Cease-Fire in Pakistan

** Militants declare cease-fire in Pakistan**

                             By ISHTIAQ MAHSUD, Associated Press Writer                                                                 *1 hour,  9 minutes ago*                             
                                                  
                       

                     DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan - A coalition of Taliban militants in northwestern Pakistan declared an "indefinite" cease-fire Wednesday in fighting against security forces. The government said it was preparing for peace talks. 


                    A Pakistani army helicopter crashed in the same region, killing three generals and five other soldiers. The army said initial reports indicated a technical fault in the chopper and ruled out hostile fire as the cause.

Maulvi Mohammed Umar, a spokesman for the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, a militant umbrella group, said the cease-fire would cover the lawless, semiautonomous tribal belt that borders Afghanistan, and the restive region of Swat where the army also has battled pro-Taliban fighters.

Any agreement by Pakistan to a cease-fire would likely be frowned on by its Western allies.
A truce in North Waziristan in September 2006, which collapsed the following July, was widely seen as giving Taliban and al-Qaida a freer hand to stage cross-border attacks into Afghanistan and expand their reach inside Pakistan.

In Washington, the State Department said it was aware of media reports about a possible deal, but did not know of any specific proposal for a new cease-fire and signaled that it would oppose any agreement that resembled the last truce.

“We would certainly want to see that any arrangement made was effective at pursuing President (Pervez) Musharraf’s goal and pursuing our goal, which is being able to defend against these kinds of extremist groups,” deputy spokesman Tom Casey told reporters. “We want to see an agreement that is effective, the last agreement was not effective by President Musharraf’s own admission.”

Tehrik-e-Taliban is led by Baitullah Mehsud, an al-Qaida-linked militant commander based in South Waziristan and blamed by the government for a series of suicide attacks across Pakistan, including the Dec. 27 assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

“The declaration of war we made against security forces on orders by Baitullah Mehsud. We now withdraw that for an indefinite period,” Umar told The Associated Press by telephone.
He said the cease-fire was the result of talks with the government.

Pakistan army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas denied knowledge of any talks but said militants in South Waziristan had stopped firing on security forces for two days and had retreated a little after recent intense clashes. He said the military operation against the militants was continuing for now.

Interior Minister Hamid Nawaz, who claimed security forces had “broken the back” of Mehsud’s fighters, said the government would form a jirga, or tribal council, very soon “for dialogue with the militants.” He said the jirga would comprise “influential people and peaceful citizens.”

The recent wave of violence has pitched Pakistan deeper into turmoil as it heads toward Feb. 18 elections meant to usher back democracy after eight years of military rule under Musharraf.

In January, Mehsud fighters launched a series of assaults on military bases in South Waziristan, underscoring government’s weak grip on the region that U.S. officials say is a safe haven for al-Qaida.
Last week, a U.S. missile strike killed Abu Laith al-Libi, a top al-Qaida commander, in neighboring North Waziristan.

On Tuesday, U.S. intelligence chief Mike McConnell told a Senate hearing that al-Qaida fighters have taken refuge in Pakistani tribal areas, which provide the extremists with a safe haven similar to Afghanistan before the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.

U.S. officials have said they believe Osama bin Laden is hiding in the border region of Pakistan, a finding that the Pakistanis dispute.

Washington nonetheless considers Pakistan a key ally in the war on terrorism, and Musharraf’s government said Wednesday it remained committed to that fight.

Pakistan already has made “more sacrifices than any other country” in the struggle against Islamic terrorism, Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammed Sadiq told reporters.

The army said the military helicopter went down near the scene of intense recent fighting.
The pilot had reported an unspecified technical problem before the crash, which occurred near the road that links Wana, South Waziristan’s main town, with Jandola, another town in the area. Weather in the area was not bad at the time, Abbas said.

He ruled out hostile fire because militants had not been firing on security forces for the last 48 hours.
Among those killed was Maj. Gen. Javed Sultan, a senior military commander in the South Waziristan area, Abbas said on Pakistan’s Aaj TV.

A military statement said the other victims included two brigadiers, a lieutenant colonel, three captains and an enlisted man. Most of the dead were members of Sultan’s staff.
Abbas refused to say where the helicopter was headed, citing operational security.


Associated Press Writer Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080206/ap_on_re_as/pakistan

And how long will this last? What could the motifs be?

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

With "snow-fall" season on their heads they might be buying time to recover, we can't trust "militants". Govt/military needs to keep its eyes open 24x7x365.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

They should agree to no kind of cease-fire. Crush them and keep crushing them. Even through winter.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

for these rodentia cease fire means, ..'our ass has been royally kicked, mercy, uncle..till we get a chance to recuperate, brainwash some more idiots into joining us, and then make tall claims about us being invinceible and then start launching suicide attacks like lil byatches, we can end teh ceasefire than, thank you, come again'

beat the shyt out of them, the fact that these rats are asking for a ceasefire means that they know they are in trouble, or they want tto protect their turf to hatch whatever nefarious plans they have been making.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

Yeah, leave more people dead in that region, from both sides. There are people dying in the middle of all this, a cease fire, would be good for both sides.

And if the Pak Army was winning, they wouldn’t agree to no cease fire :rolleyes: Especially with so many “faults” in their aircrafts…right.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

So, you delight when families lose their loved ones who are in the Pakistani military and when their helicopters crash? You delight in the prospect that the army is having a tough time dealing with these folks?

People are dying on both sides and the people you feel sorry for are not only indulging in armed fighting against an Islamic sovereign state for no good reasons or campaigns, but also housing and feeding these traitors and foreigners.

All you talk about endlessly is Islam, which you poorly understand and greivously misinterpret. Let me tell you a little something about Islam. Treason is punishable by death. Therefore, the state has complete right to crush any anti-national activities to protect its citizens from harm. Citizens do not hold this right, nor do they hold the right of armed combat againt other muslims. I hope you get that through your thick and intolerant and absolutely insensitive skull. It hurts you when some bearded guy gets blown up, but it doesn't hurt you when the lives of every day Pakistanis in other parts of the country have become completely unsafe and intolerable because of suicide bombings your beloved are committing all over Pakistan.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

Correction: You stated you didn't want a cease fire, thus who takes delight in people dying?

Correction: There is no Islamic State

Correction: Islam wasn't mentioned, please backup your sources, when you accuse **me **of misrepresenting Islam somewhere.

Correction: State has no right to crush no one. Putting Islam aside, international law states "Those under illegal occupation have the right to fight back by any means necessary." Do not blame the poor farmer who blows himself for the sake of his family who has been carpet bombed by our "beloved" air force. For the US and PAK army are breeding these bombings, and the more chaos they cause, the more of these you will see.

I'm not giving you symptoms which everyone else seems to focus on including yourself, I'm giving you root causes of the disease. Learn to contexually analyze events, enough with what you think.

Correction: It doesn't hurt me when bearded guys get blown up, for pak army has enough muslims in it that have beards. So again your premise here is false, and easily proven utterly useless. So much for all those insults you made towards me in your post.

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

Crescent, where in Pakistan is a person not allowed to practice Islam?

Re: Cease-Fire in Pakistan

^ In the Parliament :) and thats just a start....:)