Pakistan Declares War on Taliban

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Pakistan Declares War on Taliban

Pakistan launches full-scale military assault on Taliban

Pakistan declared war on its homegrown Islamic extremists; could trigger a wider conflagration


McClatchy Newspapers
By Saeed Shah
Thursday, May 7, 2009


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan declared war on its homegrown Islamic extremists Thursday in a dramatic move that could trigger a wider conflagration.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, in a late-night televised address to the nation, said Pakistan would launch a full-scale offensive against Pakistani Taliban guerrillas who've seized control of the vast Swat valley, which is about 100 miles north of the capital.

Pakistan will no longer "bow our heads before the terrorists," Gilani said in an 11 p.m. address as he called on citizens to rally behind the armed forces. He said that the government had tried peaceful negotiation with Taliban entrenched in the Swat valley, but the strategy hadn't worked.

Pakistan had "reached a stage where the government believes that decisive steps have to be taken," he said, and the army's job now was to "eliminate the militants and the terrorists."

Thousands of civilians have fled from Swat and neighboring districts in the fighting between the army and militants in the past week, but hundreds of thousands are unable to move and could be caught in the crossfire. Gilani appealed to the international community for humanitarian aid.

Islamabad acted under intense American pressure and after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned last month that the situation in Pakistan "poses a mortal threat to the security and safety of our country and the world."

The Taliban, which seized control of Swat in northeastern Pakistan early this week, are linked to al Qaida and other extremist networks in the ungoverned tribal areas along the Afghan border, as well as to cells in Islamabad and across Pakistan. A spinoff of the Afghan Taliban, the Pakistani militants are even more extreme and ideologically committed.

In taking on the homegrown Taliban, nuclear-armed Pakistan risks devastating retaliatory terrorist strikes in its cities. Extremists are sure to accuse the pro-Western government of buckling under U.S. pressure. The move conceivably could also trigger terrorist assaults in the West — which would probably require cooperation from al Qaida, as the Pakistani Taliban have no known strike capacity overseas.

The Obama administration, which had been criticizing Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari before his arrival in Washington this week, welcomed the move.

"We have seen, in the last week or two, significant Pakistani military action against . . . the Taliban in Buner District and in clear recognition that the agreement in Swat has failed," Defense Secretary Robert Gates told reporters in Kabul. He added that he was "very satisfied with the strong response that the Pakistani government and army have taken in response to this."

Ruling out any active role for U.S. combat troops in Pakistan, Gates said that the U.S. "goal is to work with the Pakistani army, with the Pakistani government as they deal with this problem. And we are willing to do all we can to help them."

In Washington, however, U.S. officials said they'd still seen no indication that the army was pulling any major combat formations off the border with India and preparing to dispatch them or other major ground units to the battle in and around Swat.

The bulk of the government offensive, they said, was still being carried by the frontier corps, a paramilitary force commanded by regular army officers and comprised of troops drawn from the Pashtun tribes that inhabit the area along the border with Afghanistan where most of the Taliban originate. The officials couldn't be named because they weren't authorized to speak to the news media.

Swat is a partly urbanized area, making civilian casualties a near-certainty. There are fears of a bloodbath if residents are unable to evacuate the main city, Mingora, and other towns.

Thousands fled southwards as skirmishes broke out in recent days, but according to desperate civilians in Swat, most residents north of Mingora, in towns such as Matta and Bahrain, have been prevented from leaving by an official curfew and by Taliban roadblocks.

"People from the upper areas are trapped," said a man from Bahrain, too afraid to give his name, who managed to get out by circumventing the roadblocks, but he had to leave his family behind. "The curfews had only been relaxed in Mingora (over the past few days), not in other places."

The government's call to arms only seemed possible because of a seismic shift in public opinion against the militants, which only took place in the past few weeks after a deal with the Taliban in Swat went badly sour.

"After a long time, the people see a ray of hope," said analyst Khadim Hussain, of the Institute for Regional Research and Advocacy, an independent research organization in Islamabad. "For the first time, the majority of the population, the people in the conflict zone, and the military, are thinking along the same lines."

The February peace accord, following two half-hearted army operations against the Taliban, would've imposed Islamic law in Swat. The Taliban, however, failed to disarm as they'd pledged, and invaded the neighboring district of Buner — which put them within 60 miles of Islamabad, Pakistan's capital. The Taliban may have overestimated their invincibility and their popular support.

Many Pakistanis thought that the Taliban and other extremists sought only to root out vices and usher in Islamic law in a country that's almost entirely Muslim.

Brutal behavior by the Swat extremists had the nation recoiling in horror, realizing that the real agenda was to seize territory and power. As well as the shock of the Buner incursion, a video emerged last month of a young woman being publicly beaten in Swat for alleged adultery, and the Taliban's political representative, Sufi Mohammad, gave a speech in which he denounced democracy as an "infidel" system.

The ambition of the Taliban brought about an unusual coming together of political and public opinion, although sections of the Islamic right still opposes military action.

Crucially, opposition leader Nawaz Sharif, a religious conservative, spoke out recently against the Taliban advance, following assiduous courting by the U.S. and other Western powers. Sharif, whose base is in Punjab, the most populous Pakistani province, previously had advocated dialogue as the only solution.

"The situation reached a point where we cannot keep talking only, we have to couple it with force," said Khawaja Asif, a senior member of Sharif's party, responding to the televised speech. "The country must rally behind the armed forces."

Pakistan's army had privately complained that the federal or provincial governments gave it neither firm direction nor strong backing for military action, following the restoration of democracy in early 2008. Now, even the pacifist-inclined Awami National Party, which runs the government of the North West Frontier Province and had promoted the Swat peace accord, supports a military offensive. Nevertheless, there will be condemnation from Islamic nationalists.

"We are opposed to this policy; it is directed against the innocent people of Pakistan, not the militants," said Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the former head of Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the two mainstream religious parties. "This is for the Americans and the Indians."

The Taliban, previously based in large numbers only in the tribal areas, began their annexation of Swat in mid-2007. The army's chief spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, said the army estimates there 4,000 to 5,000 Taliban fighters in Swat.

The major open question is whether the army will throw more firepower at the operation and employ its full resources, perhaps even moving troops stationed along its eastern border with arch-enemy India.

A meeting of corp commanders, led by the army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, took place ahead of Gilani's announcement. Kayani said in a statement that the "Pakistan army is fully aware of the gravity of internal threat. It will employ requisite resources to ensure a decisive ascendancy over the militants." In a pointed reference to India, he added: "Concurrently, army is also fully prepared to meet the conventional threat."

(Shah is a McClatchy special correspondent. Jonathan S. Landay contributed to this article from Washington.)




http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/67718.html
 
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Pakistan says decisive battle
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McClatchy Newspapers
By Saeed Shah
Saturday, May 23, 2009


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Pakistani army has entered Mingora, the largest town in Swat valley, and a street-to-street battle is raging with the Taliban, the military said Saturday.

In what's likely to be the most dangerous and crucial phase of the campaign to retake the vast Swat area back from armed Islamic extremists, the army has taken the fight to the narrow streets of Mingora, where thousands of civilians are thought to remain trapped.

Residents who've fled said that several hundred fighters are present, and they've mined the streets, created bunkers and tunnels and taken positions on rooftops.

"The Taliban has a big hold on Mingora. It is going to be very difficult for the army," said Shaukat Saleem, a Mingora resident who fled in recent days.

If the Taliban make a stand in the city rather than withdrawing into the hills and forests or disappearing into the civilian population as they've done before, a pitched battle could be costly to both sides, to the civilians caught in the middle and to both the insurgents' and the government's efforts to rally public support.

A gun battle between soldiers and the insurgents lasted around two-and-a-half hours Saturday, after which the troops retreated to their stronghold in the city around the Circuit House area, a district administrative complex, said Saleem, citing fleeing residents he'd contacted.

However, Athar Abbas, the army's chief spokesman, told a news briefing that the area from Circuit House to the city's Continental Hotel, a distance of a bit more than a mile, had been "cleared". He said that there'd also been an "intense exchange" at a busy crossroads farther into town known as Nishat Chowk, in which one would-be suicide bomber was killed and one suicide-bombing vehicle was destroyed.

"Street fights inside Mingora have begun," said Abbas. "Street by street, house by house, clearing will have to take place."

The army has estimated that some 5 to 10 percent of Mingora's 300,000 people remain in the city. Those who managed to leave after the offensive to retake Swat began on May 7, say that mostly the elderly and ill had to stay behind.

"We are mindful that the terrorists will use them (residents of Mingora) as human shields," said Abbas. "Therefore, the pace of the operation will be painfully slow."

Although the army has claimed rapid progress, there are concerns that many Taliban fighters have escaped. The army previously warned that some Taliban have shaved their trademark beards, cut their long hair and posed as civilians to get away.

Earlier this week, the army pledged that the operation wouldn't damage civilian property and that civilian casualties would be kept "very, very low". However, those who've escaped from Swat tell of significant destruction and loss of life.

So far, the army claims to have killed 1,095 Taliban, which, if accurate, is a scale of killing that suggests that the insurgents have been fighting in relatively large formations not typical of a guerrilla force.

Shah is a McClatchy special correspondent



http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/68742.html
 
you know we will end up have to fight them anyway right?

for what? cause we wanna occupy their land! or maybe promote more democracy? or promote our banking system?

AAA, if the US military wanted to handle business over there, it could be done in a matter of hours, and you know it!
 
for what? cause we wanna occupy their land! or maybe promote more democracy? or promote our banking system?

AAA, if the US military wanted to handle business over there, it could be done in a matter of hours, and you know it!

Your logic is flawed.

Would you move out of your house, move into an apartment, then move back in your house with a new house note?
 
:) We need a truly humble foreign policy. Get out of the UN, leave them alone

Dude, we are either damn if we do, damn if we don't.

If we do not intervene with any world affairs, someone would find a reason to hate us still. Why should we humble ourselves when our enemies halfway respect us now? Whats the point of humbling ourselves? So being confident about our military is a bad thing? I'm sick of everyone talking about we need to level off our achievements to make someone feel better about their situation. Fuck all of that!!!!
 
Dude, we are either damn if we do, damn if we don't.

We cannot afford to police the world. The nation is broke but the military-industrial complex isn't :cool:

Don't worry, all the warmongers in DC won't let you down. We will still occupy the middle East, pilfer their resources and support Israel!

Lets be real, if someone was in your hood telling everyone what to do, it wouldn't be long before your community retaliated, correct? If you put the shoe on the other foot, What would you do?
 
We cannot afford to police the world. The nation is broke but the military-industrial complex isn't :cool:

Don't worry, all the warmongers in DC won't let you down. We will still occupy the middle East, pilfer their resources and support Israel!

Lets be real, if someone was in your hood telling everyone what to do, it wouldn't be long before your community retaliated, correct? If you put the shoe on the other foot, What would you do?

So, us telling people that been in captivity all their life, to be free, is dictating their actions?

Are we telling the middle east to convert to Christianity?

What are we really doing to the middle east that constitute violence? Maybe the people we are fighting do not want to lose their control that they have. Not to mention, do we dictate Germany's foreign policy? We occupied them before, and look at their situation now.
 
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