic clerical movement to quell any opposition to the US talks from younger and more hardline members of the movement. However, recent reports originating from both Taliban sources as well as diplomats in the Asia-Pacific region suggest that the releases will be delayed.

Second, Pakistani officials believe that a disadvantage of a weakened Taliban movement is the issue of having to deal with more than one faction operating under a splintered leadership. "When the Taliban were ousted in a US military campaign in 2001, there was a single leader who was the all-too-powerful figure. More than a decade later, there are younger militant leaders who believe they must fight on, while the older ones may include some who are ready to give up," said a Pakistani government official in Quetta.

Finally, Pakistani officials are concerned by reports suggesting that the US is looking to work towards a negotiated settlement with the Taliban, bypassing Pakistan's army-led intelligence establishment. For more than three decades, dating back to the days of the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union, Pakistan's Inter Service Intelligence agency (ISI) has overseen the country's Afghan policy.

For Pakistan, any move by the US and/or other members of ISAF to even partially bypass the ISI will likely complicate prospects for a permanent resolution to the Afghan conflict. Pakistani officials suggest that if Islamabad is not deeply involved in conflict-prevention talks, future issues will range from remnants of the Taliban seeking to overrun parts of the country to a break-up of Afghanistan's ill-conceived army, with both former army and police members joining armed mafias seeking to gain territorial control, with the resultant violence spilling into Pakistan.

Farhan Bokhari is a Correspondent, based in Islamabad
 
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We always wait for an offensive in north waziristan..
 
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Pakistan:Three militants, two security personnel killed in Peshawar operation

Three terrorists and two security personnel were killed during a massive search operation by Pakistani soldiers within the cantonment in the northwestern city of Peshawar on Tuesday.


The search operation was launched late last night after some terrorists reportedly escaped from custody in Peshawar,the capital of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province.
While authorities were tight-lipped on the development,residents of the city posted messages on Twitter about heightened security and the "curfew-like" situation prevailing in Peshawar.
officials said that three terrorists and two security personnel were killed during the overnight search operation. No further details were immediately available.
Footage on television showed armed soldiers blocking roads and checking all cars and motorcycles.The soldiers also blocked off traffic in some areas.
Taliban fighters attacked a truck carrying supplies for NATO forces in the restive Khyber tribal region of Pakistan on Monday.

The main road linking the border town of Torkham with Peshawar, the capital of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, wasclosed after the incident.

The Pakistani Taliban had threatened attacks on NATO convoys travelling to Afghanistan when Pakistan ended a seven-month blockade of supply lines last month.

Pakistan:Three militants, two security personnel killed in Peshawar operation
 
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Thursday, August 09, 2012


VIEW : Swat operation and the role of the army — Amna Syed


In a state of vulnerability, it was the Taliban who extended a hand of sympathy, promising both worldly success and triumph in the hereafter

It was on the eve of May 16, 2009, that Pakistani forces advanced towards the Swat valley, which had become the hub of terrorism in the northwest of Pakistan. Once known for its serene beauty, the Swat valley had fallen prey to terrorist activities when the TTP active in Swat attacked the city of Buner, not honouring the pact they had signed with the Pakistani government. This operation known as Operation Rah-e-Nijat was not the first of its kind. In the US’s War against Terror the Pakistan army had previously been part of several such endeavours including a few in Swat like the Operation Rah-e-Rast and Operation Rah-e-Haq, yet this particular operation superseded all others in importance, for this was a battle of survival for Pakistanis.

Early in the summer of 2009, the provincial government signed a pact with the militants in Swat. According to this the militants would give up arms and Swat valley would be under the rule of Shariah and hence under heavy influence of these militants. The signing of the Nizam-e-Adl Ordinance was being viewed with much suspicion not only locally but internationally as well. These fears were confirmed with the attack on the city of Buner. Hence, the idea of the Pakistani state’s writ being compromised in Swat began to evolve all around.

The militants first began their activities in the year 2001 shortly before the attack on the World Trade Centre. As Swat was one of the areas with a large youth population, it held great importance for the Taliban leadership who believed that this very youth could be easily trained and equipped to fight their war. The increasing unemployment rate in the region and lack of financial support programmes by government had made the Taliban hopeful of control of this area. Mounting economic worries had left parents with little choice but to send their children to madrassas run by these militants. When such a child completed schooling, he found that there were very few or no jobs at all which he could look towards in hope of supporting his family. In such a state of vulnerability, it was the Taliban who extended a hand of sympathy, promising both worldly success and triumph in the hereafter. They were making an offer that could not be refused.

The insurgents adopted a policy of both convincing and terrorising the population in coming to terms with the Taliban. While many schools were torched and razed to the ground, a key militant leader, Maulana Fazlullah, would air his anti-westernisation sermons urging people to stop sending their girls to school as he called for a total ban on female education. In 2004 alone, there were 200 dropouts in Government High School for Girls, Charbagh. The names of these students were aired on radio, hailing them for defying western culture and escaping the fire of hell that otherwise awaited them. Swat clearly had become a Taliban stronghold. There were reports of dead bodies being found on trees, usually beheaded, and bodies lying on pavements; hence any feeble local resistance to the rule of the insurgents was brutally dealt with. In such a situation, government and military had to plan their next move very carefully.

When the country’s leadership decided the course of action that was to be adopted, there were many questions raised as to the success of such a plan. However, all parties including the military leadership deemed an operation of this kind necessary because of the advancing tide of the terrorists towards the Capital. The leader of JUI, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, was reported to have said that the Taliban were just behind the Margalla hills. The threat was real and there were very few options government could play around with. This, coupled with the US pressure for such an operation, left Pakistan with no other choice. The Pakistan army struck with full force, crippling the militants’ defences and surprised the international community with the success of the attacks. The efforts of the Pakistan army were internationally recognised. In 2009, The New York Times reported that the US joint chiefs of staff commended the efforts of the Pakistani army.

The Swat operation was very intricate in many respects. The complexity of this operation came from the fact that it was carried out in an urban area where the militants could easily take refuge in the densely populated region. Moreover, the treacherous terrain of the land made the operation more difficult. Coming into a valley where the militants already had a stronghold and then defeating them in battle was not an easy task. However, because of great stories of heroism that will be remembered for times to come, the Pakistan army not only recaptured but cleared the area of insurgents. Many important leaders of the TTP and TNSM were captured or killed.

Perhaps the most important aspect of the operation was the displacement of the IDPs; this was a source of major concern to the Pakistani authorities. According to UN reports, some 1.9 million people had been compelled to leave their homes, while some shifted in with host families. An approximate 260,000 had taken refuge in camps set up by the government. In a seemingly impossible task, the local authorities, with the help of the Pakistan army, were able to successfully return all these displaced people back to the safety of their homes. At the time when they were leaving their houses, international media had described the idea of their returning home an unrealistic dream because the parallel for such could not been found in history. The UN reports had quite openly claimed that if such a return were ever possible, it would not be before three to four years. However, the reservations of the international community were put to rest with the return of these people.

With war in Swat over and peace restored, we now look towards the causes and consequences of the Taliban control of the area. Analyses very clearly point in the direction of a weak education system and lack of employment opportunities for the people. The task of rehabilitation, which lies ahead of us, is if not more, then as equally important as was the elimination of the Taliban initially. People who have returned to their homes do not return to the Swat they once called home, the place that had been the Mecca for tourists in Pakistan. They return to a war-ravaged Swat. Children have come home to find their schools in rubble. While many government and non-governmental organisations are working to rebuild schools, the progress is very slow. A report by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan in the year 2010 showed that out of 175 schools that had been destroyed, only six were reconstructed. Furthermore, lack of economic activities in the region provides a difficult situation for people. According to the fact-finding analysis of the conflict later, a majority of people believed that it was unemployment that had initially pushed the population towards ‘Talibanisation’.

Swat today remains a vulnerable area and government should take all precautionary measures to ensure a safe and prospering northwestern Pakistan. In this, not only the health and education sector has to be catered for, adequate economic opportunities have to be generated. While the efforts of the local authorities and army have been widely acclaimed, for obvious reasons the duty that awaits us cannot be ignored.

The writer is a freelance columnist and can be reached at ayeshamazher@yahoo.com
 
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The Pakistan Army and the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) undertook a joint operation in the Orakzai Agency yesterday, killing a total of 13 pro-Taliban militants.


PAF sources claimed that many of the militant training bases and hide-outs in the Upper Orakzai region were destroyed as a result of the airstrikes. However, the locals in the area complained that the raids caused widespread damage to the civilian infrastructure, and said that a number of villagers were killed or injured during the operation.
Officials from the Pakistan Army said that the operation was conducted in the Mamozai area of Orakzai Agency, one of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan. The army claimed that the damage to the civilian structures were minimal, and said that four of the major terrorist bases in the region were completely destroyed. Army officials also claimed that all the 13 individuals who were killed during the air-strikes were having links to various banned militant organizations.
PAF officials said that the air-strikes destroyed militant bases in the villages of Botakhel and Toursemat, while the army was successful in dismantling terrorist installations in the Khwa Darra and Sangarh villages. PAF also claimed that a large number of militants were injured during the offensive. The injured insurgents are suspected to have escaped to the neighbouring Kurram and Khyber Agencies. Army sources reported that a search operation is being conducted in the region, to find and eradicate any remaining terrorists.

Although the Pakistan Army, with the help of the Frontier Corps had cleared the Lower Orakzai region of militants recently, they were unable to do the same in the Upper Orakzai region. The army operations were being affected by the extremely rugged and mountainous terrain of the Upper Orakzai, and the PAF was given a prominent role in the operations there.

Many of the militants, who have fled the lower reaches of Orakzai Agency, have found refuge in the highland region. Upper Orakzai region borders the militant-hit Tirah Valley in the Khyber Agency, which makes it easier for the militants to evade the army operations.
 
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At least 30 terrorists killed and seven others injured in result of clashes between security forces and terrorists in Barlas area of Ghilgu sub-district of Orakzai Agency, meanwhile five security personnel were martyred and 22 others injured.

According to media reports the skirmish, which took place in the Ghilgu area of the northwestern Orakzai tribal region, began when militants ambushed a military patrol. Officials said 22 soldiers were wounded in the ambush and four hideouts of miscreants have been destroyed. Security forces have taken the control over the area.

The death toll could not be independently verified, and militants often dispute official figures. The military has been conducting operations against militants in Orakzai for months.
 
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HANGU:At least eight militants were killed and two bunkers of militants were destroyed in air strikes in Orakzai and Khyber
agencies on Saturday.

According to an official of the security forces, three jet fighters of Pakistan Air Force (PAF) bombed two hideouts of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants in Gawak area of Orakzai and Mathra area of Khyber Agencies, adding that the strike was carried out at around 8:00 pm.

The official added that one jet targeted a hideout of Aslam Farooq, a TTP commander of Lower Orakzai Agency chapter, while two fighter planes struck a TTP bunker in Mathra area of Khyber Agency. “The fighters dropped two bombs on Gwak and eight in Mathra,” the official added.
 
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