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GHQ Check-Post Attackers Killed - Hostages Rescued!

:cry: The enemy is well trained , who is training them ? :undecided:

the US, S/Arabia and we r responsible for their training - remember in another time they were the mujahideen fighting the soviets - we r responsible for these "Scum of the earth", and now that they have bitten the hand that fed them, its best to finish them off - forever !!!
 
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Yes we know that we are responsible for their training and students should never be allowed to beat back their masters. Lets take them out, and take them out now.:pakistan:
 
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GHQ attacked

* Brigadier, lieutenant colonel and four soldiers martyred as six to seven terrorists wearing army uniform reach military headquarters on van
* Suicide bomber among five terrorists killed
* 10 to 15 army personnel being held hostage in security building
 
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the US, S/Arabia and we r responsible for their training - remember in another time they were the mujahideen fighting the soviets - we r responsible for these "Scum of the earth", and now that they have bitten the hand that fed them, its best to finish them off - forever !!!

.....and pledge not to create any more Frankensteins.
 
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GHQ attack no security lapse: Kaira

* Gilgit-Baltistan governor says Kerry-Lugar bill in line with govt policies

Staff Report

LAHORE: The terror attack on GHQ was not a security lapse as the attackers were effectively stopped at the first picket set up for securing the premises, Gilgit-Baltistan Governor Qamar Zaman Kiara said on Saturday.


this is called foot in mouth disease!
 
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GHQ attack

Dawn Editorial

Sunday, 11 Oct, 2009

Commando raid frees 25 hostages

Pakistan: Combating terrorism As assaults go, they don’t come more audacious than this. Attacking the army’s headquarters in Rawalpindi — an assault that entailed the taking of several hostages by militants and that was continuing late into the night — sends a signal that the Taliban are alive and kicking and will not go down without a fight. But is this attack, in which there have been fatalities both among the militants and the military personnel, a statement of intent or a sign of desperation? Are the militants flexing their muscles from a position of strength or lashing out like rabid animals trapped in a corner? Not even the most optimistic of militants could have hoped that the assailants would be able to enter the GHQ itself and carry out a precision attack without being liquidated in the process.

The attack on the GHQ appears to be a symbolic gesture aimed at demoralising the people of Pakistan who have wholeheartedly thrown their weight behind the battle against militancy and obscurantism. The message is this: if the army headquarters is vulnerable, no one is safe. Even so, considering the developments, perhaps it will be some time before it is clear whether the attack was one born out of desperation or meticulously planned.

Whatever the case, the need to improve security and intelligence systems cannot be overstated. Unlike the bomb blast in Peshawar on Friday, the GHQ attack bears all the hallmarks of the Taliban, who have traditionally targeted symbols of the state, westerners, NGOs and members of the Shia community.

In Rawalpindi, civilians at large do not appear to have been the intended targets, although there are reports of some being taken hostage. The gunmen took on security personnel, just as their kind did in attacks on police training centres in Lahore and Mingora. According to the ISPR, the information wing of the armed forces, the TTP orchestrated the GHQ attack. More attacks may be forthcoming in the weeks to come, and the state must be in a position to nip such assaults in the bud.

It is clear that the Taliban and their affiliates are feeling the pressure of the military offensive and a national consensus in favour of the ongoing operation in the northwest. They are getting desperate, which is all the more reason why they should be hit hard as soon as possible with all the force the state can muster. The Taliban’s supporters in the political arena are few and far between, and they stand discredited. Pakistan’s citizenry, though anti-American in large part, appears to be overwhelmingly anti-Taliban as well. The time is right for an all-out assault on militancy.
 
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Great news....they caught him alive but injured...he should survive ...

But don't forget the other side of coin..a whole generation in south punjab is victim if feudalism .....a generation need future...a light at the end of tunnel..
 
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Great news....they caught him alive but injured...he should survive ...

But don't forget the other side of coin..a whole generation in south punjab is victim if feudalism .....a generation need future...a light at the end of tunnel..

He will survive. Terrorist don't die so easily.
 
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Commando raid frees 25 hostages

Sunday, 11 Oct, 2009

GHQ attack

Pakistan: Combating terrorism RAWALPINDI: Pakistani commandos raided a building inside army headquarters early Sunday and freed 25 people held hostage for more than 18 hours by militant fighters, a military spokesman said. Three captives and four hostage-takers were killed, while one militant was believed to be on the run.

The audacious assault on the country's military establishment showed the strength of militants allied with al-Qaida and the Taliban ahead of a planned army offensive on their heartland in South Waziristan along the Afghan border and signaled that any push there would be met with more attacks across Pakistan.

The government said the siege had steeled its resolve to go through with the South Waziristan offensive, calling it ‘inevitable.’ The United States and Pakistan's other Western allies want the country to take more action against insurgents also blamed for soaring attacks on U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Explosions and gunshots rang out as commandos moved into a building in the complex just before dawn Sunday, while a helicopter hovered in the sky. Three ambulances were seen driving out of the heavily fortified base close to the capital, Islamabad.

Two hours after the raid began, two new explosions were heard. The army said it was ‘mopping up’ the remaining insurgents.

Up to five heavily armed militants took the hostages after they and about four other assailants attacked the main gate of the army headquarters Saturday, killing six soldiers, including a brigadier and a lieutenant colonel. Four of the attackers, who were wearing army uniforms, were killed.

No group claimed responsibility, but authorities said they were sure that the Taliban or an allied militant group were behind the strike. The city is filled with security checkpoints and police roadblocks.

Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said 20 of the hostages had been kept in a room guarded by a militant wearing a suicide vest who was shot and killed before he managed to detonate his explosives.

He said the 25 who were freed included soldiers and civilians. Three captives were killed, along with four militants, he said. ‘It was a very skilled rescue operation,’ he said.

One of the hostage-takers was believed to be on the run, and the military was searching for him, Abbas said.

Saturday's siege followed a car bombing that killed 49 on Friday in the northwestern city of Peshawar and the bombing of a U.N. aid agency earlier in the week that killed five in Islamabad. The string of attacks destroyed any remaining hope that the militants had been left a spent force by the death of Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in a U.S. missile strike in August.

A week ago, Baitullah Mehsud's successor, Hakimullah Mehsud, told journalists summoned to a briefing in South Waziristan that the Taliban would launch more attacks on military, government and other targets in the country.

The army which until 2001 had patronized various militant groups for use as proxies in Afghanistan and India had previously been unwilling to go into Waziristan. Three earlier offensives there have ended in failure, and no one thinks the fight against an estimated 10,000 well-armed fighters there will be any easier this time.

But there are hopes the army may have learned from its successful operation in the northwestern Swat Valley this year.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said a Waziristan offensive was now ‘inevitable.’
‘We are going to come heavy on you,’ he warned the militants.

In its brazenness and sophistication, Saturday's assault resembled attacks in March in the eastern city of Lahore by teams of militants against the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team and a police training center, which the insurgents took over for eight hours before security forces retook it.

The attack began shortly before noon when the gunmen attacked the main gate with assault rifles and grenades after bundling out of a white van that reportedly had army license plates.

‘There was fierce firing, and then there was a blast,’ said Khan Bahadur, a shuttle van driver who was standing outside the gate. ‘Soldiers were running here and there,’ he said. ‘The firing continued for about a half-hour. There was smoke everywhere. Then there was a break, and then firing again.’

After a 45-minute gunfight, four of the attackers were killed, said Abbas, who initially said that the assault was over and the situation ‘under full control.’

But more than an hour later, gunshots rang out from the headquarters compound, and Abbas then confirmed that other gunmen had eluded security forces and slipped into the compound.

A police intelligence report obtained by The Associated Press on Saturday had warned in July that members of the Taliban along with Jaish-e-Mohammed, a militant group based in the Punjab province, were planning to attack army headquarters after disguising themselves as soldiers. - AP

...and no action was taken!!!
 
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The caught terrorist out of this morning's operation by SSG is the head of this operation. His name is Aqeel (aka Dr. Usman) and according to media reports he was also responsible for the attack on the Sri Lanka Cricket team in Lahore.

Looks like Waziristan is getting aid from its bases in South of Punjab
 
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Six soldiers, four assailants killed in attack on GHQ

Saturday, 10 Oct, 2009

Commando raid frees 25 hostages

RAWALPINDI: Suspected Taliban militants wearing army uniforms attacked the Pakistani army’s headquarters on Saturday, killing six soldiers and triggering a battle in which four gunmen died, military officials said.

The brazen attack on the tightly-guarded headquarters in the city of Rawalpindi came as the military is preparing a major offensive against the militants in their northwestern stronghold on the Afghan border.

The gunmen drove in a white van with military license plates to a main gate of the complex before opening fire and throwing a grenade when challenged by soldiers. The gunmen then exchanged fire with troops for about 40 minutes.

Six soldiers, including a brigadier and a lieutenant-colonel who were passing through the gate, were killed. Four gunmen died but two escaped. Security forces later tracked the two gunmen down, a military spokesman said.

‘We have spotted them, we have surrounded them, and now an operation is being launched to clear them out,’ said the spokesman, Major-General Athar Abbas.

Al Qaeda-linked militants have launched numerous attacks in Pakistan over the past couple of years, most aimed at the security forces or government and foreign targets. Militants have attacked military targets in Rawalpindi before.

Television pictures showed the militants’ van, its doors open, where the gunmen abandoned it by concrete barriers outside the gate.

The attack came a day after a suspected suicide car-bomber killed 49 people in the city of Peshawar in an attack which the government said underscored the need for the all-out offensive against the Taliban.

‘What happened in Peshawar, Islamabad and today, all roads lead to South Waziristan,’ said Interior Minister Rehman Malik, also referring to a suicide bomb attack on a UN office in Islamabad on Monday.

‘The TTP is behind all of these attacks and now the government has no other option but to launch an offensive,’ he said, referring to the Taliban Movement of Pakistan based in the South Waziristan region on the Afghan border.

PUNJAB MILITANTS

Early this year, militants pushed to within 100 km of Islamabad, raising fears for nuclear-armed Pakistan’s stability. An exasperated US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the government appeared to be ‘abdicating’ to the militants.

The United States needs Pakistani help against militants crossing into Afghanistan to battle US-led forces there.

But in late April the security forces launched an offensive in the Swat valley, 120 km northwest of Islamabad, largely clearing Taliban from the region.

The militants suffered another big blow on August 5, when their overall leader, Baitullah Mehsud, was killed in a missile attack by a US drone aircraft in South Waziristan.

The United States and India have also called for action against Afghan Taliban factions on the border and anti-Indian militant groups based in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

North West Frontier Province Information Minister Iftikhar Hussain called for the elimination of militant bases in Punjab, telling reporters that even if an offensive were successful in South Waziristan, militants would get support from Punjab.

The government ordered the army to go on the offensive in South Waziristan in June and security forces have been launching air and artillery strikes, while moving in troops, blockading the region and trying to split off factions.

The army has declined to say when it would send troops in.—Reuters
 
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oh god..... my heart goes out to the two commandoes who lost their lives, such brave men, all of them who took part in this mission, knowing fully that these terrorists are here to kill or be killed, wearing suicide vests, this isn't your run of the mill rescue operation, still they went in and put their lives on the line, such courage, words can't sum it up.
 
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I have some assessments regarding this attack on the GHQ security post.

LOCATION OF ATTACK: The assailants chose to enter through the Mall Road/ Cricket Stadium entrance for two reasons. First, there is no civilian movement on this dual road and the only people entering here are the ones with official/ security passes.

TIME OF ATTACK: A time of 1100-1200hrs was chosen so as to have minimum civilian casualties. Otherwise the culprits could have chosen the early morning or late afternoon when people are entering/ leaving GHQ. This would have maximized the overall casualties and also would have given a chance for these militants to escape in the confusion that would have followed.


The purpose of this attack seems to be more of an advertisement for the TTP (like in a Punjabi Movie) then being a carefully planned op with finite objective. With the terrorists not even coming close to the GHQ compound; the said operation by the TTP remains in my view operational incompetent and ill-planned.
 
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I just saw this news, i am shocked to see "Attack on GHQ Pakistan".. first of all very sad indeed, and the loss of the hostages, and soldier is pretty bad thing.. this will increase confidence of these Fucken terrorists.. to me it is more like some spys given them information, to reach GHQ, and they came through this way... and it only happened after Black Water.. guyzz please listen to General Hameed Gul, the drama started by US will end on two things, 1 pakistan denuclearize or 2 pakistan destroyed..

even we say indians were backing this, also points towards US backing to Afghanistan.. Things are going toward worst.. Attack on GHQ also generate questions like, are people secure out side? this was the most secure place in pakistan, yet they manage to reach the gate, and then hostage some people..
 
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