US aid cut won’t affect anti-terror efforts, says Pak

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan army on Monday said the cut in US aid would not affect its anti-terror efforts. Washington a day earlier confirmed that it would withhold some $800m in assistance to the country’s armed forces.

“This move would have no significant affect on Pakistan’s anti-terror efforts. We will continue our operations against militants,” Pakistan’s military spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas said. He said the military had received no formal notification of any aid cut but pointed out that army chief General Ashfaq Kayani had declared that cash reimbursements to the military should be redirected to the government.

He said two anti-Taliban military operations in Mohmand and Kurram tribal regions, run without any external support, would continue. “The al-Qaida and other military groups operating in Pakistan are not only a threat to us but to others (as well).

White House chief of staff Bill Daley admitted on Sunday that the relationship between the two countries was experiencing difficulties and that some of the aid flow would now be stopped.

“It’s a complicated relationship in a difficult, complicated part of the world.” The $800 million in military aid and equipment is almost one-third of the total US aid of over $2 billion. The New York Times said some of the curtailed aid is equipment that the US wants to send but Pakistan now refuses to accept.

FACTBOX-Security developments in Pakistan, July 25

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

* denotes new or updated items.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Pakistan detains German man near militant stronghold

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

U.S. showed Pakistan evidence on militant faction

(Reuters) – The United States has presented evidence to Pakistan about the growing threat and reach of a militant faction which Washington suspects has ties to Pakistani intelligence, U.S. officials said on Wednesday.

World

In the presentations, U.S. military leaders provided Pakistan’s army chief with information detailing the role of the Haqqani network in a string of increasingly brazen bombings, including one last month targeting the main NATO air base at Bagram in Afghanistan.

Washington has long pressed Islamabad to crack down on the Haqqanis in the North Waziristan tribal zone bordering Afghanistan, who are closely aligned with the Taliban, but U.S. officials acknowledge it is a hard sell because of resistance within Pakistani intelligence.

General David Petraeus, who oversees the Afghan war as head of U.S. Central Command, told a congressional hearing the Haqqanis had “transnational” ambitions, suggesting they could try to strike beyond Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Washington has issued similar warnings about the growing reach of the Pakistani Taliban, which investigators blame for a botched May 1 car bomb in New York’s Time Square.

There are strategic reasons for Pakistan’s hesitancy to attack the Haqqanis, a faction which some in Islamabad see as a strategic asset that will give them influence in any eventual settlement to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

One U.S. official said “some elements” of Pakistani intelligence, but far from all, still support the Haqqanis.

Without mentioning the Haqqanis by name, Petraeus acknowledged long-standing ties between Islamabad and what he called “bad guys,” suggesting the relationships were useful to gather intelligence on the groups.

But he voiced confidence Pakistanis understood that “you cannot allow poisonous snakes to have a nest in your backyard, even if the tacid agreement is that they’re going to bite the neighbors kids instead of yours.”

“Eventually,” Petraeus said, “they turn around and bite you and your kids.”

Pakistan has denied a report by the London School of Economics that alleges enduring ties between its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Afghan Taliban.

PAKISTAN INTELLIGENCE ROLE

The report said the agency not only funds and trains Taliban fighters in Afghanistan but is officially represented on the movement’s leadership council, giving it significant influence over operations.

Petraeus said there was “no question” Pakistan has maintained “a variety of relationships,” in some cases dating back decades, to groups which, with U.S. support, battled the Soviets when they occupied Afghanistan.

“Some of those ties continue in various forms, some of them, by the way, gathering intelligence,” he said.

“You have to have contact with bad guys to get intelligence on bad guys.”

Some of the groups in question, including the Haqqani network, are now leading the fight against Western forces.

The Pentagon has expressed confidence that Pakistan will eventually mount an offensive in North Waziristan, but has acknowledged the country’s armed forces were already stretched by operations in other tribal areas.

“The problem has been one of capacity. And again, we’re working hard to enable that capacity,” Petraeus said.

Petraeus, General Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, discussed Haqqani’s alleged role in the bombings in a recent meeting with Pakistan’s army chief Ashfaq Kayani.

“We have shared information with him about links of the leadership of the Haqqani network … that clearly commanded and controlled the operation against Bagram air base and the attack in Kabul, among others,” Petraeus said.

Suicide bombers carrying rockets and grenades launched a brazen predawn attack on the base on May 19, killing an American contractor and wounding nine U.S. troops. About a dozen militants, many wearing suicide vests packed with explosives, were killed, the Pentagon said at the time.

A day earlier, a suicide bomber attacked a military convoy in Kabul, killing 12 Afghan civilians and six foreign troops.

Bagram is the main base for U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan, with the largest airfield in the country. It was used by the former Soviet Union during its invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart; editing by Todd Eastham)

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.”

Two army officers suspended over staged Kashmir shootout

New Delhi, June 6 (IANS) The Indian Army has suspended two officers — a colonel and a major — for the alleged murder of three Kashmiri men April 30 in a staged shootout after labelling them as infiltrators from Pakistan, army sources said Sunday.

No army officer held for Times Square plot: Pakistan

Islamabad, May 20 (IANS) No Pakistani Army officer has been held for involvement in the attempted Times Square car bombing for which Pakistani American Faisal Shahzad has been arrested, the military said Thursday.

‘No Pakistan Army officer has been arrested for having links’ with Shahzad, Online news agency quoted Inter-Services Public Relations chief Maj. Gen Athar Abbas as saying.

‘Western media reports in this regard are baseless concocted and devoid of facts,’ he said, adding: ‘There is no truth to such news and no army officer, retired or in service, has been taken into custody for links with Faisal Shahzad.’

He clarified that last month, a retired major was sacked and arrested for violating discipline but he has no link with Shahzad case.

The Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday that investigators had arrested a Pakistani Army major linked to Shahzad.

Abbas’s remarks come a day after Pakistan and the US Wednesday pledged to enhance cooperation to foil future terrorist attacks as senior US officials briefed Pakistan’s political and military troika on the probe into the Times Square attempt.

US National Security Advisor James Jones and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief Leon Panetta met Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and ‘provided an update on the ongoing investigation into the Times Square terrorist incident’, a joint statement issued from the presidency said.

‘The talks covered measures that both countries are, and will be, taking to confront the common threat we face from extremists and prevent such potential attacks from occurring again,’ the statement added.

On Tuesday, Shahzad was arraigned before a federal magistrate in Manhattan on five felony counts two weeks after his arrest.

Appearing before Magistrate Judge James C. Francis IV Tuesday evening, Shahzad, 30, did not enter a plea, simply answering ‘yes’ when the judge asked whether an affidavit attesting to his finances was accurate.

He was then charged with one count each of attempting terrorism by attempting to kill people; attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction; using a destructive device in connection with an attempted crime of violence; transporting explosives; and attempting to destroy property with fire and explosives. Attempted terrorism carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.

Shahzad, a Pakistani immigrant who lived in Connecticut and had worked as a financial analyst, was taken into custody May 3 as he tried to flee to his native Pakistan on a flight out of John F. Kennedy International Airport minutes before the plane was to leave for Dubai.

Prosecutors said he had left a Nissan Pathfinder rigged with makeshift, defective explosives in Times Square on May 1. The suspect who has been kept in an undisclosed location since he was taken into custody immediately began cooperating with federal investigators.

Three other Pakistanis were taken into custody in New England after a series of raids last week, and three others were arrested in Pakistan. None face criminal charges in connection with the plot.

No decision yet on Pakistan army chief’s extension: PM

Islamabad, May 20 (IANS) Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani Thursday termed as ‘inappropriate and premature’ the defence minister’s assertion that army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani’s tenure would not be extended, an indication that this could well be on the cards.

Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhtar’s statement earlier this week that Kayani, who is due to retire in October, would not be given an extension was ‘inappropriate and premature and he should not have given such a statement’, Gilani said during an interaction with senior journalists here.

A decision on this would be taken ‘when the time for it comes and so far no decision has been made’, Online news agency quoted the prime minister as saying.

Gilani’s comments could well be taken to mean that the issue was being considered, given Kayani’s track record in the military operations against the Taliban in Pakistan’s restive northwest, analysts here said.

Speculation had begun earlier this year on whether Kayani’s tenure would be extended, given the frostiness in his relations with President Asif Ali Zardari.

However, the repeal in April of the controversial 17th amendment completely changed the equations as key powers, including those to appoint the service chiefs, were returned to the prime minister’s office from the presidency to which then military dictator Pervez Musharraf had transferred them in 2002.

In contrast to Zardari, Kayani’s relations with Gilani are described as cordial.

In fact, Kayani, along with Gilani, had read Zardari the riot act in March last year when he was soft-pedalling on a pledge to reinstate the Supreme Court judges Musharraf had sacked after imposing an emergency Nov 3, 2007.

This had prompted the lawyers to stage a ‘long march’ to Islamabad. Zardari caved in when the procession entered Islamabad.

Kayani, described as a ‘quiet man’, became the army chief Nov 29, 2007 when Musharraf, who was wearing twin hats, stepped down from the post.

He is credited with planning the anti-Taliban operations that began last June in Swat and three other districts of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), now renamed Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa, that the militants had virtually taken over.

The operations later shifted to the North and South Waziristan areas of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The military estimates that some 3,000 Taliban fighters have been killed in the operations, which are now shifting to the North Waziristan area.

US wants Pak Army Chief Kayani to stay for another year

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Even though the Pakistan government has clarified its stand on the tenure of Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, sources in the US Central Command (CENTCOM) have revealed that he is likely to get an extension.

Insiders in the CENTCOM said that General Kayani has developed strong working relations with his American counterparts and it will be in the ‘best interest of the operation (war on terror) not to change leadership mid-stream.’

Sources also said that General Kayani has assured the Obama administration that the Pakistani armed forces would not disrupt the country’s civilian set-up, and would play in their “own sandbox”, The Examiner reports.

Earlier, ruling out the chances of giving Kayani an extension in service, Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar said that the PPP-led Government would not extend his tenure, and neither had he asked for it.

General Kayani (55) is the 14th chief of the Pakistan Army. He was promoted as a full General in October 2007, and made the Vice Chief of Army Staff.

He took over as the new Army Chief after Pervez Musharraf’s retirement on November 28,2007. (ANI)

Pak Army Major arrested over alleged links with failed Times Square bomber

Los Angeles, May 19 (ANI): Pakistani security agencies have reportedly arrested an Army major, who is said to have had contacts with Faisal Shahzad, the US civilian of Pakistan origin accused of plotting the botched Times Square bombing.

It is for the first time that a Pakistan Army official has been linked directly in the failed bombing plot, however, authorities are mum on the major’s links with Shahzad.

Sources privy to the arrest said that the military official had met Shahzad and that both had frequent chats over the cellphone also, The Los Angeles Times reports.

Meanwhile, US and Pakistani agencies continue to investigate Shahzad’s terror trail, and the truth behind his claims that he had met the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistani (TTP) chieftain Hakimullah Mehsud during one of his many visits to the extremist stronghold North Waziristan.

Shahzad, who appeared in a court in New York on Tuesday, has told U.S. investigators that he had gone to North Waziristan, where he met with Taliban leaders and got training in bombmaking.

According to Pakistani and US officials briefed about the investigations, Shahzad had likely visited Mohmand, a lawless tribal region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border which is considered as the hub of the Taliban and other extremist outfits. (ANI)

Petraeus says need to give credit to anti-Taliban ops in Pak

As pressure piles up on Pakistan to extend its military action against militants, a top US General has said the country should be given credit for going after the Taliban in its territory.

General David Petraeus, Commander of the US Central Command, said the Pakistani military went after the Taliban effectively last year in its northwest territories.

“There is a common enemy out there, and we all have to cooperate” in defeating it, Petraeus said in his key note address to the 2010 Joint War fighting Conference, in Virginia Beach.

Petraeus, who was in western Pakistan last week said: “It’s important to give Pakistan credit for what it has done”.

The praise for Pakistan Army’s anti-militant operations in its north west came as the Islamabad is under pressure to extend crack down to North Waziristan, believed to be the base of many al qaeda and Taliban leaders.

The US has been pursuing Pakistan to launch a military operation in North Waziristan, and the impetus has increased after the recent Times Square failed bombing attempt was found to have links to the region.

President Barack Obama has said that al Qaeda and the Taliban continue to plot from the Af-Pak border region.

“As we’ve seen in recent plots here in the United States, al Qaeda and its extremist allies continue to plot in the border regions between Afghanistan and Pakistan, and a growing Taliban insurgency could mean an even larger safe haven for al Qaeda and its affiliates,” Obama said yesterday.

Pak Army denies taking orders from US

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): Reacting to statements made by senior military and civilian US officials, the Pakistan Army has said the military leadership does not take dictates from outside the country.

Commenting on a statement of US General Stanley McCrystal that he did not ask Chief of Pakistan’s Army Chief General Pervez Kayani for details regarding operation in North Waziristan, military sources said it clearly indicated that the military leadership does not take dictates from outside Pakistan.

Pakistan is a sovereign state and its military to military relations with other countries are based on equality and mutual interest, The Nation quoted the source, as saying.

“Therefore, there is no question that someone from US will dictate terms to us,” the sources added. (ANI)

Pak Army between ‘devil and deep sea’ over US pressure to move into N.Waziristan

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Not only the civilian leadership, but the Pakistan Army too is facing the heat, as it is being pressed upon by the United States to extend its campaign against militants holed up in North Waziristan, following reports that Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomber, had received terror training in that volatile region.

The United States has long been coaxing the Pakistan Army to launch an offensive in North Waziristan, however, the military has been reluctant to go into the region on the plea that it is already overstretched and lacks resources to open new fronts against the extremists in the troubled tribal region bordering Afghanistan.

“The army realizes that it must go into North Waziristan. They have been looking at this option for quite some time, but they have been hesitant as they are overstretched,” Time magazine quoted retired general and analyst Talat Masood, as saying.

“It”s a very complex area, particularly because there are elements there that are not so hostile to the Pakistani military,” Masood added referring to the Haqqani network, an al-Qaeda linked Afghan Taliban group, which targets US led international forces in Afghanistan, but is viewed as a strategic asset by Pakistan”s intelligence services.

“The army will prefer to take a limited operation, one that is confined to the Mehsud areas,” Masood said pointing towards the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) warlord Hakimullah Mehsud.

With the US sending some strong signals, it is being speculated that the Obama Administration might send troops to Pakistan to take on the militants themselves, a situation which could be catastrophic, said Aftab Sherpao, who served as Interior Minister in General Pervez Musharraf’s regime.

“The presence of U.S. troops would be truly disastrous. The mere presence of foreign soldiers would inflame public opinion to dangerous proportions, weakening the hand of the civilian government and the army,” Sherpao highlighted.

He explained that dismantling the terror safe havens flourishing in the tribal regions was not that easy a task as the US and the international community believes.

“It will take years,” Sherpao said adding, “You can”t start operations against all these groups simultaneously. You have to proceed step by step. You have to consolidate your gains first, then move on to the next target.”

But he also noted that the Times Square incident certainly served as a wake-up call for both the civilian and military set-up.

“The political and military leadership have to sit down now and devise a serious response.Otherwise, it will become very difficult,” Sherpao said. (ANI)

Militants kill nine Pak troops as intense clashes continue in FATA

London, May 11 (ANI): At least nine Pakistan army soldiers were butchered by militants as severe clashes between the troops and militants continued in the country’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas’ (FATA) volatile Orakzai Agency.

The BBC quoted some Pakistani military officials as confirming the death of the security personnel.

Military officials described the battle between the insurgents and the army as “fierce” and said that two officers were among the dead.

The officials, however, added that 30 militants were also killed in intense clashes across the region.

The death toll was hard to be verified independently as the media is barred from visiting the war-zone.

Earlier, media reports said that over 43 extremists were killed in separate operations conducted by Pakistan security forces across the Federally Administered Tribal Areas over the last couple of days.

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.

Security forces also claimed to have killed two Taliban. (ANI)

McChrystal in ‘damage control’ mode after US’ ‘tough line’ with Pak post NY plot

Washington, May 11 (ANI): General Stanley McChrystal, the top US Commander in Afghanistan, has rubbished media reports that soon after the failed Times Square bombing he met Pakistan Army Chief General Parvez Kayani in Islamabad and asked him to launch a military offensive in North Waziristan.

“Yes, there was an unfortunate news story that came out that was completely inaccurate that represented that I had expressed to General Kayani US policy on doing more, and that just didn”t happen,” said General McChrystal, who commands US and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

“It was a one-on-one meeting and it did not occur. And I”d made it clear to Gen Kayani that I did not represent it that way,” he explained during a White House briefing.

Speaking during the briefing on Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai’s visit to Washington, White House’ Press Secretary Robert Gibbs tried to tone down the tension between the US and Pakistan, which has seen the Obama Administration openly warning Islamabad over its lack of action against extremists flourishing on its soil.

Commenting on Secretary of States Hillary Clinton’s stern warning to Pakistan that it would have to face “very severe consequences” if militants succeeded in attacking the US, Gibbs said the Pakistan government was also aware about the threat posed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is widely believed to have trained and assisted Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomber.

“The Pakistani government recognises the threat that Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan poses to them, just as we recognise the threat it poses to us,” The Dawn quoted Gibbs, as saying.

“I think there is, without a doubt, an alignment of interest in understanding where that threat is and what it poses,” he added, while denying reports of any confrontation between US and Pakistan. (ANI)

Pak unlikely to take out nurtured ‘India-centric’ terror outfits from its soil: Experts

Washington, May 7 (ANI): In wake of the failed Times Square bombing plot, which apparently had originated from Pakistan, the United States is mounting pressure on Islamabad to take on all those Islamic terror groups flourishing inside its territory, however, history suggests, action if any against these terror outfits, would be selective, analysts have said.

The Pakistan government may have offered immediate and all help to Washington, but the extent of the help may hinge again on which groups are ultimately fingered, a report in the Christian Science Monitor said.

History suggests that Islamabad has been reluctant to take any action against groups, which the state had once nurtured, especially to run a proxy war against India.

More recently, following the Mumbai terror attacks, Pakistan tried hard to deny the role of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and its associate groups in the carnage, but it was forced to act against the LeT and its front face the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) under immense international pressure.

The Pakistani establishment is not interested in dismantling these groups entirely and prefers to let them lie dormant. Members of the banned outfit are still able to congregate and hold rallies where they raise extremist slogans, the report said.

Observers also underline the fact that Pakistan Army still has a soft corner for these terror groups, and its unlikely that the international community would see action against them.

“We still see some soft corner in the heart of the military establishment for other militant groups. So it”s at least likely that the Pakistani military at this time, after putting so much pressure against TTP, won”t go after other groups and risk losing the ground they have made against the TTP,” said Abdul Basit, a researcher at the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies in Islamabad. (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)

It’s ‘premature’ to say if Shehzad had links with Pak Taliban: Pak Army

Lahore, May 6 (ANI): While US officials have said that Faisal Shehzad, the main accused behind the foiled Times Square bombing plot, received bomb making training in Pakistan’s restive tribal region of Waziristan, the Pakistan Army has said it is premature to say that he had visited the region unless a link between him and the Taliban is established.

Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) chief Major General Athar Abbas said those links are yet to be established.

“Unless a link is established, it will be premature to say that he had gone there,” The Daily Times quoted Abbas, as saying.

According to US officials privy to the investigations Shehzad, son of a former Pakistan Air Force (PAF) Chief Air Vice Marshal Baharul Haq, has already admitted to receiving terror training in Waziristan during his five-month trip to the country earlier this year.

When asked about the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) taking the responsibility for the botched up bombing plot, Abbas said : “As for the TTP claim, anybody can claim anything.” (ANI)

With three killings in 10 days Taliban haunts Swat Valley again

London, Apr.30 (ANI): Months after the Pakistan Army declared the Swat Valley safe claiming that the Taliban has been flushed out of the region, the extremists have resumed their activities killing at least three local leaders in ten days.

Pakistani officials also confirmed the target killings, but added that the recent murders does not mean the Taliban is re-entering the valley.

“There have been three incidents of targeted killings. But these incidents do not mean that the Taliban can return in any organised form to the Swat valley. The army is confident of this,” The BBC quoted Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) chief Major General Athar Abbas, as saying.

He said the militants who carried out the killings, have been “dealt with.”

“We carried out an operation after a tip-off and killed the four of them,” Abbas said.

Local residents, however, presented a different story, saying at least one militant had escaped after a gun battle with security forces.

Residents complained that though the Army claims that peace has returned to the valley, things have not improved much, and added that tourism, which once contributed a major chunk to revenue generated in the valley, still remains affected.

“Things have not improved and business is not good. We cannot even imagine that tourists will come here,” said Khalid, a local restaurant owner.

“How can things be better if there are still suicide bombings and people are being killed every few days?” he asked. (ANI)

Pak Army finally realising need to quash its ‘created Frankenstein’ in North Waziristan

New York, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pakistan Army, which has been reluctant to take on the Taliban and other extremist groups operating from the terror hot bed of North Waziristan, is now coming to terms that it must focus on the restive tribal region for the country’s own interests, Pakistani and US officials have said.

North Waziristan has long been considered as the most important safe haven for the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, where Islamabad has nurtured militant groups for years to run proxy wars across it borders.

According to US officials, the Pakistan Army is now beginning to understand that it was important to take on both the Taliban, which is targeting the state, and also those groups that are fighting against the foreign forces in Afghanistan.

“This is a scary phenomenon. All these groups are beginning to morph together,” The New York Times quoted a US official, as saying.

However, both Pakistani and Western officials said that any operation in North Waziristan by the Pakistan Army is likely to be months away.

“And even if it is undertaken, the offensive may not completely sever Pakistan’s relationship with the militants, like Sirajuddin Haqqani, who serve its interests in Afghanistan,” the newspaper observed.

North Waziristan has long been a sanctuary for the Haqqani group, which is believed to be a longtime ‘asset’ of the Pakistan military and the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI).

A top Pakistani official, who spoke on conditions of anonymity, admitted that North Waziristan is at the core of the terror issue in the country, which needs to be addressed immediately.

“The source of the problem is in North Waziristan, and it will have to be addressed,” he said.

Analysts also pointed out that an offensive in North Waziristan is imminent.

“An operation could come sooner, not least because officers on the ground are calling for it. More frequent attacks emanating from North Waziristan are likely to lead to a reaction sooner rather than later as field commanders feel the pressure to protect their troops,” said Shuja Nawaz, director of the South Asia program at the Atlantic Council in Washington.

The Pakistan military not only has to tackle the Taliban and Al-Qaeda extremists in North Waziristan, but it also has to tackle those splintered militant groups comprising of Pashtun tribesmen, Arabs, Uzbeks and ethnic Punjabis which are fighting separately, the newspaper said.

Though consensus is fast building up that the North Waziristan based terror groups must be targeted, it still remains to be seen how the Pakistan Army, which is already fighting on several fronts and often complains of lack of resources to push into the terror hot bed for at least several months, takes up the challenge. (ANI)