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Car bomb almost goes off in NYC

Very soon you will see Pakisthan arresting or killing couple of terrorists and claiming that they did a great job as frontline state of war against terror.Then Zardari, Gilani, Kayani and Pasha lining up in Washington and submitting a list of demands and pleadings for money for the expenses of salaries, shoes, socks, used condoms, hairpins and so on.USA happily pats Pakisthan and approves US$100million.This is whay is happening for the last 20 years and will happen for the next forseeble future.One is an eternal beggar and other is an eternal giver.
 
So...only when the US is attacked or faced with terrorism......it warns PAK. Else in respect of other nations like India , it advices of peace & talks & negotiations etc.... Why such double standards? After all it is crystal clear that PAK govt, PAK army too....have connections with the terror-leaders and are well aware of the terror camps which "manufacture" and engineer terror acts. And that all the money which PAK gets as "AID" are misused for terror acts directly or indirectly. After 9/11, the US attacked Akghanistan after which the US DID NOT face any terror attack. Good...Now that the US is again the target....will it unhesitatingly, attack PAK or at least "isolate PAK' from all relations & stop aid & other sanctions?
 
US doesn't rule out Headley-Shahzad link

Washington, May 08: The United States has not ruled out a connection between two Pakistani Americans, key Mumbai terror plotter David Coleman Headley and failed Times square bombing suspect Faisal Shahzad, as it probes all angles of the case.

"Well, it could be - there have been multiple plots that have involved the United States and Pakistan, citizens on both sides who have chosen to take these actions," a State Department spokesman said on Friday when asked if there was any connection between the two cases.

"I'm not aware that there's any specific connection, but clearly, we are looking to see, while this individual was in Pakistan, who he met with, what support, if any, was provided," spokesman Philip J Crowley told reporters.

"And that is the reason why we are working so closely with Pakistan on this investigation."

Asked whether the US was in touch with India about the Times Square incident, Crowley noted the two countries have a regular dialogue on counter-terrorism issues, but could not say at this point if there was an Indian link.

"I mean, we have regular dialogue with India, including on counter-terrorism issues," he said. "I can't say at this point there's an Indian link to this case, but we do have dialogue with India on a regular basis on terrorism issues."

Earlier, ABC News citing unnamed sources traced Shahzad's links to another Pakistani militant outfit Jaish-e-Mohammad and suggested he was a childhood friend of one of the alleged masterminds of the 2008 Mumbai massacre.

However, the television network did not identify the Pakistani mastermind.

The Pakistani Taliban are denying any role in the failed car bombing, but have praised Shahzad for a "brave job done", ABC said noting the suspected bomber was also in contact with former Tehreek-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud who was killed in a US missile strike in 2009.

"The Mehsuds had been family friends of Shahzad, who is a son of a former high ranking Pakistani military officer," ABC News said quoting Pakistani sources.

Shahzad was reported to be in touch with a man named Mohammad Rehan, a suspected Jaish militant who helped him to travel to Peshawar and then to Waziristan and introduced him to Taliban.

---IANS

US doesn't rule out Headley-Shahzad link | Siasat
 
Terror on a budget: Times Square car bomb plot could have cost as little as $7,000

Confessed Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad appears to have financed his failed plot with a wad of $100 bills, but the amount of money needed to execute the scheme was fairly modest.

There was his plane ticket to the U.S. from Pakistan, as well as a return flight to the United Arab Emirates, at a cost of less than $800 each way. Add to that his living expenses, including three months rent for a Connecticut apartment at a little less than $1,200 per month.

His car bomb was relatively cheap, too: $1,300 for a rusting 1993 Nissan Pathfinder and the cost of some firecrackers and tanks of gasoline and propane.

Shahzad, who seemed to have paid cash for many and maybe all of his purchases, bought himself a Kel-Tec rifle, which sells for around $400, but skimped on luxuries.

The 30-year-old slept on an air mattress in a sparsely furnished apartment, and, according to one account, tried to get a job at a jewelry store where he had worked as a young college student.

Shahzad's finances are under scrutiny, as authorities try to learn whether he got cash from a terror group.

A law enforcement official told The Associated Press on Thursday that investigators had identified and were looking for a person who helped courier money to Shahzad from an overseas source. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigation.

Matthew Levitt, a former U.S. Treasury intelligence official, now a senior fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said the fact that Shahzad paid for the car and plane ticket in cash, sometimes using $100 bills, was a "red flag."

The money trail, he said, may provide valuable clues as to whether Shahzad had any help.

Yet the bombing plan, as described by authorities, appears to have been simple enough that even a single person or a small group with limited means could stage this sort of attack.

Shahzad's rent from mid-February to the start of May, his two airline tickets, gun and vehicle purchases appear to total less than $7,000. The actual bomb components — fertilizer, propane tanks, and a few boxes of cheap firecrackers — were even cheaper, maybe a few hundred dollars at most.

"You don't need to have a lot of money to put together a bomb. It's all relative to what you want to make," said Leo W. West, a retired FBI explosives expert. He noted that a more sophisticated device containing exotic chemicals would have been more expensive.

Prosecutors said that on May 1, Shahzad tried to detonate a sport utility vehicle filled with flammable materials in Times Square. The vehicle smouldered, but didn't explode. He was arrested after investigators traced him through the SUV's previous owner.

Shahzad is in federal custody. Authorities said he is coopering with investigators. He has yet to be arraigned. The whereabouts of his wife and children has not been made public, but they are believed to be living overseas.

Born in Pakistan, Shahzad spent more than a decade in the U.S., going to school, working and starting a family, before moving back to Pakistan last spring.

Shahzad has been characterized as being in money trouble when he left the U.S., but records and interviews suggest he still had resources.

He came from a well-to-do family. In America, he held a steady white-collar job as a budget analyst for years — a job he only gave up when he left the country.

Until that departure, there was no trail of lawsuits or missed payments indicating he was in trouble. In fact, his financial history was clean enough that Wachovia Bank gave him a $65,000 home equity line of credit in January 2009.

Five months later, he left the U.S., stopped paying his mortgage and his home heating oil bill and let the bank initiate foreclosure proceedings, but it is possible that step was made, not out of financial desperation, but because it made economic sense.

As of June 1, 2009, he owed $200,673 on his mortgage, according to court records. That, plus the home equity loan, raised his liability to $265,000 — more than the home's current appraised value.

It was unclear from public records how much of the home equity loan Shahzad used before moving his family to Pakistan, but if he pocketed all $65,000, it meant that by walking away from both loans he could recover most of his investment in the house and leave the country with a nice stake for the future.

Shahzad's financial situation in Pakistan was unclear. Friends and relatives have offered little information on where he and his family lived or how they supported themselves.

His father, Bahar ul-Haq, is a retired vice marshal of Pakistan's air force and owns property in several parts of the country. Shahzad's wife, Huma Mian, also comes from a successful family. Her father, Mohammad Asif Mian, is a petroleum engineering expert who has written several books and technical manuals, worked for energy companies including Saudi Aramco and Qatar General Petroleum, and has two master's degrees from the Colorado School of Mines.

Still, when Shahzad initially returned to the U.S. in February, he phoned an old boss at a New Haven jewelry store where he had worked while attending the University of Bridgeport and asked for a sales clerk job.

Sylvia Lee, of Dynasty Jewelry, told the New York Daily News she had to turn him down because business was slow.

Acquaintances continued to express bafflement this week as to why Shahzad might have done it.

"He was a normal guy. Normal guy. Just enjoying life," said Shakeeb Murtaza, who was part of Shahzad's circle of friends when he lived in Connecticut. He said he hadn't been in touch with him since he left.

Nasir Khan, a relative in the family's ancestral village of Mohib Banda in northwest Pakistan, said he remembered Shahzad talking about the problems of Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He also said Shahzad had become more religious over his time in the U.S., compared to how he was as a boy.

"I saw a little change in him. When he was here, he was not religious-minded. But he was, when he came back from the United States," Khan said.

Col. Abdul Aziz, a close friend of the family who served with Shahzad's father in the air force, called him an "obedient and such a nice boy."

"I am flabbergasted that they say he has done this. Someone must have brainwashed him," he said. He added that he didn't believe the allegation that Shahzad had gone to Pakistan's tribal areas to get terror training, saying it was unlikely he could have travelled there without his father finding out.

"His father would never have given him permission," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon in Karachi, Pakistan; Chris Brummitt in Islamabad; Adam Goldman in Washington; Samantha Gross in New York and John Christoffersen in Shelton, Connecticut, contributed to this report.

The Canadian Press: Terror on a budget: Times Square car bomb plot could have cost as little as $7,000
 
FBI seek access to Shahzad’s father

SLAMABAD: The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) team investigating Faisal Shahzad’s case has visited Pabbi, Nowshera and Hassanabdal on Saturday and seeks access to Shahzad's father.

The FBI team which is in Islamabad to investigate the links of militants with Shahzad has gathered quite a lot of information.

Sources indicated that the team has sought access to Shahzad's father Air Vice Marshal (retd) Baharul Haq who is currently under protective custody.

The FBI team also met with high ranking government officials.

Sources also revealed that a friend of Shahzad who was arrested from Karachi has now been shifted to Islamabad and is being questioned by Pakistani intelligence agencies and the FBI team.—DawnNews

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | FBI seek access to Shahzad?s father
 
too many skeletons in this closet dude!!!
as far as i have heard he just got nationality.. why would he do such a stuff if he wanted to be american citizen?? plus he has a family... people who have a family t o support dont turn to terrorism that easily!!

then he has accepted each n everything... thats quite strange, even ajmal kasab tried his best to escape!!!

i just have this feeling there is something else, things aint straight forward as they seem!!!

Yes, me too! But I also think @TruthSeeker's post may be equally valid as well. I just don't know and don't want to make false claims to feed the ever-present conspiracy theorists of Pakistan.

My -hunch- is that somehow S.Faisal's arrest is connected with an itching desire to finally and fully open the North Waziristan front. It provides Americans more diplomatic power over Pakistan. And most probably it makes it easier for Pakistani army and the PPP govt. to allow broader American involvement in the form of more drone attacks and more 'advisors' operating inside Pakistan.

Remember that Americans are looking for a 'face-saving' exit from Afghanistan before the 2012 US elections; a 'victory' in Afghanistan, especially one where Al Qaida is publicly presented as decimated in Afghanistan, along with near-full troop withdrawl from Iraq will give a great boost for Obama's re-election. And being re-elected is of almost supreme concerns to politicians the world-over.

I just don't know yet. While I find it certainly plausible, even likely, that someone who claimed to be a 'Kashmiri' in his 'nationality' while in America would be radicalized enough to attack America I am also not ruling out a financial-loser who, instead of flying a plane to the IRS office, vents his anger in this stupid and cruel way.

Perhaps I will never know for sure.
 
BBC News - 'Pakistan Taliban' behind Times Square bomb plot

The United States says it has evidence that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attempted car bombing in New York's Times Square.

Attorney General Eric Holder said they helped to facilitate the plot, and "probably helped finance it".

US officials had previously rejected claims by the group that it was behind the 1 May plot.

A Pakistani-born US citizen has been charged with the attempted bombing in New York's tourist quarter a week ago.

Faisal Shazhad, 30, from Bridgeport, Connecticut, has co-operated with investigators, and admits receiving bomb-making training in the Pakistan region of Waziristan, prosecutors have said.

"We've now developed evidence that shows that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attack," Mr Holder said on ABC television's Sunday current affairs talk show "This Week".

"We know that they helped facilitate it. We know that they probably helped finance it, and that [Shahzad] was working at their direction."

Mr Holder said there was nothing to suggest the government of Pakistan was aware of the plot.

He also said the Obama administration was satisfied for now with the level of co-operation it was receiving from the Pakistani authorities into the investigation of the attempted bombing.

The bomb was discovered last Saturday evening in Times Square, which was busy with tourists and theatregoers at the time.

The bomb was discovered and dismantled after a street-vendor noticed smoke coming from a Nissan Pathfinder, which had been left with its engine running and hazard lights flashing.

The unexploded bomb left crucial evidence intact that detectives used to trace Mr Shahzad.
 
It's 2 days old but wth. He was a lone wolf as Petraeus called him.

Pakistani Taliban deny link to suspect

NEW YORK, May 7 (UPI) -- The Pakistani Taliban had claimed responsibility for the attempt to bomb New York's Times Square, but now deny any link with the main suspect.

Faisal Shahzad, 30, a naturalized U.S. citizen of Pakistani origin, was arrested Monday at New York's Kennedy airport just prior to the departure of his Emirates flight to Dubai. U.S. investigators now believe he might have had ties to the Pakistani Taliban and that some of them may have trained him.

However, CNN reported a spokesman for the Pakistan Taliban denied any connection to Shahzad.

The report also quoted a senior U.S. official saying that new leads developed in Pakistan show Shahzad likely had training from extremists but would not say if that was tied to the attempted bombing in New York. It was also not clear which group may have been involved with Shahzad.

Shahzad has reportedly told investigators about receiving training in bomb-making in Pakistan's Waziristan tribal region.

The Times of London also reported the Pakistani Taliban's denial of any link to Shahzad. A Taliban spokesman praised him but also said, "We don't even know him."

Since Shahzad's arrest, Pakistani authorities have detained a number of people, including a friend and one of his relatives.

Pakistan's Daily Times reported Thursday three people were detained by police in Lahore, capital of Punjab province. Sources told the newspaper Pakistan's Interior Ministry has directed intelligence agencies to immediately interrogate Shahzad's relatives in Lahore, but it was not clear if those detained are relatives.

The Daily Times, quoting witnesses, also reported some of the relatives in Peshawar, concerned about Shahzad's arrest, have locked their homes and gone underground.

CNN, quoting intelligence officials, reported a team of U.S. and Pakistani investigators questioned Shahzad's father in Peshawar and also interrogated four people linked to the militant group called Jaish-e-Mohammed, which is connected to al-Qaida.

Shahzad is reported to be one of two sons of a retired Pakistani air force officer, but the CNN report said the father was not detained or arrested.

A New York Times report quoted Western diplomats and intelligence officials as saying the Pakistani Taliban are now working with al-Qaida and several other groups to expand their activities even as their capabilities get degraded by Pakistani military operations and escalating U.S. drone strikes.

The report said alliances with other militant and terror groups have helped the Pakistani Taliban continue their activities and even improve their skills.

"They trade bomb makers and people around," a senior U.S. intelligence official told The New York Times. "It's becoming this witches' brew."
 
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White House says Pakistan Taliban behind NY bomb - Yahoo! News


By ANNE FLAHERTY, Associated Press Writer Anne Flaherty, Associated Press Writer – 16 mins ago
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama's homeland security and counterterrorism adviser said Sunday that authorities believe the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attempted bombing at Times Square.

White House adviser John Brennan said that while the investigation is ongoing, it appears that accused bomber Faisal Shahzad was working for the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP. The militant group is believed to be hiding senior al-Qaida leaders, including Osama bin Laden.

Brennan said the finding "underscores the serious threat that we face from a very determined enemy."

The conclusion seemed to contradict a recent statement by Gen. David Petraeus, who said Shahzad apparently operated as a "lone wolf." Petraeus, head of U.S. Central Command, said in a statement Friday to The Associated Press that while Shahzad was inspired by militants in Pakistan, he didn't necessarily have direct contact with them.

Brennan's comments come after speculation that TTP had orchestrated the attack. Shahzad, a U.S. citizen of Pakistani descent, spent five months in Pakistan before returning to the United States in February and preparing his attack.

Shahzad has told investigators that he trained in the lawless tribal areas of Waziristan, where both al-Qaida and the Pakistani Taliban operate. He was arrested aboard an Emirates Airlines jet in New York just minutes before it was scheduled to take off for Dubai.

The finding could increase U.S. pressure on Pakistan to clamp down on the terrorist network. Brennan said Islamabad was being very cooperative in the investigation but that the U.S. wants to know exactly who may have been helping Shahzad.

"There are a number of terrorist and militant groups operating in Pakistan," he said. "And we need to make sure there's no support being given to them by the Pakistani government."

Brennan would not say whether Shahzad may be connected to fugitive al-Qaida cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, other than to acknowledge his Internet sermons are popular among extremist Muslims.

Brennan spoke on CNN's "State of the Union" and "Fox News Sunday."
 
Pak Taliban behind NY bomb attempt: Holder: Rediff.com India News

Pak Taliban behind failed bomb attempt: US Attorney General


The US said on Sunday that it has evidence that the Pakistani Taliban [ Images ] was behind last week's failed attempt to detonate a car bomb at Times Square in New York and that Faisal Shahzad was "working at their direction". "We've now developed evidence that shows that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attack," US Attorney General Eric Holder told ABC television's Sunday current affairs talkshow This Week.

"We know that they (Pakistani Taliban) helped facilitate it. We know that they probably helped finance it, and that he (Shahzad) was working at their direction," hesaid. 30-year-old Shahzad, a Pakistani who became a naturalised US citizen, was arrested on Monday for attempting to detonate the car bomb in New York. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has said that Shahzad, son of a former Pakistani Air Force officer, has admitted to attending a terrorist trainning camp in Pakistan's restive Waziristan tribal region.

US officials have been maintaining that Pakistani Taliban could be behind the failed attempt. A video purpodetly released by the Pakistani Taliban had claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the outfit rejected it immediately.
 
It's funny how all the indians post these "pakistani taliban" news..
First it was afghanistan talibans. once they get destroyed there.
They go to the border of pakistan.
and now its pakistan trains taliban to blow up american targets.
 
It's funny how all the indians post these "pakistani taliban" news..
First it was afghanistan talibans. once they get destroyed there.
They go to the border of pakistan.
and now its pakistan trains taliban to blow up american targets.

I just posted an american news.. About a failed bombing attempt in USA. Pakistani Taliban are the usual suspect. That's all
 
It's funny how all the indians post these "pakistani taliban" news..
First it was afghanistan talibans. once they get destroyed there.
They go to the border of pakistan.
and now its pakistan trains taliban to blow up american targets.

Can you please point out where any Indian said that it was Afghan Taliban?
It is well established that the perpetrator of the recent attack in NY is a recently naturalized American citizen of Pakistani origin, who recently came back from Pakistan and carried out the attack! Anyone with common sense can join the dots and see the picture.
So, are you mental or trying to score some cheap points here?
 
First of all.. I said FIRST it was afghan talibans..(so the past but still they have power in afghanistan).

second of all.. im saying that people act like these terrorists from pakistan are trained by pakistan itself.. so try learn to read.

third of all.. what makes you think i want points?
im here to learn something and try to learn others something too. i dont give a **** about points.
how can you think of something like this?
it makes me think you are the one which wants points..
 
It's good that Pakistani Taliban were responsible now America will bomb them to hell in N waziristan (We requested strikes earlier but America was busy rooting out Afghan talibans)
 

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