Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Its long over due.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/IJ19Df01.html

Pakistan plans all-out war on militants
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

An all-out battle for control of Pakistan’s restive North and South Waziristan is about to commence between the Pakistani military and the Taliban and al-Qaeda adherents who have made these tribal areas their own.

According to a top Pakistani security official who spoke to Asia Times Online on condition of anonymity, the goal this time is to pacify the Waziristans once and for all. All previous military operations - usually spurred by intelligence provided by the Western coalition - have had limited objectives, aimed at specific

bases or sanctuaries or blocking the cross-border movement of guerrillas. Now the military is going for broke to break the back of the Taliban and a-Qaeda in Pakistan and reclaim the entire area.

The fighting that erupted two weeks ago, and that has continued with bombing raids against guerrilla bases in North Waziristan - turning thousands of families into refugees and killing more people than any India-Pakistan war in the past 60 years - is but a precursor of the bloodiest battle that is coming.

Lining up against the Pakistani Army will be the Shura (council) of Mujahideen comprising senior al-Qaeda and Taliban commanders, local clerics, and leaders of the fighting clans Wazir and Mehsud (known as the Pakistani Taliban). The shura has long been calling the shots in the Waziristans, imposing sharia law and turning the area into a strategic command and control hub of global Muslim resistance movements, including those operating in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“All previous operations had a different perspective,” the security official told ATol. "In the past Pakistan commenced an operation when the Western coalition informed Pakistan about any particular hide-out or a sanctuary, or Pakistan traced any armed infiltration from or into Pakistan.

“However, the present battle aims to pacify Waziristan once and for all. The Pakistani Army has sent a clear message to the militants that Pakistan would deploy its forces in the towns of Mir Ali, Miranshah, Dand-i-Darpa Kheil, Shawal, Razmak, Magaroti, Kalosha, Angor Ada. The Pakistani Army is aiming to establish permanent bases which would be manned by thousands of military and paramilitary troops.”

According to the security official, an ultimatum had been delivered to the militants recently during a temporary ceasefire. The army would set a deadline and give safe passage into Afghanistan to all al-Qaeda members and Taliban commanders who had gathered in Waziristan to launch a large-scale post-Ramadan operation in Afghanistan. They, along with wanted tribal warrior leaders, would all leave Pakistan, and never return.

After their departure, under the direct command and surveillance of newly appointed Vice Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kiani (who will replace President-elect Pervez Musharraf as Chief of Army Staff), fresh troops and paramilitary forces would be sent in to establish bases at all strategic points and disarm the local tribes. The Durand Line (the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan), would be fenced and border controls would be tightened.

The militants rejected the ultimatum.

What’s at stake
A qualified estimate by intelligence officials is that Pakistani military pacification of the Waziristans would slash the capability of the Afghan resistance by 85% as well as deliver a serious setback to the Iraqi resistance.

The militants have little option but to stand and fight, rather than slip across the border or melt into the local population. Aside from the sanctuary and succor afforded them in the Waziristans, most of the fighters there are either Waziris, or from other parts of Pakistan, or foreigners. They would be unable to support themselves in Afghanistan, especially as most of the non-Waziris do not speak Pashtu - a fact that also prevents them from disappearing into the Waziristan populace.

Their presence in the Waziristans also has a direct bearing on their funding: money can be transferred through bank and non-bank channels, including the informal fund transfer system known as “hawala”.

Western intelligence that has been shared with Pakistan has determined that the two Waziristans alone provide the life blood - a steady stream of fighters, supplies and funds - for the resistance in all of southeast Afghanistan, including the provinces of Ghazni, Kunar, Gardez, Paktia and Paktika, as well as for attacks on Kabul. In addition, the Waziristans supply trainers to guerrillas in the Taliban heartland of Zabul, Helmand, Kandahar and Uruzgan provinces.

According to intelligence sources, during Ramadan, the Taliban’s entire top command, including Moulvi Abdul Kabeer, Jalaluddin Haqqani, Sirajuddin Haqqani, Nasiruddin Haqqani, and Mullah Mansoor Dadullah were in North Waziristan to launch a post-Ramadan offensive in southeast Afghanistan. The Pakistani military engaged the militants well in advance to block their offensive plan, but the same militant command is believed to still be in North Waziristan.

In addition, the town of Shawal hosts the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan’s command. The Uzbeks are trying to reorganize themselves to stage an armed revolt against the government of Uzbekistan.

There is also a Kurd presence in the area, which has a direct bearing on the US’s Iraqi occupation. A small number of fresh Kurd recruits come through Iran into Waziristan, get few months’ training, and then return to Iran before infiltrating Iraq to fuel insurgency in Iraqi Kurdistan against this important US ally.

"If the planned battle is successful and Waziristan is pacified, the global Islamic resistance would be back where it was in 2003, when it had fighters but no centralized command or bases to carry out organized operations, said a Pakistani security official. “As a result, the guerrilla operations were sporadic and largely ineffective.”

The safety of Taliban and al-Qaeda assets in Waziristan is a matter of life and death and, therefore, the militants have devised a forward strategy to target the Pakistani cities of Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad, hoping to break the will of the Pakistani armed forces. The Pakistani military, meanwhile, is trying to break the will of the militants with ongoing bombing raids.

Underscoring the seriousness with which the military is planning for the coming battle, it is reported that Shi’ite soldiers from northern Pakistan are being sent to the Waziristans. In the past, the Pakistani Army has been plagued by desertions of Pashtun and Sunni troops who refuse to fight fellow Pashtuns or Sunnis.

Syed Saleem Shahzad is Pakistan Bureau Chief, Asia Times Online. He can be reached at [email protected]

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Results will tell if the things get fixed…like they are being fixed in Afghanistan and Iraq. :jhanda:

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Long overdue, time to deal them a fatal blow.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Time for all of Pakistan to unite and get rid of this menace.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Way to go! Now looters will clean Pakistan of terror like the cleaned its wealth :jhanda:

and by the way the generals would starve if they finish all terrorists.. they must keep the situation going keep the dollars flowing and show the world they are serious. How could those who created them be serious in anything.

Aalsi…you forgot something…

Long Live Mush :jhanda:

Long live: Aalsi :jhanda:

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

^ God Bless President Musharaf, and may God give him and every other Pakistani the Himat to get rid of this terrorist menace. Ameen.

Some rough times ahead. But Inshallah Pakistan will survive this and come out of it much better.

:jhanda:

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

^ Yes, just like Maliki in Iraq and Karzai in Afghanistan did.

God Bless Gupshup jhanda

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

^Pakistan is far stronger then either Afghanistan and Iraq put together...

The Terrorists really dont stand a chance if there is ever a concentrated effort to destroy them...

Despite the lame support they get from their few E-Jihadi supporters here and there...

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Noori Maliki has the entire US Amry with him, and Karzai has NATO with him and the militants are only getting stronger and stronger to the point that Karzai is now trying to bribe the Talibans out of this fight.

We all want peace to prevail in Pakistan. All iam saying is we dont commit the same mistakes US and UK did. An all-out war is not a solution and will only strengthen the militants. There are other ways to get out of this mess.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

okay, lets hear those other ways then.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

As for the militant flush, i read that militants were launching attacks from afghanistan on the army recently? NATO, except some british and few canadians, doesn't want to get out of kabul and northern areas to deploy in eastern and southern afghanistan. I don't know if the counterinsurgency training [actually more "urban warfare" for iraq] of the marines will come in handy if they given the control of afghanistan.

Finally, i hope that they use some real men, not some tribals etc that surrender easily like the 300 for lack of weapons, fear and/or local sympathy. I don't see how our paindoo army will intelligently win this war so there could be a lot of casualties like in sindh / karachi in the 80s and 90s.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

The US is hardly in position to attack the terrorsits in Iraq and wipe them out. They are in a foreign country, with huge pressure to minimize casualties as much as possible.

In Afghanistan, NATO is really not up to the task, and the Afghan national Army lacks the training and power to be effective.

As for Pakistan, we have the capacity, it in our own country...
We all want peace, but peace will not pervail so long as we allow terrorsits to dictate terms to the nation, which is what they are doing... They are destroying the fabric of society, I dont think I have to mention the many crimes these people have commited in this short space of time...

You might be willing to settle for a country in which large segments are completely out of govt control, where terrorsits are allowed to go about their crimes without hindrence, but im not, and neither is the rest of the country.

The bitter pill has to be swallowed. So long as these people exist, Pakistan nor world will know no peace. Unlike Karzai, we cant afford to bribe these A holes... These snakes will come back and bite the hand that feeds them and then we will all suffer. This policy of appeasment has gone on long enough, and there is no alternative but to kill these people all out.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

[quote]

As for Pakistan, we have the capacity, it in our own country...
[/quote]
I doubt we might have the full capacity [unless we want a lot of casualties] but the bigger problem is the "will to do it", which is hindered by the deobandi / wahabbi / salafi etc infiltration in our establishment. And people after zia, including our shia bb, are to blame for it.

PS No need for offense since i am only stating facts.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

It will be a long drawn out war, thats for certain, and many casualties... Sad but true.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

as hesitant as I am to be in favour of any military activity, people who support the indiscriminate killing of innocent civilians through such bombings need to be eliminated. there are avenues for social and political change, but suicide bombings are not one of them.

any military activity should be very carefully thought out though. building permanent bases there will make our forces easy targets. i would think the easier route would be massive intelligence gathering and targeted aerial strikes on that intelligence over a sustained period of time.

something like rumsfeld's war in Iraq, which was spectacularly successful in squashing saddam/taleban. americans/nato only got into difficulty when they tried to stay there and own the area. and even now, a paltry 3500 americans have been killed in Iraq... an insignificant number in comparison to what the vietnam did.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Well, we all know that Pakistan hasnt used its full capacity as yet... There are many means at our disposal... For example, all roads into the area go through the settled areas... We can cut of all supplies. Cut of all oil supplies and see how that works for example.

Your right, there are those within the govt and intellgence that will want to resist... But a purge is whats needed... With the changing political scenerio, that might be what will happen. Wait and see.

Bottom line though, something has to be done fast.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

If we really want to stop these suicide attacks in our cities and elsewhere, then our only solution will be in backing out of this War against terror.

It was never our war to begin with, we have supported others in this unjust war of theirs for far too long. We paid heavily and got compensated miserly and we do need to realize that the jawan in our army do not want to fight their own countrymen; this was not what they signed up for and now we have army personel joining the militancy...i see a very ugly future, if we continue down this path.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

Why should all supplies be cut off? Why should all residents be punished for the wrongdoings of few jihadis. Neither the people of the tirbal areas created these jihadis nor all of them support them. Should the whole Pakistan be bomed because its army has been exporting islamic terrorism in the whole world?

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

What is Pakistan currently doing to support the War on Terror? Supposing it is limited to picking up militants or random joes (whom talibanies dont care about) and the use of airspace when the war against afghanistan happened 5 years ago, can you tell me, realistically that when Pakistan releases the estimated 50-60 terrorism suspects it has, the taleban camps in Pakistan will disarm? will they end their parallel state in Waziristan once missing persons are released?

If it is beyond the missing persons/terrorism suspects, then can you tell me specifically what else you would like Pakistan to do?

You're right, it is NOT our war. Which is why we should NOT allow them to establish bases in our country and fight in the war on terror FROM our country. if we're really neutral like you'd like us to be, we would push any fighters who want to fight the WOT out of Pakistan.

Go fight in Afghanistan, I couldnt care less.

Re: Pakistan plans all-out war on militants

I apologize, but this looks like an announcement of an operation on Sohrab Goth... does anyone remember that?