mujahideen
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Baitullah warns govt
DAWNs front-page story, Baitullah Mehsud warns government against entering his area (Jan 22), is reiterating yet again his old rhetoric. It may be recalled that Baitullah had threatened the government of serious consequences if it violated our area by moving its security forces into South Waziristan (Aug 19, 2007). The death of his one-legged brother, Abdullah Mehsud, on July 24, 2007 in North Waziristan had taken the wind out of his sails.
This time he has warned of serious repercussions if the military operations were not stopped in his area. He seems to be greatly disturbed by the arrest of his close aide, Younus Mehsud, in Sohrab Goth, Karachi, on Jan 21. A question or two need answers.
What is meant by our area or his area? Is it a different country? Has he separated South Waziristan from Pakistan? Is the Pakistan army an enemy force? He may be fighting it still it is not an enemy force.
So long as Waziristan is a part of Pakistan, it is not an enemy army. He may have differences with the government; who does not have some? But you dont pick up the gun as he has. He has been misguided by the enemies of Pakistan.
The leniency shown by the government in the form of Agreement of Feb 5, 2007 with Abdullah and Baitullah Mehsud, reached through the efforts of a special jirga, and the general amnesty to all militants sent a wrong signal, which they thought was its weakness.
They became even more arrogant. They were banking on the governments inability to move regular army to fight them. They are also relying on the supply of money, arms, ammunition, intelligence and training facilities from secret agencies like RAW, Mossad, KGB, KHAD and a host of others operating in Afghanistan.
Pakistan has to stop this. The military axioms: to cut the enemy supply lines and to know the weapons the enemy is using, is half the war won can be used here too. Would we see the barrier erected across Pakistan-Afghan border to thwart those supplies? It will break the Talibans back.
M. K. NAQVI
Karachi
DAWN - Letters; January 28, 2008
DAWNs front-page story, Baitullah Mehsud warns government against entering his area (Jan 22), is reiterating yet again his old rhetoric. It may be recalled that Baitullah had threatened the government of serious consequences if it violated our area by moving its security forces into South Waziristan (Aug 19, 2007). The death of his one-legged brother, Abdullah Mehsud, on July 24, 2007 in North Waziristan had taken the wind out of his sails.
This time he has warned of serious repercussions if the military operations were not stopped in his area. He seems to be greatly disturbed by the arrest of his close aide, Younus Mehsud, in Sohrab Goth, Karachi, on Jan 21. A question or two need answers.
What is meant by our area or his area? Is it a different country? Has he separated South Waziristan from Pakistan? Is the Pakistan army an enemy force? He may be fighting it still it is not an enemy force.
So long as Waziristan is a part of Pakistan, it is not an enemy army. He may have differences with the government; who does not have some? But you dont pick up the gun as he has. He has been misguided by the enemies of Pakistan.
The leniency shown by the government in the form of Agreement of Feb 5, 2007 with Abdullah and Baitullah Mehsud, reached through the efforts of a special jirga, and the general amnesty to all militants sent a wrong signal, which they thought was its weakness.
They became even more arrogant. They were banking on the governments inability to move regular army to fight them. They are also relying on the supply of money, arms, ammunition, intelligence and training facilities from secret agencies like RAW, Mossad, KGB, KHAD and a host of others operating in Afghanistan.
Pakistan has to stop this. The military axioms: to cut the enemy supply lines and to know the weapons the enemy is using, is half the war won can be used here too. Would we see the barrier erected across Pakistan-Afghan border to thwart those supplies? It will break the Talibans back.
M. K. NAQVI
Karachi
DAWN - Letters; January 28, 2008