Afghan Taliban says rehearsed attack for two months

KABUL: The insurgents who mounted weekend attacks in central Kabul and other parts of Afghanistan carefully rehearsed for months, even building small military-style models and pre-positioning weapons, a Taliban spokesman said on Monday.

Za

bihullah Mujahid provided Reuters with a rare insight into how the group plans strategic high-profile attacks designed to deal a psychological blow to US-led Nato forces and their allies in the Afghan security forces.

In the latest, a 30-member suicide squad was dispatched to launch simultaneous assaults on parliament, Nato bases and Western embassies after two months of painstaking discussions on tactics.

“Our military experts sketched maps of the targets and also created a mock-up of them where fighters carried out practice before carrying out the large-scale operations in four provinces,” Mujahid said in a phone interview.

“The fighters also learned how to enter their targets and hold them.”

His account could not be independently verified.

Heavy street fighting between militants and security forces in the centre of the Afghan capital ended on Monday after 18 hours of gunfire, rocket attacks and explosions that bore strong similarities with an operation last year.

In both assaults, insurgents occupied high-rise construction sites to use as firebases after smuggling weapons into central Kabul past police checkpoints.

The battles that broke out at midday on Sunday gripped the city’s central districts into the evening and through the night, with blasts and gunfire lighting up alleys and streets before Afghan special forces soldiers backed by Nato helicopter gunships killed the insurgents.

Mujahid said the insurgents, who were mostly all killed by security forces, had been selected from among the estimated 50,000 fighters battling Nato and Afghan troops and given special training.

“Ordinary fighters can’t obviously carry out these important missions,” he said. “The fighters who were assigned for this mission received special training on how to use heavy machine guns, suicide bomb vests and other tactics.”

Mujahid said heavy machine guns, rocket grenades and ammunition had been put in place well before the assault with inside help from Afghan security forces, but did not elaborate.

A witness to the attack in Kabul’s diplomatic quarter saw insurgents in a dark blue Prado SUV opening fire on a policeman before entering a building that he had been guarding.

“One Taliban opened fire toward a security guard from a window of the vehicle and another went to a security checkpoint and wounded the man inside, occupying his position,” said Ahmad Zeya Azami, 29, a car mechanic, who worked next door.

“Five Taliban ran into the building.”

Azami said one insurgent targeted the multi-storey Kabul Star Hotel with a rocket-propelled grenade, while another opened fire on the nearby diplomatic quarter.

“I closed our shop and escaped from the area without any wounds. But now everybody is living in fear and losing hope about the future,” he said.

Ahmad Farhad, 19, another shopkeeper, said the insurgents had appeared calm and very well prepared.

“One went to the police checkpoint and others went into the building in an organized way, like they had seen the area before,” Farhad said. “All were wearing traditional clothes, black or grey, and all looked to be aged about 30.”

Farhad said the men had been armed with rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles, and some had carried bags as they climbed out of a black four-wheel-drive.

Afghan and US officials have blamed the attacks on the al-Qaida-linked Haqqani network, based along the porous Afghan-Pakistan mountain border.

Mujahid denied any involvement by the insurgent group, one of the most feared in Afghanistan. The United States has long pressed Pakistan to go after the Haqqani network, which analysts say Islamabad regards as a strategic asset.

Any Haqqani role in the weekend assault would likely further strain relations between Washington and Islamabad.

“The attacks were very successful for us and were a remarkable achievement, dealing a psychological and political blow to foreigners and the government,” Mujahid said.

“Although the Haqqanis are part of the Taliban, we did not ask for any help, guidance or support. This is a baseless plot from the West, who wants to show that we are separate.”

Taliban chief orders fighters to kill civilians-NATO

July 18 (Reuters) – NATO said on Sunday it had intercepted a letter from the reclusive leader of the Afghan Taliban in which he calls on his fighters to capture and kill any Afghan working for foreign forces.

If genuine, the letter marks a turnaround from a directive issued by Mullah Omar a year ago when he urged fighters to avoid harming civilians even if they had been captured. Reuters could not immediately verify the letter’s authenticity.

The appeal, which NATO said was picked up in early June, also instructs Taliban field commanders to recruit anyone with access to foreign military bases in order to obtain information on international troops, said NATO’s spokesman in Afghanistan.

“The message was from Mullah Omar, who’s hiding in Pakistan, to his subordinate commanders in Afghanistan,” Brigadier General Josef Blotz told a news conference in the Afghan capital.

The letter, which contains five specific orders, also calls on Taliban commanders to fight foreign troops to the death and capture them whenever possible as well as instructing fighters to obtain more heavy weapons. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK]

or see link.reuters.com/syx62d

Afghan blog: blogs.reuters.com/afghanistan/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

One order in the letter specifically calls on fighters to capture and kill Afghan women who are “helping or providing information to coalition forces”.

Blotz said he was “100 percent sure” the letter was from the Taliban leader, although he could not reveal how it had been verified in order to protect NATO’s sources.

The Taliban could not be immediately reached for comment.

Violence is at its worst in Afghanistan since U.S.-backed Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban in late 2001 for refusing to give up al Qaeda members following the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.

Omar, seen as the founder of the Taliban movement that emerged during the civil war of the early 1990s, has not been seen in public for years. He is believed to be in Pakistan.

While other leaders are believed to be more involved in the day-to-day command of the insurgency in Afghanistan, Omar is still considered the spiritual head of the hardline movement. (Reporting by Jonathon Burch; Editing by Maria Golovnina) (jonathon.burch@thomsonreuters.com; +93 794 354 074; Reuters Messaging: jonathon.burch.reuters.com@reuters.net)) (If you have a query or comment on this story, send an email to newsfeedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

‘US studying options for a possible Pakistan strike’

Washington, May 29 (IANS) The US military is reviewing options for a unilateral strike in Pakistan in the event that a successful terror attack on American soil is traced to the country’s tribal areas, according to the Washington Post.

Ties between the alleged Times Square bomber, Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad, and elements of the Pakistani Taliban have sharpened the Obama administration’s need for retaliatory options, the influential daily reported Saturday citing senior military officials.

A US reprisal, however would be contemplated only under extreme circumstances, such as a catastrophic attack that leaves President Barack Obama convinced that the ongoing campaign of CIA drone strikes is insufficient, the unnamed officials stressed.

The US options for potential retaliatory action rely mainly on air and missile strikes, but could also employ small teams of US Special Operations troops already positioned along the border with Afghanistan, the Post said.

Plans for military strikes in Pakistan have been revised significantly over the past several years, moving away from a ‘large, punitive response’ to more measured plans meant to deliver retaliatory blows against specific militant groups, one of the senior military officials was quoted as saying.

The official added that there is a broad consensus in the US military that airstrikes would at best erode the threat posed by Al Qaeda and its affiliates, and risk an irreparable rupture in the US relationship with Pakistan.

At the same time, the administration is trying to deepen ties to Pakistan’s intelligence officials in a bid to head off any attack by militant groups.

The United States and Pakistan have recently established a joint military intelligence centre on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar, and are in negotiations to set up another one near Quetta, the Pakistani city where the Afghan Taliban is based, the Post said citing US military officials.

US spy agencies have engaged in a major buildup inside Pakistan over the past year. The CIA has increased the pace of drone strikes against Al Qaeda affiliates, a campaign supported by the arrival of new surveillance and eavesdropping technology deployed by the National Security Agency, the Post said.

US studying options for possible Pakistan strike: Post

Washington, May 29 (IANS) The US is studying options of striking Pakistan if a successful terror attack is traced back to that country, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

Ties between the alleged Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad, and elements of the Pakistani Taliban have sharpened the Obama administration’s need for retaliatory options, senior defence officials were quoted as saying by the newspaper.

They stressed that a US reprisal would be contemplated only under extreme circumstances, such as a catastrophic attack that leaves President Barack Obama convinced that the ongoing campaign of Central Iintelligence Agency (CIA) drone strikes is insufficient.

‘Planning has been reinvigorated in the wake of Times Square,’ one of the officials told the Post.

At the same time, the administration is trying to deepen ties to Pakistan’s intelligence officials in a bid to head off any attack by militant groups.

The US and Pakistan have recently established a joint military intelligence centre on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar in Pakistan, and are in negotiations to set up another one near Quetta, the Pakistani city where the Afghan Taliban is based, according to the US military officials.

The ‘fusion centres’ are meant to bolster Pakistani military operations by providing direct access to U.S. intelligence, including real-time video surveillance from drones controlled by the US Special Operations Command, the Post report said.

But in an acknowledgement of the continuing mistrust between the two governments, the officials added that both sides also see the centres as a way to keep a closer eye on one another, as well as to monitor military operations and intelligence activities in insurgent areas.

President Obama said during his campaign for the presidency that he would be willing to order strikes in Pakistan, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a television interview after the Times Square attempt that ‘if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences.’

Obama dispatched his national security adviser, James L. Jones, and CIA Director Leon Panetta to Islamabad this month to deliver a similar message to Pakistani officials, including President Asif Ali Zardari and the military chief, Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani.

Jones and Panetta also presented evidence gathered by U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies that Shahzad received significant support from the Pakistani Taliban.

The US options for potential retaliatory action rely mainly on air and missile strikes, but could also employ small teams of US Special Operations troops already positioned along the border with Afghanistan.

One of the senior military officials said plans for military strikes in Pakistan have been revised significantly over the past several years, moving away from a ‘large, punitive response’ to more measured plans meant to deliver retaliatory blows against specific militant groups.

‘The general feeling is that we need to be circumspect in how we respond so we don’t destroy the relationships we’ve built’ with the Pakistani military, a second official said.

US Special Operations teams in Afghanistan have pushed for years to have wider latitude to carry out raids across the border, arguing that CIA drone strikes do not yield prisoners or other opportunities to gather intelligence.

But a 2008 US helicopter raid against a target in Pakistan prompted protests from officials in Islamabad who oppose allowing American soldiers to operate within their country.

The CIA has the authority to designate and strike targets in Pakistan without case-by-case approval from the White House. U.S. military forces are currently authorized to carry out unilateral strikes in Pakistan only if solid intelligence were to surface on any of three high-value targets: Al Qaeda leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, or Taliban chief Mohammad Omar. But even in those cases, the military would need higher-level approval.

The report quoting a senior US military official said the centres would be used to track the Afghan Taliban leadership council, known as the Quetta shura. But other officials said the main mission would be to support the US military effort across the border in Kandahar, Afghanistan, where a major US military push is planned.

Dismay over Red Cross giving first-aid training to Afghan Taliban

Washington, May 26 (ANI): Dismay prevails in certain sections of Afghan society over the Red Cross providing first aid training and medical aid to the Taliban, which has been at war with NATO troops for almost a decade.

Taliban insurgents fighting against British and American forces in Afghanistan controversially continue to receive first-aid training and are supplied with medical kits by the Red Cross. Some in the Afghan government, are unhappy that the Taliban is being given aid, as they believe that it could help sustain its forces in the field.

In an “operational update”, the International Committee for the Red Cross reported that it had trained and equipped “over 70 members of the armed opposition” as part of a programme to deal with battlefield injuries.

First-aid training and kits was also given to “arms carriers” and “civilians living in conflict areas”, 100 Afghan security forces personnel, taxi drivers used to transport the wounded and the Red Cross””s own staff.

Marco Baldan, the Red Cross””s chief surgeon and a recognised specialist in combat injuries, held a three-day war surgery workshop for 42 surgeons and doctors.

The Red Cross has remained neutral in global conflicts, a role that is accepted by NATO””s military commanders.

The Telegraph, however, quoted some Afghan Red Cross officials as saying that they were shocked at the lack of basic first aid facilities in a war ravaged zone.
They said that even in areas where health care was available, it was often difficult for the wounded to be transported during military operations like the recent offensive in Marja.

“Even after the fighting is over in a particular area, we””re having difficulty transporting patients to doctors,” an Afghan Red Crescent Society volunteer said.

He added: “Mines, checkpoints and general insecurity stop us getting through safely.” (ANI)

US proposal of opening a consulate in Quetta a security risk

Islamabad, May 21 (ANI): Pakistani law enforcement agencies have termed the US proposal of opening a consulate in Quetta a “security risk”.

In a report presented before the Pakistani Foreign Ministry, the agencies after gathering comprehensive information opposed the proposal and declared it a ‘security risk’, the sources said.

According to experts, Balochistan is rich in natural resources like coal, natural gas, gold, oil, silver, iron and several other minerals.

Owing to the Gwadar port, this part of the world has become a gateway for Central Asia and Afghanistan to reach out to the Middle East and Europe, the Daily Times reports.

Keeping in view the minerals and its geographical position, the officials said that many world powers, especially the US, were thinking of settling in Balochistan.

Geological experts said that the oil in the region flows from Iran into Iraq, from where it is drilled and supplied to the world.

Due to the law and order situation, foreign companies are reluctant to invest in exploration in Balochistan, which is the only reason why law enforcement agencies have opposed the US proposal.

Local diplomats said that the US was constructing an air base in Ormara Creek, while another base was being built at Bochik in the Chaghi area, from where the US security experts will be able to monitor developments in Iran and keep an eye on the Afghan Taliban and al Qaeda. (ANI)

Next big terrorist attack on US will be postmarked ‘Pakistan’: CIA analyst

Washington, May 15 (IANS) A former CIA analyst, who helped President Barack Obama formulate his Pakistan-Afghanistan policy, sees ‘a very serious possibility that the next mass casualty terrorist attack on the United States will be postmarked ‘Pakistan.”

‘What we’re seeing going on in Pakistan now is a very dangerous phenomenon,’ says Bruce Riedel, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution, in an interview with the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington think tank.

‘The ideology of Al Qaeda, the ideology of global Islamic jihad that all jihadists should focus on the United States as the ultimate enemy, is gaining ground with groups beyond Al Qaeda,’ said Riedel, who chaired a special interagency committee last year to develop Obama’s Af-Pak policy.

Obama and previous Bush administrations have been pressuring Pakistan for years to shut down completely the jihadist Frankenstein that was created over three decades in Pakistan, Riedel said. But ‘no Pakistani government has yet been willing to take on the entire network of terrorist groups.’

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has also raised questions about some in the Pakistani government still retaining links to Al Qaeda, the Afghan Taliban, the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba and a host of other groups.

‘We saw this in 2008 in Mumbai, when Lashkar-e-Taiba attacked Mumbai and attacked American and Israeli targets,’ Riedel said noting ‘Those are the targets of Al Qaeda and the global Islamic jihad.’

‘We’ve now seen the Pakistani Taliban try to launch an attack on the United States of America for the first time,’ he said referring to the arrest of Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad in connection to the failed car bombing in New York’s Times Square.

‘This spreading of the idea of global Islamic jihad is very dangerous and as it gets deeper and deeper into the extremist groups in Pakistan it means we can expect more attacks like the one we saw at Times Square, and we can expect them to become increasingly sophisticated and more capable,’ Riedel said.

Clinton has warned of ‘severe consequences’ for Pakistan in the event of a successful Pakistan-based terrorist attack in the United States.

But US options to act against Pakistan are ‘severely limited,’ Riedel said arguing the best option is ‘to get Pakistan to do more now’ in its fight against extremism, he says, by providing more weapons and technological aid.

Outcome of US-led ‘War On Terror’ hinges on ‘Battle Of Kandahar’ success

New York, May 12 (ANI): The slated US offensive against Taliban in Kandahar could be the defining moment in the US-led war on terror in Afghanistan. More than 20,000 US troops are being mobilized for the do-or-die operation that will see the US go all out to reclaim the nerve center of the Afghan Taliban.

According to Stephen Biddle, a civilian adviser to Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the outcome of the entire war is riding on it.

“If we fail to secure this population, it”s hard to see how the campaign could succeed,” CBS News quoted Biddle as saying.

The operation is already under way with more than a hundred Taliban operatives being reportedly captured or vanquished.

Operation Cooperation for Kandahar, the official name for the operation, is unprecedented in scale and far outstrips previous US attempts at weeding out the Taliban militia from Marjah.

Right now there are only 12,000 U.S., Canadian and Afghan troops in and around Kandahar, and according to Michael Semple, an Irish EU official who has spent more than two decades in Afghanistan and is a Taliban expert, that”s not enough to stop the Taliban”s reign of terror, the report said.

Between now and July, the number of troops will essentially double. American and Canadian troops will set up bases in the districts surrounding Kandahar and spread out into the villages where the Taliban have their safe havens, the report said.

At the same time, U.S. and Afghan forces will establish checkpoints – 40 in all – on roads leading into Kandahar. Inside the city, U.S. troops will man every police station alongside Afghan police, though Semple has his reservations about the Afghan Police’s ability.

“The weak point in the strategy is the Afghan police. They have yet to prove themselves,” Semple said.

“The operation in Kandahar is 100 times more important than the operation in Marjah, that was a sideshow; Kandahar is the real thing,” he added

The Marjah operation is still not over and U.S. officers do not expect the Kandahar operation to produce results until the end of the year. (ANI)

Pak court dismisses plea against extradition of Taliban No.2

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): The possible extradition of 12 Afghan Taliban militants, including Taliban No.2 Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, arrested by Pakistan has benn stalled after the Lahore High Court dismissed petitions regarding the extradition.

Chief Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif on Tuesday rejected the plea of petitioner’s lawyer Tariq Asad, stating that the petitioner, Khalid Khawaja, was now dead.

He said a fresh petition needed to be filed for the case to proceed, the Daily Times reports.

Khawaja was kidnapped and later killed by the Afghan Taliban.

The kidnappers had linked his release with the withdrawal of petitions pending in the Lahore High Court regarding their arrested men.

Khawaja had challenged the possible extradition of Mullah Baradar, Mullah Abdul Salam, Maulvi Kabir, Mullah Muhammad, Ameer Muawiya, Tayyab Agha, Hakeemuddin Mehsud, Mullah Tayyab Popalzai, Abdul Qayum Zakir, Musa and Mohtasim Agha and others. (ANI)

Some Pak officials know where Osama is: Clinton

Doing some tough talk on Pakistan, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said some people in its government are aware of the whereabouts of elusive al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Taliban chief Mullah Omar.

“Some Pakistani officials are more informed about al-Qaeda and Taliban than they let on,” Clinton told CBS in an interview.

“I am not saying that they are at the highest levels but I believe that somewhere in this government are people who know where Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda is, where Mullah Omar and the leadership of the Afghan Taliban is, and we expect more cooperation to help us bring to justice, capture or kill, those who attacked us on 9/11,” she said.

Over the weekend, Clinton warned Pakistan that it would face “very severe consequences” if any terror plot like the failed Times Square bombing was traced to that country.

Asked if the US was not getting sufficient cooperation from Islamabad, she acknowledged a “sea change” in cooperation by Pakistan but said “we want more”.

Her comments came as US officials, including Attorney General Eric Holder, said they had evidence that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attempt to set off a car bomb in Times Square.

Many western youth wanting to join ‘jihad’ after failed Times Square bombing: Taliban

New York, May 10 (ANI): The bungled Times Square bombing plot has actually helped the Taliban gain wide scale publicity which has resulted in more and more youngsters like Faisal Shahzad wanting to join the ‘jihad’ (holy war) against the west, a top Afghan Taliban leader has said.

“We”ve got more publicity from this one failed bombing in New York than from more than 100 bombings in Afghanistan,” a report in the Newsweek magazine quoted the high-ranking Taliban commander, as saying.

The report, however, didn’t disclose the name of the Taliban commander.

He claimed that there are many foreign youngsters like Shahzad, the naturalised American citizen of Pakistan origin who is accused of plotting the Times Square bombing, who send e-mails seeking to join the terror outfit.

“With all this new technology, it”s not difficult to recruit people in the West. It”s hard to contact Al Qaeda. But it”s very easy to get in touch with the Pakistani Taliban,” the Daily News quoted Taliban commander, as adding in the report.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has denied any role in the failed bombing plot, but has praised Shahzad’s ‘noble’ work.

However, US agencies are probing the possibility of the TTP and other banned terror group such as the Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM) financing and helping Shahzad in getting trained in bomb making. (ANI)

Pakistan still sees India as major threat, says top US general

Washington, May 8 (IANS) Pakistan still sees India as its major thereat even as it has stepped up action against militants realising the ‘very existential threat’ posed by the Pakistani Taliban and some of its allies, according to a top US general.

‘India is still seen as the major state-based threat,’ General David H. Petraeus, the head of US Central Command who has just returned from a visit to Pakistan said in an interview to Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington think tank.

‘In fact they’ve just completed an exercise, some 50,000 Pakistani military forces, similar to the old NATO exercises that we used to run in the days of the Cold War,’ he noted when asked if he had seen a shift in the Pakistani army’s thinking about its enemies.

‘So there’s no question about the image still in their mind of the threat that is posed by India to their security.’

‘Having said that, the most pressing threat that emerged to their very ‘writ of governance,’ as they term it, came to be seen as that posed by the Pakistani Taliban-again, in particular over the course of the last year or eighteen months,’ Petraeus said.

‘The developments of the last year in Pakistan are significant in that you saw the people, the leaders, and the bulk of the clerics all recognize the very existential threat that was posed by the Pakistani Taliban, the Tehrik-i-Taliban, and some of its allies,’ he said.

The Pakistani Taliban’s claim of responsibility for the failed Times Square bombing also highlights the potential threat ‘between some of these organizations and transnational extremism at large,’ the general said.

Formed in 2007, the Pakistani Taliban has almost exclusively targeted elements of the Pakistani state. But the attack on New York City suggests its ambitions are expanding.

‘There is clearly a symbiotic relationship between all of these different organizations; Al Qaeda, the Pakistani Taliban, the Afghan Taliban, TNSM [Tehreek-e-Nafaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi],’said Petraeus.

He added that it’s not surprising that militants would look to wage attacks on American soil. ‘There are a lot of organizations out there that are wannabe international terrorist organizations,’ he said, ‘because that’s how you garner resources.’

Kidnapped ex-ISI official in Punjabi Taliban’s captivity: Family

Islamabad, Apr.22 (ANI): A day after kidnapped former Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) official Khalid Khawaja’s wife blamed the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) for her husband’s abduction, a press release from Khawaja’s family has stated that he along with his former colleague Colonel Imam and British filmmaker, Asad Qureshi, were taken up by the Punjabi Taliban.

All the three men were kidnapped from North Waziristan while they were shooting a documentary film in the restive region.

According to the press release issued by Khawaja’s family, they visited the tribal region on the “precise invitation of the High Command of Tehrik-e-Taliban of North and South Waziristan as their respected guests for the purpose of making a documentary highlighting the present situation in the area and its impact on the indigenous population.”

The statement also revealed that a man who identified himself as Usman Punjabi had called Khwaja’s family to put forth the abductors demands, The News reports.

It is pertinent to mention here that on Monday a group calling itself the ‘Asian Tigers’ released videos of Khawaja and others who were kidnapped, saying that they were in the Taliban’s custody.

Khwaja’s former colleague Colonel Imam is credited for creating the Taliban in the 1990s.

It is said that both Colonel Imam and Khawaja, worked with the mujahideen resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in the 1980s.

Since retiring from the ISI, Khawaja had turned into a human rights campaigner. He has defended Al-Qaeda suspects and filed petitions against extradition of the Taliban’s second man in command Mullah Baradar to Afghanistan.

Khawaja remained more active on the domestic front. He had once claimed that he hosted Al-Qaeda chieftain Osama bin Laden prior to 9/11. He had also claimed that Laden had visited his Islamabad residence often.

Col. Imam is said to have a closer relationship with the Afghan Taliban, and he worked on behalf of the Pakistani authorities. (ANI)

Hospital blast kills 10 in Pakistan

A suicide bomber has killed 10 people, including a TV journalist and senior police officials, in a suspected attack against Sh’ite Muslims inside a hospital in Pakistan’s southwestern city of Quetta.

A member of parliament from the ruling Pakistan People’s Party was among the scores wounded in the attack outside the emergency ward of the hospital in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan, officials said.

“Ten people, including two senior police officials, were killed in the attack and another 47 wounded,” provincial police chief Rehmatullah Niazi said.

A cameraman from the private TV news channel Samaa was among the dead, while five other reporters were injured. They were in the hospital to cover the arrival of the body of a Shi’ite man killed in a drive-by shooting earlier in the day.

Another senior police official said it was a suicide attack. The official said it appeared to be a sectarian attack against Shi’ites.

Police said 15 kilograms of explosives were used in the bomb that badly damaged the emergency ward building. Broken window glass and pools of blood marked the scene of the attack.

Shi’ite Muslims are a minority in Pakistan, which is about 80 per cent Sunni, and thousands of people have been killed in sectarian violence across the country in the past 30 years.

The country’s biggest and poorest province of Baluchistan has also suffered a decades-long low-level insurgency by Baluch separatists who are demanding more provincial autonomy and control of its resources.

The leadership council of the Afghan Taliban, known as the Quetta shura, is widely believed to be based in Afghan refugee camps outside the city, although Pakistani officials deny that.

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, April 11

April 11 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan at 1730 GMT on Sunday:

* Shows new or updated item.

KANDAHAR – Four Afghan deminers were killed and 18 others were wounded by a homemade bomb on Saturday in Daman district of southern Kandahar province, said Mohd Ibrahim, a doctor at the main hospital in the province said.

* KUNDUZ – Three Afghan soldiers were killed during a clash with Taliban insurgents in an area of northern Kunduz province overnight, the Defence Ministry said on Sunday.

* KUNDUZ – President Hamid Karzai cancelled a planned meeting with the German troops of the NATO-led force after rockets landed outside the troops’ base in Kunduz on Sunday, an officer for the troops said.

* SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN – Two service members from the NATO-led force were killed by homemade bombs in separate incidents in the south of the country, the alliance said.

* GHAZNI – An Afghan army soldier opened fire on NATO-led troops, slightly wounding one of them on Saturday in Ghazni province to the southwest of Kabul, an alliance official said.

* BADAKHSHAN – Afghan Taliban ambushed a convoy carrying provincial police officials of northeastern Badakhshan late on Saturday, wounding a district police chief and killing one of his body guards, an official said on Sunday. (Compiled by Jonathon Burch, Peter Graff and Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Pak plays old game; boosts troops on Indian border to mask failure of Taliban campaign

London, Mar.26 (ANI): Pakistan has deployed more troops on the eastern border with India, saying the heightened tension with the neighbouring country has affected its efforts against the Taliban and other extremist organisations on the western border.

Confirming the report about reinforcement of troops on the Indian border, Pakistan’s High Commissioner to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, said that India had increased pressure on the border by building several new military cantonments close to the sensitive frontier, and Islamabad can not remain subservient to the move.

“The government has had to send some troops down there because we don”t want to leave ourselves exposed. This is taking away from our defence capabilities on the Afghan border. We really wish the international community would intervene, but nobody has said anything to the Indians,” The Financial Times quoted Hasan, as saying.

Experts and diplomats, however, have described the troops reinforcement as more of a political and diplomatic move rather than a strategic one.

“Every time Pakistan has to defend itself on criticism for gaps in its campaign, they bring up India. The campaigns in Waziristan cannot be expanded because of India, for example, is one issue,” the newspaper quoted a western diplomat, who is based in Islamabad, as saying.

Ashley Tellis, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that the recent arrests of top Taliban leaders in Pakistan, including the Afghan Taliban’s second in-command Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, was primarily motivated by wanting to dent the negotiations between Kabul and the international community and the Taliban.

“Pakistan is motivated by the conviction that India, not the Afghan Taliban, is the main enemy to be neutralised in the Afghan endgame,” Tellis said.

Former Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri also admitted that despite calls from the international community to reduce tension, Islamabad would continue to prioritise its eastern border to protect itself against a rival with which it had fought “three major wars and two minor ones”.

“We have enough problems of our own on our eastern border. We are concerned about India. Resolve the problems with India and then our security orientation could change,” Kasuri said. (ANI)

Pak rejects ex-UN official’s remarks over Taliban peace talks being ‘blocked’

Islamabad, Mar.20 (ANI): Pakistan has rejected former UN envoy to Afghanistan Kai Eide’s remarks that the arrest of some top Taliban commanders in the country has blocked the reconciliation process with the extremists.

“The fact of the matter is that Mullah Baradar’s arrest was a joint operation with the US and had nothing to do with talks or reconciliation,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basit said.

Responding to the top UN official’s statement, Basit said Pakistan itself has been calling for talks with the Taliban and Eide’s remarks were a ‘misinterpretation’ of Islamabad’s aims.

“Pakistan is committed to support an Afghanistan-led reintegration and reconciliation process. So, any other contentions, we believe, are a misrepresentation and misinterpretation of our intentions,” he added.

Earlier, admitting that there were secret negotiations going on with the Afghan Taliban, Eide had criticised Pakistan for the arrests of high-profile Taliban leaders, including the second-in command Mullah Ghani Baradar, which he said has ‘completely stopped a channel of secret communications with the UN.’

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has also questioned the basis of Eide’s statement.

“I do not understand why has he given such a statement?” Qureshi said.

He reiterated that the arrest of Barader, who is considered second only to the Taliban chief Mullah Omar, was part of a joint operation between Pakistani and US forces, adding: “Islamabad has always backed reconciliation process in Afghanistan.” (ANI)

Pakistan Army not interested in politics: Holbrooke

Lahore, Mar. 15 (ANI): US President Barack Obama’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, has said that the Pakistan Army is no longer interested in playing a role in the country’s volatile political scene.

The Daily Times quoted him as saying that while Pakistan’s political scenario is still complicated, the overall situation has improved compared to the previous year.

He pointed out that there has been a significant improvement in Pak-US relations in the last 13 months.

“In the last 13 months, since this administration took over [in the US], there has been a significant improvement across the board in the relationship between our government and the government of Pakistan,” Holbrooke said.

In an interview with CNN, Holbrooke said that al Qaeda’s top 10 to 12 key leaders were killed last year, and the loss of frontline leadership had put al Qaeda under tremendous pressure.

“Al Qaeda is under great pressure after losing key members of its leadership,” Holbrooke said, adding that the arrest of Mullah Baradar, al Qaeda’s military leader in Afghanistan, as a significant development.

Holbrooke also said the distinction between Afghan and Pakistan Taliban is eroding.

“It has allowed Pakistan to take a much more forward-leaning position. There was above all a backlash from the excesses of the Taliban in Swat, South Waziristan, and their attacks in places like Lahore, Rawalpindi, Islamabad and Karachi have all contributed to an evolution,” he said.

When asked whether Pakistan would launch an operation against the Afghan Taliban, suspected to be hiding in North Waziristan, Holbrooke said it was up to the Pakistanis to decide. (ANI)

Holbrooke ‘agnostic’ over Pak’s sudden change of policy against Taliban

Washington, Mar.5 (ANI): Notwithstanding the recent surge in action against extremist commanders in Pakistan, President Obama’s Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke has said he is “agnostic” about whether Islamabad has actually turned decisively against the Afghan Taliban.

In an interview to The Financial Times, Holbrooke said he is unable to judge whether Pakistan’s policy against the Afghan Taliban, which was created by Islamabad itself, has really changed.

“Everyone has asked the same question. How do you know? Have we turned a corner? I’m not prepared to make those judgments, and you’ll have to ask the Pakistanis that. I’m an agnostic at this point as to whether this was a policy change (by Islamabad) or a serendipitous collection of discreet events.”

Responding to a question regarding the arrest of Afghan Taliban’s second in-command Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar from Karachi, Holbrooke said he has “no problems” with the Lahore High Court’s denial to extradite the Taliban commander to Afghanistan.

When asked about President Obama’s proposed pull out from Afghanistan next year, he said the plan to start pulling out from the region from July 2011 would go as per the schedule.

“Some people have either wilfully or through ignorance misrepresented that as the withdrawal date. It’s the beginning of withdrawals at a pace and size [to be] determined by the situation,” Holbrooke said.

He also admitted that US and allied forces are facing a “daunting” task in Afghanistan and “it is much too early” to predict the outcome of the struggle.

“You can’t occupy every piece of terrain, so the real key is building and transferring control to the Afghan security forces. It’s much too early. I’m not ready to predict how it is going to turn out because it is a difficult challenge,” Holbrooke said. (ANI)

Experts wary of Pak’s ‘double game’ behind US’ back

Washington, Mar.5 (ANI): The Pakistan Army’s ‘successful’ offensive in restive tribal regions of the country and the recent arrests of top militant commanders in Karachi and from other parts of the country, might be seen as a shift in Islamabad’s policies, but concerns are that it may be playing a “double game”.

According to Daniel Markey, a South Asia expert at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and a State Department official during the Bush administration, while Pakistan has romped up action against extremists breeding on its soil in the recent past, concerns regarding it playing a “double game” of supporting extremists behind the United States” back still remains.

“We are seeing things now that we had, in previous years, only hoped for,” The USA Today quoted Markey, as saying.

Bruce Riedel, President Obama’s key advisor on the revamped Af-Pak policy, also pointed out that the arrest of Afghan Taliban’s second in-command Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar and other top militant commanders is a significant move, particularly when Pakistan has maintained that there were no Taliban leaders in the country.

“He is a big fish. This is something the United States has been pressing Pakistan to do since the Bush administration,” Riedel said.

Shuja Nawaz, an analyst with the Atlantic Council, also raised questions over Pakistan’s efforts and said that the recent steps are “window dressing” designed to undermine the potential peace talks with the Taliban.

Nawaz and other analysts believed that the real test for Pakistan is whether it clamps down on the extremists flourishing inside its border who have, till now, remained untouched by the state.

One such extremist group is the Jalaluddin Haqqani network, which operates in the North Waziristan.

“The Haqqani network is one of the most deadly organizations, especially for U.S. troops. A more robust effort to target them would be a very positive signal,” said Lt. Gen. David Barno, a Pakistan expert at the National Defense University. (ANI)