Obama's First Military Strike

QueEx

Rising Star
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First Military Strike Under the Barack Obama Administration</font size></center>



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lol, the new boss sounds just like the old boss! I'm going to enjoy listening to all the Obama supporters justify expanding this 'war on terror'! Wake up ya'll, the only people who benefit from war are govt. contracters and banks, meanwhile the nation goes deeper into debt and our civil liberties are eroding around us.

Let me guess, "Freedom is under attack by the terrorists" LMAO
 
Second Military Strike Under the
Barack Obama Administration


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Suspected U.S. strike in Pakistan kills 27</font size>
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Pakistani intelligence officials say foreign insurgents among the dead</font size></center>



ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - A suspected U.S. missile strike by a drone aircraft flattened a militant hide-out in northwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing 27 local and foreign insurgents, intelligence officials said.

Several more purported militants were wounded in the attack in South Waziristan, a militant stronghold near the Afghan border where al-Qaida leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri are believed to be hiding.

The new U.S. administration has brushed off Pakistani criticism that the missile strikes fuel religious extremism and boost anti-American sentiment in the Islamic world's only nuclear-armed nation.

Pilotless U.S. aircraft are believed to have launched more than 30 attacks since July, and American officials say al-Qaida's leadership has been decimated. Pakistani officials say the vast majority of the victims are civilians.


Foreign fighters

Taliban fighters surrounded the compound targeted Saturday in the village of Shrawangai Nazarkhel and carried away the dead and wounded in several vehicles.

Intelligence officials, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media, said the victims included about 15 ethnic Uzbek militants and several Afghans. Their seniority was unclear.

Two of the officials said dozens of followers of Pakistan's top Taliban leader, Baitullah Mehsud, were staying in the housing compound when it was hit.

Pakistan's former government and the CIA have named Mehsud as the prime suspect behind the December 2007 killing of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto near Islamabad. Pakistani officials accuse him of harboring foreign fighters, including Central Asians linked to al-Qaida, and of training suicide bombers.

The accounts of Saturday's incident could not be verified independently. The tribally governed region is unsafe for reporters. The U.S. Embassy had no comment, while Pakistani government and army spokesman were unavailable.


Tacit consent?

Pakistani leaders told visiting American envoy Richard Holbrooke earlier this week that the missile strikes kill too many civilians and undermine the government's own counterinsurgency strategy.

Still, many analysts suspect that Pakistan has tacitly consented to the attacks in order not to endanger billions of dollars in American and Western support for its powerful military and its ailing economy.

Pakistan's pro-Western government, led by Bhutto widower Asif Ali Zardari, has signed peace deals with tribal leaders in the northwest while launching a series of military operations of its own against hard-liners.

However, government forces are bogged down in several regions and Taliban militants have sustained a campaign that has included a string of kidnappings and other attacks on foreigners.


Threat to American

On Friday, a shadowy organization holding an American employee of the United Nations warned it would kill him within 72 hours and issued a grainy video of the blindfolded captive saying he was "sick and in trouble."

Gunmen seized John Solecki on Feb. 2 after shooting his driver to death as they drove to work in Quetta, a city near the Afghan border.

The kidnappers identified themselves as the Baluchistan Liberation United Front, suggesting a link to local separatists rather than the Taliban or al-Qaida. They are demanding the release of hundreds of people allegedly held in Pakistan.

But officials say the group is unknown and has yet to contact the United Nations. Fears for Solecki's safety are intense after Taliban militants apparently beheaded an abducted Polish geologist. If confirmed, the Pole's slaying would be the first killing of a Western hostage in Pakistan since American journalist Daniel Pearl was killed in 2002.

Zardari said in a television interview that the Taliban had expanded their presence to a "huge amount" of Pakistan and were eyeing a takeover of the state.

He sought to counter the view of many Pakistanis that the country is fighting Islamist militants, who have enjoyed state support in the past, only at Washington's behest.

"We're fighting for the survival of Pakistan. We're not fighting for the survival of anybody else," Zardari said, according to a transcript of his remarks that CBS television said it would air Sunday.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29191082
 
Two US Missile Strikes In Pakistan In Three Days Kill More Than 60

The Stimulus wasn't the only thing that happened yesterday

By Barry Grey
17 February 2009
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m51868&hd=&size=1&l=e

The United States on Monday carried out its second missile strike in three days inside Pakistan. More than 30 people were reported killed after four CIA Predator drone aircraft launched at least four Hellfire missiles at a purported Taliban training camp in Pakistan's northwest tribal area of Kurram.

It was the first US strike in Kurram, one of seven semi-autonomous tribal areas in Pakistan on the border with Afghanistan. Monday's attack followed a missile strike on Saturday on a building in the South Waziristan tribal district that killed at least 30 people.

The two strikes in rapid succession came within days of a visit to Pakistan by Richard Holbrooke, President Barack Obama's special envoy to Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Holbrooke met last Wednesday with top Pakistani government and military officials in Lahore as part of a tour of the three countries whose principal aim is to prepare the way for an escalation of US military violence in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Following Holbrooke's meeting with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Kayani and other officials, the Pakistani daily Dawn reported that Holbrooke insisted that "the US wanted to see the tribal areas cleared of safe havens of Al Qaeda and the Taliban" and was prepared to "meet the military hardware needs of the country for counterinsurgency operations."

Pakistani officials reportedly reiterated their concerns over the US missile strikes in Pakistan aimed at wiping out Taliban and Al Qaeda "safe havens" in regions bordering Afghanistan. Since August, at least 38 such strikes have killed, according to conservative estimates, 130 Pakistani civilians, fueling popular opposition to both the US and the Pakistani government. While the Pakistani regime publicly opposes the strikes as a violation of Pakistani sovereignty, its military and intelligence agencies have supplied the CIA with intelligence and targeting information to facilitate the attacks.

The two most recent strikes, bringing the number since Obama took office to four, were a clear signal that the new administration intends to escalate the US military intervention in Pakistan, regardless of its destabilizing effect on the government in Islamabad. This is part of a broader plan to nearly double the US presence in Afghanistan to 60,000 troops over the next 18 months and to treat Afghanistan and Pakistan as part of a single military theater.

One indication of the advanced plans to widen the war into Pakistan was the statement last week by Senator Dianne Feinstein, the Democratic chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, who said it was her understanding that US Predator drones "are flown out of a Pakistani base." Feinstein made the remark during a hearing with Obama's director of national intelligence, retired admiral Dennis C. Blair.

Blair refused to comment at the time. A spokesman for the Pakistani embassy in Washington denied the existence of such a base, saying, "There are no foreign bases in Pakistan." However, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell, when asked at a news briefing about Feinstein's statement, did not deny the base's existence, saying only that he could not comment and had no knowledge of such a base.

Feinstein's office said she was referring to a March 27, 2007 report in the Washington Post that US drones targeting Pakistani tribal areas were launched from inside Afghanistan and "from bases near Islamabad and Jacobabad in Pakistan."

Prior US missile attacks have focused on alleged Al Qaeda and Taliban compounds in the tribal agencies of North and South Waziristan as well as in Bajaur. One strike took place in Bannu, a region outside of the tribal areas.

The increase in the number of US missile strikes into Pakistan is a measure of the worsening military security situation for the US-led occupation of Afghanistan as well as the growing power of anti-US and anti-government Islamist insurgents within Pakistan.

According to the Long War Journal web site, there were 36 recorded cross-border attacks in Pakistan during 2008. Of these, 29 took place after August 31. There were only ten recorded strikes in 2006 and 2007 combined.

The camp that was struck on Monday is located just 15 kilometers from the Afghan province of Khost. It is a holdover from the mujahideen guerrilla war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan that was financed and directed by the CIA on both sides of the border in the 1980s.

The US attack was evidently aimed at weakening Taliban forces in Kurram who have been conducting increasingly bold and effective attacks on the main US and NATO overland supply route from the Pakistani port of Karachi across the Khyber Pass in the northwest of the country and into Afghanistan.

Rehman Ullah, a resident of the targeted village of Baggan, said drones were seen in the sky before the attack and that he saw 30 bodies dug out of the rubble afterwards.

The US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, carried out to secure American domination of Central Asia, home to some of the richest oil and natural gas reserves in the world, has vastly destabilized the region and increased tensions between the US and rival powers, particularly Russia and China. After more than seven years of military violence and repression, the strength of insurgent opposition to the US occupation and Washington's puppet government in Kabul has grown, to the point where the Taliban, which was ousted from power by the US intervention in October 2001, controls large parts of Afghanistan.

Only days before Holbrooke arrived in Kabul for talks with President Hamid Karzai, coordinated attacks by Taliban guerrillas left at least 26 dead and 57 wounded in the heart of Kabul. The attacks exposed the fact that neither the Karzai government nor the 70,000 US and NATO troops that keep it in power are capable of maintaining security in virtually any part of the country, including the capital itself.

The Obama administration has signaled its growing displeasure with Karzai, who has issued frequent public criticisms of US air strikes that have killed hundreds of Afghan civilians. There is growing speculation that Washington may dispense with its puppet ruler and install someone new.

The security situation in Pakistan is likewise deteriorating. Islamist insurgents control large parts of the northwest tribal districts, and tensions between the US and Islamabad have mounted over the failure of the Pakistani military to wipe out the militants. In an extraordinary interview aired Sunday on the CBS television program "60 Minutes," Pakistani President Zadari said the Taliban had expanded its presence to a "huge amount" of Pakistan and were eying a takeover of the state. "We're fighting for the survival of Pakistan," he said.

One area that has come under Taliban control is the Swat Valley, once the home of a sky resort that attracted foreign tourists. In 2007 the Taliban launched an offensive and has since taken control of the region, which is part of Malakand in the North West Frontier Province.

Since last summer, some 12,000 Pakistani government troops have been carrying out fierce military operations in Swat against a Taliban force of about 3,000 fighters. But the government offensive has become bogged down and has failed to dislodge the Taliban.

On Monday, the regional government, with the support of President Zadari, announced that it was suspending military operations and conceding to the main demand of the Taliban in Swat—that Malakand come under Islamic, or Shariah, law. The move is widely seen as a defeat for the central government and a sign of weakness.

The United States has opposed previous attempts by Islamabad to establish a truce with Islamist insurgents and signaled its displeasure with the deal announced Monday, which flies in the face of Holbrooke's demand for an escalation of Pakistani military action against Islamist forces in the border regions.

"It's hard to view this as anything other than a negative development," a senior Defense Department official said on Monday. Speaking in India, Holbrooke did not specifically address the cease-fire agreement, but indicated Washington's opposition, saying the rise of the Taliban in Swat was a reminder that the US, Pakistan and India faced "an enemy which poses direct threats to our leadership, our capitals and our people."

This is coded language for a US military escalation that threatens to engulf all of Central Asia in a bloody conflagration.
 
lol, the new boss sounds just like the old boss! I'm going to enjoy listening to all the Obama supporters justify expanding this 'war on terror'! Wake up ya'll, the only people who benefit from war are govt. contracters and banks, meanwhile the nation goes deeper into debt and our civil liberties are eroding around us.

Let me guess, "Freedom is under attack by the terrorists" LMAO

change we can believe in
 
Sad. Same old American military interventionist bullshit. Leave Pakistan to the Pakistanis; Afghanistan to the Afghanistanis; Iraq to the Iraquis. We've got enough on our plate right here. I had hoped Obama had his war face on just to get elected, but I guess not. :hmm:
 
If you believe that some war is justified, this will probably be the closest that directly effects America's security. Comparing this war to the joke that happen in Iraq is a big stretch.
 
<font size="3">By my count, this would be the 3rd U.S. strike in
Pakistani territory since Obama has taken office
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US missiles suspected in northwest Pakistan strike</font size></center>



Pakistan.sff.mi_embedded.prod_affiliate.69.jpg

AP Photo - Supporters of Pakistan's pro-Taliban
cleric and leader of a religious movement Sufi
Muhammad, unseen, listen to their leader at his
headquarters


Associated Press Writer
By ISHTIAQ MAHSUD and SHERIN ZADA
March 1, 2009


A suspected U.S. missile killed seven people in a Taliban stronghold in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, officials said, while a hard-line cleric rattled peace efforts elsewhere by demanding the government launch Islamic courts within two weeks.

The developments showed the mercurial state of the fight against insurgents in Pakistan's regions bordering Afghanistan, where the country is pursuing both peace talks and military offensives, and where the Obama administration appears more than willing to flex U.S. muscle despite official Pakistani protests.

The missiles landed in Murghiban village in the South Waziristan tribal region and also wounded three people, two Pakistani intelligence officials said. At least four of the dead were believed to be foreign militants, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media.

They said that drones believed to be used by the U.S. were seen in the air ahead of the strike and that Taliban fighters surrounded the damaged center afterward. The compound was allegedly a militant training facility, the officials said, citing field informants.

South Waziristan is the main stronghold of Baitullah Mehsud, the top leader of the Pakistani Taliban.

The U.S. has dramatically stepped up its missile attacks on al-Qaida and Taliban targets in Pakistan's northwest since mid-2008, a policy that has not changed under new President Barack Obama and which officials say has killed several key al-Qaida figures.

Pakistan has condemned the strikes, saying they inflame anti-American sentiment especially when they kill civilians, but many analysts speculate the two countries have a secret deal allowing the attacks.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Sunday that he would not talk about the specifics of the U.S. mission in Afghanistan or Pakistan when asked about the alleged strike on Fox News Sunday. He said, however, that the military overall was "carrying out guidance from President Obama" in the region.

Muslim-majority Pakistan has also turned to peace talks to try pacifying the insurgency in its northwest - much to the dismay of Washington and other Western capitals.

Last month, Pakistan agreed to implement Islamic law in the Swat Valley, a former tourist haven where militants have gained tremendous sway. The Swat Taliban and the military also agreed to a cease-fire, halting months of fighting that has killed hundreds and displaced up to one-third of the valley's 1.5 million residents.

American and European officials worry that the talks could turn Swat into a sanctuary for Taliban fighters. Swat lies less than 100 miles from Pakistan's capital, Islamabad. It also is near tribal regions where al-Qaida and the Taliban have strongholds, but where the Pakistani military is waging separate offensives.

The provincial government in northwestern Pakistan made the pledge to establish Islamic courts in Swat and surrounding areas to Sufi Muhammad, a pro-Taliban cleric who agreed to then negotiate with the Swat Taliban. Muhammad's son-in-law heads the Swat Taliban, and he himself heads a movement that has long agitated for Islamic law.

He said Sunday that it did not appear the government was holding up its end of the bargain.

"I'm not seeing any practical steps for the implementation of the peace agreement, except for ministers visiting Swat and uttering words," the elderly cleric told reporters in the valley's main city of Mingora.

Muhammad set a March 15 deadline for the Islamic courts to start running. Muhammad also said that the Taliban and the government should release each other's prisoners by the same date and that both sides should immediately abide by an agreement that includes no public displays of weapons.

Pakistani officials have been vague on whether at any point the Taliban would be ordered to give up their weapons, which many would probably consider a major test of whether the government can re-establish its authority in the valley.

Muhammad said that if the deadline was not met, his followers would stage peaceful protests throughout the region.

The province's information minister promised that the government would "implement the justice system at the earliest" but would not directly commit to meeting the mid-March deadline.

"We have great respect for Sufi Muhammad and value his efforts for bringing peace in Swat," Mian Iftikhar Hussain said. "No one should have any doubt about the provincial government's intention. We will remove all his reservations."

Swat Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan said the militants have already released all government prisoners they were holding.

"We don't have any other prisoner in our custody, but the government has not released our men so they should abide by the agreement with Maulana Sufi Mohammad by releasing all prisoners," Khan said.

Past peace deals with militants in Pakistan - including one in Swat last year - have failed, giving the extremists time to regroup and rearm. Western officials have raised this point in questioning whether Pakistan was effectively ceding Swat to the militants.

Pakistan has deflected the criticism, saying it is merely responding to longtime local demands for a more efficient justice system - a desire exploited by militants to gain followers. Officials say their pledge on Islamic law will not include the harsh interpretations adhered to by many Taliban, such as banning girls from getting an education.

The country has taken a more forceful approach to al-Qaida and Taliban fighters in parts of its semiautonomous tribal regions bordering Afghanistan.

On Saturday, Pakistani military commanders said they had defeated the militants in Bajur tribal region and were close to victory in neighboring Mohmand tribal area. The U.S. has praised the military actions in those regions, saying they have helped pressure militants who used Pakistan as a base to plan attacks on American and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

http://www.bradenton.com/news/breaking_news/story/1261470-p2.html
 
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In Pakistan, US drone strike on Taliban kills 12</font size>

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Since last August an estimated 34 such attacks have
killed about 340 people, including some senior commanders</font size></center>


The Guardian,
Declan Walsh in Islamabad
Thursday 2 April 2009

Two missiles fired from a suspected US drone killed at least 12 people and wounded several more in Pakistan's tribal region yesterday.

The missiles hit a building believed to be a Taliban safehouse in Orakzai, close to the Afghan border. According to reports, militants sealed off the building immediately afterwards.

The attack by an unmanned Predator aircraft was targeted at Hakimullah Mehsud, a commander in the Pakistani Taliban, a Pakistani intelligence official said. But he escaped the American missiles. "He wasn't there, but we wish he was," added the official.

The attack came a day after Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for Monday's assault on a Lahore policy training facility in which eight police cadets and several militants were killed. Mehsud said the offensive had been in retaliation for Predator strikes

In recent months US forces have targeted al-Qaida and Taliban leaders in their hideouts, mostly in North and South Waziristan and Bajaur tribal agencies, using Predators armed with Hellfire missiles. Since last August an estimated 34 such attacks have killed about 340 people, including some senior commanders.

But the drones have also taken a heavy toll on Pakistani public opinion, causing widespread anger over a perceived breach of sovereignty. About 150 elders protested the strikes in the town of Tank, near South Waziristan yesterday.

The Pakistani government publicly denounces the drone strikes but provides tacit support for their execution, including the use of army bases inside the tribal areas by CIA agents.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/02/taliban-usa-attack-pakistan
 
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