FACTBOX-Security developments in Pakistan, July 25

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Pakistan at 1630 GMT on Sunday.

* denotes new or updated items.

* SOUTH WAZIRISTAN – Two U.S. drone planes fired four missiles into a militant hideout in the lawless region of South Waziristan on the Afghan border, killing five militants and wounding four, intelligence officials in the region said.

Hours later, three drone missiles killed three Pakistani militants in a strike on a house in the same area.

The latest strikes came a day after a similar drone attack killed at least 16 militants in South Waziristan, once known as a stronghold of militants led by Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud.

The Pakistan army says forces largely cleared the area in last year’s operation.

* NORTH WAZIRISTAN – Two missiles fired by a pilotless drone plane struck killed four militants in North Waziristan region, a hotbed for al Qaeda and Taliban militants on the Afghan border, security officials said.

United States has stepped up drone strikes in Pakistan’s border region since last year. (Compiled by Islamabad Bureau) (For more Reuters coverage of Pakistan, see: here)

Civilian deaths rise as Afghan fight intensifies

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Hundreds of Afghans took to the streets of Mazar-i-Sharif on Saturday to protest against mounting civilian deaths, while five U.S. and NATO troops died in separate insurgent attacks on a bloody day of fighting across the country.

Protesters chanted slogans against foreign forces and Afghan President Hamid Karzai after U.S. troops killed two civilians in a pre-dawn raid on Wednesday in the northern city’s outskirts.

NATO also admitted killing six people with stray artillery on Thursday, a day after an airstrike accidently killed five Afghan soldiers.

Insurgent gunmen also killed 11 Pakistani tribesmen near the eastern Afghan border, opening fire on their bus, while a bomb placed on a motorbike killed one civilian at a bazaar in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. [ID:nSGE669GBL] Civilian casualties and friendly fire deaths among Afghan security forces have been a frequent irritant between Karzai and Western military forces during the nine-year war since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

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General David Petraeus, the U.S. general tapped by Washington to take over the Afghan war after his predecessor criticised senior administration officials, last week wrote to international troops to warn civilian deaths must be kept at a minimum.

“We must never forget that the decisive terrain in Afghanistan is the human terrain,” Petraeus, who masterminded the Iraq counter-insurgency, wrote to 150,000 U.S. and NATO troops preparing an all-out offensive against the Taliban in the south.

In Kabul, The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said five soldiers were killed by roadside bombs and insurgent gunfire in separate incidents in the south and east.

A joint Afghan and NATO investigation team found six civilians died on Thursday when artillery shells went astray in Paktia Province, the alliance said in a statement.

“ISAF officials offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the statement said.

Five Afghan government soldiers were accidently killed and two others wounded in a pre-dawn NATO helicopter airstrike on Wednesday, prompting condemnation from the government.

SENSITIVE CHANGE

Petraeus is considering a sensitive change to rules of engagement drawn up his predecessor to avoid civilian casualties, following complaints they tie the hands of coalition troops combating insurgents.

The latest deaths will make any relaxation more difficult and may prompt more strains with the government.

Karzai is already annoyed over plans outlined by Petraeus for Afghan villagers to form militia-style defence groups to help fight the Taliban on their own, The Washington Post newspaper said on Saturday.

Casualties among NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan hit a high in June and commanders expect violence to rise in parallel with an anti-insurgent offensive in coming months, raising questions about whether more can be done to protect troops.

Bombers including one suicide attacker hit two separate NATO convoys in eastern Khost and northern Kunduz on Saturday, injuring German soldiers and showing the growing insurgency can strike well beyond the Taliban-dominated south.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday in separate bomb attacks, NATO said, while a suicide car bomb hit an alliance convoy on a bridge outside Jalalabad, killing one civilian. (Additional reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Suicide attack kills 3, wound 50 in NW Pakistan

Pakistan, July 9 (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed three people and wounded nearly 50 in an attack outside the office of a senior government official in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, government and hospital officials said.

The bomber struck when dozens of people were gathered around the office in the Mohmand ethnic Pashtun tribal region on the Afghan border, where security forces have stepped up attacks on Taliban militants in recent weeks.

“The bomber blew himself up outside the office of an assistant political agent, killing himself and wounding dozens others,” a government official, Mehraj Khan, told Reuters.

Hospital officials said three people were killed and nearly 50 were being treated for multiple wounds.

Pakistan launched two major offensives in the northwest last year against homegrown Taliban militants who have killed hundreds of people in retaliatory attacks across Pakistan, mostly in the northwest, but also in major cities. (Reporting by Izaz Mohmand; Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Ron Popeski) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Pakistan detains German man near militant stronghold

Pakistan, June 22 (Reuters) – Pakistani security forces have detained a German man clad in a head-to-toe veil in the northwest as he was being driven from the militant bastion of North Waziristan on the Afghan border, police said on Tuesday.

The man, in his mid-20s, was caught at a security checkpost on the border between North Waziristan and Bannu city on Monday, Shafqat Khan, a senior police officer in Bannu, told Reuters.

“He was in a car with two tribesmen, one of them was also wearing a burqa. They were carrying a girl in a bid to pretend they’re a tribal family,” he said.

Khan said the German was being interrogated by a joint investigation team.

Khan did not give further details but he suspected the German man could have links with militants in the the lawless region.

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(For more stories on Afghanistan and Pakistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK])

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North Waziristan is a known stronghold for al Qaeda and Taliban militants, and the United States has been pushing Pakistan to launch a military offensive there. But the Pakistan army says it lacks resources to do it.

Last week, police in northern Chitral detained an American for allegedly trying to sneak into Afghanistan to hunt and kill al Qaeda kingpin Osama bin Laden.

Separately, Pakistani warplanes bombed militant positions in the northwestern region of Orakzai on Tuesday, killing eight militants and destroying several hideouts, security officials said.

(Additional reporting and writing by Kamran Haider; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Sanjeev Miglani)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Pakistan, June 11

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Pakistan at 1100 GMT on Friday:

NORTH WAZIRISTAN – A U.S. drone fired three missiles into a Taliban compound in North Waziristan region near the Afghan border, killing 11 militants and wounding four, Pakistani officials said.

It was the second drone strike in the last 24 hours in the militants’ stronghold of North Waziristan. In an earlier attack, a drone killed three suspected militants. (Compiled by Islamabad Bureau; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

US to go ahead with ‘essential’ drone attacks in Pak despite UN call to stop

Washington, Jun.4 (ANI): Notwithstanding a report by a top UN official, which called for the discontinuation of unmanned Predator drone attacks in Pakistan’s troubled tribal areas along the Afghan border, the United States has defended the missile strikes, which many believe have killed more civilians than extremists.

Bruce Riedel, a former Central Investigation Agency (CIA) officials and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Saban Center described the CIA operated attacks as ‘essential’, which were needed to pressurise terror groups like Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

“Drone operations are essential. The drones are part of a much broader effort to put pressure on Al-Qaida through the war in Afghanistan. They”re the cutting edge of the pressure, but they”re not the only pressure,” The Christian Science Monitor quoted Riedel, as saying.

Micah Zenko, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, also argued that the drone attacks were an “essential tool for killing terrorists even if their use should be more carefully scrutinized.”

Zenko, however, pointed out that militants were fast adopting to these strikes, and that their ‘usefulness may be waning.’

A top United Nation (UN) official had criticised the Obama administration for continuing drone attacks in the semi-autonomous tribal areas of Pakistan, as they have resulted in countless civilian deaths.

While US officials have presented an impressive figure of over 500 terrorists being killed in missile hits and only 30 civilians in the past couple of years, UN’s special rapporteur on extra judicial, summary or arbitrary executions Phillip Alston argues that drone strikes amount to a “license to kill” without being held accountable, a license the U.S. would not want any other country to have.

Alston, in his report, said that by carrying out the drone attacks, Washington is just setting a bad example.

“The rules we’re setting for ourselves now are the rules that we”re also setting for others later,” Alston’s report said.

Alston criticized the secrecy of the CIA”s drone attacks, saying they have resulted in “the creation of a major accountability vacuum.”

“Remote attacks also led to a risk of developing a ‘Playstation’ mentality to killing,” he wrote in his report. (ANI)

Suspected Taliban blow up “U.S. spies” in Pakistan

Taliban militants strapped explosives to two men accused of being U.S. spies and blew than up at a public execution in northwest Pakistan, intelligence officials and residents said on Friday.

The killings took place on Thursday evening in North Waziristan, a lawless al Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary on the Afghan border where the United States has stepped up attacks with missile-firing drone aircraft, fuelling militant fears of spies.

Five masked militants paraded the hand-cuffed men before dozens of people in the Datta Kheil area and accused them of passing information to the United States on targets for its CIA-operated pilotless drone aircraft.

“They strapped explosives around their bodies and then blew them up,” a Pakistani intelligence official in the region told Reuters by telephone.

Militants have killed hundreds of people they suspect are spies for the United States or the Pakistani government over the past few years.

They usually decapitate or shoot the suspects. Residents said this was the first time the militants had blown up suspected spies.

Pakistan’s northwestern ethnic Pashtun tribal lands along the Afghan border have never been under the full control of any government and have for decades been Islamist militant hubs.

During the 1980s, the tribal belt was a staging area for the U.S.- and Pakistani-backed jihad, or Muslim holy war, against Soviet forces occupying Afghanistan.

Many Taliban and al Qaeda fighters fled there after U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban from Afghanistan in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

A separate Pakistani Taliban force then emerged from the Pashtun tribes and they have been waging war against the Pakistani state in recent years.

The army launched a major offensive in the Pakistani Taliban bastion of South Waziristan last October, killing hundreds of insurgents and destroying their main bases. Many militants took refuge in North Waziristan, officials said.

The United States wants Pakistan to extend its offensive to North Waziristan and go after militants there, particularly Afghan Taliban, who launch cross-border attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani military, which has long seen the Afghan Taliban as tools for limiting the influence of old rival India in Afghanistan, says it will deal with North Waziristan but in its own time.

(Writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/afghanistanpakistan)

Three children among seven killed in Pakistan

Islamabad, May 13 (DPA) Three boys died and two people were injured Wednesday when a bomb exploded in a camp of Afghan refugees in northwestern Pakistan, police said.

Separately, Taliban militants killed two men in the same region, accusing them for spying for the United States, while a blast ripped through an oil tanker carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan, killing two people in Pakistan’s southwestern province.

Local police officer Mohammad Aslam said that an explosion took place in the outskirts of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber-Paktunkhwa province, formerly known as North West Frontier Province.

‘Three children aged between 10 and 13 died in the blast while one child and a man were injured,’ said Aslam. ‘The nature of the blast is not known yet. Our bomb disposal squad is on the spot and they are collecting evidence to determine what sort of bomb that was’.

Peshawar has seen dozens of bombings carried out by Taliban militants who have intensified attacks to avenge Pakistan’s ongoing assaults in their strongholds in lawless tribal region along Afghan border.

The US has encouraged Islamabad to target Taliban and Al Qaeda militants who launch regular cross-border raids from their hideouts in rouged tribal region on international forces into Afghanistan.

In addition to the efforts by around 150,000 Pakistani troops against Islamist insurgency, the American CIA has also launched a covet war in Pakistan’s tribal region with unmanned drone aircrafts.

More than 900 people, most of them Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, have been killed in the missiles attacks carried out by the drones since August 2008.

Following almost every drone strike Taliban respond with killing alleged US spies who they believe guide the drones by planting electronic devices near possible targets.

Wednesday, residents found the bodies of two people dumped in Miranshah, the main town in tribal district of North Waziristan that is a major bastion of militants.

An intelligence official said that a note attached with the bodies comprised a promise from Taliban for the same fate for all those who ‘intended to spy for the Americans’.

North Waziristan has been severely hit by drone attacks in recent months. Twenty-four people died in two US aerial attacks in the district Tuesday.

Also Wednesday, a blast destroyed a tanker carrying fuel supplies for the NATO troops in the landlocked Afghanistan, killing two by-passers and injuring two more.

The attack took place in Chaman, the main border town in south-western Baluchistan province that adjoins Afghan province of Kandahar.

‘One child and a man died in the attack, while two more were wounded,’ said Ata Mohammad of the border security police. ‘Several shops near the bombing place also caught fire’. Mohammad suspected that Taliban could be behind the bombing.

US turns down Pak’s request for drone technology

Islamabad, May 13 (ANI): The United States has reportedly rejected Pakistan’s fresh demands of handing over unmanned drone technology to it, highly placed sources in the Pakistan military have revealed, adding that Washington’s refusal could see Islamabad further delay its decision to launch a new war front against militants in North Waziristan.

“Apart from other issues, the issue pertaining to transfer of requisite drone technology could cause delay in Pakistan’s launching of military operation in North Waziristan”, The Nation quoted the sources, as saying.

Pakistan has already developed drones capable of reconnaissance missions, but it still lacks the technology to attach weapons to the indigenous drones so that it can carry out attacks against extremists in the country’s semi-autonomous tribal regions by it self.

The well-placed military sources said that it was imperative for the Obama Administration to provide the drone technology to enable it take action against extremists flourishing on the terror hot beds situated along the Afghan border.

“Drones with weapon systems are imperative to meet Pakistan’s pressing needs in tackling low intensity conflict such as terrorism especially with back up intelligence support from US satellite network on Pak- Afghan border” they said.

Islamabad has long been opposing the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes in the restive tribal areas, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-American sentiments amongst the population, however, it is believed that Pakistan is privately sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs. (ANI)

Pakistan investigates NY bomb plot Taliban link

Pakistan is investigating whether a Pakistani-American arrested over a botched plot to bomb New York’s Times Square met Pakistani Taliban leaders in their stronghold in the northwest, a minister said on Saturday.

Pakistani investigators were trying to verify information provided by the United States that the suspect, Faisal Shahzad, 30, had visited South Waziristan, a militant bastion near the Afghan border where the Pakistani military launched an offensive late last year, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said.

“Today we received a formal request from them in which they have given the details of the charges according to which Shahzad has been visiting South Waziristan and meeting Qari Hussain and Hakimullah Mehsud,” Rehman told reporters, referring to two Pakistani Taliban commanders.

“But it all needs confirmation.”

The Pakistani Taliban last Sunday claimed responsibility for the attempted car bomb attack the previous day, but a spokesman for the militants on Thursday denied links with Shahzad.

Mehsud is the head of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, while Hussain is referred to as the mentor of the Pakistani Talbian suicide bombers.

If confirmed that the Taliban in Pakistan sponsored the attempted bombing in New York, it would be the group’s first involvement in an attack on U.S. soil.

That would also put Pakistan under renewed U.S. pressure to intensify its crackdown on the militants.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in comments released by the U.S. CBS network on Friday, said U.S. ally Pakistan had been cooperating on the investigation.

But she also said the United States had warned Pakistan of “severe consequences” if a successful attack in America was traced back to Pakistan.

VIDEO THREAT

Mehsud was widely believed to have been killed in a missile strike by a pilotless CIA drone aircraft in January but he appeared in a video posted on the internet last week in which he threatened revenge suicide strikes in U.S. cities.

Hussain also appeared in a separate tape posted on the same day taking responsibility for the attack in the United States “with pride and valour”, apparently referring to the Times Square incident.

The New York police at the time said there was no evidence to support Taliban claim.

Malik said on Thursday he thought it unlikely that Shahzad acted alone.

Pakistani security officials say Shahzad, who is suspected of driving an explosives-laden SUV into Times Square, was close to Jaish-e-Mohammad, a group fighting Indian forces in the disputed Kashmir region.

The group also has ties to al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban.

Pakistani security agencies have arrested at least one Jaish activist, Mohammad Rehan, as he left a mosque linked to the group in the southern city of Karachi on Tuesday.

Other associates, including Shahzad’s father-in-law, have also been detained in Karachi, according to media reports.

The United States has asked to interview Shahzad’s parents, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.

But Malik ruled that out.

“The government of Pakistan will not allow any outside investigators to investigate our people,” he said.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel and Sugita Katyal)

Officials urge US to send more troops to Pak following bungled Times Square bombing

Washington, May 7 (ANI): In the wake of the reported confession of Faisal Shahzad, the man accused of plotting the unsuccessful Times Square bombing, that he had received bomb-making training in the ungoverned tribal region situated along the Afghanistan border in Pakistan, a fresh debate on whether to station more troops in Pakistan or not has started.

While some US officials are of the view that it was imperative for the Obama Administration to increase the number of Special Operations troops working with Pakistani forces in the country’s western mountains, others believe any action taken in this regard must be thoroughly planned and that the decision should not be taken in haste.

“There is a growing sense that there will need to be more of a boots on the ground strategy,” The New York Times quoted a top Obama Administration official, as saying.

Officials, who requested anonymity to discuss strategy surrounding any new program, said that any new troops in Pakistan would serve as advisers and trainers, and not as combat forces.

Some US officials opined that the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes against militants were insufficient for preventing attacks on the West, and that an expanded training mission might raise confidence in Pakistan’s military to launch an offensive in North Waziristan, the terror hot bed situated close to the Afghan border.

However, Pakistani officials said that stationing more troops in the country, where there are already more than two hundred soldiers are working secretly, would not serve purpose.

They said Washington should not ‘overreach.’

“The Americans have to be careful not to make demands that are disproportionate to the good will they have built up,” the newspaper quoted a senior Pakistani official, as saying. (ANI)

Times Square would-be bomber received terror training in Pakistan

New York, May 5 (ANI): Faisal Shahzad, the 30-year-old Pakistani origin terror suspect who has been accused of planting an explosive device in a parked SUV at New York’s Times Square, has told investigators that he received bomb-making training during a five-month trip to Pakistan.

He disclosed that the training was imparted to him in Waziristan, a tribal region close to the Afghan border and a Taliban bastion. He also admitted that he was the one who carried out the failed attack.

Connecticut resident Shahzad said he was the only individual involved in the foiled bombing attempt.

Authorities apprehended Shahzad while he was trying to flee New York for Dubai on an Emirates flight.

US Attorney General Eric Holder told a news conference in Washington that Shahzad’s act was a “terrorist plot aimed at killing Americans.”

Despite Shahzad”s claims that he acted alone, authorities “will not rest until we have brought everyone responsible to justice,” the New York Post quoted him, as saying.

“Based on what we know so far, it is clear that this was a terrorist plot aimed at murdering Americans in one of the busiest places in our country,” he added.

Holder claimed that Shahzad, a naturalized US citizen, had admitted to the crime and was talking to authorities.

“The investigation is ongoing,” he said without elaborating further.

According to the charges, Faisal bought the SUV on April 24 for 1,300 dollars, using thirteen 100-dollar bills.

When the cops secured the car, they found a set of keys inside — one of which opened the front door of his Bridgeport home, the other was for an Isuzu owned by him.

Using a pre-paid cell phone, Faisal called a fireworks store in Pennsylvania and received several calls from Pakistan, according to court papers.

Meanwhile, authorities in Pakistan raided four different locations and have rounded up at least ten suspects, some of whom may be related to Shahzad.

Pakistani police told NBC News that Shahzad travelled from the US to Karachi on July 3, 2009, and returned to New York on August 8, 2009.

During that time, he is believed to have travelled to Peshawar, a city in the region bordering Afghanistan.

According to New York Post, the explosive device found inside the SUV had alarm clocks connected to a 16-ounce can filled with fireworks, which were intended to detonate gas cans and set propane tanks afire in a chain reaction.

Cops said the bomb could have produced “a significant fireball” with enough force to kill pedestrians and destroy nearby buildings.

Suspicious over ‘terror links’ US to send more military personnel to Pak

Washington, Apr.29 (ANI): The Obama Administration’s decision to send 50 more military personnel with four new F-16 combat jets to Pakistan has the latter worried, as it is apprehensive about the US’ plans.

The Pakistan government is worried that the arrival of US troops in the country would add to the already heightened anti-US sentiments prevailing in the country.

There are currently about 200 U.S. military involved in security assistance in Pakistan, including a Special Operations training and advisory contingent. The Central Investigation Agency (CIA) had also sent additional intelligence-gathering operatives and technicians in recent months.

“Certainly, this is a delicate area,” The Washington Post quoted a Pakistani military official, as saying.

Though Islamabad has been sharing intelligence inputs facilitating the CIA operated drone strikes in the ungoverned tribal regions along the Afghan border, a senior ISI official complained that the Obama Administration still remains suspicious of its links with the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

During a recent briefing in Islamabad, a senior ISI official said the US believes that Pakistan is ‘incapable’ of safeguarding its nuclear arsenals from the threats posed by the extremist groups operating from the terror ‘hot beds’ situated in the tribal regions.

“The United States sees Pakistan as incapable of guaranteeing the security of its nuclear arsenal, irrationally obsessed with the threat from India and generally not serious about either democracy or fighting terrorists,” he said.

On the other hand, US officials believe that Islamabad is concerned over the US’ pull out from Afghanistan, as they fear that America’s withdrawal would give Afghan President Hamid Karzai a free hand to reconcile with the Taliban without even consulting Islamabad.

“They (Pakistan) don’t believe we don’t know what Karzai is doing.They”re afraid that we”re going to cut a peace deal without them. We”ve told them that as soon as we know, they”ll know,” the newspaper quoted a US State Department official, as saying.

Pakistan is of the view that it would need allies among the Pashtun tribes in Afghanistan to maintain its influence and protect its western border from India’s influence. (ANI)

10 policemen injured in NWFP suicide attack

Peshawar, Apr.24 (ANI): At least 10 policemen were wounded when a suicide attacker targeted a prison van in Pakistan’s troubled tribal region of North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Senior police officials said that the attackers came in an explosives laden car, which they rammed into the prison van as it arrived at a jail in Timergarh town of the Lower Dir District.

The prison vehicle was empty at the time of the attack, The Dawn reports.

“We have found the engine of the car used in the attack and some body parts of the bomber including his sliced head from the site,” senior police official Shakeel Ahmad said.

Another senior police official, Qazi Jamil, confirmed the attack, saying: “It was a suicide attack targeting the police van.”

Timergarah, which is situated near the Afghan border, was a stronghold of the Taliban 2009 when the Pakistan Army launched a major offensive and established its control over the region.

Extremists have been targeting security forces stationed in the region since they were forcibly flushed out last year, which shows that they still hold ground. (ANI)

ANALYSIS – No early Pakistan action seen on Lashkar-e-Taiba

Pakistan is unlikely to take on Lashkar-e-Taiba any time soon, since this could drive it into a dangerous alliance with the Pakistani Taliban and other al-Qaeda linked groups, security officials say.

That is a problem for India, which believes LeT not only runs its own sophisticated operations like the 2008 attack on Mumbai but is now encouraging disaffected Indian Muslims in the “Indian Mujahideen” to launch small-scale bomb attacks in Indian cities.

Security officials in Pakistan say the country needs to focus first on defeating Pakistani Taliban fighters in its tribal areas on the Afghan border rather than opening up a new front in its heartland Punjab province where Lashkar-e-Taiba is based.

“If you are so up to your neck in the tribal areas, would you like to open another front?” asked one security official.

Unlike other militant groups, LeT has been careful to avoid attacks within Pakistan itself, focusing on India and Indian Kashmir, and as a result has been left largely alone.

“LeT continues to operate almost with impunity in Pakistan,” said Rifaat Hussain, who heads the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad.

LeT — once nurtured by the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency to fight India in Kashmir — is estimated to have between 2,000-3,000 gunmen and another 20,000 followers, many trained to fight and who could be mobilised against a crackdown.

The group could ultimately become a major risk for the West — LeT’s charitable wing has wide support and funding from the Pakistani diaspora — and even threaten Pakistan itself if it decided to try to impose its Islamist views across the country.

Yet Pakistani security officials argue success in its battle against militants depends on its ability to isolate the enemy.

“Do not do anything where all the threat comes together,” said one security official. “If we open a front against LeT in central Punjab what would happen? What political support would be there? What is your capability? If you do it, would you overcome the militants or would the militants take over?”

Instead, as with other Punjab-based militant organisations, Pakistan prefers to monitor their activities closely rather than take action which could drive them further underground and create splinter groups which could prove even more dangerous.

“We know who they are, and we try to keep an eye on them,” said another security official. “There is no official support.”

“KARACHI PROJECT”

Others, however, say its suits Pakistan to retain an organisation which could be used against India in the event of war, or, some say, to repay in kind what it sees as Indian support for separatists in its Baluchistan province.

Indian security officials and analysts question whether Pakistan would really go after the LeT, regardless of timing, given what they see as close ties to the Pakistani security establishment.

After a lull following the Mumbai attack, analysts say LeT is again using the Indian Mujahideen — an organisation they say it has nurtured for years — in a fresh wave of small-scale urban bombings in India in recent months.

“The recent bombings in Bangalore and before that in Pune appear to have borne out fears that the Lashkar was facilitating the regrouping of the Indian Mujahideen,” said Praveen Swami, an Indian journalist who has extensively researched both groups.

This could prove an obstacle to a resumption of talks between India and Pakistan, broken off after the Mumbai attack.

“If we’re going to see a heightened bombing offensive leading into the Commonwealth Games (in Delhi in October), there’s obviously going to be a problem, even if the scale of the attacks do not precipitate an India-Pakistan crisis per se,” he said.

Some analysts have dubbed the new campaign the “Karachi project”, named after the Pakistani city where they say disaffected Indian Muslims are brought for training.

“The purpose of the project is to deploy Indian Muslims to carry out attacks in India using locally available bomb material so that the attacks are not traced back to Pakistan,” wrote Indian analyst Animesh Roul this month in the CTC Sentinel, published by the Combating Terrorism Center at U.S. military academy West Point.

Pakistani officials say India is blaming Pakistan for “home-grown terrorism” fueled by anger over communal violence in which the majority of victims have been Indian Muslims. For example, several thousand Indian Muslims died in 2002 in riots in the state of Gujarat.

Analysts in both countries also see it as part of a propaganda campaign — mostly aimed at Washington — in which India and Pakistan try to prove the other is the main cause of problems in the region.

SPLINTERING INTO AFGHANISTAN

Along with its alleged support for the Indian Mujahideen, LeT is believed to have fighters in Afghanistan’s Kunar and Nuristan provinces, where U.S. forces have taken a beating from a scrum of different militant groups working together.

LeT has a history of involvement in Kunar and ran Kashmir training camps there for years, said Stephen Tankel, a U.S. researcher who is writing a book on the group.

“It’s questionable whether LeT is running its own operations there,” he said. “Its people are, however, taking part in training, recruiting, logistical support and fighting alongside other insurgent operations in and around Kunar.”

The group has also been linked to al Qaeda and, by Indian analysts, to February’s attack on Indian interests in Kabul.

Pakistani officials dismiss such talk as Indian propaganda and say any former LeT fighters involved in Afghanistan, or linked to al Qaeda, belong to splinter groups.

This argument about splintering is often offered by Pakistani security officials, and is commonly used to explain the Mumbai attack which they say was not endorsed by LeT founder Hafez Saeed.

It is an argument, however, that can cut both ways.

“You don’t get splintering in small organisations,” said Hussain at Quaid-i-Azam University. “You begin to splinter only when you are sprawling, when you are trying to become too big.”

(Editing by Chris Allbritton and Sanjeev Miglani)

(For more coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: http://www.reuters.com/places/afghanistan-pakistan)

US working with India on Af-Pak: Petraeus

The US is trying to reverse the momentum of the Taiban in Afghanistan and has been working actively with India with regard to the situation in the Af-Pak region, a top American General has said.

“It (India) is not in the title (of Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke), but he has certainly had a lot of activity with our Indian partners,” General David Petraeus, Commander of the US Central Command, told Charlie Rose Show on the PBS.

Appreciative of the recent Pakistani military operation against the Taliban and al-Qaeda along the Pak-Afghan border, Petraeus said the US forces in Afghanistan are trying to regain the momentum in the country.

“It (Taliban) has been resurgent. It did indeed have the momentum. And what we’re trying to do now is reverse that moment and take back areas they have been able to take control of,” Petraeus said.

The American General said that defeat of the Taliban in Kandahar is very important for victory in the war against terrorism.

“It really is the birthplace of the Taliban. It is also where the 9/11 attacks were originally conceived. That’s where they were planned. So it has enormous importance to the Taliban,” he said.

“It will not be a hub-to-hub offensive. This is not going to be something like the clearance of Ramadi or, say, southwestern Baghdad. This in fact is as much political as it is military,” he said.

Responding to a question on Pakistan, Petraeus said there has indeed been considerable progress by the Pakistani army and frontier corps against the Pakistani Taliban in the country’s northwest, including Swat and tribal areas, but clearly it is a very tough work.

“And again, the extremists there, the Pakistani Taliban and their confederates, have sought to fight back by doing what they do, which is carry out acts of indiscriminate violence against innocent civilians as they did before, as well, as they assassinated Benazir Bhutto and blew up visiting cricket teams and thousands and thousands of innocent Pakistani civilians and security force members,” he said.

Terrorised by Taliban tribals scoff Pak Army’s ‘war is over’ claims

London, Apr.21 (ANI): Local residents in Pakistan’s tribal regions, where the Army had initiated an all out offensive against the Taliban and other extremist groups last year, are still living in fear despite claims that the militants have been flushed out.

While the Pakistan Army has been claiming huge success against the Taliban and said that things were fast returning to normal in the rugged terrains, people here are still terrorised by the outlawed militant group, which clearly suggests that the ‘war in not over’.

“People are very intimidated. They have been terrorised by the Taliban. They are scared to go out at night. They are scared to speak. The war is not over,” The Times quoted a former army officer Khalid Munir, as saying.

The tribal region close to the Afghan border has witnessed a sudden increase in army’s action and terror strikes over the past fortnight.

A few days ago over 70 people, mostly civilians, were killed in an air raid by the air force. Nearly 45 people were killed in a suicide attack in Kohat last week.

Earlier this week, suicide bombers targeted a police station killing seven security officials. Another terror strike in a busy market place in Peshawar, the capital city of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) killed over 25 people.

The surge in violence certainly puts a question mark over the Pakistan Army’s repeated remark that normalcy in returning in the tribal region, and also suggests that they are nowhere near to being defeated. (ANI)

Pak Govt. urged to “stop treating militant outfits with kid gloves”

Kohat (Pakistan), Apr 19(ANI): After a series of suicide attacks, which rocked Northwestern Pakistan’s Kohat region over the weekend, the Pakistan Government has been urged to reconsider its policy and “stop treating militant outfits with kid gloves”.

An editorial in a leading Pakistan daily also demanded the government to launch a heavy crackdown to ensure security against such suicide attacks.

“The government has to take strict measures against terror groups to save the country from going up in flames. The government’s inconsistency in cracking down on militant outfits, especially the banned organizations, shows that there is a lack of requisite political will in curbing extremism,” an editorial in the Daily Times said.

It further said that the way the terrorist organizations are operating in the country, it exposes the inefficiency of the security agencies and stressed that pre-emptive measures have to be taken.

“Now that such attacks have targeted not only the security forces and government officials, but citizens as well in the length and breadth of the country, this has certainly thrown up a bigger challenge to the security agencies,” the editorial added.

Earlier on April 17, two suicide bombers dressed in burqas had attacked a refugee camp in Kohat, killing at least 41 and wounding more than 60 peoples.

The bombers struck minutes apart in the Kacha Pukha camp, a registration centre for people fleeing Taliban violence and Pakistani army operations close to the Afghan border.

Less than 24 hours after the attack, a powerful bomb exploded near the Bilitang police station in the same region.

At least seven people were killed and over 31 others were injured in the incident.

Nine security officials, including two personnel of the Frontier Constabulary and seven policemen, were among the 31 people injured in the attack. (ANI)

Pak Govt. urged to “stop treating militant outfits with kid gloves”

Kohat (Pakistan), Apr 19(ANI): After a series of suicide attacks, which rocked Northwestern Pakistan’s Kohat region over the weekend, the Pakistan Government has been urged to reconsider its policy and “stop treating militant outfits with kid gloves”.

An editorial in a leading Pakistan daily also demanded the government to launch a heavy crackdown to ensure security against such suicide attacks.

“The government has to take strict measures against terror groups to save the country from going up in flames. The government’s inconsistency in cracking down on militant outfits, especially the banned organizations, shows that there is a lack of requisite political will in curbing extremism,” an editorial in the Daily Times said.

It further said that the way the terrorist organizations are operating in the country, it exposes the inefficiency of the security agencies and stressed that pre-emptive measures have to be taken.

“Now that such attacks have targeted not only the security forces and government officials, but citizens as well in the length and breadth of the country, this has certainly thrown up a bigger challenge to the security agencies,” the editorial added.

Earlier on April 17, two suicide bombers dressed in burqas had attacked a refugee camp in Kohat, killing at least 41 and wounding more than 60 peoples.

The bombers struck minutes apart in the Kacha Pukha camp, a registration centre for people fleeing Taliban violence and Pakistani army operations close to the Afghan border.

Less than 24 hours after the attack, a powerful bomb exploded near the Bilitang police station in the same region.

At least seven people were killed and over 31 others were injured in the incident.

Nine security officials, including two personnel of the Frontier Constabulary and seven policemen, were among the 31 people injured in the attack. (ANI)

U.S. drone strike kills four militants in Pakistan

MIRANSHAH, Pakistan, April 14 (Reuters) – A suspected U.S. drone aircraft fired two missiles at a vehicle carrying Taliban fighters on Wednesday in Pakistan’s North Waziristan region near the Afghan border, killing four militants, Pakistani officials said.

The attack took place in Dattakhel village, 20 km (12 miles) west of Miranshah, the main town of the region, a santuary for al Qaeda and Taliban militants, intelligence officials said.

“The missiles hit a moving vehicle and we have reports of four dead,” an intelligence official in the region told Reuters.

Pakistan has expressed concern that the U.S. strikes anger the public and undermine its campaign against the Pakistani Taliban, even though the attacks have killed senior Taliban and al Qaeda figures fighting to topple the government.

U.S. officials say the pilotless drones are one of the most effective weapons against militants. (Reporting by Haji Mujtaba; Writing by Kamran Haider; Editing by Michael Georgy)