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)

Q+A: Who was al Qaeda’s operations chief Sa’id al-Masri?

(Reuters) – Al Qaeda’s operations chief and third-in-command, Sheikh Sai’d al-Masri, is believed to have been killed in a U.S. missile strike in Pakistan last month, U.S. and Pakistani officials said.

World

Al Qaeda has confirmed the death of Masri, who is also known as Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, in a statement on an Islamist website but gave no details.

U.S. and Pakistani intelligence officials believe Masri was killed, along with members of his family, in a strike by a pilotless CIA-operated drone in tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan in late May.

Following are some facts about him.

WHO IS SAI’D AL-MASRI?

He was born on December 17, 1955, in Egypt and became a militant Islamist in his youth, spending three years in prison.

Masri was a founding member of al Qaeda number two 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, Masri was implicated in the killing along with Zawahiri and others, and they spent time in jail together.

He left Egypt for Afghanistan in 1988 and was subsequently convicted in absentia for militant offences in several trials in Egypt, and was sentenced to both life imprisonment and death.

Masri accompanied Osama bin Laden from Afghanistan to Sudan in 1991. While there he served as an accountant for bin Laden’s Sudan-based businesses before returning to Afghanistan with bin Laden in 1996.

Masri is reported to have supplied funding for Mohammed Atta, the leader of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

WHAT WAS HIS ROLE IN AL QAEDA?

Masri was one of al Qaeda’s most important and trusted leaders. He was al Qaeda’s leader in Afghanistan and in what the group refers to as the Khorasan, a region encompassing large areas of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Iran.

The Khorasan is considered by jihadists to be the place where they will inflict the first defeat against their enemies in the Muslim version of Armageddon.

He also served as a top propagandist for al Qaeda and the Taliban. Bespectacled Masri, wearing a white turban, often appeared on propaganda tapes with senior Taliban leaders.

As one of the founding members of al Qaeda in the late 1980s, Masri was a close associate of bin Laden. He also was a member of al Qaeda’s Shura Council, its core leadership forum.

Among Islamist groups, Masri was reputed to be a diplomatic personality who had good relations among local militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan. His appointment as the leader of Afghan operations in May 2007 was seen by experts as a bid by al Qaeda to boost its ties to local insurgents.

The U.S. September 11 Commission described Masri as the network’s “chief financial manager”. He was also believed to have opposed the September 11 attacks prior to their execution, but he remained loyal to al Qaeda and bin Laden.

HOW SIGNIFICANT IS HIS DEATH?

Security experts say his death would be a blow. Al Qaeda has suffered a steady erosion of its leadership and ability to mount attacks since the United States stepped up its campaign of missile strikes by unmanned aircraft in Pakistan’s tribal region.

His death could also hamper al Qaeda’s ability to raise and distribute funds because he was in charge of the group’s “bayt ul mal”, or treasury. Because of his seniority he will be difficult to replace, security experts say.

Masri, which means “the Egyptian”, was the most senior al Qaeda leader killed in Afghanistan since military commander Mohammad Atef died in a U.S. air strike on his home in Kabul in November 2001.

He was also the highest ranking al Qaeda operative to have been killed in Pakistan’s tribal belt this year. In 2008, Pakistani security officials had said he was killed in military clashes in the northwestern Bajaur tribal region but that was later proved incorrect.

WHAT DID HE SAY WHEN HE WAS ALIVE?

One of the few recognizable faces of al Qaeda, Masri issued warnings and threats to countries and leaders the group considers itself waging holy war, or jihad, against.

In an interview aired on Al Jazeera television in June 2009, Masri said al Qaeda would use Pakistan’s nuclear weapons in its fight against the United States if it were in a position to do so. When asked about the whereabouts of bin Laden and Zawahiri, he said they were “safe”.

In a video seen by Reuters in 2009, Masri warned India of more attacks like the 2008 operation in its financial capital Mumbai and said India’s economic interests would be targeted if it retaliated against Pakistan.

Masri also told Pakistan’s Geo television in an interview aired in 2008 that a suicide bomber who attacked the Danish embassy in Islamabad that year came from the Muslim holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia.

In a June 2009 audio message, Masri said militants were short of food, weapons and other supplies and appealed for funding. In a January 2010 message, he praised a December 30, 2009, attack at a U.S. base in Afghanistan in which a Jordanian double agent turned suicide bomber killed seven CIA officers.

(Additional reporting by William Maclean in LONDON; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Miral Fahmy)

Q+A-Who was al Qaeda’s operations chief Sa’id al-Masri?

ISLAMABAD/KABUL, June 1 (Reuters) – Al Qaeda’s operations chief and third-in-command, Sheikh Sai’d al-Masri, is believed to have been killed in a U.S. missile strike in Pakistan last month, U.S. and Pakistani officials said.

Al Qaeda has confirmed the death of Masri, who is also known as Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, in a statement on an Islamist website but gave no details.

U.S. and Pakistani intelligence officials believe Masri was killed, along with members of his family, in a strike by a pilotless CIA-operated drone in tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan in late May.

Following are some facts about him.

WHO IS SAI’D AL-MASRI?

He was born on Dec. 17, 1955, in Egypt and became a militant Islamist in his youth, spending three years in prison.

Masri was a founding member of al Qaeda number two 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, Masri was implicated in the killing along with Zawahiri and others, and they spent time in jail together.

He left Egypt for Afghanistan in 1988 and was subsequently convicted in absentia for militant offences in several trials in Egypt, and was sentenced to both life imprisonment and death.

Masri accompanied Osama bin Laden from Afghanistan to Sudan in 1991. While there he served as an accountant for bin Laden’s Sudan-based businesses before returning to Afghanistan with bin Laden in 1996.

Masri is reported to have supplied funding for Mohammed Atta, the leader of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

WHAT WAS HIS ROLE IN AL QAEDA?

Masri was one of al Qaeda’s most important and trusted leaders. He was al Qaeda’s leader in Afghanistan and in what the group refers to as the Khorasan, a region encompassing large areas of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Iran.

The Khorasan is considered by jihadists to be the place where they will inflict the first defeat against their enemies in the Muslim version of Armageddon.

He also served as a top propagandist for al Qaeda and the Taliban. Bespectacled Masri, wearing a white turban, often appeared on propaganda tapes with senior Taliban leaders.

As one of the founding members of al Qaeda in the late 1980s, Masri was a close associate of bin Laden. He also was a member of al Qaeda’s Shura Council, its core leadership forum.

Among Islamist groups, Masri was reputed to be a diplomatic personality who had good relations among local militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan. His appointment as the leader of Afghan operations in May 2007 was seen by experts as a bid by al Qaeda to boost its ties to local insurgents.

The U.S. September 11 Commission described Masri as the network’s “chief financial manager”. He was also believed to have opposed the September 11 attacks prior to their execution, but he remained loyal to al Qaeda and bin Laden.

HOW SIGNIFICANT IS HIS DEATH?

Security experts say his death would be a blow. Al Qaeda has suffered a steady erosion of its leadership and ability to mount attacks since the United States stepped up its campaign of missile strikes by unmanned aircraft in Pakistan’s tribal region.

His death could also hamper al Qaeda’s ability to raise and distribute funds because he was in charge of the group’s “bayt ul mal”, or treasury. Because of his seniority he will be difficult to replace, security experts say.

Masri, which means “the Egyptian”, was the most senior al Qaeda leader killed in Afghanistan since military commander Mohammad Atef died in a U.S. air strike on his home in Kabul in November 2001.

He was also the highest ranking al Qaeda operative to have been killed in Pakistan’s tribal belt this year. In 2008, Pakistani security officials had said he was killed in military clashes in the northwestern Bajaur tribal region but that was later proved incorrect.

WHAT DID HE SAY WHEN HE WAS ALIVE?

One of the few recognisable faces of al Qaeda, Masri issued warnings and threats to countries and leaders the group considers itself waging holy war, or jihad, against.

In an interview aired on Al Jazeera television in June 2009, Masri said al Qaeda would use Pakistan’s nuclear weapons in its fight against the United States if it were in a position to do so. When asked about the whereabouts of bin Laden and Zawahiri, he said they were “safe”.

In a video seen by Reuters in 2009, Masri warned India of more attacks like the 2008 operation in its financial capital Mumbai and said India’s economic interests would be targeted if it retaliated against Pakistan.

Masri also told Pakistan’s Geo television in an interview aired in 2008 that a suicide bomber who attacked the Danish embassy in Islamabad that year came from the Muslim holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia.

In a June 2009 audio message, Masri said militants were short of food, weapons and other supplies and appealed for funding. In a January 2010 message, he praised a Dec. 30, 2009, attack at a U.S. base in Afghanistan in which a Jordanian double agent turned suicide bomber killed seven CIA officers.

(Additional reporting by William Maclean in LONDON; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Miral Fahmy) (For full coverage of Pakistan and Afghanistan, click on [ID:nAFPAK] (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

‘Not right time for India and Pak to address Kashmir issue’

The US has said that this is not the appropriate moment for India and Pakistan to hold discussions on the Kashmir issue as they need to go for confidence building measures first.

“I think that’s not going to be an issue that’s going to be addressed right away,” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Robert Blake said in response to a question at a special news conference on India yesterday.

Blake emphasised that it was for India and Pakistan to take a call on it, but felt that it would be better for the two countries go for confidence building measures first.

“I think, again, that what’s most important is first to get these talks going again and to focus on — once they’ve gotten beyond the immediate counter-terrorism issues, to focus on some of the important opportunities like trade that exist between these two countries,” Blake said.

“Once they have developed a degree of confidence, they might then be able to take up some of these more sensitive territorial issues,” Blake said.

He was responding to the question: “Where does Kashmir and the line of control fit into this puzzle?” The State Department official also did not agree with the allegations coming from some of the top Pakistani officials about India’s role in Afghanistan, which he said is nothing but constructive.

“I am not sure that India’s providing that much training to the Afghan army,” Blake said when referred to the remarks of General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani that he was against India training Afghan Armed forces.

“The vast majority of the assistance that the Indians are providing to Afghanistan is in the form of economic assistance,” Blake said.

“I would say we’ve welcomed very much the assistance that India has provided and all of our cabinet-level officials have welcomed that and will continue to do so,” he said.

“We think that they’ve really played a very important role with the USD 1.3 billion in assistance that they provided to date, mostly in infrastructure and other kinds of reconstruction projects, but also capacity building and training and so forth.

And so we think that is a very important part of the international effort to help stabilise Afghanistan,” Blake said.

Times Square plot: 11th suspect held in Pakistan

Islamabad, May 27 (IANS) Pakistani officials have detained an 11th person in connection with the botched attempt of bombing New York’s Times Square early this month, CNN reported quoting a Pakistani intelligence source.

The man, identified as Qamar Ejaz, is the brother of Adnan Ejaz, a former major in Pakistani army who is already in custody for having alleged links with Faisal Shahzad, the prime suspect in the plot, said the intelligence source, who requested anonymity.

However, it was unclear how Ejaz is linked to Faisal Shahzad or the Times Square bombing plot.

Shahzad, a naturalised US citizen of Pakistani origin, was arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport while trying to board a flight to Dubai May 3, two days after he planted an explosive-laden vehicle in Manhattan’s Times Square. The bomb failed to detonate.

US tells Pak to take out terror groups radicalising people to strike against west

Washington, May 19 (ANI): The United States wants Pakistan to take on the extremist organisations which radicalise disgruntled Pakistani civilians living in foreign countries and use them for terror activities targeted at the west, particularly America and Europe.

According to sources, this would be the message that the two senior security aides of President Barack Obama, National Security Adviser General James Jones and Central Investigation Agency (CIA) Director Leon Panetta, would be giving to the Pakistani leadership during their visit.

General Jones and Panetta arrived in Islamabad on Tuesday (May 18), and are likely to meet both the civilian and military leadership during their visit.

While certain sections of the media reported that both the top US officials visit is linked with the May 1 failed Times Square bombing plot, but observers believe that the high-profile visit has more to do than what it seems.

“This (Times Square probe) is not such a sophisticated or complicated case that the White House should send its national security adviser and the CIA chief all the way to Islamabad. They are there to look at the bigger picture and to discuss with Pakistani officials the greater context of this issue,” The Dawn quoted sources, privy to the development, as saying.

The basic concept of the message that General Jones and Panetta are believed to have brought with them is the same as that of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s, sources added.

In a recent television interview, Clinton had warned that Pakistan would have to face “very severe consequences” if a successful terror attack on the US is traced back to Pakistan. (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)

Some Pak officials know where Osama is: Clinton

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

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

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

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

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

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

FBI team in Pakistan to probe Times Square bomb plot

Islamabad, May 8 (DPA) A team of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is in Islamabad to exchange information on the New York Times Square bombing plot, Pakistani officials said Saturday.

A three-member FBI team arrived in Pakistan’s capital Friday to obtain information from local officials about their probe into possible links between Islamist extremists and Faisal Shahzad, a 30-year-old US citizen from Pakistan charged in the botched bombing.

‘The FBI officials are focusing on two things. First, they want to question Faisal Shahzad’s father, father-in-law and his friends so they can guess how that man was radicalized and whether he had any links with radicals,’ said a Pakistani security official.

‘Secondly, they want to know if any militant organisation in Pakistan had sent money to Faisal Shahzad to fund the bombing plot,’ he said, requesting anonymity. ‘They want us to find out if any transactions took place through hawala.’

The hawala is an informal, private system of quick money transfer that millions of Pakistanis living abroad use to send remittances to the families back home.

US officials say Shahzad has admitted to the plot and told investigators that he attended militant training camps in Pakistan, but authorities in both countries have not confirmed any conclusive contact between him and a terrorist organization.

‘We have taken into custody a couple of Faisal Shahzad’s friends and people who knew them but there has not been any major breakthrough in the investigation so far,’ the official said.

‘We do not know if this person had any direct or indirect links with Taliban, Al Qaeda or any other terrorist group.’

Other officials have said at least one of Shahzad’s friends is believed to have links with Jaish-e-Mohammad, a militant group with suspected ties with Al Qaeda and accused of some crimes in Pakistan.

Police arrested the person earlier this week in southern port city of Karachi.

Some media reports said authorities had taken Shahzad’s father, Baharul Haq, a retired air vice marshal, into ‘protective custody’ but officially it has not been confirmed.

Shahzad was arrested Monday on a Dubai-bound plane at John F Kennedy International Airport in New York, two days after a vendor spotted smoke arising from a vehicle in Times Square. Police defused the crude car bomb consisting of gasoline, propane and powder.

His links to Pakistani terrorists remain unclear but the pressure is building on the country to act decisively to eliminate Taliban safe havens involved in the insurgency in Afghanistan and Al Qaeda terrorist organization conducting terrorist actions overseas.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warned Pakistan of ‘very severe consequences’ if a terrorist action on US soil were linked to Pakistan.

‘We’ve made it very clear that if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences,’ Clinton told CBS in an interview to be aired Sunday.

But Clinton also praised Pakistan’s increased cooperation, adding that more was needed from the Islamic country.

‘We’ve gotten more cooperation and it’s been a real sea change in the commitment we’ve seen from the Pakistan government. We want more. We expect more,’ said Clinton, according to excerpts released by CBS.

Around 150,000 Pakistani troops are carrying out several offensives against Islamist rebels in its lawless tribal region and adjoining Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, formerly known as North West Frontier Province.

But they have mainly focused on the militants who have attacked civilian and official targets inside Pakistan, and spared those groups of rebels who conduct cross border raids into Afghanistan.

Large areas of its territory are still under control of so-called ‘good Taliban’ or ‘Afghan Taliban’ who are said to allow Al Qaeda to operate almost freely.

Two or more groups could have tutored Times Square suspect

Washington/New York, May 7 (IANS) US investigators probing the aborted Times Square bombing attempt have shifted their focus to prime suspect Faisal Shahzad’s links in Pakistan and a counter-terrorism expert has said two or more groups could have worked together in grooming Shahzad for a terrorist mission.

Meanwhile, the US is planning to send Pakistan a detailed request for ‘urgent and specific assistance’ in the aborted bombing case, the Washington Post reported.

According to the daily, a US counter-terrorism official was cited as saying it was possible that two or more groups had worked together in grooming Shahzad for a terrorist mission during an extended trip he made to Pakistan last year.

The influential daily cited US officials as saying that they had reached no firm conclusion about whether Shahzad had ties to any domestic militant group in Pakistan, but that information gathered thus far continued to point to the Pakistani Taliban, which has asserted responsibility for the bombing attempt.

The question of which group, if any, was involved is an important one for the future of the uneasy counter-terrorism alliance between the United States and Pakistan, it said.

‘The Pakistani military has been waging war against the Pakistani Taliban for more than a year, with US assistance,’ the Post said.

‘But Pakistan might be more reluctant to take action against other groups, particularly those focused on separating the disputed region of Kashmir from India.’

‘Some, particularly the Lashkar-e-Taiba, thought responsible for terrorist attacks in India, have strong support within the Pakistani intelligence service,’ it noted.

The Post cited Pakistani officials aiding in the Times Square case as saying they have arrested some people linked to a third group, Jaish-e-Muhammad, which is focused on Kashmir but has also turned its efforts against US troops in Afghanistan.

US intelligence suspects there is increasing overlap and coordination among domestic Pakistani groups and the Pakistan-based Afghan Taliban and Al Qaeda, the daily said.

The Post said pressure on Pakistan to escalate its domestic counter-terrorism operations, particularly toward Kashmir – and India-focused militants, could increase anti-US sentiment there, while any perceived Pakistani hesitation would undermine congressional and public support in the US.

White House spokesperson Robert Gibbs told reporters that the justice department and investigating agencies are actively looking at the time which Shahzad spent in Pakistan, but did not go into details.

The New York Times also cited unnamed officials as saying that after two days of intense questioning Shahzad, an American citizen of Pakistani origin, evidence was mounting that the Pakistani Taliban had helped inspire and train Shahzad in the months before he drove the car bomb to Times Square Saturday night.

Officials said Shahzad had discussed his contacts with the group, and investigators had accumulated other evidence that they would not disclose.

On Wednesday, Shahzad, the 30-year-old son of a retired senior Pakistani Air Force officer, waived his right to a speedy arraignment, a possible sign of his continuing cooperation with investigators, the Times said.

One senior Obama administration official cited by the Times cautioned that ‘there are no smoking guns yet’ that the Pakistani Taliban had directed the Times Square bombing.

But others said that there were strong indications that Shahzad knew some members of the group and that they probably had a role in training him. American officials said it had become increasingly difficult to separate the operations of the militant groups in Pakistan’s tribal areas.

Besides the Pakistani Taliban and Al Qaeda, groups operating in the tribal areas are the Haqqani Network and the Kashmiri groups Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for the Mumbai terror attacks, and Jaish-e-Muhammad.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal said Shahzad possibly received instruction from the Pakistan Taliban’s suicide-bomb trainer.

If verified, the suspected links between Pakistan Taliban and Shahzad would mark a stark shift in how it and related jihadist groups, which have so far focused on attacks within Pakistan and in India, not the US, pursue their goals, it said.

Pakistani investigators are also probing Shahzad’s possible connections with Jaish-e-Muhammad, an outlawed Islamist militant group, after the arrest Tuesday of Tohaid Ahmed and Mohammed Rehan in Karachi, the Journal said.

The two men were believed to have links to Jaish, it said citing a senior Pakistani government official. Ahmed had been in email contact with Shahzad.

Rehan took Shahzad to South Waziristan, the official was quoted as saying. There, Shahzad received training in explosives in a camp run by Qari Hussain, a senior commander with Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan who trains suicide bombers, the official was quoted as saying.

Hussain is also a cousin of Hakimullah Mehsud, the Pakistan Taliban’s chief.

Hussain claimed responsibility for the attempted attack in a weekend audio message. His message followed a video of Mehsud, the Pakistan Taliban leader, in which he warned of a wave of attacks on the US. ‘Our fighters are already in the United States,’ said Mehsud.

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)

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)

Swat Taliban chief Fazlullah alive, living with impunity in Pak, claims spokesman

Peshawar, Apr.27 (ANI): Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah has long been eluding Pakistani security forces, who apparently have no idea about his whereabouts, however, the extremist leader’s spokesperson has claimed that he is alive and in Pakistan itself.

Late last year, reports said that Fazlullah has crossed over to Afghanistan. Pakistani officials also claimed that he was wounded and was unlikely to survive.

However, Fazlullah’s spokesperson Omar Hasan Ahrabi has claimed that the militant leader was never injured and is in fine health.

Ahrabi said though Fazlullah was currently in Pakistan, he could cross over to Afghanistan whenever he wishes.

“I am in touch with him through handwritten letters. He is in our ‘watan’ (our homeland) and is able to cross over to Afghanistan whenever he wishes,” The News quoted Ahrabi, as saying.

The spokesman said that a new video of Fazlullah would be released soon to put to rest all speculations about his health.

Fazlullah, who is said to be in his early 30s, is the most wanted Taliban leader in Swat with a bounty 50 million rupees on his head.

Fazlullah’s whereabouts have long been a matter of speculation, but it is believed that he has taken refuge tribal areas, such as Mohmand or Orakzai in the restive Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). (ANI)

Action against Musharraf in Benazir case after ‘concrete’ evidence is found: Malik

Islamabad, Apr.20 (ANI): Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik has said that action against former President General Pervez Musharraf in the slain Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination case would be taken after ‘concrete’ evidence is gathered against him.

While the UN’s fact finding team, in its probe, has blamed the Musharraf regime for Bhutto’s assassination, Malik said the tragic incident took place due to the Punjab government’s failure to provide full security cover to Bhutto.

Malik said Pakistani officials are still probing the former premier’s murder, The Dawn reports.

It may be noted that the UN commission had also accused Pakistani intelligence agencies and other authorities of hampering the probe against those who masterminded the gun and bomb attack.

Meanwhile, insiders said that the government is contemplating action against Musharraf’s close relatives, who have been indicted in the UN report.

According to sources, the Presidency is in consultations with various authorities to initiate action against Major General Nadeem Ijaz and Major General (retired) Nusrat Naeem. (ANI)

Hospital blast kills 10 in Pakistan

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

U.S. drone strike kills four militants in Pakistan

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

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

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

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

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

India agrees to review Nimoo Bazgo water project’s design

Lahore, Mar. 29 (ANI): While India has rejected six out of eight objections raised by Pakistan over the Nimoo Bazgo water project, it has agreed to review the design of the project.

During the first day of the three-day meeting of the Indus River Commission in Lahore, Pakistani officials raised concerns about the construction of Nemobaaz Go and Chutak power plants at the River Sindh by India, saying that the constructions would violate the Indus Basin Treaty and block 35,000 feet per acre water.

The nine-member delegation of the Indian water commission headed by G Aranga Nathan rejected six points raised by the Pakistani delegation and said that he would answer on the remaining two objections after consulting the top leadership in New Delhi, The Nation reports.

On Pakistani Water Commissioner Jamaat Ali Shah’s proposal to install the telemetric system along rivers, Nathan said the reactivation of the telemeter system was possible and he would consult his telemetric experts on the proposal.

Nathan added that a new meeting would be held soon if the two sides failed to resolve the dispute during this visit.

Meanwhile, Shah pointed out that an immediate breakthrough in the Indus River water talks was unlikely because of the “non-political nature” of the dialogue.

He added that the use of water for agricultural and hydroelectric purposes would be discussed during the remaining days of the dialogue.

He said objections over design of the Chutak project would be discussed on the second day. (ANI)

Pak Army kills 22 Taliban militants in Orakzai

Parachinar, Mar. 29 (ANI): The Pakistani Army reportedly killed 22 Taliban insurgents near the Afghanistan border on Sunday after a group of militants attacked an army base with rockets and automatic weapons.

The Dawn quoted Samiullah Khan, a Pakistani government official, as saying that the fighting occurred in the Orakzai tribal region where the army is on the offensive.

He added that security forces first killed 10 militants in a retaliatory attack and the military helicopter gun ship later bombed hideouts in the Chapri Ferozkhel area, killing another 12.

According to Pakistani officials, over 100 suspected militants and five soldiers have been killed in fighting in the region this week.

Militants killed in the attacks include Uzbek and Arab nationals.

The region has been the main base of the Pakistani Taliban commander Hakimullah Mehsud.

A suspected US missile strike is believed to have killed him in North Waziristan earlier this year. (ANI)

Pak against Taliban gaining control in Afghanistan: Qureshi

Washington, Mar.27 (ANI): Rejecting the notion that Islamabad is providing ‘covert’ support to the Taliban in Afghanistan against foreign forces, Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said there was a time when his country was ‘comfortable’ with the Taliban government, but it now does not want the insurgents to take control of the neighbouring nation.

In an interview with the National Public Radio, Qureshi said Pakistan wants peace and stability in Afghanistan, and would take all necessary steps in this regard in accordance with the country’s wishes.

“We are going to do whatever we can do to achieve the objective of a peaceful, stable, friendly Afghanistan,” Qureshi said.

Qureshi insisted that since the establishment of a democratic government in the country things have changed and that Pakistan is striving to be a “moderate, democratic voice”.

“What the American people need to understand is that people and democracy in Pakistan are getting their act together,” he said.

Later, talking to reporters after a meeting with US Vice-President Joe Biden, Qureshi said after meeting the top US diplomats during the strategic dialogue he believes that the Obama Administration is committed to strengthen ties with Islamabad.

“We exchanged views on the discussions we had at the strategic dialogue and his (Biden’s) expression of support reinforced my understanding that this administration is ready to turn bilateral relations into a partnership,” Qureshi said.

Biden had dropped in a White House meeting between National Security Adviser James Jones and top Pakistani officials including Qureshi, Defence Minister Ahmed Mukhtar, Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani and Pakistan’s Ambassador in the US Hussain Haqqani. (ANI)

Pak arrests six Indian fishermen for violating sea limits

Karachi, Mar.25 (ANI): The Pakistani Maritime Security Agency arrested six Indian fishermen for violating the country’s water boundary in Krake near Karachi on Thursday.

Pakistani officials also seized two boats belonging to Indian fishermen.

All the fishermen have been sent to jail, The Nation reports.

This is second such arrest made by Pakistani agencies in less than a week.
Five Indian fishermen were arrested for allegedly violating Pakistan’s sea limits near the Sir Creek area in the Arabian Sea last week.

India and Pakistan frequently arrest each other’s fishermen over violation of the maritime boundary, and hundreds of them are swapped regularly.

According to statistics, over 100 Pakistani fishermen are languishing in Indian jails while over 600 Indian fishermen are in Pakistani prisons.

Some believe that it is the rare and expensive fish like ‘Lal Pari’, which lures Indian fishermen to sail near Pakistani waters.

The fish is found near Sir Creek, at the mouth of the Indus River.

The “Lal Pari” offers handsome profit to the fishermen and a large quantity of these species are exported to European countries. (ANI)