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Fazlullah vows new war in Pakistan

Wish PA catches him alive and him forever in sole confinement where he can implement his version of sharia
 
PAF should throw a JDAM or a HAGRA Anti tank Cluster bomb on his a$$ in some crap holes hes hidding in afghanistan.

Bloody scum.
 
Wish PA catches him alive and him forever in sole confinement where he can implement his version of sharia

....:laugh: I didnt know you hate mosquitoes that much...

imagine lashes being given out to mosquitoes... :D
 
“We sacrificed our lives, left our homes and villages for the sake of Sharia (Islamic Law) and will do whatever we can to get Sharia implemented in the Malakand region and rest of Pakistan,” Sirajuddin Ahmad, a close adviser, told Reuters, describing Fazlullah’s position.

Mr Fazlullah, Holy Prophet Muhammad (SA) NEVER spread Islam with sword and weapons . . . . . . He spread Islam with his kind Nature and with Love . . . . . . Islam Will only come in Pakistan, if it is spread according the Method given by Hazrat Muhammad (SA) . . . . . .

Your acts of Suicide Bombings, killing innocent Muslims and Non-Muslims and fighting against the Pakistani Government (no matter how corrupt they are) and Our Armed forces are only making you KHARJITES (kharjis in Urdu Language) . .. . . . And according to One Hadith in Sunan Tirmidhi and Musnad of Ahmed Bin Hanbal , Mr Fazlullah and his TTP thugs are the DOGS OF HELLFIRE. . . . . . .

People like Fazlullah are spreading terrorism. . . They are not spreading Islam . . . . . .
 
The ruthless murderer and leader responsible for terrorizing the innocent people of Swat issues another warning to the Pakistani government. Is it not in his evil nature to attempt to uproot freedom from Pakistan and to bring despair to those who would otherwise reside in peace? The Taliban terrorist mission inside Pakistan could easily be held responsible for thousands of killings. They have brought death, fear and panic to many and destroyed families by killing brothers, sisters and children. Do not the suicide bombings, no longer the exception but now the rule, signal that the time to take action is now? When a known terrorist issues a stern warning, is not the time for action now? The US and NATO forces are fighting the same enemy with the same evil agenda across the border. When Pakistani authorities aggressively counter the same threat, the Taliban will have nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. Our wish and desire is to have a region free of terrorist atrocities. Our statements are often taken out of context, and the real meaning is twisted and turned, but the end goal envisions a region free of terrorism. Our nations have made and will continue to make sacrifices to achieve our common interests in the war on terror.

MAJ Taylor,
DET, United States Central Command
U.S. Central Command
 
The ruthless murderer and leader responsible for terrorizing the innocent people of Swat issues another warning to the Pakistani government. Is it not in his evil nature to attempt to uproot freedom from Pakistan and to bring despair to those who would otherwise reside in peace? The Taliban terrorist mission inside Pakistan could easily be held responsible for thousands of killings. They have brought death, fear and panic to many and destroyed families by killing brothers, sisters and children. Do not the suicide bombings, no longer the exception but now the rule, signal that the time to take action is now? When a known terrorist issues a stern warning, is not the time for action now? The US and NATO forces are fighting the same enemy with the same evil agenda across the border. When Pakistani authorities aggressively counter the same threat, the Taliban will have nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. Our wish and desire is to have a region free of terrorist atrocities. Our statements are often taken out of context, and the real meaning is twisted and turned, but the end goal envisions a region free of terrorism. Our nations have made and will continue to make sacrifices to achieve our common interests in the war on terror.

MAJ Taylor,
DET, United States Central Command
U.S. Central Command

So can we expect a major US/ISAF/ANA offensive in the North Eastern Afghan provinces, from where Mullah Fazlullah, Qari Ziaur Rehman and Faqir Mohammed operate, anytime soon?

In 'days or weeks, rather than months' as Hillary Clinton called for?
 
then first he should come out from his cave and face pak army sitting in afghanistan under the tree and bashing is easy .its not same guy who run away like idiot from swat.lolz and yes this time he will be with his media advisor in ISI cell .hhahaha

before aresst bashing time
1-muslimkhanpa_450x338.jpg


after arrest looking for mercy from same kaffers
2009911114053356734_5.jpg

Do you believe these rats make their own military gear from stones!
For operational expenses of war they print $ in caves!
Once Pak army comes, they have no choice but to disappear using indeginous DRDO invention.
 
PESHAWAR: Afghanistan-based Taliban leader Maulvi Fazlullah, a leading figure in the insurgency, has vowed to return to Pakistan to wage war as the country came under renewed American pressure to tackle militancy.

“We sacrificed our lives, left our homes and villages for the sake of Sharia (Islamic Law) and will do whatever we can to get Sharia implemented in the Malakand region and rest of Pakistan,” Sirajuddin Ahmad, a close adviser, told Reuters, describing Fazlullah’s position.]

No Sir. When the time came to die for the sake of your twisted Sharia, you ran to Afghanistan like a sissy along with your top commanders. :lol:
 
Pakistan turns tables on U.S. accusations about sheltering militants

By Karin Brulliard, Published: October 20

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — High in the mountains, a nation’s troops are regularly attacked by insurgents who easily come and go from sanctuaries across a porous international border. Armed forces in the neighboring country, nominally an ally, do little to stop the rebels. Resentment in the capital is growing.

For several years, that is how frustrated U.S. officials have described the challenge for the NATO coalition in Afghanistan, which they say is battling Taliban enemies who operate freely from hilly hideouts in next-door Pakistan, an American ally and aid recipient.

Insurgents attacking U.S. forces on the Afghan border will often times escape to safety in Pakistan. Americans discuss fighting in one of the most remote provinces in Eastern Afghanistan to understand the border challenges facing our troops. (Sept. 28)


But in the past several months, Pakistan has turned the tables, adopting a mirror-image argument in its own defense
.

According to this increasingly assertive account, Pakistani Taliban fighters flushed out by Pakistani military offensives have now settled into a security vacuum created by NATO forces in eastern Afghanistan whose attention is focused elsewhere. That territory, Pakistan contends, is the new regional hub for Islamist militants of all stripes, one that the U.S.-led coalition must better control to prevent attacks on American forces as well as strikes inside Pakistan.


Some analysts here say Pakistan is now pushing this case as an excuse for not pursuing the Haqqani network, an Afghan Taliban faction that U.S. officials assert operates unmolested from Pakistan. Others say the opposite: that the Americans are boosting pressure on Pakistan by allowing the attacks inside Pakistan.

Either way, the dueling narratives have become the latest illustration of the disconnect between Washington and Islamabad, and they help explain why the ever-prickly security partnership has plummeted to such lows that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton arrived in Islamabad on Thursday night with an extraordinarily high-level American delegation that included CIA director David Petraeus.

The disconnect, which also involves differences over negotiations and the U.S. troop drawdown in Afghanistan, was on center stage during a stopover by Clinton in Kabul, where she sternly warned Pakistan that it would face dire consequences if it failed to eliminate militant sanctuaries on its soil. In Pakistan, talk show pundits encouraged Pakistani officials to take an equally hard line with the Americans by insisting they show appreciation for the nation’s help, not condemnation.

In an interview, a Pakistani intelligence official said Pakistani leaders expected to be confronted with evidence of state support for the Haqqanis and threats of aid cuts. But the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said “many in our security establishment” had decided that the real U.S. target is Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, and that Pakistan will offer little help unless the United States limits the role of India, Pakistan’s prime rival, in Afghanistan.

“Any breakthrough is unlikely in the talks,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Pakistan had already escalated its complaints this week, faulting NATO forces for failing to hunt down an infamous militant cleric whom Pakistani troops expelled from its Swat Valley in 2009. Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas told Reuters that Maulvi Fazlullah is now in Afghanistan. From there, Abbas said, Fazlullah has directed a series of recent cross-border strikes that have killed more than 100 Pakistani security forces. The U.S.-led coalition has ignored Pakistan’s pleas for action, he said.

Pakistan turns tables on U.S. accusations - The Washington Post
 
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