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Indian journalists brought to Bajaur by Pakistan Army

EjazR

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The Hindu : News / International : In Bajaur, Pakistan Army faults U.S. strategy
Sandeep Dikshit
After a bloody campaign that lasted six months, the Pakistan Army has restored control over this tribal agency that nearly fell last year to a rampaging Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). As the Army helicopter swept down towards the fort, it was clear that the Army and the paramilitary Bajaur Scouts were putting their best foot forward to showcase an area that had gone out of state control to militias aligned with Behtullah Mehsud's TTP.

Rosy-cheeked children, girls and boys, stream out of schools, the older ones taking home provisions of sugar and flour, the younger ones stopping to wave at the hurrying convoy. People are clustered around a pack of shops crammed with medicines near one of the biggest hospitals in the region. And the few general-purpose shops open have multi-coloured sweets.

Three of the area's top TTP leaders are on the run. A meticulously dug cave near the village of Damadola was assaulted and captured, and operations are on in the higher mountain reaches that enclose the wide valley of Khaar town and its adjoining villages.

In the fort, senior Army officials detached themselves from inspecting a captured wheeled contraption — used by militants to quickly shift mortar guns from one firing location to another — to meet Indian journalists ferried from Islamabad. The gutted armoured vehicles and mini-trucks Pakistani journalists saw months earlier have been removed, and bombarded shops and houses where militants made their last stand are the only aberration to a partly enforced scene of normalcy.

But the danger is present and serenity brittle. A short distance from the briefing room, two artillery guns are dug into the soft soil, their barrels facing the mountains, misty in the upper reaches and divided into canopies of green and smouldering boulders. The guns are part of the heavy weaponry that the Pakistan Army flooded the frontier agencies with to plaster militants mercilessly after ordering the evacuation of the entire population.

The Army is still not taking any chances. A large group of men in Pathan suits, spotted hurrying away when the helicopter landed, could be the same ones who lined the bazaar when the media convoy passed by. Most shops are shuttered and traffic on either side has been stopped. Soldiers with their backs to us dot the entire route to a laboriously dug TTP hideout aimed at riding out air attacks. The Army overran it while they were still adding cisterns and doorframes.

An army captain suddenly materialises when the last vehicle in the convoy stalls, gets into the driver's seat and shows the right way to disengage the gears. This is near the village of Damadola, where a U.S. airstrike killed 83. It is also the birthplace of the TTP's predecessor organisation. Osama Bin Laden and Mullah Omar were sighted here after the U.S. bombing in 2001, using the same high ridges they roamed during the anti-Soviet jehad.

But soldiers cramming the back of the SUVs are relaxed, one confessing that he just “missed” becoming a shaheed when his platoon was encircled. He and his mates escaped getting slaughtered after fighter jets and helicopter gunships arrived to pound militant positions.

The Pakistan Army is still taking casualties — it has already lost 1,000 men and officers, with 9,000 injured — and the militants retain the wherewithal to issue press statements and dispatch suicide bombers.

This is the 22nd delegation of foreign journalists being brought to the Bajaur tribal agency, bordering Afghanistan's Kunar province, which has the same stock of Pathan tribals. But this is the first time the Pakistan Army has brought Indian journalists. And they were wholehearted about fulfilling their part of the bargain.

Twice the choppers were ready, but cloud cover made crossing the mountains and valleys on the way to this northernmost of the seven Pakistani tribal agencies treacherous. The promise was to take us to the scenic Swat Valley as well, but it had to be aborted as the weather cleared only on the last day of our stay in Islamabad.

But this would probably be the first batch of journalists that was sympathetic to their narrative of why militants overran the tribal agencies, bringing in their wake deadly ambushes, pitiless killing of civilians suspected of collaborating with the government, checkpoints on roads, closure of music and barber shops, and revenue collection in the name of donations.

All senior Pakistan Army officials make the same point: the faulty U.S. strategy in Afghanistan pushed militants here and nearly led to the takeover of the tribal agencies and Swat. There is no coordination between the two forces on U.S. drone attacks, which “ignite” public opinion as they also kill children and women. Instead, western reports prefer to describe the terrain that has hosted proxy warriors for three decades and the fact that outsiders rarely get access to the region where the distrust of strangers borders on xenophobia, but a guest will be sheltered against all odds. Where there is no application of conventional law, but tribes have self-governance systems. Force and allurement are two sides of the coin to ensure the state's writ is more or less maintained.

The Army has taken a huge gamble by hosting Indian journalists and baring their innermost thoughts to them. The common thread of the briefings was acute displeasure with U.S. political and military tactics.

The U.S. was trying to rectify its political mistake of ignoring Pashtuns in the Afghan governance structure through military strategy, said an officer. Another found fault in the military strategy: “While they pushed from the north, they did not block the rear.”

Either way, in these rugged frontier regions, Pakistan has been left fighting a Holy War that has ricocheted.
 
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i think they are reffering to the Shalwar Kameez. But i get that this reporter is quite smug. Specially when he refers to the reconstruction happening as if it all a facade put up for the journalist.
On the other hand it is nice to see that reconstruction work has started but it has to be expanded to all of Bajaur agency.
 
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The Army has taken a huge gamble by hosting Indian journalists and baring their innermost thoughts to them........

Facting hell, PA did that?!!!!:eek:

Well, well, well.

I have to say..difficult but absolutely brilliant move. I cannot freaking believe it.

Somebody in PA has one heck of a brain. :eek:

AM and kidwaibhai, regardless of your natural (I would have the same reaction if IA got Pakistani media in India) response to the story, let me give my POV and tell you this is freaking brilliant.

Regardless of how you think of the Indian media, let me assure you, you get some of those Indian media boys (print, not those TV news wafflers, although I admit you may want some) on the case, not matter where, they will report what they see, and they will not give a damn if it favours India or Pakistan - provided it is sensationalist. :partay:

How do I know? Well, I used to be one of those 'Indian media boys'.

Oh boy, would I love to be a reporter attached to PA right now.:D
 
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nothing new - just confirms what we know!!! so we get a few indians saying the same - big deal !!!
 
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What's the big deal in it, The military will show only their side of the picture and anything else wont be allowed to be recorded nor be allowed to be seen.
 
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The fact remains that Pakistani Army has done well and many journalist have commented on this excellent progeress.

Challenging the myths of Pakistan’s turbulent northwest | Analysis & Opinion |

KHAR, Pakistan – I had not expected Pakistan’s tribal areas to be so neat and so prosperous.

These are meant to be the badlands, mythologised as no-go areas by Kiplingesque images of xenophobic Pashtuns, jezail musket in hand, defying British troops from rugged clifftops.

They are the “ungovernable” lands where al Qaeda took sanctuary after the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan; the bastion of Islamist militants said to threaten the entire world.

Yet to fly by helicopter for the first time into Bajaur tribal agency is to challenge the more wildly imagined cliches about this little-visited region on the Pakistan-Afghan border.

Here, in the northernmost part of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), you realise this region is no longer as ferocious as feared and that while militants still call the shots in parts of FATA, Bajaur at least is somewhat pacified.

The Pakistan army knows this and has brought us, a small group of foreign journalists, to Bajaur to try to convince us it has turned a corner in its battle against Islamist militants.

PAKISTAN-TRIBAL/WITNESSIt is a message we are given repeatedly on a whirlwind tour of the country. In Islamabad, the city is relatively relaxed despite the many checkpoints, the jacaranda trees are in bloom and families are back out strolling in the parks.

A minister reminisces about the bars of his student days; an official remembers the more peaceful country that existed before the jihad against the 1979-89 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

In Karachi, businessmen party through the power cuts and talk up the stock market; in Lahore, academics speak of the potential cultural revival of a country of 170 million people.

The still-frequent bombings and lingering militant hideouts, including in North Waziristan on the Afghan border, give plenty of grounds for scepticism. But visiting Bajaur is meant to make you believe that something has changed.

FORT UNDER SIEGE

Our helicopter lands in Khar, at a fort which less than two years ago was under siege with rockets raining down every day.

Authorities had ceded control of the surrounding area running up to the Afghan border to militants believed to have once offered sanctuary to al Qaeda leader Ayman al Zawahiri.

It became so bad that, according to one military official, the army feared even the fort would be overrun, the troops inside either massacred or taken prisoner en masse.

Outside the fort, the militants ran their own checkpoints, collected revenue, beheaded prisoners in the bazaar and convinced every family to offer up one male child to the cause.

Even reopening a marble factory required written permission from the militants; another man — according to the army — turned himself from labourer to landlord by successfully navigating the paperwork of their newly created bureaucracy.

Now we are able to drive out of the fort towards the border to inspect an abandoned former stronghold of the Taliban.

This is a region which we are told was run according to a 6,000-year-old tribal system — primitive say some, mature say others — where each individual was so clear of his or her obligation to society that it worked “perfectly” in its own way.

The fields are either neatly terraced or carefully laid out and the land is well-tended and fertile. If you have travelled in South Asia, it looks remarkably prosperous, either thanks to the old tribal order or money sent in by workers in the Gulf.

The terrain is hilly rather than rugged, although the mountains rise up at the Afghan border in the distance.

The old order broke down with the CIA-backed Pakistan-led jihad against the Soviets which stressed pan-Islamism over tribal loyalty; it nearly collapsed altogether with the flood of fighters fleeing the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001.

The militants became so entrenched that when Pakistani authorities tried to reassert control in 2008 by setting up a checkpoint at the region’s main crossroads, the 150 troops there found themselves surrounded by a thousand fighters.

They began to run out of water and ammunition and each party sent from Khar to rescue them was ambushed. Eventually, after fierce fighting, 140 made it back to Khar. But it was enough to convince the army to launch a full-scale military operation.

In February, the army cleared out the last of the main militant strongholds in Bajaur after months of intense fighting which destroyed villages, left gaping wounds in buildings from rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs), and sent villagers fleeing.

MYTH BROKEN

Our small group drives out of the fort of Khar in pick-up trucks, soldiers standing in the back around a rather alarming stack of black-tipped RPGs meant to guarantee our safety.

The roads here are better than in much of South Asia and we drive fast — presumably to avoid a bullet from a lone gunman or a remotely triggered IED. It is clear that while the strongholds may have been overrun, the area is still not secure.

Yet the atmosphere is less threatening than I had felt for example in Kashmir at the height of the insurgency there.

The crowds of men we come across along the road stare, but without menace. The young girls in white, their heads but not their faces covered, ignore us. Women are nowhere to be seen.

The soldiers who fan out when we reach the abandoned stronghold at Damadola some 20 minutes drive away, where local militant leader Fakir Mohammad once held court, are watchful but not jumpy.

At the very least, the myth of the “ungovernable” tribal areas — so beloved of Raj-era tales — has been broken.

The militants were so well entrenched at Damadola that only when the fighting intensified did they put up a sign asking local people to stop bringing their disputes for settlement.

As the army pressed forward, some militants escaped, including the leaders, into Afghanistan, or back into the population. Some were captured, many were killed. The last of them retreated into a warren of caves dug out of the hillside.

You have to stoop low to get through the narrow tunnel at the entrance to the caves, fighting claustrophobia before you can stand up straight again in a dark cavern.

The army says it cleared these caves one by one, throwing in smoke grenades and then opening fire. For some of the local boys, given up by their families to join the militants, this would be the last they saw of their neat and prosperous land.
 
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What's the big deal in it, The military will show only their side of the picture and anything else wont be allowed to be recorded nor be allowed to be seen.

yes ofcourse that is why NATO complimented pakistan army & evolved its strategy in afghanistan from what it saw PA doing in its tribal areas! the briefing by our COAS in BRUSSELS is also a farce for indians!

no worries keep living in denial my indian friend!
 
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yes ofcourse that is why NATO complimented pakistan army & evolved its strategy in afghanistan from what it saw PA doing in its tribal areas! the briefing by our COAS in BRUSSELS is also a farce for indians!

no worries keep living in denial my indian friend!

When the same Nato and American Allies say - pakistan is hand in hand with taliban and ISI uses terrorists for its ulterior motives - then people like you say its propaganda against Pakistan and Islam.

What kind of logic is that ?? May be Pakistani logic.
 
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What is a 'Pathan suit'?

Its a term used to refer to the Shalwar Kameez most common in Punjab and other parts of Pakistan. You will probably get images if you do a google image search or something. The other Shalwar Kameez being Kurta Pyjama. Then ofcourse you have the sherwanis e.t.c. which are also a type of shalwar kameez in a way albeit in a different design
 
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in pakistan there is only one shalwar kameez. which has now been named as 'pathan suit'
not sure about the urdu speaking ppl in pakistan.
 
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When the same Nato and American Allies say - pakistan is hand in hand with taliban and ISI uses terrorists for its ulterior motives - then people like you say its propaganda against Pakistan and Islam.

What kind of logic is that ?? May be Pakistani logic.

no it goes lik this.
if even the western so called allies, who dont leave any chance to malign pakistan, are praising the gains then there must be something too visible or completely undeniable.

so pakistani logic still works.
 
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When the same Nato and American Allies say - pakistan is hand in hand with taliban and ISI uses terrorists for its ulterior motives - then people like you say its propaganda against Pakistan and Islam.

What kind of logic is that ?? May be Pakistani logic.

ISI uses tribal people not "terrorist". those people from tribal areas r very tough, they had been defending pak's western border for years!!! noone dare to cross the border in their prsence. but since drone attacks they are not able to do anything. and btw they r still helping PAK army in their operation in swat and waziristan.
:pakistan:
 
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Its a term used to refer to the Shalwar Kameez most common in Punjab and other parts of Pakistan. You will probably get images if you do a google image search or something. The other Shalwar Kameez being Kurta Pyjama. Then ofcourse you have the sherwanis e.t.c. which are also a type of shalwar kameez in a way albeit in a different design

I know what the journalist was referring to - I was trying to point out how outdated the term was. It makes one go back to a colonial era, and I think the usage is interesting in that it highlights how out of touch so many Indians are with Pakistan, that they refer to the most widely worn dress in Pakistan by such an obscure term.
 
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