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Operation Rah-e-Nijat (South Waziristan)

US gives $150,000 bomb disposal equipment to NWFP

* Contribution in addition to previously furnished $1.6m in ATA training and equipment

Staff Report

PESHAWAR: As part of its continuing collaboration with Pakistani authorities to protect people in Pakistan from terrorist bombings, the United States government on Wednesday provided $150,000 in bomb disposal equipment to the NWFP police.

This contribution is in addition to the $1.6 million in ATA training and equipment furnished to the NWFP Bomb Disposal Squad previously this year.

US Consulate Principal Officer E. Candace Putnam turned over explosive ordinance disposal suits, ballistic helmets, blasting machines, search mirrors, and tool kits to NWFP Inspector General Police Malik Naveed.

The ceremony was also attended by Major (r) Shafqat Ullah Malik, assistant inspector general of police, Special Branch Bomb Disposal.

Ms Putnam noted the bravery of the NWFP Bomb Disposal Unit whose Peshawar officers defused two remote-controlled bombs at a girls’ school in Landi Arbab area of Peshawar on October 20. Three members of the bomb disposal team lost their lives during operations in 2009 alone; one in Swat and two in Bannu.

In Peshawar, the US provides training, equipment and technology to the NWFP police and is helping them to respond effectively to the security situation in the area. This year 20 police officers received specialised training in bomb disposal.

More training and equipment will be delivered to the police in the coming year. Since 2003, the US has donated approximately $10 million in training and equipment to the NWFP police.

with no results!!!
 
South Waziristan fighting kills 25 militants
Thursday, 22 Oct, 2009

ISLAMABAD: The military claims to have killed at least 25 militants in the ongoing offensive in the South Waziristan tribal region during the last twenty four hours.

Two soldiers also died during the clashes.

Intense fighting took place on the Jandola-Sararogha Axis which the militants vacated after suffering at least 13 casualties, a statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said.

The military claims to have cleared a number of caves and bunkers in the tribal region’s Tor Ghundai area.

The military claims it is in the process of securing different areas in the region in a systematic manner by establishing pickets during clearance operations.

An update issued by the military spokesman's office says the military is repulsing the militants’ attacks in various areas of the tribal region described as a sanctuary of a number of foreign militants.

The militants fired six rockets at the Razmak camp as a result of which one soldier was killed.

An independent verification of the military’s claims is not possible as journalists do not have access to the battle ground in South Waziristan.

Meanwhile, search and clearance operations are continuing in Swat where the military claims to have killed militant commander Iqbal alias Islam and arrested nine suspects from different areas of the valley.

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | South Waziristan fighting kills 25 militants
 
Al-Jazzerra is reporting that the army is closing-in on the village of militant leader BM.
 
The military claims to have cleared a number of caves and bunkers in the tribal region’s Tor Ghundai area.

SWA is full of such fortifications which cannot be destroyed 100% from the air and therefore requires a frontal assault by ground forces.
 
Al-Jazzerra is reporting that the army is closing-in on the village of militant leader BM.
Is that Kotkai, the hometown of Hakimullah and Hussain? That is proving to be a difficult area to capture for our forces. I hear that within hours of capturing a high point in Kotkai, a Taleban assault on our post regained the ground.

Also, initially, our forces were converging from 3 sides onto Makeen. Do we hold Makeen now?

Sir, please can you confirm this?
 
Kotkai is a miserable little impoverished village, located in Pakistan.
I wish the same zeal was shown in Siachin and Kargil.
 
Kotkai is a miserable little impoverished village, located in Pakistan.
I wish the same zeal was shown in Siachin and Kargil.

You assume the Indians are not just as well equipped or fight with the same zeal in Siachen and elsewhere.

We can keep this localized to some extent (suicide bombers etc. means not entirely), whereas a conflict with India always has the threat of going out of control with far more disastrous results for both nations (and not even talking about nukes).

Personally, I believe Kargil was handled incorrectly - we should have claimed the territory and stated our action was in response to India's aggression in Siachen, and we would withdraw only when the Indians withdrew from Siachen.

Of course to do so would have meant risking full fledged war - but if we were not prepared for that, we should not have undertaken the Kargil offensive to begin with.
 
Dear AgNoStIc MuSliM

Thanks very much for your thoughtful and logical response. I truly appreciate you investing the time and attention to articulate your views, I find them very informative, a great learning opportunity.
Thank you.

However I respectfully differ with the flow-down inferences from the revered concept of the State of Pakistan:

1. Whereas Pakistan State and its Constitution are absolutely uncontroversial (above board); the implementing framework is not.
a. Just because a corrupt traffic policeman receiving a Rs 200 bribe from me is wearing a Uniform sanctioned by the state, I cannot salute him with the reverence as I salute my Flag!.
b. Just because our Commander-in-Chief (President) is formally instituted under the State’s constitutional framework, that does not entitle him to a revered status even though he has served time for embezzlement and corruption.
c. Just because the Armed Forces are sanctioned under the State’s framework, it does not confer upon them the right to launch operations on their own soil (stated objectives are always very noble, even Pol Pot regime in Cambodia had “noble” objectives!).
a. The corrupt policeman is violating Pakistan's laws and constitution - he has no authority given him/her by the constitution to extort bribes. So unless the government of Pakistan/NWFP has no right to requisition the military in support of maintaining law and order, there is no comparison to be made here.

b. Zardari does not have to be given 'revered' status - this is a strawman since I never made this argument - but if he is constitutionally appointed (and the fate of the NRO may change that), then he also has the right to use his powers (or Gillani does, not sure who can deploy the army) to pursue policies he thinks will work. Pakistanis can disagree with those policies, which you are, but I would also like to see constructive alternatives. Otherwise let him do his job.

c. I believe the GoP ordered the ops. so you would have to show that the GoP acted unconstitutionally in asking for Military support to maintain law and order.

2. State Constitution is the bed rock on which rest of the framework is anchored. It’s been 36 years since we had the 1973 Constitution; 20 years under direct martial law, and the rest under “Quasi martial law”. Repeated amendments have mutilated the letter and spirit of Constitution.
I agree it has been mutilated - Zia and Bhutto's extremist amendments - such as the Blasphemy Law, declaration of Qadianis as non-Muslims, Hudood Laws - some of the most despicable mutilations.

But it is nonetheless the only constitution we have, and that most Pakistanis generally agree on. I despise the above-mentioned amendments in the constitution, as I am sure you do some others, but we are required to support it until such time as other amendments are made or the people of Pakistan can come up with another constitution.

3. It is a fact of life that since 2001 the Government of Pakistan has essentially forfeited its sovereignty to the USA. The Constitution of the State of Pakistan does not sanction:
a. Sale of its citizens to CIA/FBI
b. Or to facilitate drone strikes on its soil.
c. Hand over a serving Ambassador of another country to CIA for being interned in Guantanamo bay.
d. Abduction / Disappearance of hundreds of Pakistanis without a due judicial process.
e. Authorize the use of our airspace and resources to a foreign country to launch operations on our soil or that of neighbors.

And any actions not in consonance with the constitution should be opposed, but the above actions do not automatically indicate that the Military Operation in FATA is unconstitutional.
4. The Constitution does not confer upon the Services the instutions:
a. Appointing serving Army Officers to run State institutions like KESC, PIA, CDA, Factories and even Cricket teams!.
b. Rapacious land grabs and commercial activities on the pattern of Lt. Gen. Zarrar Zameen, or others of his elk.

In a nutshell the State implementing machinery (Government) has lost its constitutional and moral authority.
part a. I assume refers to Musharraf, and he was opposed and is long gone.

And the rest I cannot comment upon since I have not seen the evidence, or that the current government supported them. Nor do they have any bearing on the legitimacy of the Military Operation in FATA.

FATA has been “managed” under the draconian FCR (1901) by the corrupted nexus of Political Agents and selected Muajib Khwar Maliks. Taliban are essentially a reactionary force that swapped the ends on the rapacious system then in place. It is not possible to enforce ill conceived ideas on the tribal populace, unless you have some respectability and moral authority.
No one is enforcing 'ill conceived ideas upon the Tribal populace' - terrorists are being eliminated. Hopefully the ideas of the terrorists are not the ideas of the majority of the Tribal populace.

TTP menace did not rise overnight, it was carefully nurtured over years to CREATE a front in Pakistan where Musharraf regime can be seen as waging a valiant struggle against Al-Quaida.
I would like to see evidence of that 'nurturing'. I don't believe it came about overnight either though. It came about as a result of the US invasion of Afghanistan, and strengthened because Pakistan ignored it for a variety of reasons, until it started to threaten the State.

Taliban doctrine gained acceptability due to the misuse of the Armed forces in FATA since early 2002. It began with the ritual BALLI of tribal lives by Musharraf Government whenever a western dignitary passed by Pakistan. Jack Straw while visiting a Medrassah in Peshawar on a goodwill visit was told how expensive his goodwill
Damadola airstrike - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“” On 13 January 2006 the Central Intelligence Agency fired missiles into the Pakistani village of Damadola (Urdu: ڈمہ ڈولا) in the Bajaur (Urdu: باجوڑ ) tribal area, about seven kilometres (4.5 miles) from the Afghan border, killing at least 18 people. Originally the Bajaur tribal area government claimed that at least four foreign members of al-Qaeda were among the dead. US and Pakistani officials later admitted that no al-Qaeda leaders perished in the strike and that only local villagers were killed.[1] The attack purportedly targeted Ayman al-Zawahiri, second-in-command of al-Qaeda after Osama bin Laden, who was thought to be in the village””.

Hundreds of such incidents were repeated in Khyber, Mohmand, Orakzai, Bajaur, Waziristan till the fuel / air mixture had reached the right proportions. The ill conceived Lal Masjid operation ignited the mixture first in Swat (girl students burnt alive); and then a full scale conflagration. Taliban just emerged as the rallying point by default.

You are assuming Pakistan was aware the Damadola strike was going to occur, and I believe people like Nek Mohammed, Abdullah Mehsud etc. had been operating and challenging the state long before that strike.

And we have discussed the Lal masjid Operation in detail on other threads - the state has a right to resolve a situation as it sees fit, and the State considered that lives of the students reportedly being held hostage by Mullah Aziz as being in danger if the standoff continued for much longer, and therefore made the decision to storm the terrorist sanctuary.

There are no credible reports validating the 'burning of hundreds of students' and what not.
You have absolute freedom to enjoy your black label, rave parties late into morning, and occasional ecstasy highs and ++, as long as you don’t attack the sensibilities of the society. The mixed marathon was one of Musharraf’s many hedonistic ideas (kinda enlightened moderation); essentially boycotted by the people of Lahore. Even Ch. Pervaiz Elahi’s family did not participate.
If people want to boycott it that is their choice - it is not however their right to infringe upon the freedom of others to go for a run around the neighborhood and participate in athletic activities (provided the women were not dressed like Serena Williams).

There is a sure shot way to disband the Taliban militias, by giving them due political space in accordance with the Constitution of Pakistan.
We tried that in Swat, it didn't work.
Collective punishments and mass exodus is not sanctioned by any Constitutional provision.

I thought that is what the FCR did in fact sanction.

I agree however with doing away with it and bringing FATA into the political mainstream, but that will not work until the Taliban threat is neutralized
Dear Sir you know it very well that such simplistic outlook has got us where we find ourselves today. Even a Soap factory is managed with better dexterity than this. If this was a solution, you and I would have been enjoying a holiday in “pacified” Swat today (or even in 5 years).
We have tried the other options, including bowing to almost all Taliban demands in Swat, did not work - so unless you have other options, dexterous or not, this remains the only way for now.
 
Rawalpindi - October 22, 2009:

1. South Waziristan - Operation Rah-e-Nijat.


In last 24 hours, 24 terrorists have been killed during Security forces operation in SWA. Security forces losses are 2 security forces personnel embraced shahadat and 4 were injured. Details of operations are as follows:-

a. On Jandola – Sararogha Axis

(1) After intense fighting complete Tor Ghundai feature has been secured. Series of bunkers and caves have been neutralized. Terrorists have left the area after suffering heavy casualties. Reportedly, thirteen terrorists have been killed.

(2) At present security forces are in the process of securing Shishamwam spurs and caves are being cleared in a systematic manner.

(3) Mizo-Wam has been fully secured.

b. On Shakai - Ladha Axis

(1) Security forces are extending perimeter of security North of Sherwangi area. Gurgura Sar has been fully secured.

(2) Last night terrorists raided Boya Narai west of Sherwangi. The attack was repulsed inflicting heavy casualties on to attackers. Eleven terrorists were killed and a number of them were injured.

(3) Security forces suffered one soldier shaheed and three injured.

(4) Security forces have established pickets at road Torwam-Sherwangi and are patrolling the area.

(5) Security forces have regained the control of Torwam Bridge which was closed by terrorists since 2007. This bridge is vital for link up between Torwam and Ladha.

c. Razmak

(1) Security forces are consolidating their positions and have effectively blocked the roads leading from Makeen.

(2) Terrorists fired 6 rockets at Razmak camp. One soldier embraced shahadat and one was injured.

3. Relief Activities - DI Khan and Tank.

7,184 IDP families have been registered, since 13th October 2009.

---

KIT Over n Out :victory::pakistan::sniper::guns:
 
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