China making armed drones; eyes Pak, Arab states for sales

WASHINGTON: China has ramped up its research in drone technology and is in the process of building armed, jet-propelled unmanned planes, which it plans to sell to countries like Pakistan.

Though much of this work remains secret, the large number of drones at recent exhibitions underlines not only China’s determination to catch up in that sector – by building equivalents to the leading US combat and surveillance models, the Predator and the Global Hawk – but also that its desire to sell this technology abroad, a media report has said.

“No country has ramped up its research in recent years faster than China. It displayed a drone model for the first time at the Zhuhai air show five years ago, but now every major manufacturer for the Chinese military has a research center devoted to drones,” the Washington Post recently said quoting Chinese analysts.

Not only the Chinese are trying to make state of the art armed drones, they are also eyeing the international market. “The United States doesn’t export many attack drones, so we’re taking advantage of that hole in the market,” said
Zhang Qiaoliang, a representative of the Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute, which manufactures many of the most advanced military aircraft for the People’s Liberation Army.

“The main reason is the amazing demand in the market for drones after 9/11.”
According to the daily, Pakistan has said it plans to obtain armed drones from China, which has already sold the nation one for surveillance.

As per Aviation Industry Corp of China, it has begun offering international customers a combat and surveillance drone comparable to the Predator called the Yilong, or “pterodactyl” in English.

Zhang, of the Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute, said the company anticipates sales in Pakistan, the Middle East and Africa.

‘US halted drone attacks from Pak 3 months ago’

ISLAMABAD: The US has halted the launch of Predator drone strikes against al-Qaida and other militant leaders from an airbase in Pakistan after a dispute over a CIA contractor who shot dead two Pakistani citizens in Lahore in January, a US newspaper quoted Pakistani and US officials as saying.

The Shamsi airbase in Baluchistan has been one of the facilities that Pakistan provided to the US for its counter-terrorism operations in the region. Under a secret arrangement, Islamabad had allowed the US to use the Shamsi airbase for its covert drone operations inside Pakistan’s tribal areas.

The US has been using the place for more than seven years to launch Predator and Reaper drone strikes against al-Qaida and Taliban hideouts. The CIA presence at Shamsi was detected in 2004, when the first drone strikes were launched from the base. Google Earth images showed Predator drones parked on the runway at the base.

In recent days, Pakistan claimed that it had asked the US to close its operations from Shamsi following the secret commando raid in Abbottabad in May in which al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was killed.

The Washington Post reported on Saturday that the US stopped drone strikes from Shamsi in April after a diplomatic row over a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistani nationals in Lahore, weeks before the raid on bin Laden’s safe heaven.

“US personnel and Predator drones remain at the facility, in the southwestern province of Baluchistan, with security provided by the Pakistani military,” officials told the Post, adding that the US drone strikes inside Pakistan in the past three months have been launched from an airbase in Afghanistan. The latest drone strike was on June 20 in Pakistan’s Kurram Agency.

Although Pakistan had tacitly allowed the US to launch drone strikes, the country’s civilian leadership always condemned such attacks to avoid public wrath.

According to revelations by WikiLeaks, Pakistani leaders told the US to continue its strikes in the tribal areas against al-Qaida and Taliban and assured them that they will handle the situation in the country by condemning and protesting the lethal attacks.

In another version of the story, Pakistan’s civilian officials recently said that they closed the Shamsi base in retaliation for an American reduction in coalition support funds, a multibillion-dollar subsidy for Pakistani military operations.

Pakistan’s defence minister Ahmed Mukhtar said on Wednesday “the US had been told to stop launching strikes from Shamsi”. The US personnel had already started to shift equipment from the base, he added.

The US officials, however, rejected the claim and said: “This is news to us. American operations against terrorists in Pakistan are continuing.”

Pakistan’s senior air force official told the country’s legislators in a briefing after bin Laden’s killing that Shamsi Airbase was built by the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The area was sold to them by the government in late 1990′s. The Arab Sheikhs use the base for facilitating their trips of hunting falcons.

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)

Unmanned hunter

Washington, June 5 — While part of the reason for Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad’s abortive car bombing in New York’s Times Square is said to have been the US campaign of Predator strikes in Pakistani territory, this strategy is now central to how the Obama Administration approaches quelling terrorist outfits in that country especially in North Waziristan. According to the latest data from Long War Journal, which is the standard for tracking covert airstrikes in Pakistan, the number of such attacks till May 15 this year has already matched that for 2008 and could soon equal that for all of last year. There have been 36 strikes this year as against 53 in 2009. Intelligence analyst and Long War Journal’s Managing Editor Bill Roggio said, “It could break last year’s total some time in July at this pace.” While the strategy originally had been to strike at high value target, it now also involves targeting Al Qaeda’s external networks, those that want to strike in the US, as well as the training camps of the multitude of terror outfits that have made their base mainly in North Waziristan. Even Punjabi Taliban groups appear to have moved to the North after the Pakistan Army’s operations in South Waziristan. While there has been pressure from the US on Pakistan to move into North Waziristan, especially after the Times Square episode, Pakistan’s Army has been reluctant to do so. In fact, the group which Shahzad was linked to, the Tehrik-e-Taliban or the Pakistan Taliban is centred in North Waziristan. That is where he also received training in bomb making. In addition, while the majority of attacks are undertaken by the MQ-1 Predator, another advanced drone, the MQ-9 Reaper has also been introduced into the theater. However, there are no numbers for a break down of strikes by category of drone.

An official said, “The US Air Force proposed the MQ-9 system in response to the Department of Defense request for Global War on Terrorism initiatives. It is larger and more powerful than the MQ-1 Predator and is designed to go after time-sensitive targets with persistence and precision, and destroy or disable those targets.”

U.S. believes it killed al Qaeda No. 3

(Reuters) – Al Qaeda’s third-in-command, whose role spanned from operations to fundraising, is believed to have been killed last month in a U.S. missile strike in Pakistan, dealing a serious blow to the embattled group.

World

Sheikh Sa’id al-Masri, also known as Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, was believed to be killed along with members of his family in a strike by a pilotless CIA-operated drone attack. Al Qaeda confirmed his death in a statement on a Islamist website earlier on Monday.

“We have strong reason to believe … that al-Masri was killed recently in Pakistan’s tribal areas,” a U.S. official in Washington said on condition of anonymity. “In terms of counterterrorism, this would be a big victory.”

A Pakistani security official said Yazid was most probably killed in a missile strike in North Waziristan on the night of May 21.

“We had a report at the time that one Arab was killed in that strike with some of his family members and I think it was probably him,” said the official, who declined to be named.

The attack targeted a house owned by a tribesman some 25 km (15 miles) west of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, a stronghold of al Qaeda and Taliban militants that borders Afghanistan.

Intelligence officials at the time said six militants were killed but residents said 12 people, including four women and two children, were killed. Six women and two children were wounded and treated at a hospital in Miranshah, residents said.

“He was known as Mustafa in the area. His wife was killed in the strike,” a resident of the village where attack took place said on condition of anonymity.

The U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors Islamist websites, said earlier on Monday that al-Qaeda announced al-Masri’s death in an Internet posting.

In addition to al-Masri, the announcement stated that his wife, three of his daughters, his granddaughter and other men, women and children were killed, according to SITE.

The CIA has stepped up the pace of unmanned aerial drone attacks, targeting not only high-level al Qaeda and Taliban targets but largely unknown foot soldiers as well.

A U.S. official said al-Masri was widely seen as al Qaeda’s No. 3 figure and its main conduit to leader Osama bin Laden.

As al Qaeda’s chief operating officer, he had a hand in everything from finances to operational planning, the official said.

CAPACITY DAMAGED, COMMITMENT REMAINS

Analysts say his death will be a major loss for al Qaeda but there would be no weakling of the group’s fighting resolve.

“Definitely it will have an impact because it was their important figure, it’s a big loss for them but there appears to be a generational change taking place in al Qaeda where new ones are replacing old ones,” said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a newspaper editor and expert on militant affairs.

“Al Qaeda’s capacity to operate and strike has been badly damaged because of their losses in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq but we have not yet seen any weakening of their commitment.”

A senior intelligence official in Islamabad said al Qaeda’s No. 3 position was “the most dangerous” rank in the group.

Five other al Qaeda leaders considered third-in-command have been killed or captured since the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, but al-Masri may be the most difficult to replace.

“They’re not getting enough people of the right caliber that they require as they were getting earlier,” the intelligence official said, crediting pressure from the drone strikes, Pakistani military actions in the tribal areas and stepped-up intelligence actions in the rest of Pakistan.

Yazid served as al Qaeda’s leader in Afghanistan and as well as al Qaeda’s “chief financial officer,” according to the U.S. 9-11 commission.

As chief financier, he was responsible for disbursing al Qaeda funds, making him one of the most trusted and important leaders of the group.

He was a founding member of Ayman al Zawahiri’s branch of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, one of the original groups that merged to form al Qaeda. Following the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981, al-Masri was implicated in the killing along with Zawahiri and others, and they spent time in jail together.

He also served as a top propagandist for al Qaeda and the Taliban.

In March, U.S. officials said a drone strike in Pakistan killed a key al Qaeda planner.

Turkey sees no impact on Israel drone delivery

June 1 (Reuters) – Turkey’s Defence Minister Vecdi Gonul said on Tuesday a diplomatic crisis with Israel after the Jewish state stormed a Turkish-backed aid convoy will not affect the planned delivery of Israel-made Heron drones to Turkey.

Israel’s long-time Muslim ally Turkey has recalled its envoy to Israel and cancelled joint military exercises after Israeli marines raided an aid flotilla bound for Gaza on Monday.

Earlier this year, the two countries, which have a close military alliance, wrapped up the purchase of 10 Heron drones in a deal worth $180 million. (Reportingby Tulay Karadeniz; Writing by Ibon Villelabeitia; Editing by David Stamp)

Five killed in US drone strike in Pak’s Khyber region

Peshawar, May 16 (ANI): At least five persons were killed and many others injured in a suspected US drone strike in Khyber region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan.

While unmanned Predator aircrafts regularly target militant hideouts located in the volatile tribal regions along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, the missile hit, which military and intelligence officials said targeted a house and a truck loaded with extremists, is probably the first such drone attack in the region.

The death toll could not be confirmed independently with some sources saying it could be anywhere between five to fifteen, The Dawn reports.

Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-American sentiments amongst the population, it is believed that it was sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs.

More than 850 people have been killed in over 90 such strikes in Pakistan since August 2008, with a surge in the past year as President Barack Obama has put Pakistan at the heart of his fight against Al-Qaeda. (ANI)

Pak agencies arrest Times Square bomber’s local TTP facilitator

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Pakistani security agencies have arrested a man having links with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), who claims that he assisted Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomber, US officials have said.

“The suspect in Pakistani custody is believed to have a connection to the TTP. Clues have added to authorities” understanding of the plot, but what is definitely true is that a lot of this comes from the statements of people directly involved,” The Washington Post quoted a US intelligence official, who refused to be named, as saying.

U.S. officials declined to identify the suspect, but said American investigators have direct access to him, and described him as a facilitator for the TTP.

Officials privy to the probe said the suspect, during interrogation, described the whole story about the Shahzad’s arrival in Karachi last year and his travel north to Waziristan for training with elements of the Pakistani Taliban.

However, some other US official, briefed on the investigations said there are some “conflicts and disconnects” in the accounts of Shahzad and the man in custody.

The discrepancies center mainly on the details and chronology of Shahzad”s travel and training. The conflicts have raised some questions about the reliability of the suspects” information, but have not cast significant doubt on the overall understanding of the plot, they said.

American officials also believe that Shahzad and the man arrested have presented an exaggerated account of the their terror tale.

Both the suspects claim to have met TTP chieftain Baitullah Mehsud, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone attack, however, US officials are sceptical that Mehsud would risk a ‘face-to-face’ meeting with a new recruit, that too of foreign origin.

Meanwhile, Pakistani officials have also claimed to have detained five persons from a mosque in Karachi who are said to be members of the banned extremist outfit Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM). Officials believe that Shahzad is believed to have visited the mosque during his long stay in Pakistan earlier this year. (ANI)

US drones pound North Waziristan, four militants killed

Islamabad, May 11 (ANI): US drones showered 10 missiles on a suspected militant hideout killing at least four militants in Lawara Mandi area of the volatile North Waziristan region, security officials said.

Confirming the attack, a senior security official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, said five unmanned aircrafts targeted a house and a vehicle parked outside firing 10 missiles.

A local security official also confirmed the missile hit, saying the death toll may rise as several other people were also wounded in the attack, The News reports.

This was the second drone strike in less than a couple of days in the region.

On Sunday (May 9), at least 10 suspected extremists were killed and several others wounded in a similar attack on Inzarkas village, situated some 50 kilometres west of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan.

The missile hit has come amidst reports that the United States is planning to greatly expand the use of drones against militants in Pakistan’s troubled tribal regions along the Afghanistan border following the failed Times Square bombing plot, which was masterminded by an American citizen of Pakistan origin, Faisal Shahzad.

US drones routinely target Taliban and Al Qaeda commanders in country’s tribal regions.

A US drone strike in Miranshah in February killed Muhammad Haqqani, a brother of al Qaeda-linked warlord Sirajuddin Haqqani, whose network is fighting against US and local forces in Afghanistan.

The frequency of missile hits has increased considerably in North Waziristan following a bomb attack on a CIA camp in Afghanistan in December last year, which killed seven top US intelligence officials.

Although Pakistan publicly opposes the attacks, saying they violate its sovereignty and fuel anti-Americanism among the population, it is believed that it was sharing intelligence with the US about the insurgents and their hide-outs. (ANI)

US to attack extremists on Pak soil if it doesn’t do so itself: ex-CIA official

Washington, May 10 (ANI): With the US authorities almost certain that the confessed Time Square bomber Faisal Shahzad was trained by the Tehreeke-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton giving Islamabad the most stringent warning of them all till date, President Barack Obama is likely to tell the Pakistani leadership that they have got very little or no choice but to launch assault against extremists in their stronghold North Waziristan.

A former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) official, Arthur Keller said it is likely that US will ask Pakistan to launch a military offensive in North Waziristan, where Shahzad is believed to have received the terror training or it will do so itself.

“If you”re not going to help, just get the hell out of the way,” is what Keller believes Washington would tell Islamabad.

Keller, while quoting from a speech that Obama had delivered in August 2007 on foreign policy, stressed that Obama, the then presidential hopeful had clarified that US would not hesitate to target militants across Pakistan.

“If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and Pakistan won”t act, we will,” the then Senator Obama had said.

Keller pointed out while ground operations by US troops inside Pakistan’s territory were difficult, the CIA, which has been operating the drone strikes, and the Special Operations Command (SOC) would be allowed to expand their operation in the troubled country.

“CIA and Special Operations Command could get license to operate more freely.That”s a logical escalation,” The Daily News quoted Keller, as saying.

“It”s almost like a Sicilian vendetta killing cycle,” he added. (ANI)

Pak security forces kill over 43 Taliban in separate clashes in FATA

Islamabad, May 10 (ANI): Over 43 extremists have been killed in separate operations conducted by Pakistan security forces across the Federally Administered Tribal Areas over the last 24 hours.

Ground troops assisted by fighter jets killed at least 33 militants in Orakzai Agency, officials said.

Pakistan Air Force jets pounded suspected Taliban hideouts in Kasha, Teerangra , Khawri and other regions killing over 10 militants, The Daily Times reports.

Security forces also claimed to have killed two Taliban commanders in Swat.

On Sunday, at least 10 suspected extremists were killed and several others wounded in a US drone strike in North Waziristan

Security officials said unmanned aircrafts targeted a suspected militant hideout in Inzarkas village, situated some 50 kilometres west of Miranshah, the main town in the volatile North Waziristan region killing 10 extremists on the spot.

“The missiles struck a militant compound in the village, killing at least 10 rebels,” a local security official said.

“It was, however, not immediately known if any high-value target was present in the area at the time of attack,” the official added.

The missile hit came amidst reports that the United States is planning to greatly expand the use of drones against militants in Pakistan’s troubled tribal regions along the Afghanistan border following the failed Times Square bombing plot, which was masterminded by an American citizen of Pakistan origin, Faisal Shahzad. (ANI)

US piles on pressure on Pak to pound terror training camps

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Amidst the wide scale outburst against Pakistan that it has to act against terror breeding groups flourishing on its soil especially after the failed New York bombing, the United States has stressed that Islamabad must not hesitate to take on the extremists threatening it and the world.

Addressing a regular press briefing here, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell romped up pressure on Pakistan to take stiff measures against terror training camps operating in the country.

Referring to the Times Square bombing plot, Morrell said the incident underlines the need for “all to continue aggressive operations in going after terrorists wherever they reside”.

He parried questions over the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operated drone strikes in Pakistan, but added that the incident would ‘reinvigorate’ both Washington and Islamabad to confront these threats more effectively.

Separately, Michele Flournoy, Under-secretary of Defence for Policy, also denied to comment on reports that US is contemplating expanding drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal regions, but admitted that the Obama Administration is concerned over the presence of militant training camps in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

“Afghanistan-Pakistan, that border region, has been the sort of locus of the sort of heartland, if you will, of Al Qaeda for many years,” Flourney said while testifying before the House Armed Services Committee.

“And so I think denying them sanctuary and safe haven there, disrupting them there has a powerful impact on the global network,” The Dawn quoted her, as adding.

Meanwhile, media reports quoting some ‘unidentified’ US officials said that the Obama administration had quietly allowed the CIA to expand drone strikes in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal regions along the country’s border with Afghanistan. (ANI)

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)

Taliban, Pak Punjab terror groups’ coalition fast turning into a ‘witches’ brew’: Experts

New York, May 7 (ANI): When it was being believed that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have been dealt a heavy blow by the Pakistan Army and continuous US drone strikes, the extremist outfit seems to have survived through all attempts to dismantle its terror network by aligning with other splinter groups, specially those which operate from Pakistan’s Punjab province and have India on top of their ‘jihad’ hit list, officials and analysts said.

The Taliban and several other smaller terror groups operating from Pakistan’s terror safe havens have joined hands together which has made it difficult to distinguish between them, and the coalition has virtually become a “witches’ brew.”

The recent arrest of an American civilian of Pakistani origin, Faisal Shahzad over his alleged role in plotting the bungled New York bombing, and subsequent investigation suggesting him having links with the Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM), a terror group which primarily targets India, presents a very dangerous emerging picture.

“They (Pakistan based terror groups) trade bomb makers and people around. It’s becoming this witches’ brew,” The New York Times quoted a senior US intelligence official, as saying during an interview earlier this week.

The official said that in recent years the overall ability and lethality of these groups had dropped, but the threat to countries like the US had increased because they cooperate against a range of targets.

Experts pointed out that the Taliban, on its own, did not have any international agenda, but as it has become the local partner of Al-Qaeda in Pakistan its reach has certainly expanded.

“The Taliban is the local partner of Al-Qaeda in Pakistan. It has no capacity for an international agenda on its own,” said Amir Rana, director, Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies.

One of the most dangerous and disturbing element in this coalition of terror groups is the addition of militants from the Punjab province.

The Punjabi terror groups were originally fathered and funded by the country’s military to run a proxy war against India, and support the Kashmir ‘struggle.’

“The Punjabi groups have surpassed many of their peers in the technical ability and the viciousness of their attacks. But members can often move among the groups or be members of groups simultaneously. They cross-fertilize each other,” the newspaper quoted Rana, as explaining.

The newspaper pointed out that it should not be surprising if links between Times Square would be bomber (Faisal Shahzad) and these Punjabi groups, which use the education system, mosques and religious parties to recruit for Al Qaeda and the Taliban, are established. (ANI)

Zardari, Musharraf helped each other through secret deal: PML-Q

Karachi, May 6 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf’s ‘safe’ exit and incumbent President Asif Ali Zardari’s return to the country was part of a deal inked between both leaders, Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) General Secretary Mushahid Hussain Syed has said.

Interacting with media persons during a press conference here, Syed also revealed that the deal was also backed by international powers.

“This deal was not a usual one as it had the support of international powers,” The News quoted Syed, as saying.

He, however, did not disclose the names of those ‘international powers.’

Syed also claimed that Zardari had entered into a secret deal with former US President George Bush, according to which the US would continue the drone strikes in the country’s tribal areas, and Islamabad would go on criticising Washington for the missile hits. (ANI)

Times Square bombing is a reaction to US drone attacks: Qureshi

Islamabad, May 5 (ANI): Pakistan Foreign Minister Mahkdoom Shah Mehmood Qureshi believes the attempted Times Square bombing is a reaction to U.S. drones targeting Taliban followers along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

“This is a blow back. This is a reaction. This is retaliation. And you could expect that. Let”s not be naive. They”re not going to sort of sit and welcome you eliminate them. They”re going to fight back,” CBS News quoted Qureshi, as saying.

Qureshi was speaking as police in Pakistan police confirmed the arrest of two people, one of whom, Tauseef Ahmed, is believed to have travelled to the U.S. to meet Faisal Shahzad. Both were arrested in Karachi, Pakistan.

CBS News has also learned that Shahzad may have spent at least four months training at a terrorist camp – raided in early March by Pakistani forces.

Though Pakistan is a key ally to the U.S., the country is still seen as a fertile training ground for militants.

Faisal Shahzad comes from a wealthy and educated family. His father is a retired high-ranking Air Force officer. But the failed plot will no doubt put new pressure on Pakistan to crack down on insurgents within its borders. (ANI)

Hakimullah threatens more attacks on United States in a new video

Islamabad, May 3 (ANI): Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan chief, Hakimullah Mehsud, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan in January, has vowed more attacks on the United States in a new video dated early April, according to the SITE monitoring group.

Although neither the US nor the Pakistani agencies had confirmed Hakeemullah’s death, who was sworn in as the TTP chieftain following Baitullah Mehsud’s death in a similar missile attack in August last year, he was widely believed to have succumbed to his injuries sustained during a missile hit in January.

“The time is very near when our fidayeen (soldiers) will attack the American states in the major cities,” Mehsud said in the Internet video alleged to have been made on April 4, SITE reported.

Another video allegedly from the Pakistan Taliban claimed that it was behind an attempted car bombing in New York on Sunday, The News reports.

Mehsud was reported to have been killed in a US bombing raid in January, but some reports last week quoted Pakistani intelligence officials as saying he had survived the strike.

“He (Hakimullah) is alive. He had some wounds but he is basically OK,” The Guardian quoted the official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, as saying.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Rehman Malik had also confirmed Hakimullah’s death, however, he had failed to table any evidence to back his claims.

Hakimullah was hit within 72 hours after the release of a confessional video of Jordanian doctor Human Khalil Abu-Mulal al Balawi, who killed seven CIA agents in Khost on December 30, Malik had claimed.

The video, which showed Hakimullah sitting with the Jordanian double agent Balawi, was released on the evening of January 9 and Hakimullah was hit in a drone attack in Shakoti on the night between January 13 and 14, he said. (ANI)

Pak downplays involvement of Tehreek-e-Taliban in Times Square bomb attempt

Washington, May 3 (ANI): The claim made by the Tehreek-e-Taliban of being involved in an attempted car bomb attack in New York’s Times Square has been downplayed by Pakistani intelligence officials, as lacking in credibility.

An Internet video purportedly from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the failed car bomb attempt, the US monitoring service SITE said Sunday.

Posted on YouTube, the video said the attempted bombing was an act of revenge for the recent killing of two top Al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq, US drone strikes in Pakistan and US treatment of a Pakistani neuroscientist, SITE said.

“There is no credible way to prove that the Taliban have this kind of capacity to attempt such an attack in the heart of the United States,” said a Pakistani intelligence official.

“A claim is far easier to make than to be carried out in real life,” CBS News quoted a Pakistani intelligence official, as saying.

The intelligence official was responding to a statement on a website commonly used by Islamists in which the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the attempt.

A Western diplomat in Islamabad said: “The Taliban have no demonstrated ability to strike in distant places. Structurally, they are far from being a global organization like al Qaeda.”

Taliban News apparently posted the video on YouTube early Sunday, but a service message said it had been removed because of a “use violation”.

SITE said the video contained an audio message from Qari Hussein Mehsud, a Tehreek-e-Taliban official that was played over anti-American images with English subtitles. (ANI)

Hakeemullah even if alive not in command of Pak Taliban anymore: Pentagon

Washington, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pentagon is unsure over the fate of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakeemullah Mehsud, but it is certain that the warlord does not exert any authority over the banned terror outfit anymore.

Speaking during a media briefing here, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said while Hakeemullah’s fate is still shrouded in mystery, it is believed that he is not in command of the Taliban.

“I certainly have seen no evidence that the person you speak of (Hakeemullah) is operational today or is executing or exerting authority over the Pakistani Taliban as he once did. So I don’t know if that reflects him being alive or dead, but he clearly is not running the Pakistani Taliban anymore,” The Daily Times quoted Morrell, as saying.

Earlier, a British daily quoted an Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official as claiming that the Taliban chieftain, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan in January, is alive.

“He (Hakimullah) is alive.He had some wounds but he is basically OK,” the official had said on conditions of anonymity.

Although neither the US nor the Pakistani agencies had confirmed Hakeemullah’s death, who was sworn in as the TTP chieftain following Baitullah Mehsud’s death in a similar missile attack in August last year, he was widely believed to have succumbed to injuries sustained during a missile hit in January. (ANI)

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)