Militants killed in J-K encounter identified as Pakistani nationals

Srinagar, Mar 31 (ANI): The militants killed in the encounter with the security forces in Jammu and Kashmir”s Rajouri district have been identified as Pakistani nationals.

The security personnel have also recovered a diary that disclosed their identity as Abu Zarar, Abu Abdullah, Abu Shoaib and Abu Osama.

The security personnel have also found the food supplies that the militants brought with them. All of them have Pakistani registration marks, which further makes it clear that they all had come from Pakistan.

It is suspected that they came in groups from Pakistan and later split in three teams as three encounters were witnessed in Jammu and Kashmir”s Rajouri district in the last 48 hours.

Four militants and three security personnel were killed in the exchange of fire in Rajouri district that lasted nearly 12 hours.

The second encounter that took place at Dharamshall came to an end with terrorists fleeing back to the Pakistani side of the LoC; a police official was injured in the encounter.

Meanwhile, it has been reported that the encounter between security forces and militants is on in Jammu and Kashmir”s Kolian area. (ANI)

Osama declares decades of war on ‘powerless’ Obama

Islamabad, Sep 14 (ANI): Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has said that US President Barack Obama is “powerless” to stop the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a transcript of a tape released by the terrorist organization’s media wing.

Al Qaeda’s As-Sahab Media released a video featuring a still image of Osama and audio statement entitled “A statement to the American people,” said the organisation IntelCenter.

SITE Intelligence Group, a terrorist-monitoring firm that translated the address, says Osama blames the wars on the “pro-Israel lobby” and corporate interests.

IntelCenter, another company that monitors terrorist propaganda, reports that the 11-minute video is an address to the American people, two days after the eighth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

The group described the release as an address to the American public. Osama usually releases a statement around September or October each year, The Times reports.

In his last previous known message in June, Osama said US President Barack Obama had planted the seeds of “revenge and hatred” towards the United States in the Muslim world and warned of decades of conflict to come.

That audiotape aired on Qatar’s Al-Jazeera news channel less than an hour after Obama landed in Saudi Arabia.

Obama “has followed the steps of his predecessor in antagonizing Muslims… and laying the foundation for long wars,” Osama said in the June release, referring to deadly clashes in Pakistan between the US-backed government and Islamist militants.

“He gave his orders to (Pakistani President Asif Ali) Zardari and his army to prevent the people of Swat from applying Sharia (Islamic) law,” he said.

“Obama and his administration have sowed new seeds of hatred against America. Let the American people prepare to harvest the crops of what the leaders of the White House plant in the next years and decades,” said the Al-Qaeda leader. (ANI)

‘Osama’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish’

London, Sep 12 (ANI): The handshake by world’s most dreaded terrorist Osama bin Laden has been described as limp, and like shaking a wet fish by a producer of CNN who met the terror mastermind.

CNN producer Peter Bergen, who wrote The Osama bin Laden I Know: An Oral History of al-Qaeda’s Leader, met the most dreaded terrorist in March 1997 when he went to film his first television interview.

Bergen narrates about the extra security around bin Laden and how they were taken to his hideout at night changing vehicles blindfolded.

The interview took place near the Tora Bora region of eastern Afghanistan where Bergen and his crew were electronically swept for tracking devices, and had to pass through three groups of guards armed with sub-machineguns.

“Bin Laden made no effort at small talk, wanting to get the interview done as soon as possible. Peter Jouvenal, our British cameraman, remembers that bin Laden’s handshake was limp, like shaking a wet fish,” The Times quoted him, as saying.

“I don’t recall shaking his hand but I do remember that he took frequent sips from a cup of tea, giving him an air that was more feline than fierce, and his blistering diatribe against the US for its policies in the Middle East was delivered in a barely audible whisper. After an hour he was gone, as suddenly as he had arrived,” he adds.

He also narrates Abdel Bari Atwan, a London-based Palestinian journalist who interviewed him in Afghanistan in 1996, as saying that Bin Laden, it seems, had prepared for life as a fugitive for years, adopting a monk-like detachment from material comforts.

Zaynab Khadr, whose family lived with the al-Qaeda leader in Afghanistan during the late 1990s, was quoted by the author as saying that he did not even allow his children to drink cold water because he wanted them to be prepared for the day when there’s no cold water.

He quotes Bin Laden as once instructing his followers: “You should learn to sacrifice everything from modern life like electricity, air-conditioning, refrigerators, gasoline. If you are living the luxury life, it’s very hard to go to the mountains to fight.”

In a tape posted to Islamist websites in February 2006, he says bin Laden confirmed his willingness to be martyred: “I have sworn to only live free. Even if I find bitter the taste of death, I don’t want to die humiliated or deceived.” (ANI)

Is Al-Qaida’s central leadership weakening?

London, Sep 11(ANI): Al-Qaida, known for its rigorous training camps for terrorists to carry out attacks around the World, is now undergoing a massive change as tales from six captured Al-Qaida terrorists belonging to immigrant communities in France and Belgium reveals another facet of the organisation.

According to intelligence reports, it is claimed that all the flashy videos shown to prospect recruits were a “trick”, which served a dual purpose -”to intimidate enemies and to attract new recruits” The Guardian reports.

However, the reality had a different picture for them, they had to spent months in Pakistan’s rugged frontier zones and had nothing more than basic small arms training, some physical exercise and religious instruction.

They were also expected to pay around 1,000 dollars for their equipment, weapons and accommodation.

The disappointments for them continued, as they did not get any opportunity to meet supreme head Osama Bin Laden, nor was there any real need for them as fighters in Afghanistan.

Training provided to them involved little live firing and weeks of religious instruction from a junior cleric.

Though the six were forbidden to venture outdoors, one of the six did eventually participate in operations against US forces. (ANI)

‘The American’ leading al Qaeda in Somalia awaits terrorism charges back home

Washington, Sep 5 (ANI): The man who grew up in Daphne, Alabama, as Omar Hammami, but is now reported to be a member of al Qaeda-linked Somali terrorist group al-Shabaab under the name Abu Mansour al-Amriki, told a school newspaper after 9/11 attacks that it was “difficult to believe a Muslim could have done this”.

According to FOX News, eight years later he is professing to launch attacks himself and calling on others to join the fight, as terror-related charges await him at home in Alabama.

Abu Mansour al-Amriki or “The American” has become one of the most recognizable and outspoken voices of terrorist propaganda, the report said.

He has been in war-torn Somalia for several years, fighting the secular government there with a group known as al-Shabaab, which has ties to Al Qaeda and was labeled a terrorist organization by the US Government last year, but only recently has he taken on a starring and jarring role in al-Shabaab’s outreach efforts the report added.

The FBI has been looking into him for several years. In fact, a grand jury in Mobile, Alabama., has already indicted him on charges of providing material support to terrorists, a source said.

Al-Amriki first surfaced in October 2007, when Al-Jazeera TV aired a report about the “common goal” of al Qaeda and hard-line militants in Somalia. The report described al-Amriki as a fighter and military instructor, but he concealed his face with a cloth wrap throughout the report.

In April, he showed his face for the first time, during a highly polished, 30-minute recruitment video posted online. It featured anti-American hip-hop and sporadic images of Osama bin Laden.

In the video, he purportedly led a group of al-Shabaab militants in an ambush of pro-government forces in Somalia.

Speaking about one man killed in the fight, he said: “We need more like him, so if you can encourage more of your children and more of your neighbors, anyone around, to send people like him to this jihad, it would be a great asset for us.” (ANI)

Popular Arab TV Program exposes real Al Qaeda

Dubai, Sep.2 (ANI): The Al Arabiya satellite television channel has come up with a popular program titled “Death Making,” that exposes another side of Al Qaeda.

Hosted by female correspondent Rima Salha, the Dubai-based show is heading into its third year on Al Arabiya and aims to influence how the Arab world views Al Qaeda, reports Fox News.

It is a unique program that lets jihadists tell their stories, and then shows the results of their actions.

“It’s not enough to tell you that Al Qaeda is a terrorist organization. You have to understand why, what it means, how everything works, and what the end goal is for them,” Al Arabia’s general manager Abdul Rahman al-Rashed explains.

For her work, Salha, who is Lebanese, gets death threats, including when Osama bin Laden’s number two, Ayman al Zawahiri, singled the show and Al Arabiya out, by weaving video of both into one of his multi-media diatribes against mass media.

Despite the threats, Salah is undeterred. She goes to the jihadists, wherever they are: in refugee camps off limits even to security forces and to Iraq. She and her team convince subjects to talk to them. It’s not easy, but some of these militants apparently think they stand to benefit from a bit of publicity.

The topic of terrorism is so hot that Salha gets attacked from all sides. (ANI)

Al-Qaeda gave millions to ISI to bribe politicians, claims former FIA chief

Lahore, Aug.28 (ANI): In a startling revelation, a former Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) director Malik Mumtaz has disclosed that Al-Qaeda had given millions of rupees to the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to destabilise the Benazir Bhutto’s government in 1988.

Mumtaz claimed that ISI had hatched a massive conspiracy involving former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, former ISI chief General (retired) Asad Durrani, Brigadier (retired) Imtiaz and Major (retired) Amir to overthrow the Bhutto government.

He said Osama bin Laden was behind the conspiracy and had paid millions of dollars to the ISI, The Daily Times reports.

In an interview with a private television, Mumtaz said one of his close friends had told him that the ISI was in the look out for Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) legislators who would change side and join the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

When asked whether he was too a part of the conspiracy, Mumtaz said he instead informed the PPP leadership about the plot.

Meanwhile, the PML-N Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal has rejected the allegations, saying the party never received any money from the intelligence agency.

Iqbal said that such claims were a part of maligning the PML-N leadership.

Former Director General of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Brigadier (retired) Imtiaz also rejected the allegations.

He said the charges were completely false and it was a handiwork of some ‘mysterious elements’ within the PPP who were trying to destabilize the country. (ANI)

Betullah Mehsud still alive, claims close aide

London, Aug. 8 (ANI): A lieutenant of Pakistan’s enemy no. 1 Baitullah Mehsud on Saturday rejected reports of the Pak-Taliban chief’s death in a US drone strike.

BBC quoted Commander Hakimullah Mehsud – who some analysts suggest may be positioning himself to succeed Baitullah Mehsud – as saying that the reports of Mehsud’s death were the work of US and Pakistani intelligence agencies.

“The news regarding our respected chief is propaganda by our enemies. We know what our enemies want to achieve – it’s the joint policy of the ISI and FBI – they want our chief to come out in the open so they can achieve their target,” Mehsud said.

He said the Pakistani leader had decided to adopt the tactics of Osama bin Laden and stay silent. He said he would issue a message in the next few days.

The US has said that it is increasingly confident that its forces had managed to kill Mehsud, while Pakistan’s foreign minister said on Friday he was “pretty certain” Baitullah Mehsud had been killed.

Neither side has provided evidence to back up their claims so far.

The missile fired by the US drone hit the home of the Taliban chief’s father-in-law, Malik Ikramuddin, in the Zangarha area on Wednesday.

On Friday, another of Baitullah Mehsud’s aides had told the press by telephone that his leader had been killed along with his second wife in the attack.

The White House spokesman, Robert Gibbs, on Friday said that the Pakistani people would be safer if he was dead.

“There seems to be a growing consensus among credible observers that he is indeed dead,” he told reporters.

Believed to command as many as 20,000 pro-Taliban militants, Mehsud came to worldwide attention in the aftermath of the 2007 Red Mosque siege in Islamabad.

He has been blamed by both Pakistan and the US for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the country, as well as suicide attacks on Western forces across the border in Afghanistan. (ANI)

Pak terms US drone strikes ‘futile’, claims Laden is in Afghanistan

London, July 12 (ANI) : Claiming that no top Al-Qaeda leader is present inside its territory, Pakistan has termed the continuous US drones attacks in its ‘lawless’ tribal areas along the Afghanistan border as ‘futile’.

The Pakistan Prime Minister’s Advisor on Interior Affairs, Rehman Malik, has claimed that neither bin Laden nor any ‘big fish’ of Al-Qaeda were present in Pakistan.

Malik said Laden could not have escaped the Pakistan Army if he happened to be in the country.

“If Osama was in Pakistan, we would know, with all the thousands of troops we have sent into the tribal areas in recent months,” The Times quoted Malik, as saying.

He claimed that bin Laden is hiding in Afghanistan itself.

“According to our information, Osama is in Afghanistan, probably Kunar, as most of the activities against Pakistan are being directed from Kunar,” said Malik.

Malik insisted that the drone strikes were a waste of time, as the Al-Qaeda leadership was in eastern Afghanistan.

“They’re getting mid-level people not big fish. And they are counterproductive because they are killing civilians and turning locals against our government. We try to win people’s hearts, then one drone attack drives them away,” he said.

Malik’s statement came a day after a US Senator asked Islamabad to accept its ‘tacit approval’ of the drone hits.

Senator Carl Levin, told a Congressional hearing that the attacks would not have taken place without the ‘tacit approval’ of the Pakistani leadership, so it was wrong on Islamabad’s part to blame the US for the missile hits.

“For them to look the other way or to give us the green light privately and then to attack us publicly leaves us, it seems to me, at a very severe disadvantage and loss with the Pakistani people,” said Levin.

Officials said that despite Pakistan’s double faced attitude on the issue, the US is working to develop a new strategy to reduce stirring tension between both the countries.

Pakistan has been criticizing the Obama administration for the drone strikes against the insursents in the tribal areas, saying that the attacks are proving ‘counterproductive’ in its war on terror, as they had killed far more civilians than militants.

Official Pakistani sources claimed that since 2006, the drones have killed 700 civilians and only 14 militants. (ANI)

Bin Laden’s son describes his dad as evil in new memoir

Washington, July 10 (ANI): Al Qaeda chief Osama bin laden’s son, Omar, has described his father as an evil man in his new memoir.

According to the New York Daily News, Omar says that he first realized the depth of his father’s evil when his beloved dogs were taken away and gassed in a chemical warfare experiment.

Omar also confirms that his father was tipped off to a 1998 U.S. attempt to kill him.

He writes that Bin Laden got a secret communication and fled his Afghan camp two hours before cruise missiles struck it.

Omar’s book, “Growing Up Bin Laden,” written with his mother, Najwa – the Al Qaeda leader’s first wife – describes the ultimate dysfunctional family.

The Bin Ladens lived austerely as their father staked his horrific claim as the world’s most wanted man. His son eventually concluded Bin Laden hated his enemies more than he loved his family.

Omar, 28, describes himself as weeping as a teenager when told that Al Qaeda needed his pets to conduct chemical warfare tests.

“After I learned the truth about the puppies, I turned even further away from my father,” whose jihad led only to death, Omar writes in the book set for release by St. Martin’s Press later this year.

He calls the 9/11 attacks “horrific.”

They occurred after his best friend -Al Qaeda operative Abu al-Haadi – told him that a “new mission” would be much bigger than the embassy bombings.

Omar mourned al-Haadi’s death in the resulting U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. (ANI)

Libyan extremist group severs ties with Al-Qaeda over ‘indiscriminate violence’

London, July 10 (ANI): What may be seen as a severe blow to Al-Qaeda, one of its ally, the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) has decided to severe its ties with Osama bin Laden saying that the “indiscriminate bombings” and the “targeting of civilians” was not in accordance to its objectives.

This is the first such instance when an ally of Al-Qaeda has parted ways with it due to its policy of ‘indiscriminate violence.’

The LIFG, which once aimed to topple Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, criticised Al-Qaeda for carrying out attacks on innocent civilians and said that such violent activities did not achieve the “aims of the group in removing oppression.”

Officials believe that the LIFG’s back out is a great blow to Al-Qaeda which is facing a massive surge by the US led allied forces in Afghanistan at the moment.

“LIFG figures had ‘graduated to become major players’ in al-Qaeda and the group’s withdrawal amounted to a ‘moral blow’ to the network,” The Telegraph quoted an official, as saying.

A statement issued by the LIFG claimed that the group had no link with Al-Qaeda in the past.

“The decision to join bin Laden’s network had been invalid, and the LIFG had no link to the Al-Qaeda organisation in the past and has none now and we demand that those parties remove the name of the Fighting Group from those lists,” the statement said.

During the 1990′s the LIFG’s leaders were forced out of Libya. They then escaped to Afghanistan and started coming closer to different extremists groups based there such as Al-Qaeda. (ANI)

‘Barbaric’ Somalian Islamic radicals publicly chop off hands and legs of alleged thieves

London, June 26 (ANI): In an appalling incident in the Somalian capital, Mogadishu, pro-Al Queda insurgents on Thursday used a machete to slice off a hand and a foot from each of four men accused of stealing mobile phones and guns.

The men screamed in pain, as some 300 spectators were compelled to watch the slaughter by the al-Shabaab fighters. Some of the onlookers even vomited while the amputations were in progress.

An ad-hoc court set up by the hardline al-Shabaab movement had earlier this week found the men, aged 18 to 25, guilty of stealing mobile phones and guns from residents in several Mogadishu suburbs.

“We have carried out this sentence under the Islamic religion and we will punish like this everyone who carries out these acts,” The Scotsman quoted al-Shabaab official Sheikh Ali Mohamud Fidow, as saying.

The punishments, which leading international human rights groups pleaded unsuccessfully with al-Shabaab to forego, have sent tremors through western diplomatic and intelligence communities.

Al-Shabaab openly expresses its support for al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, although intelligence sources said it has proved hard to identify what its formal links are to al-Qaeda. (ANI)

Jordan arrests four on suspicion of planning attacks on Israel

Amman – Four Jordanian Islamists have been arrested for allegedly planning attacks on Israel in retaliation for the “massacres” it committed during its 22-day offensive on the Gaza Strip in January, judicial sources said Wednesday.

More than 1,300 Palestinians were killed and about 4,000 wounded in the Gaza attack.

The four people, who were detained in April, are expected to be charged with the possession of arms without license for illegal uses, the sources said.

The suspects were identified as Sakhr Abu Zaid, Hassan Talaq, Mohammad Abu Ourah and Osama Abu Kabir. The last-named was a Guantanamo prison detainee for several years, they added.

Under the peace treaty which Jordan concluded with Israel in 1994, the Hashemite Kingdom committed itself not to allow attacks on the Jewish state from Jordanian territory. (dpa)

Leading Iraqi party chooses new leader

Baghdad – The Iraqi Islamic Party, a leading political party representing Sunni Muslims, on Monday announced it had chosen a new leader.

Osama Tawfiq al-Tikriti succeeded Iraqi Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi as party leader, it said in a statement sent to reporters on Monday.

“The party’s leadership and supporters wish to express their thanks and praise for him,” the statement said.

The Iraqi parliament’s selection in April of Iyad al-Samarrai as its speaker gave the Iraqi Islamic Party a second key post in the government, alongside the vice-presidency.

In the 2005 elections, the party ran as a part of the Iraqi Accord Front, which won 44 seats in the 275-seat legislative assembly, more than any other Sunni coalition. (dpa)

Osama’s cook coming to New York to face charges in embassy bombing

Washington, May 22 (ANI): Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden’s former Tanzanian cook is coming to New York to face charges for his role in the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa 11 years ago, President Obama announced Thursday.

Ahmed Kalfan Ghailani will be moved from Guantanamo Bay as part of Obama’s controversial order to shut down the U.S. terror prison camps in Cuba over the objections of many lawmakers from both parties.

“Preventing this detainee from coming to our shores would prevent his trial and conviction,” Obama said in a Washington speech.

The baby-faced and diminutive Ghailani – known as “Foopie” – faced a bounty of 25 million dollars when he was nabbed in July 2004 after a 12-hour shootout at an Al Qaeda safe house in Pakistan.

Ghailani rose from an Al Qaeda “rank-and-file soldier” in Afghanistan before 9/11 to become Bin Laden’s cook and his most prolific passport forger and travel agent, according to a Directorate of National Intelligence biography.

Four other plotters were convicted in federal trials in the city for the Aug. 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, which killed a dozen Americans and 211 others.

Ghailani was among the original 22 “most wanted” terrorists designated by ex-President Bush’s FBI after 9/11, even though the government admits he “was not directly involved in operational planning” by Al Qaeda. (ANI)

Obama administration distances itself from comedian Sykes’ 9/11 joke

Washington, may 12 (ANI): President Obama smiled at the time, but the White House declared Monday there was nothing funny about comic Wanda Sykes joking about 9/11.

Sykes skewered Rush Limbaugh at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Saturday – likening the conservative talk show king to Osama bin Laden.

“I think there are a lot of topics that are better left for serious reflection rather than comedy,” Fox News quoted White House press secretary Robert Gibbs as saying Monday.

“I think there’s no doubt that 9/11 is part of that,” he added.

Sykes began her riff by branding as “treason” Limbaugh’s oft-repeated hope that Obama “fails.”

“He’s not saying anything differently than what Osama bin Laden is saying,” she said. “I think maybe Rush Limbaugh was the 20th hijacker. But he was just so strung out on OxyContin he missed his flight.”

That brought groans and guffaws from the crowd while Obama smiled nervously and took a sip from his glass.

Limbaugh ignored Sykes Monday on his radio show, and she also kept mum.

But earlier, Sykes took offense that she was warned “not to say the F-word or the N-word” before her bit. “They really think I was going to say that to the President?,” she told “Extra.” (ANI)

New Internet magazine linked to al Qaeda seeks to lure Americans to jihad

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Jihad Recollections, a new English-language Internet magazine linked to al Qaeda, focuses on the terrorist group, its founder Osama bin Laden and how to commit jihad.

The Internet magazine also predicts the demise of the United States, FOX News reported.

“This is designed for Americans,” says noted terrorism expert Steven Emerson, founder of the Investigative Project on Terrorism in Washington, D.C., and author of the book “American Jihad: The Terrorists Living Among Us.”

“It’s not for Brits, not for Germans, not for jihadists in the Middle East. It’s designed for Americans and it’s designed to get them to convert to Islam or to carry out jihad acts of terror,” he said.

“What started off as some angry kids in their basement has transformed over the past several years into a robust al Qaeda propaganda outlet right here in our backyard,” says Jarret Brachman, an al Qaeda specialist and author of the new book, “Global Jihadism.”

It is not clear what connection, if any, the magazine has to al Qaeda or its followers. Yet “Jihad Recollections” certainly highlights the terrorist group and the goals of Islamic jihad in a sophisticated and graphically slick presentation.

The magazine includes the speeches and writings of bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri. Articles range from “Four Practical Steps to Expand the Global Jihad,” to “The Science Behind Night Vision Technology” and “Principles of Guerrilla Warfare.”

“The magazine is quite startling,” said Emerson. It is “a veritable manual on how to carry out terrorism. It’s quite shocking, and the question is whether it violates the law or not.”

“Jihad Recollections” appears to prepare followers to engage in jihad. One section teaches aspiring jihadists how to stay in shape by doing exercise without weights.

Articles with photographs of men dressed in white robes with their faces covered encourage them to exercise at home and stay away from American gyms because “they are full of music, semi-naked women, free mixing.”

It warns of the dangers of “showing off” during a workout and even observes that protein shakes are too expensive and not worth the money. (ANI)

Pak intelligence believes Osama bin Laden is dead : Zardari

p
Islamabad, Apr.27 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has said that his country’s intelligence believes that Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is dead, but they have no proof to back their claims./pp
The Americans tell me they don’t know, and they are much more equipped than us to trace him. And our own intelligence services obviously think that he does not exist any more, that he is dead. But there is no evidence, you cannot take that as a fact, The Nation quoted Zardari, as saying./pp
We are between facts and fiction, he added./pp
When asked to comment over reports that the Swat Taliban would welcome bin-Laden if he comes to Pakistan, Zardari said it was not clear whether he was alive or not, but it is evident that there is no trace of Al-Qaeda chief./pp
The question is whether he is alive or dead. There is no trace of him, Zardari said. (ANI)/p

Israel’s remarks about Pak being a threat to it “unwarranted”: FO

Islamabad, Apr.24 (ANI): Reacting strongly to Israel’s remark that Pakistan is one of three countries threatening its existence , the Pakistan Foreign Office has said that the “unwarranted” statements by Tel Aviv were aimed at maligning Islamabad’s image internationally and would never succeed.

“We have taken a strong exception to the remarks which are unwarranted. Any efforts to malign or isolate Pakistan will not succeed, Pakistan is moderate and progressive nation,” The Nation quoted Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit, as saying.

Addressing a regular press briefing, Basit said that Pakistan has full support of the international community, and it would certainly thwart all the challenges it is facing currently.

“The world has full faith in the abilities and strength of Pakistan to sail through the difficult time,” Basit added.

Earlier, Israel’s Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman had said that Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq were the three countries from which Israel faced an immediate threat.

“Pakistan is nuclear and unstable and Afghanistan is faced with a potential Taliban takeover, and the combination forms a contiguous area of radicalism ruled in the spirit of Osama bin Laden,” Lieberman had said. (ANI)

Taliban’s ‘safe havens’ in Pak’s heart a “doomsday scenario for India, Afghanistan and West

Washington, Apr.24 (ANI): The so called ‘peace deal’ between the government of Pakistan and the Taliban in the Swat Valley has brought Washington and Islamabad at loggerheads, with the United States considering that the accord would only provide an opportunity to the insurgents to build terror safe havens in Pakistan’s heart.

US diplomats see the peace accord of the Swat Valley, which is located just 60 miles away from Islamabad, as a threat to the region, and to the western world too.

“There’s a doomsday scenario where the real concern is that they establish a foothold in this part of northern Pakistan to launch attacks on Afghanistan, India and the West,” The Telegraph quoted a diplomat, as saying.

With the Pak Taliban announcing earlier this week that Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and other top Taliban leaders from Afghanistan would be welcomed in the valley as ‘brothers’, as would militants fighting British and American forces in Afghanistan, concerns for America have increased manifold.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, fearing Taliban taking over Pakistan in near future, had also said that Islamabad has no choice left but to challenge the expanding writ of the insurgents.

Clinton also has accused the Government of Pakistan of “abdicating” to the Taliban and other extremist groups by ceding large tracts of territory.She said that the country’s instability is a “mortal threat” to world peace. (ANI)