commando

By Khalid Qayum and Naween Mangi Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan’s military began a ground and air offensive against Taliban guerrillas in their stronghold of South Waziristan, its most direct attempt to end terrorist violence that has threatened to destabilize the government of the nuclear-armed state. The operation started late Oct. 16, said an army spokesman yesterday. He declined to be identified in accordance with military policy. The operation may take eight weeks or longer to complete, he said. Troops will target both Pakistani and foreign militants, he said. Fighters loyal to the late Baitullah Mehsud have led an escalating campaign against President Asif Ali Zardari’s administration. The U.S. has encouraged offensives against Pakistan-based Taliban, saying Waziristan and other border districts are sanctuaries for jihadists who attack U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan. A Pakistani news channel, Express News, reported that residents were leaving the mountainous region as fighting began. Thousands of displaced people have reached the nearby city of Dera Ismail Khan, where they are being registered at the main sports stadium, the network said. Northwest Frontier Province Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain said as many as 2 million families may be displaced as a result of the military operations South Waziristan. He spoke in televised press conference in Peshawar yesterday. He didn’t say what plans the government has for housing the displaced people. Deaths Four Pakistani soldiers were killed and 12 injured in initial clashes with militants, the military said in a statement on its Web site late yesterday. A bomb exploded near a military convoy as it moved from Razmak, a military base in North Waziristan, Agence France- Presse reported. Razmak is one of four main launching points for the offensive, to the north, east and west of Mehsud’s forces, Pakistan’s Samaa television said. The government said last week it had approved an offensive and given authority to the army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani , to decide when to launch it. The army says it has deployed 28,000 troops around South Waziristan to attack an estimated 10,000 fighters of a major Taliban faction led until August by Baitullah Mehsud . Mehsud Mehsud was killed in August by a missile from a U.S.- operated unmanned aircraft, and his forces now are led by a relative, Hakimullah Mehsud. While other Taliban factions have focused their attacks on NATO forces in Afghanistan and their Afghan government allies, the Mehsud fighters have waged an escalating campaign within Pakistan. Pakistan’s government blamed Baitullah Mehsud for the 2007 assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto , the wife of President Zardari, an accusation Mehsud denied. Spokesmen for the Mehsud Taliban have claimed responsibility for a spate of bombings and guerrilla assaults this month against government, army and police targets. At least seven guerrilla attacks in the past week killed 140 people, including 11 who died in a car bombing Oct. 16 in the northwestern city of Peshawar. Pakistan’s Taliban and their allies also are turning to commando raids on police and soldiers as a tactic to convince Pakistanis the government can’t contain them. At least 26 people were killed in assaults on Oct. 15 on a federal police headquarters and two police training centers in the eastern city of Lahore, and a bombing at a police station in Kohat. Commando Assaults While suicide bombings killed most of those who died in the last week, the Pakistani media’s focus has been on the commando assaults Oct. 15 and a 22-hour siege one week ago at Pakistan’s army headquarters in Rawalpindi. Jihadists also used commando assaults in Lahore in March, against a bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team and at a police academy that was attacked again on Oct. 15. The tactic has been revived in an effort to fight back after the army drove the Taliban out of the Swat Valley in July and killed Mehsud in August, said Kamran Bokhari, regional director for the Middle East and South Asia at Stratfor , an Austin, Texas- based intelligence-consulting firm. The week-long series of attacks has been in part an effort to demoralize Pakistan’s security forces in advance of the South Waziristan offensive, Bokhari said. To contact the reporter on this story: Khalid Qayum in Islamabad at kqayum@bloomberg.net or Naween A Mangi in Karachi at nmangi1@bloomberg.net

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Pakistan Begins Offensive Against Militant Stronghold in South Waziristan

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Pakistan Blast Kills 11 as Islamic Militants Stage Seventh Attack in Week

October 16, 2009

By Khalid Qayum and James Rupert Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) — A blast in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar killed 10 people, the country’s leading ambulance service said, the seventh attack in a week as Islamic militants escalate a campaign against security forces. “More casualties are feared,” Mohammed Naeem , a spokesman for the Edhi ambulance service said in a telephone interview from Peshawar. The attack appeared to target the city’s intelligence agency building. Pakistan’s Taliban and its allies are turning to commando raids on police and soldiers, on top of suicide bombings, as a tactic to convince Pakistanis the government can’t contain them. At least 26 people were killed in attacks yesterday on a federal police headquarters and two police training centers in Lahore, plus in bombings of a police station in the town of Kohat. “There seems to be a new strategy by terrorists in recent attacks,” said Rana Sanaullah, law minister of Punjab province , of which Lahore is the capital. Attacking and taking hostages is meant “to get maximum TV coverage and make their demands.” Taliban spokesmen have said recent attacks that have killed more than 140 police, troops and civilians, were revenge for the August killing of their top commander, Baitullah Mehsud, by a U.S. missile. The spate of violence comes as the government and military prepare an assault on the group’s South Waziristan encampments near the Afghan border. Lahore Attacks Yesterday, a child was killed and nine people were injured by a remote-controlled bomb in a building housing government officers in Peshawar. That attack came after guerrillas firing assault rifles and throwing hand grenades stormed three police complexes in Lahore, the country’s second-largest city, and militants exploded two bombs in northwestern Pakistan. While suicide bombings have killed three-quarters of those who died in the past week, most of the Pakistani media’s focus has been on the commando assaults yesterday and the 22-hour siege involving Taliban-affiliated attackers this past weekend at Pakistan’s army headquarters in Rawalpindi. After years of relying on bomb attacks within Pakistan, jihadist groups have made at least four commando-style assaults this year, two in the past week. The raids echo last November’s three-day attack on Mumbai, India’s business capital, when 10 gunmen killed 166 people at a railway station, restaurant and two luxury hotels. India blamed the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba group and halted peace talks with its nuclear-armed neighbor. Ground Assault The week-long spate of attacks is in part an effort to demoralize Pakistan’s security forces as the army has deployed what it says are 28,000 troops around the stronghold of Mehsud’s Taliban faction, in the mountainous region of Waziristan, near the Afghan border. The government said this week it has given the army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani , authority to begin an offensive against Mehsud’s fighters, and warplanes have been pounding their positions in the area. To contact the reporters on this story: Khalid Qayum in Islamabad at kqayum@bloomberg.net

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Pakistan Blast Kills 10 as Islamic Militants Stage Seventh Attack in Week

October 16, 2009

By James Rupert Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) — Pakistan’s Taliban and its allies are turning to commando raids on police and soldiers, on top of suicide bombings, as a tactic to convince Pakistanis the government can’t contain them. Guerrillas firing assault rifles and throwing hand grenades stormed three police complexes yesterday in Lahore, the country’s second-largest city, and militants exploded two bombs in northwestern Pakistan. Six major operations in a week have killed more than 130 troops, police officers and civilians. “There seems to be a new strategy by terrorists in recent attacks,” said Rana Sanaullah, law minister of Punjab province , of which Lahore is the capital. Attacking and taking hostages is meant “to get maximum TV coverage and make their demands.” At least 26 people were killed in yesterday’s attacks on a federal police headquarters and two police training centers in Lahore, plus in bombings of a police station in the town of Kohat and a government building in Peshawar. While suicide bombings have killed three-quarters of those who died in the past week, most of the Pakistani media’s focus has been on the commando assaults yesterday and the 22-hour siege involving Taliban-affiliated attackers this past weekend at Pakistan’s army headquarters in Rawalpindi. After years of relying on bomb attacks within Pakistan, jihadist groups have made at least four commando-style assaults this year, two in the past week. Mumbai Raid The raids echo last November’s three-day attack on Mumbai, India’s business capital, when 10 gunmen killed 166 people at a railway station, restaurant and two luxury hotels. India blamed the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba group and halted peace talks with its nuclear-armed neighbor. The more complex attacks in Pakistan show the groups “are trying to demonstrate their prowess and appear larger than life,” said Kamran Bokhari, regional director for the Middle East and South Asia at Stratfor , an Austin, Texas-based intelligence-consulting firm. Jihadists did use commando assaults in Lahore in March, against a bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team and at a police academy that was attacked again yesterday. The tactic has been revived in an effort to fight back after the army drove the Taliban out of the Swat Valley in July and a missile strike killed their top commander, Baitullah Mehsud , in August, Bokhari said by telephone from Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital. The week-long spate of attacks is in part an effort to demoralize Pakistan’s security forces as the army has deployed what it says are 28,000 troops around the stronghold of Mehsud’s Taliban faction, in the mountainous region of Waziristan, near the Afghan border. Attacking the Army The government said this week it has given the army chief, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani , authority to begin an offensive against Mehsud’s fighters, and warplanes have been pounding their positions in the area. The jihadists boosted the perception of their power through public shock over their Oct. 10 assault on the seat of the army, Pakistan’s most powerful institution, said Mehdi Hassan , the dean of the School of Media and Communications at Lahore’s Beaconhouse National University . The commando attacks are “part of a well-planned psychological war campaign” and have helped create “a national atmosphere of crisis,” said Hassan. The groups are creating uncertainty in the country of 180 million, partly because of more than two dozen TV news channels that sprang up under the army-led regime of former President Pervez Musharraf , he said in a telephone interview. The channels “compete intensely for any breaking news” and “any sense of crisis,” said Owais Ali, secretary general of the Pakistan Press Foundation , which trains journalists. “It’s like the first three days of coverage of 9/11 in America, only imagine it going on for seven years,” he said in a telephone interview from Karachi. To contact the reporter on this story: James Rupert in New Delhi at jrupert3@bloomberg.net .

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