What's new

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

Hasan-Khan.jpg

The last battleground
Hasan Khan November 2, 2014.

Stretching the offensive to Shawal means the military is seriously ready to take on all the militants

Pakistan Air Force is the better option.
Clearing the major population centres of North Waziristan after five months of active engagement, Pakistan military is now planning to further stretch the offensive and chase the militants in the treacherous mountains of Shawal where most of the militants are said to have gathered fleeing the towns along River Tochi.

Featuring snow capped mountains, deep valleys and impenetrable forests and spread out in the North and South Waziristan agencies and even Afghanistan, Shawal valley has been the last resort for militants whether fleeing the Rah-i-Nijat operation launched in 2009 in South Waziristan or Zarb-e-Azb in North Waziristan launched on June 15, 2014.

Majority of Pakistanis perceive Zarb-e-Azb operation as “national resistance” or “battle of national survival” against terrorism fought in the mountains of North Waziristan — thought of the epicentre of international terrorism. It is said to be the headquarter for almost all militants networks of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), al-Qaeda, Haqqanis, Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighur terrorists.

According to the military accounts — the only available source of information — during the five months air and grounds offensives, security forces have cleared more than 80 per cent of North Waziristan; resulting in the killing of some 1000 hardcore terrorists, destroying scores of IED factories, tons of explosives and weapons’ depots, dismantling well-established ‘command and control’ systems and jihadi infrastructure built over decades here. The offensives dislocated over one million tribesmen, women and children to district Bannu and other adjoining areas.

However, what the military sources claim, of reclaiming 80 per cent territory from militants’ occupation without killing or arresting a high profile terrorist leader, is not without reservations. “Clearing 80 per cent [North Waziristan] means the remaining 20 per cent is Shawal region that needs to be washed down,” says defence analyst Brig (Retd) Said Nazeer Mohmand.

The region is very inhospitable for troops to move and operate in, with thick forests and foliaged valleys covered with snow in most parts of the year especially in winter.

“I see the game is not finished yet…..and elimination of militants is not an option but dislocation might be,” says the former military officer alluding to the recently signed Bilateral Security Agreement between Afghanistan and US, allowing international forces to stay in Afghanistan beyond December 2014.

Pushing and holding up militants in the lush green lofty foliaged mountains of Shawal is a better strategy instead of Kurram and Tirah where some reports say militants affiliated to Haqqani network have escaped.
North Waziristan operation, according to military accounts, is the “biggest and most well-coordinated operation” ever conducted against terrorists. ISPR chief Gen Asim Bajwa has been quoted in media as saying: “We have surrounded the entire agency and sealed the 180km border with Afghanistan, as well as boundary with South Waziristan, making it impossible for terrorists to escape.”

So it is possible a few of militants have taken refuge on the Afghan side of the border, but most of them and their leadership are still in the targeted area. Now after clearing the major population towns of Mirali, Miramshah, Boya, Deegan, Hasokhel, Mosakay and areas of Dathakhel, forces are now planning to chase militants affiliated with TTP, al-Qaeda, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Chinese and Arabs in the mountains of Shawal where most of them have taken refuge.

Local militant groups including the influential Sadiq Noor group, Aryana group, Malavi Said Khan and Gud Abdur Rehman groups are said to have gathered in the thickly foliaged valleys. Going to the Shawal valley is not difficult for the forces. “For military going to Shawal valley is not a problem but eliminating militants and staying will definitely be,” says Brig Nazeer.

“If military goes to Shawal, militants will go further up into the mountains or disperse in the dense forests putting no resistance or just imposing certain caution by spraying IEDs as they did in parts of North Waziristan,” says Nazeer.

The region is very inhospitable for troops to move and operate in, with thick forests and foliaged valleys covered with snow in most parts of the year especially in winter.

“The local and foreign militants who are living in this region are acclimatised to the terrain and will make it very tough for the military to catch or kill them,” says Safdar Dawar, a senior journalist from Miramshah.

Stretching the offensive to Shawal means the military is seriously ready to take on all the militants including TTP, al-Qaeda, Haqqanis, Uzbeks, Uighurs and dozens of small local groups, as all are holed up in Shawal mountains…. “A task that seems highly difficult and dangerous, if not impossible,” says Dawar.

The region is sparsely populated by Wazir tribes across the border and till 2004 it was completely out of the administrative zone and ungoverned. After military operations in Wana, Azam Warsak, Shakai and Makeen areas of South Waziristan in 2004, some check posts were established in the low lying areas. But these check posts were vacated when Operation Zarb-e-Azb was launched due to fear of guerilla attacks. In winter the valley is completely emptied and people shift to other warm areas.

There are also reports the valley has a well established jihadi infrastructure inherited from the days of Afghan-Soviet war. “Yes there are long tunnels, underground facilities dug during the Afghan war for securing mujahideen from air attacks,” says Dilawar Wazir, another local journalist.

Besides the terrain and harsh weather conditions, the role of Afghan government is another very important factor in case of any engagement against the militants in Shawal: large parts of the region are located in Afghanistan and the region contains no marked signs separating Pakistani region from the Afghan one.

Even if the Afghan government wants to extend support to Pakistan forces or play as an anvil to the fleeing militants, it can’t in the prevailing situation, when international forces are packing up handing over all security affairs to the Afghan forces by December 14.

So in the wake of no active support from Afghanistan, it will be easier for militants who have crossed to Afghanistan to re-launch guerilla attacks on Pakistani forces with the support of Afghan backers.

Some experts are more skeptical saying that even if Afghan government extends military support to Pakistan, the elimination of militants is a hard task in Shawal. “Shawal is as inaccessible from the Afghan side as it is from Pakistan and short of helicopters services, transport and supply is almost not possible,” says Safdar Dawar.

The better option is to use the Pakistan Air Force that has the capability of targeting with precision the hideouts of militants anywhere in the mountains and valleys. “We have the capability to monitor the militants’ activities from 30,000 feet up in the sky and hit any target with laser-guided missiles, with precision and less collateral damage,” says Brig Nazeer.

Zarb-e-Azb 2014-11-02

Hasan Khan
Hasan Khan hosts political talk shows on radio and Pashto television channel. He may be reached at hasan.khyber@gmail.com.
 
Militancy
  • As reported by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty on November 12, Imam Bukhori Jamat, an Uzbek militant group based in Aleppo Province, Syria, pledged allegiance to Taliban leader Mullah Omar. Imam Bukhori Jamat’s leader Sheikh Salahuddin pledged allegiance to Omar in a video, and claimed to have met Haqqani Network leader Sirajuddin Haqqani in Afghanistan before coming to Syria.[6]
  • According to a November 10 Express Tribune report, three key Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) militants laid down arms and surrendered to the authorities. The three commanders included LI spokesman Saifullah Saif, Commander Ilyas and Commander Wajid. They belong to the Qambar Khel, Sipah and Malik Din Khel tribes respectively. On November 12, four more LI commanders also reportedly surrendered.[7]
  • On November 11, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) killed 13 militants, including foreigners, in airstrikes in the Daras area of Khyber Agency. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) stated that militants involved in the Wagah suicide bombing may be among the dead.[8]
  • On November 12, Pakistani military forces killed at least 19 militants in airstrikes in the Sandapal and Aka Khel areas of Khyber Agency. The ISPR reported that an important militant commander was among the militants killed.[9]
  • On November 11, in repelling an LI and Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant attack on the Khusab Darra security post, security forces killed 13 militants and injured 12 others in the Aka Khel area, Khyber Agency.LI and TTP militants have reportedly begun launching joint attacks on security posts and government infrastructure in the Khajuri area of Bara and the Tirah Valley.[10]
  • On November 12, security forces killed two militants and injured three others in the Shingar area of Jamrud sub-district, Khyber Agency. Security forces additionally recovered three people who were kidnapped from a village in Jamrud. Security forces have imposed a curfew, ordering residents to remain indoors, while they conduct operations in Jamrud sub-district.[11]
  • On November 11, officials told the inhabitants of the Sipah and Malik Din Khel areas of Khajuri that they need to evacuate the area by the evening of November 12 in preparation for security forces’ activities in those areas of Khyber Agency.[12]
  • As reported on November 11 by The Frontier Post, the military’s offensive in Khyber Agency has killed at least 135 militants and arrested 250 militants since the offensive began on October 17. The Frontier Post additionally stated that the military’s operations in North Waziristan Agency have successfully cleared the Datta Khel, Boya, and Degan areas of North Waziristan Agency.[13]
  • On November 11, security forces killed 15 militants while repulsing an attack on a security check-post in the Shirin Dara area of Orakzai Agency. Two Frontier Corps (FC) personnel were also killed and six injured in the attack. More than 50 militants reportedly attacked the check-post.[14]
  • On November 10, in an exchange of fire, two soldiers and four militants were killed near the Afghan border in North Waziristan Agency.[15]
  • On November 11, an IED targeting an anti-terrorist court judge’s vehicle killed one person and injured 32 others in the Double road area of Quetta. Judge Nazeer Ahmed Langrove remained unhurt. Four security personnel were also injured in the attack.[16]
  • On November 11, an IED detonated near a security forces vehicle killing three Levies personnel and injuring three others in Salarzai sub-district of Bajaur Agency. The Levies personnel were reportedly providing security to a polio vaccination team at the time of the explosion. The TTP claimed responsibility for the attack.[17]
  • On November 11, an IED killed two security personnel and injured two others in the Nala Tochi area of Bannu district in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[18]
  • On November 11, in a village near Wagah, Punjab, Pakistan intelligence officials arrested four individuals suspected of providing logistical support for the suicide bomber who attacked the Wagah border post.[19]
  • On November 10, three unidentified gunmen killed two police officials and injured two others when they opened fire on officers stationed at a police barricade outside an imambargah in the Sadiqabad area of Rawalpindi. Police believe the target of the attack was intended to be the mourners inside the imambargah. Police also stated that they believe that the attack was a reprisal for the military offensives in the tribal agencies as well as an act of sectarian violence.[20]
  • On November 10, a grenade attack on a police vehicle killed two police officials and injured one other in the Gul Plaza Market on M.A. Jinnah Road in Karachi.[21]
  • On November 12, a vehicle borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) injured five people in a targeted attack on a Rangers’ vehicle in the Baldia Town area of Karachi.[22]
  • As reported by GeoTV on November 11, unidentified gunmen fired upon and killed a policeman and injured another in Karachi.[23]
 
Khyber 1 is an other operation going in Khyber valley parallel with zarb e azab
 
Pakistan Army is only army in the world which has highest rate of Officer martayr in this war on terror
 
Militancy
  • On November 12, the spokesman of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Jamatul Ahrar, Ehsanullah Ehsan, posted a Twitter statement, demanding human rights organizations investigate the imprisonment of the group’s former spokesman, Ikramullah Mohmand. Mohmand was arrested by ISAF and Afghan forces in December 2013 and transferred to Pakistani authorities in September 2014. Ehsan accused human rights organizations of having double standards and an anti-Muslim bias. Ehsan further threatened revenge against Pakistani authorities and human rights organizations if Mohmand was executed by Pakistani authorities.[2]
  • According to a Long War Journal report on November 12, fighters from the al Qaeda-affiliated Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP) were photographed in northern Syria. The TIP reportedly operates in China, Central and South Asia and is believed to have fighters in Pakistan’s tribal areas. Several of the group’s fighters also have been targeted in drone strikes in Afghanistan and Pakistan.[3]
  • On November 13, militants attacked anti-Taliban militia Tauheedul Islam (TI) in the Narai Baba area of the Tirah Valley in Khyber Agency. Five militants, including a key commander, Spinbat, were killed in the resulting clashes which also injured seven TI members.[4]
  • On November 12, unknown gunmen fired at multiple shops, killing five people and injuring three others, on Usman Road in Quetta. According to police officials, the attack targeted non-Baloch ethnic groups.[5]
 
Indo-Pak Border Suicide Bombing
  • As reported on November 13, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Jamatul Ahrar released a photo of the suicide bomber it claims carried out the November 2 suicide bombing in Wagah, Punjab that killed over 60 people. TTP Jamatul Ahrar spokesperson Ehsanullah Ehsan referred to the suicide bomber as Brother Hanifullah and restated that the bombing was carried out in retaliation to the military offensive in North Waziristan Agency.[2]
Militancy
  • On November 14, the Pakistani military killed at least 30 militants in airstrikes in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan Agency. Some of the militants killed were reportedly foreigners.[3]
  • On November 13, TTP Jamatul Ahrar spokesperson Ehsanullah Ehsan announced that the group’s intelligence commander Omar Khalid Khorasani had been sent to Khyber Agency along with a contingent of fighters to engage security forces.[4]
  • On November 13, security forces destroyed four militant hideouts in the Chappari and Lashora areas of Jamrud sub-district, Khyber Agency.[5]
  • Over the past six months, the Pakistan military has suffered almost 100 casualties in North Waziristan Agency while 12 soldiers have died in Khyber Agency since Operation Khyber I began October 17. Most of these deaths were caused by improvised explosive devices (IED). The BBC reports that the military’s goal in Khyber is to eliminate the haven in which local militant group Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) has been hosting TTP militants fleeing North Waziristan. The military hopes to clear militants from Khyber Agency before winter sets in in order to neutralize the threat they pose to Peshawar.[6]
  • On November 12, militants shot dead Fazal Hayat, a local Pakistan Peoples’ Party (PPP) leader, in the Qambar area of Mingora city in Swat district. TTP spokesman Muhammad Khurasani claimed responsibility for the attack in an email message and said that the PPP leader was targeted for supporting democracy which was an “infidel” system.[7]
  • On November 14, the Frontier Corps (FC) launched an operation against Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and United Baloch Army (UBA) militants in the Sunni Shoran area of Bolan in Kachhi district, Balochistan. The FC killed several militants on November 14 as part of this operation.[8]
  • On November 14, unidentified gunmen attacked a police checkpost killing a policeman in the Hasarabad area of Hana, Quetta.[9]
  • On November 14, five militants were killed and two policemen injured in a shootout in the Swati area of Quaidabad, Karachi.[10]
  • On November 14, unidentified attackers killed four people including a police assistant sub-inspector and injured another policeman in the Lines area of Karachi.[11]
 
Militancy
  • On November 16, according to Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), security forces killed at least 27 militants, including foreign fighters and commanders, in airstrikes on militant compounds in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan Agency.[5]
  • On November 16, five soldiers, including a major, and eight militants were killed in an attack on a security post in the Spera Ghar area of Datta Khel area of North Waziristan. According to Reuters, eight militants are missing following the attack. The attack was publically claimed by Hafiz Gul Bahadur’s militant group which also threatened more attacks on security forces.[6]
  • On November 14, 39 Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) militants surrendered to security forces in Khyber Agency. Since the military’s offensive in Khyber Agency began on October 16, about 350 militants, including 20 militant commanders, have surrendered to security forces.[7]
  • On November 17, 10 militants surrendered themselves, their weapons, and their ammunition to the Pakistan Army in the Bara sub-district of Khyber Agency.[8]
  • On November 17, the Pakistan Army killed 10 militants in Bara sub-district of Khyber Agency.[9]
  • On November 15, members of an anti-Taliban militia killed three Lashkar-e-Islam (LI) militants and injured two militants in an attack on militant bunkers in the Sandapal area of the Tirah Valley, Khyber Agency.[10]
  • On November 14, militants publically beheaded a local tribesman after accusing him of spying for security forces in the Mehraban Kalay area of Tirah Valley, Khyber Agency.[11]
  • As reported by Dawn on November 14, the Pakistan government is ready to launch FM radio stations countering militant propaganda throughout all seven agencies of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). LI Commander Mangal Bagh and other militants have been using radio stations to broadcast their messages and agendas.[12]
  • On November 16, militants attacked Afghan security forces at a border post near Arandu, Chitral district, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. Five militants and two Afghan security officials were killed while two Pakistani civilians and two security force personnel were also injured in the encounter.[13]
  • On November 14, a blast killed a refugee from Swat district along with an Afghan tribal elder in the Karmol area of Wattapur, Kunar province, Afghanistan.[14]
  • On November 16, security forces arrested over 100 suspects in a search and strike operation in the Yakatoot, Nasir Bagh, and Chamkani areas of Peshawar. Of those arrested, 10 are reported to have been unregistered Afghan nationals.[15]
  • On November 14, police killed five TTP militants in a shootout in the Gulshan-e-Buner neighborhood of Karachi.[16]
  • As previously reported, on November 14, police killed five suspected terrorists and injured two in the Swati Mohalla area of Quaidabad, Karachi. Among those injured was Misbah Mehsud, a commander with the TTP Swat faction that was affiliated with the “Shahmim Ladah group.” A deputy commander of the same group was also killed.[17]
  • As reported by The News on November 15, police arrested known militant Sansar Ali, and seized explosives and weapons during a targeted operation in Gulshan-e-Jamal, Karachi.[18]
  • On November 14, security forces killed six militants, arrested eight, and seized rocket launchers and other weapons in Bolan district, Balochistan.[19]
  • On November 16, unidentified attackers threw two hand grenades at two parked vehicles in Khuzdar, Balochistan. The blast killed a child and injured 13 people.[20]
  • On November 15, unidentified gunmen killed an anti-Taliban militia member in the Tahirabad area of Mingora, Swat district, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. Security forces arrested 40 suspects in a search operation following the attack.[21]
  • On November 15, police seized explosives found near a football field in Wanda Shahabkhel village, Kurrum Par area, Swat district, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[22]
  • On November 15, a blast injured one person and damaged three shops in Charsadda, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[23]
  • On November 15, an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) injured two people in Reesan village, Hangu district, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[24]
 
Militancy
  • On November 15, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Jamatul Ahrar’s Ihya-e-Khilafat Media Foundation distributed an Urdu-language video on its social media accounts which shows dead soldiers of the Pakistani Army killed in attacks by militants in Khyber Agency. The footage was reportedly recorded by Lashkar-e-Islam. The video shows a beheaded soldier and threatens to behead all soldiers involved in the military campaign in the area.[2]
  • On November 18, Pakistan Air Force airstrikes killed six militants, including a key commander, in the Malikdin Khel area of the Tirah Valley in Khyber Agency. Several militants were also wounded. [3]
  • On November 18, an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) killed two people and injured five children when it exploded near a school van in the Nasti Kot area of Parachinar city in Kurram Agency. [4]
  • On November 18, unknown gunmen killed two government officials in a targeted attack in the Labach area of Awaran district in Balochistan.[5]
  • On November 18, a grenade attack injured 15 people near the Mithadar police station in Karachi.[6]
 
guys i have seen a gruesome video released by Taliban of Khyber operation
i cant post it as posting graphic images is not permissible in this forum

but it was a stunning and scary video
i was shocked to see.. Taliban n mangal bagh goons are freely moving in bara Khyber and they shown at least ten burned Pak army vehicle apparently it shows that the whole convey is destroyed and the beheaded bodies shows the whole crew is killed

i am shocked we were made to believe that we are wining this war and militants are surrendering on daily basis
when will this bloody war end. these bastards are the biggest enemies of Pakistan no one hurted Pakistan so much the way these SOBs did in last 6 7 years
 
Back
Top Bottom