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Operation Rah-e-Nijat (South Waziristan)

Its quit amazing that people Brainwashed by the media still like to shoot arrows in the sky .
Hate it when they puke around with unclassified info.
 
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PESHAWAR: Secretary Law and Order Fata Tariq Hayat Wednesday said the terrorists present in South Waziristan Agency (SWA) are flourishing on foreign aid and patronage.

Talking to Geo News here, he ruled out carrying out of large-scale terror activities, as are presently being witnessed in the country, by organizations running on public donations.

Tariq Hayat pointed to the presence of such foreigners in the organized militant outfits in SWA who are seditious even to their own homeland and they are funded with foreign aid. “Donation-run militant group cannot launch actions of such great propotions,” he ruled out.

According to experts, the explosives used in Peshawar blasts were brought from abroad.

According to Secretary Law and Order Fata, the extremists present in SWA pose real threat to the stability of Pakistan; the government is bearding down upon them with a full-fledged crackdown.

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Obviously referring to Uzbek and Arab militants....
 
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Good luck to your Soldiers!
I hope the "Road to Deliverance"(that is the name of the operation right?) isn't to long...

I know the terrain is extremely difficult in Waziristan, but it will still be an big advantage if - with the troop surge - NATO encircles the Taliban in the North and PakArmy does it in the South, right?
 
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Good luck to your Soldiers!
I hope the "Road to Deliverance"(that is the name of the operation right?) isn't to long...

I know the terrain is extremely difficult in Waziristan, but it will still be an big advantage if - with the troop surge - NATO encircles the Taliban in the North and PakArmy does it in the South, right?

No my dear, As per plan NATO pull out of North of operation theater as soon as Pakistan army launched ground attack against TTP in South Waziristan. And tell you more, US senate is to pass a bill to curb Pakistani military aid in WoT. Now analyze all these developments and let me know what you thing who actually is helping TTP in real sense.
 
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one thing is clear - the long term goals of US and the long term goals of Pakistan regarding Afghanistan are very very different. regardless of US plans for the region, Pak must find a way to gradually steer itself away from being US's frontline soldier. the short term rewards are nowhere near the long-term damage it does to the nation and its institutions.

very interesting and pls continue.....
 
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Qaeda operative Abu Musa killed

LAHORE: Top Al Qaeda leader Abu Musa al-Misri, expert at preparing suicide vehicles, was killed in North Waziristan, a private TV channel reported on Wednesday. According to the channel, Musa was killed when an explosives-laden vehicle went off in the house of Gharib Nawaz in Spilga village, about 10 kilometres southeast of Miranshah. “Initially, it was presumed to have been a drone attack, but it turned out to be an explosion in the house,” a security official said. It was not immediately clear whether the tribesman, Nawaz, was affiliated with Taliban or Al-Qaeda networks active in the area.

daily times monitor/afp

may ye rot in hell !
 
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Pakistan’s opinion of drone strikes changing

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: The Pakistani government and the people have become less hostile towards US drone strikes in the Tribal Areas, as, The New America Foundation’s Peter Bergen said, “US and Pakistani strategic interests, which are often very divergent, are kind of coming together”.

In an interview with National Public Radio, he said the Pakistani government was protesting against the drone strikes much lesser than it used to. “The Pakistani government used to say these were bad, but now you may notice that they’ve tended not to really protest so much because, you know, it’s suiting their strategic interest,” Bergen said. “For instance, one of the drone attacks killed the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, back in August, a guy who had killed Benazir Bhutto,” he said.

Bergen said civilian casualties in the Tribal Areas from the drone attacks were somewhere around the 29 percent mark, against the earlier figure of over 90 percent.

“I think a lot of people will say, well, a 30 percent civilian casualty rate - that’s absolutely unacceptable. Other people may say, well, these are killing leaders of the Taliban, they’re killing lower-level militants as well, you know, that’s acceptable.” He said the Pakistanis had grown weary of the Taliban “in the last year or so”

“The mood in Pakistan is shifting against the militants anyway. And we’ve got, right now in Waziristan, a major Pakistani military operation, which is also going to put a lot of pressure on these militants. The Pakistani public has really changed its minds about the Taliban, Al Qaeda.

“The operations the Pakistani military is undertaking are no longer seen as, well, this is just doing something America wants. Now, it’s seen as being in Pakistan’s national interest,” he said.
 
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amna

“”It is not our fight. We are stuck in it because of our spineless leaders, and we won't magically have good leaders anytime in the future given how our political machinery works. I just hope our army has a long-term plan once SWA is dealt with.””

You are Absolutely right.
 
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fatman17

“”LAHORE: The Pakistani government and the people have become less hostile towards US drone strikes in the Tribal Areas, as, The New America Foundation’s Peter Bergen said, “US and Pakistani strategic interests, which are often very divergent, are kind of coming together”.””

Yes our noses have been desensitized while living in a garbage dump, whips of stink now smell of Roses.

Just Look what the Defenders of the Nation are saying:

Troops advance to clear heights surrounding Kotkai
By Iftikhar A. Khan and Sailab Mehsud
DAWN: Thursday, 22 Oct, 2009
A military official said: ‘Troops have advanced some 10 kilometres in enemy territory from various directions, but climbing hills and clearing the routes will take time. We are moving very cautiously.’

10 kms into ENEMY territory! Since when did Waziristan secede from Pakistan and become an Enemy State? APNEY LOGON KI DUSHMANI MEIN ITNA AAGE JANEY KI ZAROORAT NAHI HAI.
 
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Waziristan operation aims to destroy terror source

* Military’s prime target will be ethnic Uzbek terrorists
* Analysts say Taliban unlikely to hold out for long


Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: The Pakistan Army’s push against the Taliban and Al Qaeda terrorists in the Mehsud tribal stronghold of South Waziristan has one paramount objective - to destroy the source of terror attacks in the country, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

The ground offensive the army launched in the region on Saturday is viewed by analysts as one of its most serious attempt to liquidate the terror network there.

“This conclusion is based on the tactics the army has adopted so far. Unlike previous operations which were invariably half-hearted, haphazard and abortive, it took its time to plan a thorough operation this time,” the BBC said.

“The ground offensive comes after a four-month siege of Mehsud lands, during which the civilian population was encouraged to leave the area and the mobility of the militants was restricted. The army also used this time to persuade militant networks in the adjoining Wazir tribal areas of North and South Waziristan to stay out of the conflict,” it said.

Targets: A policy statement of the army said the prime target of the operation would be the ethnic Uzbek terrorists from Central Asia, followed by foreign fighters from regions like the Middle East and North Africa, while the elimination of local fighters who refuse to lay down arms has been set as the army’s last priority.

The military’s spokesman said there were between 8,000 to 10,000 fighters in the area, out of whom around 1,000 were foreigners, adding that not all Mehsud fighters were equally motivated, as many had joined the Taliban ranks under duress or due to outright intimidation.

“The message is obviously designed to encourage the “soft” fighters to desert their positions,” the report said.

Hardcore Taliban are left with two options — they can either fight to the bitter end, or can slip out of the area to fight another day.

Hold out: Analysts say the fighting will be fierce, but few believe the Taliban will hold out for long against a superior ground force and precision bombing from the air.

“The general view is that they will ultimately abandon their positions and resort to guerrilla attacks, as the militants in Swat have done,” the BBC said.

But the report said the Taliban in Waziristan, unlike in Swat and other parts of Malakand, would have to battle in a more inhospitable terrain, devoid of water and forest cover and a large number, including the foreigners, were likely to slip out of the area.

“The easiest route for them would be to head south across the Gomal pass and disappear into the vast wastelands of Balochistan,” the BBC said.

Western observers fear that Al Qaeda’s trained bomb-makers in the area may end up in the worldwide sleeper cells of terrorists and enhance their ability to carry out attacks in the West.

For the Pakistani army, a success in South Waziristan would almost certainly create the need for a quick follow-up operation in the Orakzai-Darra Adam Khel region to prevent reprisal attacks on Peshawar.
 
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‘Finish off Taliban once and for all’

* Taliban draw support from Pashtuns on both sides of Pak-Afghan border

DERA ISMAIL KHAN: The government needs to finish off Taliban once and for all in an offensive on their South Waziristan stronghold or risk them returning stronger and in greater numbers, internally displaced persons (IDPs) from South Waziristan say.

With the offensive by the Pakistan Army against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, people who have fled the fighting, say the die-hard insurgents, backed by hundreds of foreigners, would be hard to shift from their fortified positions. “They have built bunkers and caves that cannot be hit even by bombing from the air,” said Jameel Mehsud, 75, registering at a site for IDPs at Dera Ismail Khan. Malik Mehsud, another fleeing resident, said people were not willing to support half-hearted military offensive. “If they are serious we are with them, otherwise we cannot risk our lives,” he said, adding that he feared Taliban reprisals if the government abandoned the operation, as they have done in the past, or struck a truce with Taliban leaders.

Security forces launched the offensive on Saturday after a series of bomb and commando-style attacks by the Taliban across the country. About 28,000 soldiers are battling an estimated 10,000 hard-core Taliban, including about 1,000 Uzbek fighters and some Arab Al Qaeda members. It follows a similar operation this year in the Swat valley launched after the Taliban, emboldened by a government deal that gave them greater autonomy in some parts, moved into other areas as well. The Federally Administered Tribal Areas have long enjoyed a large degree of autonomy based on sharia law and ancient custom.

Support: Taliban in Pakistan – like their brothers-in-arms in Afghanistan – draw much of their support from Pashtuns who live on both sides of the porous border, and the rugged mountains and valleys of Waziristan have become a sanctuary for militants, including Al Qaeda operatives. US unmanned drone aircraft have for years been attacking suspected Taliban positions in the country from Afghanistan, occasionally hitting wrong targets and killing civilians, further hardening local attitudes towards foreigners and a central government accused of complicity. Escaping the fighting is only half the battle, say the IDPs. “Wherever we go, people treat us with suspicion, as if we are terrorists, just because we have come from Waziristan,” said Jameel, a resident of Kaniguram, a Burki tribe’s stronghold in South Waziristan.

While the government and aid agencies do not expect a humanitarian crisis on the scale of the one that followed the Swat offensive, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said on Wednesday about 32,000 people had fled in the past week, joining 80,000 who left since May. Unlike in Swat, where the government established camps for the IDPs, most of those fleeing South Waziristan are staying in second homes outside the province, or with relatives or friends. Muhammad Khan, 40, accused the authorities of not thinking the offensive through before starting. “They are bombing our houses and when people try to move out they are not letting them go,” he said after arriving in DI Khan with his 12-member family following a torturous journey that usually takes only a few hours. “They have imposed curfews in several parts and are not letting us pass through blockades.”

reuters
 
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