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Operation Zarb-e-Azb | Updates, News & Discussions.

Scorch the earth policy on Kunar and Nooristan, Fazullah is hiding there. I want to see him dead on my tv.


No need to scorch anything.

Afghanistanis (as per my reading) are finally IMPRESSED by the sheer control that Pak army can exert.

FIRST time ever in recent history, Afghanistanis are believers in Pak army.

The same Afghanistanis have seen Russians, Americans, and every Tom, and Dick, And Abdullah in between.

Never they saw an utter dominance the way it has been so far in NWA.

So if Pak army and Pakistan can maintain this posture in NWA, Afghanistanis will hand over Mullah Fazlu to us in a cage.


Hope you understand.


Black Ops from SW are on his tail. ;)

yes that is true based on recent news.
 
Black Ops from SW are on his tail. ;)

TIGER, tiger, burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?

In what distant deeps or skies
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand dare seize the fire?

And what shoulder and what art
Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
And when thy heart began to beat,
What dread hand and what dread feet?

What the hammer? what the chain?
In what furnace was thy brain?
What the anvil? What dread grasp
Dare its deadly terrors clasp?

When the stars threw down their spears,
And water'd heaven with their tears,
Did He smile His work to see?
Did He who made the lamb make thee?

Tiger, tiger, burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?
 
It's been quite some time since we've heard from the loud mouth Shahid Ullah Shahid. Must be hiding with his head up Fazlu's a$$ wearing his yellow trousers...... I can't even see a goat getting slaughtered but i would gladly make his beheaded picture as my screen saver....
 
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Taliban cut hair and beards to flee Pakistan army assault
Refugees reveal life under militants — and their taste for imported luxuries
  • AFP
  • Published: July 6, 2014
Bannu: Hundreds of Taliban fighters rushed to disguise themselves with new haircuts in the weeks before a Pakistani army assault, it has emerged, as refugees revealed details of life under the militants — and their taste for imported luxuries.

Azam Khan was one of the top barbers in Miranshah — the main town of North Waziristan — until he, like nearly half a million others, fled the long-awaited offensive unleashed by the Pakistan military on the tribal area in June.

He said his business boomed in the month leading up to the army assault as the militants sought to shed their distinctive long-haired, bearded look.

“I have trimmed the hair and beards of more than 700 local and Uzbek militants ahead of the security forces’ operation,” he said while cutting hair in a shop in Bannu, the town where most civilians fled.

For years he cut Taliban commanders’ hair to match the flowing locks of former Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leader Hakimullah Mehsud, killed by a US drone last November, but in May a change in style was called for.

“The same leaders came asking for trimming their beards and hair very short, saying that they were going to the Gulf and wanted to avoid problems at Pakistani airports,” Khan said.

Even Uzbeks and Tajiks with little knowledge of the local language came to him, he said.

“Knowing little Pashto, they used to utter four words: ‘mulgari (friend), machine, zero, Islamabad’,” said Khan — asking him to shave their beards to nothing so they could go to Islamabad.

The Pakistani military launched the offensive against militants in North Waziristan tribal area on June 15, vowing to wipe out the strongholds they have used to wreak countless deadly terror attacks across the nuclear-armed state.

The rugged, mountainous area on the Afghan border has been a hideout for years for militants of all stripes — including Al Qaida and the homegrown TTP as well as foreign fighters including Uzbeks and Uighurs.

For years people from North Waziristan remained tight-lipped about life in a Taliban fiefdom, scared of being kidnapped or even beheaded if they shared information about the militants.

But as the exodus of people has grown, some have found the confidence to tell their stories.

While the militants bombed and maimed thousands in their fight to install an austere Sharia regime in Pakistan and publicly professed contempt for the West, in North Waziristan they indulged themselves with fancy imported goods.

Hikmatullah Khan, a shopkeeper in Miranshah, said that at the same time as commanders were insisting he pay Rs300 (Dh11) a month “tax”, their fighters were stocking up on grooming products.

“They were very keen to buy foreign-branded shampoos, soaps and perfumed sprays,” Khan said.

“They had a lot of eagerness for French and Turkish perfumes, body sprays and soaps.”

Mohammad Zarif, a wholesale merchant in Datta Khel, near Miranshah, said fighters would buy large quantities of British detergent and American cooking oil, much of it smuggled from Dubai.

Pakistan’s allies, particularly the United States, have long called for an operation to flush out groups like the Haqqani network, which use the area to target Nato troops in neighbouring Afghanistan and are thought to have links to Pakistani intelligence services.

The Pakistani military has said it will target militants “of all hue and colour” but the scant resistance troops have encountered has led many to believe the insurgents fled before the offensive, limiting its effectiveness.

The army says the operation has killed nearly 400 militants and will rid North Waziristan of their bases, denying them the space to plan attacks and allowing investment to come to one of Pakistan’s poorest areas.

But it remains to be seen what the long-term impact of the offensive will be. Local intelligence and militant sources said that up to 80 per cent of fighters fled after rumours of an army assault emerged in early May, most over the porous border into Afghanistan.

These sources estimate the present number of militants as around 2,000, down from around 10,000 before the operation. The figures are uncertain and difficult to confirm.

The Pakistani army has asked Afghanistan to crack down on TTP refuges across the border and this week top brass from both sides met in Islamabad to discuss the issue.

“It is clear that militants were aware that the offensive was coming before it started. Lots of them fled,” a Western diplomat said.

“The big question is: after the offensive, will Pakistan allow the Haqqanis and others to come back?”

Taliban cut hair and beards to flee Pakistan army assault | GulfNews.com
 
This is an AGE OLD picture disected a thousand times

Btw, if you want to imply that since TTP is trained by USA (which it is NOT) hence its a terrorist, then please wake up. Pakistan Army is trained, financed and fed by USA, shouldnt it be a bigger terrorists?

hahahahahahah,
You should be a comedian!
 
...

“They were very keen to buy foreign-branded shampoos, soaps and perfumed sprays,” Khan said.

“They had a lot of eagerness for French and Turkish perfumes, body sprays and soaps.”


I am sure many of them did their "last journey" smelling like roses.
 
Up to 93 families relocate to North Waziristan village

By Our Correspondents
Published: July 7, 2014

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A file photo of IDPs. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

BANNU/ISLAMABAD: As a top military commander visited the troops in North Waziristan Agency (NWA) on Sunday, as many as 93 displaced families have returned to the Eidak village of agency’s Mirali tehsil.

The families, which amount to more than a thousand individuals, returned after security forces declared the area cleared of militants, an official of the tribal agency’s political administration told The Express Tribune.

“Elders of the village have been holding talks with security forces over the past two days after the area was declared clear [of militants],” the official said. “The elders have assured security officials that they will not allow any militants into the area,” he added.

According to the official, the elders, while assuring their all-out support to the armed forces, pointed out that they had razed militant seminaries and hideouts in the area in the past.

“Following the talks, 93 families moved back from Bannu and other parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa to their native areas in the agency,” he said.

Peshawar corps commander visits troops

Peshawar Corps Commander Lt Gen Khalid Rabbani visited the troops in North Waziristan Agency on Sunday and vowed that the operation will continue till the last terrorist was eliminated from the troubled region. The senior commander is the first high-ranking army official to visit the restive tribal area since Operation Zarb-e-Azb was launched.

According to an Inter-Services Public Relations statement, Lt-Gen Rabbani visited Miramshah and met the troops fighting what the army has dubbed a ‘battle of survival’ for Pakistan. The statement said the corps commander was given a detailed briefing about the progress of the operation.

Sources said the general was informed that the operation was progressing as planned and security forces continued to strangulate militant hideouts. They added that Lt-Gen Rabbani told the troops that the entire nation was looking up to the armed forces to defeat terrorists.

The general said the army would make sure that the writ of the state was established in NWA in the shortest possible time so that internally displaced persons (IDPs) could safely return to their homes.

Meanwhile, Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif said the military operation in North Waziristan would continue till terrorism was rooted out from the area.

On Sunday, the minister told reporters the government would take all mainstream parties into confidence on the issue of eradicating terrorism and rehabilitating IDPs.

He added that it was not possible at this stage to give any timeline for the completion of the operation.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 7th, 2014.

Up to 93 families relocate to North Waziristan village – The Express Tribune
 
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