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Operation Rah-e-Rast (Swat)

WHAT ABOUT COMMANDER SALMAN
ACCORDING TO MEDIA SOURCES HE CLAIMED THAT FAZAL ULLAH HAD SURVIVED
PAF AIR STRIKE AND REMAINS FULLY UNHEART IN THE AIR STRIKE
 
Rawalpindi - July 17, 2009:

1. During last 24 hours, search and clearance operations were conducted in Swat and Malakand.

2. Swat.

Security forces conducted search operation at Titlawala near Charbagh and destroyed 8 tunnels and 12 bunkers and apprehended 15 suspected terrorists.

Security forces cleared Akhun Baba Ziarat near Aloch.

Security forces vehicle was hit by an IED near Serai, while moving from Shahid Kahpa to Piochar, resultantly 2 soldiers embraced shahadat.

Security forces commenced cordon and search operation at Chakdara - Aspentar, Kanju and Kabbal.

3. Dir

Security forces apprehended 2 suspects and recovered 1 machine gun and a pistol alongwith ammunition during routine search at
Kumbar Bazar.

Security forces conducted search operation at village Kuanpur near Aspentar and apprehended 1 suspect.

Local Lashkar destroyed terrorists bunkers in Shahdas near Lal Qila and killed 2 terrorists while 2 were injured.

4. Bunnu.

Terrorists fire raided Chappak Kalle near Jandola area resultantly 4 women and a child were injured.

Terrorists fire raided with 6 rockets at Jandola Fort resultantly 1 soldier was injured.

5. Relief Activities.

So far 162,606 cash cards have been distributed amongst the IDPs of Malakand.

8,990 in-camp families have been repatriated to Malakand.

Repatriation for Mingora city has also started.


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KIT Over n Out :victory::pakistan::sniper::guns:
 
in that case - damn impressive!:yahoo:

Elmo says thank you! :bounce:


@ Blain 2:
The military went in however all of those operations were conducted at or less than brigade level. To ensure control, you need to have a much larger presence and that too for a very long time. Neither of those considerations were in place because the political atmosphere for large scale Army action was not conducive.


Weren’t two brigades deployed there in a span of a year… that’s at least a thousand soldiers in the region, which have increased significantly in the last couple of years. As for long time, seven years is really long. How can you say that the “political atmosphere” was not conducive for large scale army action — the government here was strongly backed by the US to take such an action. People's sentiments rarely figure in taking such decisions. Also, the strategists were incorrect in their assessment of the situation on ground and so the forces were browbeaten.

Maybe you need to have a better understanding of public affairs work done by the military. All of the above falls under the realm of Public Affairs work by the Army (it allows the Army to interface with the locals in a capacity different from that of IS and Kinetic operations). Economic development is another tool that can and will be used as normalcy returns and refugees come back to their homes
.

Firstly, one is not implying that the army needs to take up economic development. That’s the work of the state and it is failing to do the same even now. Public Affairs work by the army has got nothing whatsoever to do with “economic” development of the region. You need to get your perspective right as well: economic developments in not “another” tool that “can” be used — it is a tool that “has” to be used.


Army has operated in that region many times over and each time the solution simply has been to tire out the other side as you simply cannot destroy all of the opposition. Secondly, all of the operations prior to the ones starting recently have been small scale operations. The public support was simply not in place for the Army to go after its own people at such a large scale.


Please define "small-scale operations". All instances of army operations have been that of large-scale operations. In fact, that is one of the things that the Pakistan Army is criticised for.



SSG is at the front lines even before the FC/Army move.

Apparently not in Waziristan… This is an August 4, 2008 report (originally printed in Daily Times) whose blurb says: “Bowing to mounting pressure from the Bush Administration, the Pakistan Government has reportedly agreed to deploy a Pakistani Special Service Group (SSG) unit, trained by Americans, in the Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan.”

“Washington, Aug.4 : Bowing to mounting pressure from the Bush Administration, the Pakistan Government has reportedly agreed to deploy a Pakistani Special Service Group (SSG) unit, trained by Americans, in the Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan. The Daily Times quoted a senior Pakistani official as saying that the deployment would meet Washington's longstanding demand for immediate action in the Tribal Areas, while at the same time ensure the sanctity of Pakistan's sovereignty.
The Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday that the Pakistani commando division, trained by the United States, is an elite special operations force similar to the U.S. Army's Special Forces, or Green Berets.
"The Americans are telling us that they need action now," the paper quoted a senior Pakistani official who attended meetings between Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Bush in Washington last week, as saying….”
Also, stats released by the army itself of the SSG conducting operations in Waziristan date them from 2003 onwards when in fact the army went in to the tribal areas in December 2001. A contradiction between the news report given first and other stuff quoted here, but it is clear that there is a two year gap between the presences of the SSG. In short, not on the front line!



SSG were reconnoitering the entire tribal area in the 50s and without a shadow of doubt did the same for the higher command to make decisions about where to put the troops in and where to put the pressure on the militants. However the problem is a bit more complex than one that can be fixed by just throwing special forces at it. SSG can go in, conduct recce, take action and then leave. What happens after that? Who stays behind? How would the tribals respond to your presence? How do you maintain effective and timely communication with the remotely deployed troops given the paucity of air transport? How long do you stay there?


Agreed SSG is more tactical than strategically but only those in the operations command can answer those questions. Clearly, the higher command has been unable to take advantage of the headway provided by small victories and hence been unable to consolidate its hold of the tribal areas.
 
ASIA PACIFIC
Date Posted: 16-Jul-2009

Jane's Defence Weekly

US-Pakistan talks focus on joint anti-Taliban campaign

Farhan Bokhari JDW Correspondent - Islamabad

Key Points
The US and Pakistan are discussing a possible joint campaign against militants on either side of the Afghan-Pakistani border

Pakistani officials have become disillusioned with US efforts to improve security in Afghanistan



Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Pakistan on 16 July for talks with senior military commanders, including General Ashfaq Kiyani, Pakistan's Chief of Army Staff, to discuss the possibility of launching a campaign against Taliban militants on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

The visit came as Pakistani officials have increasingly begun expressing their disillusionment with the US strategy in Afghanistan.

In recent background briefings, officials have called for the US to step up its military campaign on the Afghan side of the border, after Pakistani troops successfully fought back Taliban militants in Swat.

"Six months ago, President Obama was believed to be gearing up to pour large numbers of troops into Afghanistan," said one Pakistani official. "Today, we see him stepping back from that."

While Obama has committed to sending an extra 21,000 to Afghanistan, there was an expectation in official Pakistani circles that far more US forces would be sent to the country.

"The question for us is: What is going on in Washington with US policy on Afghanistan's security?" said the official.

The official said Islamabad would raise its concerns over Afghanistan with Adm Mullen. The US's strategy is seen as relevant to Pakistan's own operations against Taliban warlord Baitullah Mehsud in the Waziristan region, where the Pakistani military has stepped up its attacks against the Taliban after the fighting in Swat came to end in late June.

"We want to know exactly how far the US and other Western allies can step up the pressure on the Taliban in Afghanistan," the official said. "We have done a lot on our side but there is a need for pressure from the Afghan side as well."

Adm Mullen also arrived as the Pakistani government was beginning to repatriate some of the two million people who fled the fighting between the Pakistan Army and Taliban militants in the country's northern Swat valley.

The return of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) to Swat has prompted fears that the Taliban militants will launch fresh attacks to discourage them from returning to their homes.

"There is a very major danger now of the Taliban using a classic tactic familiar to terrorist groups," a Western defence official in Islamabad told Jane's . "You kill a few [IDPs] in one or two attacks and you effectively stop everybody from going home."

Adm Mullen was expected to visit an IDP camp in a show of US support for the relief effort.
 
“Washington, Aug.4 : Bowing to mounting pressure from the Bush Administration, the Pakistan Government has reportedly agreed to deploy a Pakistani Special Service Group (SSG) unit, trained by Americans, in the Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan. The Daily Times quoted a senior Pakistani official as saying that the deployment would meet Washington's longstanding demand for immediate action in the Tribal Areas, while at the same time ensure the sanctity of Pakistan's sovereignty.
The Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday that the Pakistani commando division, trained by the United States, is an elite special operations force similar to the U.S. Army's Special Forces, or Green Berets.

Elmo, this was not implemented according to my info - further the PA dosnt have a commando division. it has at best 2 brigade strength of SSG/SOF therefore their use/utility is done very carefully.
 
“Washington, Aug.4 : Bowing to mounting pressure from the Bush Administration, the Pakistan Government has reportedly agreed to deploy a Pakistani Special Service Group (SSG) unit, trained by Americans, in the Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan. The Daily Times quoted a senior Pakistani official as saying that the deployment would meet Washington's longstanding demand for immediate action in the Tribal Areas, while at the same time ensure the sanctity of Pakistan's sovereignty.
The Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday that the Pakistani commando division, trained by the United States, is an elite special operations force similar to the U.S. Army's Special Forces, or Green Berets.

Elmo, this was not implemented according to my info - further the PA dosnt have a commando division. it has at best 2 brigade strength of SSG/SOF therefore their use/utility is done very carefully.

All I know (and I can be wrong) is that is that the SSG is now under a major-general's command and the following is off a post that MuradK had posted on PDF.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/members-club/8072-pakistani-commandos-vs-indian-commandos-2.html

"It was decided to upgrade the command structure of SSG to better support the newly created units by raising it to Divisional level from Brigade level. The re-structuring plan was approved in June 2003 and now SSG command structure is very similar to any traditional Divisional HQ. The re-structuring plan also included the creation of sub-HQ’s to support various SSG units during operations since it was understood that re-structuring would also entail additional duties for sub units. 3 Commando Battalion was converted into a Special Operations Battalion (Spec Ops Bn) to deal with Low Intensity Conflicts (LIC). After converting 2 Commando Battalion into Spec Ops Bn, a need was felt to create another Battalion for its replacement in the army to deal with the traditional style operations. 4 Commando Battalion was raised to fill this gap. The manpower for this 4 Commando battalion was raised by taking one Company each from other three Battalions. For this process a special meeting of CO’s was OC’s was held and Company names were selected via a draw."

If anyone can verify the above.
 
Taliban resurface in parts of Buner district

Saturday, July 18, 2009
FC officials deny report

By Delawar Jan

PESHAWAR: Taliban militants resurfaced in parts of the Buner district during the last several days, carrying out armed patrol on roads besides establishing a checkpoint in Pacha Killay, locals told The News on Friday.

The reports about the reappearance of the militants emanated from the district at a time when the people, displaced by the Taliban arrival and the subsequent military operation, are returning to their homes.

“My brother had gone back to his home after the start of the IDPs’ return, but the situation there was still precarious and the Taliban were active, which forced him to leave Buner again,” a resident of a village near Pir Baba said, requesting anonymity.

Locals said the militants had infested numerous parts of the Buner district. “The Taliban arrived in great numbers to Kalpani, which is a densely populated area, and Chagharzai. They terrified the people when they brazenly carried out armed patrol on a four-kilometre strip on the Kalpani-Chagharzai Road a couple of days back,” another resident of Buner, who also requested not to be identified, said.

He contended that during the operation, the Taliban militants had suffered meagre casualties and their numerical strength remained intact. The displaced people coming back, he apprehended, would not be safe there and they could migrate again. “They are moving back to the district, because they could not pass time in camps. They just want to be at their homes in this scorching heat and unfavourable conditions,” he argued.

The locals from Pacha Killay said the militants had established a checkpoint at a stream between Pacha Killay and Balo Khan a few days back, where they checked the people to single out government officials or their opponents.

“The checkpoint was set up a few days ago, but removed after shelling by security forces. However, they have set it up again and checked the people here on Friday,” a resident said.People of Pacha Killay said some 250-300 Taliban militants stormed the area a couple of days ago. There were also reports that they took away Rs 25,000 cash cards from the recently-returned IDPs.

The locals said the Taliban militants were still present in Pir Baba, Mula Banda, Dokada, Malikpur and Balo Khan. The militants, they added, were also present in Hisar, Gokand and other areas on this strip.

Meanwhile, the Amn Tehrik on Friday raised a serious concern over the military operation and said the Taliban’s top leaders were still alive. “How can we say the task has been completed when the top leadership of the Taliban is still alive? After the return of the IDPs, there is an apprehension of a wave of targeted killings,” Idress Kamal and Dr Said Alam Mehsud of the Amn Tehrik told a press conference here.

However, the Frontier Corps, which is leading the operation in Buner, denied setting up of a checkpoint and armed patrol by the Taliban. It also played down the concerns by some quarters about regrouping of the militants.

“There are no Taliban in Pacha Killay or any other area. The action against the Taliban was effective and now, there is no organised militancy in the area like before,” the FC officials said, when asked to comment on the situation in Buner.

However, it was conceded that the militants had attacked security forces’ position in the Bachkada area, which had been responded with full force. “Now that area has also been cleared and two local Taliban commanders arrested,” the officials said.
Taliban resurface in parts of Buner district
 
Locals said the militants had infested numerous parts of the Buner district. “The Taliban arrived in great numbers to Kalpani, which is a densely populated area, and Chagharzai. They terrified the people when they brazenly carried out armed patrol on a four-kilometre strip on the Kalpani-Chagharzai Road a couple of days back,” another resident of Buner, who also requested not to be identified, said.

They were roaming on 4 km strip free and nobody bothers to inform army but to tell news reporter afterwards.

Why did not locals inform the army so that cobras be used to gun them down immediately. I believe army should heavily advertise telephone numbers where people can contact them.
 
there needs to be an urgent operation in these parts of buner. the people have again put there faith in the army they cannot be disappointed this will have serious repercussion in the future.
 
Pakistan police are on the front lines against terrorism - Los Angeles Times

Pakistan police are on the front lines against terrorism

As the army drives Taliban fighters from their strongholds in the Swat Valley and elsewhere, the militants have shifted their attention to Pakistan's cities, especially poorly equipped police.

Reporting from Mattani, Pakistan -- Naseem Hayat fights a war he knows police shouldn't be asked to fight.

With just a handful of officers, the 48-year-old police subinspector spends his days and nights opening car trunks, never knowing whether the next vehicle that pulls up is the one primed to explode.


Two months ago, that's exactly what happened. A white pickup pulled up, then rammed a police truck around which several of Hayat's officers were standing. Before they could react, the suicide bomber at the wheel detonated his explosives. Three of Hayat's men died.

When the funerals were over, Hayat and his men made the berm in front of their dilapidated police building a couple of feet higher, added a wall of sandbags, and resumed checking cars for bombs.

"We are on the front lines," Hayat said. "We know this is not our job. But we have been ordered to do this, to check every vehicle. That's why we do it."


Underpaid, poorly trained and ill-equipped, Pakistan's police ranks nevertheless have become crucial fighters in the war to rid the country of Taliban militants.

As the army drives Taliban fighters from their strongholds in the Swat Valley and surrounding regions, the militants have shifted their attention to Pakistan's cities, where civilian law enforcement must shoulder the burden for fighting terrorism.

"The police in this situation are not trained, equipped or geared to fight insurgency," said Malik Naveed Khan, inspector general of the North-West Frontier Province police and the conflict zone's top cop. "It's a very serious war. You're fighting the shadows of an invisible army."

For a force of 50,000, Khan's department has 7,500 bulletproof vests and 17,000 automatic rifles. The department lacks explosives-detection equipment, a computerized fingerprint database and updated forensic equipment. The microscopes that technicians use to conduct ballistics examinations, Khan said, "are the same ones used in high schools."

The department has 12 armored personnel carriers, only three of which function. They are Russian-made and from the 1960s.

"They're so old that we have to put a mechanic inside while they run," Khan said. "Every three kilometers, they break down."

Pakistani police have no choice but to better train and equip themselves, if only for self-defense.

Militants have zeroed in on police as targets in recent weeks.

On May 27 in Lahore, attackers detonated a van filled with explosives at a police emergency center and intelligence agency building, killing more than two dozen people.

The next day, the attack at the checkpoint here in Mattani was followed by a bomb blast at a checkpoint in the city of Dera Ismail Khan, near Pakistan's lawless tribal areas.

A police officer and two civilians were killed in the third attack. In early June, a suicide bomber scaled a wall at a police building in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, killing two officers. And on June 11, a suicide bomber attacked a checkpoint in Peshawar, killing one officer.

Experts say militants have stepped up attacks on police because they find them far easier targets than the military, which has relied on helicopter gunships, tanks and heavy artillery to push the Taliban out of Swat.

So far, said Talat Masood, a military analyst and retired Pakistani army general, the government has been slow to train and equip police for a wave of attacks that he said authorities should have foreseen.

"The police aren't giving the impression that they are fully prepared for any eventuality," Masood said. "Police aren't wearing body armor. Some of the officers at checkpoints aren't armed. Funding needs to be made available to improve the police, because it's the police that are going to prevent terrorism and stand on the front line."

Police say the will to fight the Taliban isn't in question. The June 6 attack on the Rescue 15 building in Islamabad could have been far more devastating if it weren't for Imtiaz Ahmed, 25, an officer who spotted the oncoming suicide bomber and shot him from 20 feet away. The attacker's explosives detonated before he could get inside the building.

"It was my job -- I had to do that," said Ahmed, who was injured in the attack. "The role of police is the backbone in this fight against terrorism."

But as the Taliban focuses its sights on police stations and checkpoints, police commanders know it takes more than fighting spirit to fend off terrorists. Khan's officers work 14 to 16 hours a day, seven days a week.


They receive a few days off each month to return home to see their families, Khan said. The average provincial cop makes about $120 a month.

In Mattani, officers say they keep working for two reasons: There is no other work, and no one will take their place.

Malik Khan Wali, 42 and on the force for 21 years, says he's biding his time until he can retire with a pension in two years.


"In the morning and evening, there are very long lines of cars," said Wali, a checkpoint officer with a handlebar mustache and a weathered AK-47 in his hands. "It's very tough for us to check every car, and the threat is always there. You never know if the car next to you has a bomb."

"My wife asks me all the time to get out," Wali said. "My kids too. They tell me, 'Leave the job, stay at home.' I tell them: 'God knows better. Everything will be OK.' "

Officers share the red-brick, two-story police station with 23 paramilitary troops from Pakistan's Frontier Corps.

Almost everyone sleeps in a single room with only a couple of feet of separation, on blankets thrown onto the concrete floor. The building's door frames and walls have begun to crack as a result of the blast.

Any shoring up, Hayat said, will have to be done by the police and soldiers housed there. "We had to build our own toilets," he said.

If his bosses gave him another assignment, he'd gladly take it, Hayat added. Still, his family doesn't pressure him into quitting.

"My family knows that death is a fact, that everyone has to die," he said. "That's why they don't insist that I leave this job. They know the situation."

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Prayers and salute to all auch pakistanis.....

rather than spending so much on unnecessary trips Mr. Zardari and his PPP rulers should do everything possible to ensure our policemen fighting enemies get financial rewards and best possible equipment
 
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No doubt that had our police been geared uo and made into a proper and professional fighting force by our rulers of the past.....we would have seen much better results in averting acts of terrorisms in Pakistan.

That said, its so unfortunate and sad to read what has been said in the above article. I really felt depressed after reading it, these men are already not very sound financially, they have to do a dangerous, verry dangerous job with very limited reward and praise from the nation and government and yet they keep doing it. I wish our government could do put forward a real working plan to not only upgrade and modenise pakistan police, at all levels, but also announce major boost in perks for our poliemen. I have always thought, if traffic police can be made into a professional organisation, why not security police.

No matter how much we bash police in our general lives, it wasnt them who made themselves bad. It was those who ordered them and never really brought structural changes and ways to ensure competent and deserving people joined police.
 
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

Taliban target lashkar elders in Bajaur

KHAR: Taliban attacked fired missiles at houses of elders from a Salarzai lashkar in Bajaur Agency on Thursday, killing one man.

Sources said the Taliban fired missiles and rockets at the houses of lashkar elders in Baroon, Tilli and Dag Qila. The lashkar retaliated with automatic weapons.

Separately, the Bajaur Levies defused remote-controlled bombs planted along roads in Tilli. staff report
 
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