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Operation Zarb-e-Azb | Updates, News & Discussions.

Oh dear god. Can you go around without your condescending behaviour all the time? A simple "yes they're going after the terrorists in other agencies" would do. I am not hearing much action from other agencies so that's why you're asking. Try not to look at your d*ck too much in the mirror.


ouch.

Kuch Rozay ka khiyal karo bhai (respect Ramadan). why to bring genitalia discussion in the thread where none is intended.

At least wait till the end of Ramadan before using this lingo. Thank you

Looks like Negotiation drama was prepared to ensure friend or foe Taliban to maintain strategic depth in Afghanistan prior to PA operation, so which area will be next hub of Pakistani intelligence games?

hain Ji. why to spread negative feelings while our jawans and officers are dying.
 
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hain Ji. why to spread negative feelings while our jawans and officers are dying.

They are accomplishing what has been ordered so there is no need to be emotional or extreme patriotic, but should learn from history and not be used by any third party in the name of Allah/Islam as directed by Traitor Zia and in the name of dollars as did Traitor Musharraf.

Now we are cleaning what was cooked by Pakistani Intelligence agencies.

We should learn not to use own territory as any proxy training field.
 
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...... deleted & moved to relevant thread.
 
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Calling ex presidents as "traitors"!

Who is being emotional now.



you have to clean after every kind of cooking if you know what I mean.

What makes you saying "Emotional", or do you want to justify their actions as true patriot? So then why you should push your army for Rahe-Nijaat or Zarb-e Ghazb?

Interesting that you have no importance how many innocent people has been suffered because of their delicious dishes and you are supporting the idea to make patriotic or heroism scenario what they are cleaning?
 
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A well come statement. Something which should have done long ago....there are no good and bad amongst the militants,
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June 26, 2014
Ground operations and heavy bombardment begin in North Waziristan; 13 militants killed and 12 captured in Mir Ali; Sharif blames militants for failure of peace; Emirates and Etihad suspend service to Peshawar International Airport after attack; Militants attack checkpoint in Jamrud, resulting firefight kills four militants and three Khasadar officials; Afghan delegation arrives in Islamabad to develop join counterterrorism plan; U.S. places two Lashkar-e-Taiba leaders on global terrorists list.
June 25, 2014
Car bomb attack in Spinwam, North Waziristan kills three; Airstrikes in Mir Ali, North Waziristan destroy five militant hideouts and kill 13 militants; twenty militants and six civilians killed in airstrikes on militant hideouts in the Tirah Valley, Khyber Agency; IDPs protest conditions in camps; Balochistan and Sindh announce they will welcome IDPs; PIA flight fired upon during landing, killing one person and injuring two others; Indian and Pakistani officials meet in Thailand to discuss future of peace and security between the two nations.
June 24, 2014
Airstrikes in Khyber agency kill 20 militants and destroy 13 militant hideouts; airstrikes in Mir Ali kill 27 militants and destroy 10 hideouts; VBIED detonates near Spinwam, killing two soldiers and civilian; Saidgai registration checkpoint has registered 454,207 IDPs to-date; Monday marks end of IDP evacuation period from North Waziristan; Police defuse two IEDs in Hayatabad neighborhood of Peshawar; Cleric Qadri’s return leads to protests in Islamabad and Lahore; Pakistani government urges Afghan government not react rashly to alleged cross-border killing of Afghans by Pakistani troops.
June 23, 2014
Air strikes kill 15 on June 23 near Mir Ali; 3 suspected terrorists killed in Karachi and 20 apprehended; June 21 strikes killed more than 30 terrorists in Khyber and North Waziristan; Up to 30 terrorists killed in strikes on June 19 and 20, 24 arrested attempting to flee; General Mahmood visits Washington DC to discuss security concerns; Explosion injures 61 at shrine in Peshawar; Number of IDPs reaches 400,000; Tribal leaders in North Waziristan promise not to harbor militants; TTP leader Bahadur proposes new ceasefire; Musharraf denied exit from Pakistan by Supreme Court; PAT leader Qadri calls for revolution against Sharif.
June 20, 2014
Army helicopter kill 20 to 23 militants east of Miram Shah as North Waziristan operation continues; Police and army forces increase security efforts in Karachi amid renewed TTP terrorist activity and attacks; Islamabad and Sialkot airports on high alert; Firefight in Kashmir kills 3 militants; IED blast in Torghar kills two policeman, injures two others; Militant attack on checkpoint in Kurram kills one and injures two; Joint Ranger-police operation in Karachi kills two key TTP leaders; IDP crisis deepens after curfew lifted, 164,000 IDPs to Bannu, 200-300,000 projected to flee; President Karzai assured Prime Minister Sharif of Afghanistan’s support for the operation in Northern Waziristan. Mehmood Khan Achakzai and Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhry meet with President Karzai to request further Afghan support, including extradition of Mullah Fazlullah.
 
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Why not do that in parallel? Is it because of stretched resources? 2014 can be the decisive year against ALL terrorist groups, sectarian and political ones alike.

May be resources is one of the cause - but i think leadership don't want to open all the fronts simultaneously.
 
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BANNU (AFP) Military helicopters shelled militant hideouts in the country's restive northwest on Wednesday as part of a massive ongoing offensive against the Taliban and other extremists, killing 10 insurgents, officials said.
The helicopters pounded Islamist compounds in the Khar Warsak area, 12 kilometres (seven miles) north of Miranshah, the main town in the North Waziristan tribal region.
"The helicopters destroyed three militant compounds and killed 10 insurgents during the shelling," a local security official told AFP.
A local intelligence official confirmed the attack and militant casualties.
Nearly 500,000 people have fled the offensive in North Waziristan, which is aimed at wiping out longstanding militant strongholds in the area, which borders Afghanistan.
Tens of thousands of families have left for the town of Bannu, close to North Waziristan, while hundreds more have moved further afield to the towns of Lakki Marwat, Karak and Dera Ismail Khan since the offensive began in mid-June.
Jets and artillery began hitting militant targets in North Waziristan on June 15, launching an operation to regain full control of the district after years of pressure from Washington and other powers.
The assault was finally launched after a dramatic attack on Karachi airport last month which killed dozens of people and marked the end of a faltering peace process with the Pakistani Taliban.
So far, 376 militants and 19 soldiers have been killed in the offensive, according to the military, though with the area off-limits to journalists the number and identity of the dead is impossible to verify.
Major General Asim Bajwa, the chief spokesman for the Pakistani military, said on Tuesday the ongoing offensive would target all militants, including the feared Haqqani network.
He also demanded Afghanistan do more to track down hardline cleric Maulana Fazlullah, who took over the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leadership last year after previous chief Hakimullah Mehsud was killed by a US drone.
Fazlullah is believed to be in hiding across the border.

Military helicopters pound hideouts, kill 10 militants | Pakistan | Dunya News
 
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we proudly support the army war against terrorism we suffered many innocent life's its time for all of us we get hands with our brave army fought against TTP and all the terrorist groups.our identity is pakistan we are greens we are peaceful peoples of a peaceful land pakistan.There is no power on the earth that can undo Pakistan......naara e takbeer allahu akbar..pak army zindabad we pray for this successful mission zarb e azb
 
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PESHAWAR: Police foiled a terror plot by recovering arms, ammunition and explosive from a car in Budh Bair on Wednesday.

Police said they intercepted a car in Budh Bair area and recovered a Kalashnikov, 2 hand grenades, 3 pistols and 5 kg of explosive.

Four persons, hailing from Barra, were held on the spot and shifted to police station for further probe. - See more at: Terror Bid Foiled In Peshawar, Arms Explosive Seized - JAAG TV
 
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Asia Pacific
A Long History of Rebellion in the Mountains of Pakistan
By DOUGLAS SCHORZMAN and KIRAN NAZISHJUNE 30, 2014

Inside The North Waziristan tribal agency in northwestern Pakistan has been the focus of a lot of firepower: The C.I.A. has made it ground zero for its drone strike campaign, the Pakistani military has sporadically unleashed raids and barrages there, and now it has been stormed by Pakistani infantry forces trying to clear out entrenched militant groups.

But long before Al Qaeda and the Taliban found shelter in the forbidding mountains of the tribal region, Waziristan was a wellspring of guerrilla insurgency and resistance to whatever power had tried to bring it in line. The Pashtun tribes of Waziristan have never been truly conquered, and courting them as allies has almost always ended up backfiring on whoever has tried — ask the British, Pakistanis, Afghans and, for that matter, the Americans.

Continue reading the main story
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From the mid-19th century until their departure in 1947, British forces fought Pashtun rebels in Waziristan at huge losses of life to both sides. Then, as now, the tribesmen knew the mountains and treacherous pathways better, and were never completely jarred loose, even by the 20th-century dawn of airstrikes, delivered by British biplanes.
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Mir Ali
Miram Shah
Bannu
Afghanistan
North
Waziristan
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Paktika
Wana
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In the strategic maneuvering of “The Great Game,” the British imposed the Durand Line border with Afghanistan in 1893, and in the process divided the Pashtun population. To this day, that border is an irritant to governments and a fiction to inhabitants.
In the decades after, Pashtun fighters waged a new jihad that spanned governments: first against the declining British Empire, then against the Pakistani government founded in the partition of 1947. One of their goals was an autonomous Pashtunistan, spanning the Durand Line, and at times they were aided covertly by the Afghan government.
Even as the fledgling Pakistani government fought the Pashtuns, they also sought to employ them, paying tribal fighters to deploy against India. That effort reached new heights in the 1980s, after the Soviet invasion next door in Afghanistan.
Continue reading the main story

OPEN Map
Map: Pakistan’s Hot Spots at a Glance

Suddenly, Pashtun jihadis were the allies of choice for Pakistani, Saudi and American officials who were trying to bloody the Soviets, and Waziristan — rugged, impregnable, close to the border — was the perfect training ground for them. Money and arms, and thousands of volunteers from the Arab world, flowed into North and South Waziristan under the watch of the Pakistani military spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, and with the blessing of the United States.
The relationships and expertise forged in the fight against the Soviets became the foundation for new militant movements after the American invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, this time in the Taliban insurgencies in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and in the global terrorism campaign directed from the tribal areas by Al Qaeda against the United States and Western world.
The Pakistani military struck a tenuous peace deal with the Waziristan-based factions a few years later, but as it fell apart, many of the army’s former allies among the militants turned against it and the Pakistani government. Crackdowns on the tribal areas intensified, and a military offensive in South Waziristan and other areas of the northwestern frontier was waged in 2009. The assault sent hundreds of thousands of people fleeing, including militant commanders, who moved north to join their comrades in the even more rugged terrain of North Waziristan.
Since then, drone strikes have cut into the militants’ leadership ranks. But for the most part, the militant groups sheltering in the mountains of North Waziristan were able to kill or force out resistant tribal leaders, share resources and grow stronger together for years. “There is no militant group in the world that you won’t find here,” one tribal leader said in a telephone interview. “From Uzbeks, to Chechen, to Chinese and Turkish militants, everyone is free in N.W.”
Now, the Pakistani military has marched into Miram Shah and Mir Ali, the main towns in North Waziristan. Again, a huge wave of refugees has been created, with many crossing the gossamer border into Afghanistan, where the political process is struggling and the American military is withdrawing. With those refugees, many officials say, are again a number of militant commanders and fighters.
 
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