PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

**ISLAMABAD: The Defence Committee of the Cabinet (DCC) decided on Wednesday to utilise all means to eliminate terrorists and their sanctuaries in the country and reaffirmed its confidence in the ability of the security agencies to deal with threats to national security. **

“Security, defence and law-enforcement agencies will be authorised to use all means necessary to eliminate terrorists and militants,” a statement issued by the prime ministers office after the committees meeting said.

The second DCC meeting in less than a fortnight was presided over by Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani and attended by federal ministers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, the three services` chiefs and the director general of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). It was convened to discuss the security situation in the aftermath of the brazen weekend attack on the PNS Mehran base in Karachi.

In his opening comments, the prime minister called for revisiting the counter-terrorism strategy.
Although the use of all means was mentioned twice in the statement, it wasnt clear whether it meant the toughening of anti-terror laws or an intensifying military campaign to root out militants sanctuaries in different parts of the country.

Prime Minister Gilani said the country was entering a defining phase in the fight against terrorism.
It would be too early to say if the civil and military leadership have decided to act decisively against terrorists, but the statement suggested so when it said that national security demanded tough decisions.

“National security is the foremost priority and all arms of the government will ensure that terrorists` hideouts will be destroyed using all appropriate means.”
The DCC agreed that like the Swat operation, national consensus should be built prior to initiating an action against terrorists.

“The national consensus on eliminating terrorism will be implemented through a well-coordinated and comprehensive strategy.” The committee called for “full public support” in the new phase in the fight against terrorism.
The attack on the naval base raised questions about the ability of the security agencies to defend strategic installations, fuelling global concerns about the prospects of nuclear arsenal falling into the hands of terrorists.

Nato Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, just a day earlier, said safety of Pakistan`s nuclear arsenal had become a matter of concern after the new attack.

Rejecting such concerns, the statement said: “The DCC expressed full confidence in the ability and the capacity of the armed forces and law- enforcement and intelligence agencies in meeting all threats to national security.”

The prime minister said: “Under the National Command Authority we have an effective command and control system for ensuring the safety and security of our nuclear weapons and related systems. These arrangements conform with the highest international standards and practices followed by other nuclear weapon states.”

http://www.dawn.com/2011/05/26/military-asked-to-wipe-out-terror-and-sanctuaries.html

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

I will pray for their success. May Allah give them toufeeq to fulfill their mission. Ameen.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

Before doing all that, did PM ask military what they think of Haqqani group? Are they going to change views/support? We first need to decide what we want to do with "strategic depth" that is killing us today. Militancy can't be rooted out if our borders are bloody open and neighbor is full of free arms/high-tech weaponry.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

yeap we should seal the borders asap!

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

Not only Haqqnis ,LTe and Lal Masjid mafia , Other mafia in different parts of Pakistan. They have to wash their own quarters. Many hidden there like Dr Usman (GHQ Attack). There should be very clear policy. No good or bad cop.
They should have to get them away from land mafia and traders.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

The entire press release is meant for public consumption. Rest assure they won't be doing anything new. In fact, from the first suicide attack to the last one in Hangu, we did not do anything differently.

The policy right now in effect is to let them burn themeselves out. And I don't need to write how it's working.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

I agree with that, Mushy supposedly took action against them too but that was only "ban" which doesn't do more than lip-service.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

if and when military starts taking action, not just against the perps but those providing monetary and logistics support or some sort of cover, there are many who will start yip yapping in support of the morons getting chitrol.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

This need a lot of work .
First all active political parties should call their own summits and get the proposals.
Second and same time a summit of bureaucrats .
traders and big and small industry summit .
Mullas from all sections to show their minimum agenda otherwise throw them in sea.
And people wearing boots should ask their medium ranks, not only cc conference.
Then becomes proposal of N$.
They should all sit down with NA and senate and should be not allowed to come out without a result.
This is real emergency and can be dealt only in revolutionary way.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/may/26/islamic-militants-train-near-bin-ladens-compound/

Islamic militants train near bin Laden’s compound
A forest where villagers dare not tread

GULI BADRAL, Pakistan | In this Pakistani village surrounded by forests and glacial streams just 35 miles from where Osama bin Laden was killed, people become uneasy when asked what goes on up the mountain.

**It’s where villagers avoid cutting pine trees for firewood - and where they know not to ask questions.

When pressed, they say it’s a secret training complex for Islamic militants and that the Pakistani army is aware of it. The army denies that it exists.**

**Accounts gathered by the Associated Press in the Ughi area of Mansehra district add to suspicion that Pakistan is playing a “double game” - that is, accepting U.S. aid to fight militants on the one hand but tolerating and in some cases encouraging and harnessing the power of extremism on the other.

Three men who identified themselves as mujahedeen - militants - told the AP that the training complex is one of at least three in the region that among them house hundreds of recruits.

The mission, the three say, is aimed at taking recruits to Kashmir to fight Pakistan’s archenemy, India.

But Kashmiri veterans have been known to join forces with al Qaeda and other terrorist groups, including those fighting the U.S. and its allies in Afghanistan and elsewhere.**

The charges of Pakistani duplicity have gathered strength in the aftermath of the May 2 U.S. raid against bin Laden, who was hiding in the army town of Abbottabad and a short walk from a military academy.

Pakistani officials have denied any collusion, but the country is coming under renewed pressure to abandon its links to all Islamist militant networks.

In 2001, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf said the country was severing its ties to jihadi groups amid intense U.S. pressure after the Sept. 11 attacks, but few are convinced that has happened.

The Mansehra area, a roughly four-hour drive north of the capital, Islamabad, was known to have hosted state-backed militant groups in the 1990s. The region was considered ideal for such activities largely because it is so close to Kashmir - about 25 miles from Pakistani-administered Kashmir and about 45 miles from the boundary of the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir. Both countries claim the territory in its entirety.

When contacted by the AP last week, the army denied that any training camps or other facilities are hidden away in the Mansehra area. “The allegations are baseless,” said spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas.

In Guli Badral, however, locals say extremists and men whom they presume to be soldiers are familiar sights in the village square, where they shop for meat, flour and beans before getting back into pickup trucks for the two-hour trip along a rough track to the training camp.

The three militants who spoke to the AP about the camps did not give their names and asked that the names of their organizations not be published. They said the road leading to one of the larger camps, near the village of Khatai, has an army checkpoint.

Militants and villagers alike gave the same advice to an AP team: Do not attempt to get any closer. It’s too dangerous.

At least one of the militants appeared motivated to speak out because of anger at the army, which he said is not as supportive as it once was. Before 2001, Kashmiri-focused militant groups had offices across the country where they could openly recruit and allegedly received considerable state funds.

The man said the army was “putting up hurdles” to the group’s work and briefly arrested some of its members. He gave no details.

**It’s widely believed that the army has been unwilling to go a step further and dismantle militant training camps and crack down on the groups using them.
**
The reason: Pakistan’s obsession with neighboring India as an existential threat. The two countries have fought three wars since 1947 - two over Kashmir - and remain in a state of semi-hostility.

India has a larger army, so Pakistan views militants as a cheap and motivated force when needed.

Pakistan’s alleged harboring of Afghan Taliban factions also is related to its hostility toward India. Pakistan fears being encircled by India and wants an Afghan regime hostile to New Delhi when U.S. troops eventually withdraw.

“Pakistan has never changed its policy of using jihad as an instrument of its defense policy, even after 9/11,” said Arif Jamal, author of “Shadow War: The Untold Story of Jihad in Kashmir.”

“They do not want evidence of that getting out, but everybody knows what they are doing,” Mr. Jamal said.

**This policy comes with a price.

Many of Pakistan’s former jihadi proxies already have turned against their former patrons in disgust at their collaboration with Washington after 9/11. Allied with al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban, they have carried out scores of suicide attacks within Pakistan.
**
One group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, is of growing concern to the West because it is suspected of seeking international links and modeling itself on al Qaeda.

Foreigners have attended its camps. Lashkar-e-Taiba operatives were trained in Pakistan before carrying out the 2008 terrorist attacks in the Indian city of Mumbai.

The three militants who spoke to the AP said all the bases in Mansehra were training recruits for jihad in Kashmir, not Afghanistan.

An essential part of that process is religious indoctrination, especially a willingness to kill - and die - for Islam, said Mr. Jamal, who visited Mansehra camps about a decade ago.

The camp near the village of Khatai houses a mosque big enough for 2,500 worshippers as well as dormitories and classrooms, according to one militant, who said his job is to deliver supplies such as boots and jackets to the facility. He said firing exercises take place deeper inside the forest, where the recruits stay in tents.

Recruits may enroll in a four-week course that covers basic military skills, or three-month stints with extensive instruction in guerrilla warfare, according to this militant. He said “chosen graduates” are sent to the Pakistan-controlled part of Kashmir for more explosives training.

Not every graduate goes on to fight, he said.

“We don’t make just killing machines. Rather, we are trying to make them God-fearing men so that they don’t do anything wrong during jihad,” said the second militant.

The camp supplier said the training camps closed temporarily in 2005 after an earthquake that killed 80,000 people brought international attention and aid groups to the region.

A signboard hammered into the ground in Guli Badral indicates that the U.S. government once funded a medical clinic here.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

One Simple Question. Dr. Usman and so many pakistanis who have collaborated with these so called terrorists...were they paid for doing it? were they forced to do it? were they bribed by Pak Enemies in doing such things?
This is a war of ideology..wat pakistan needs is to counter that ideology/mentality.
First up this mentality was put into these minds over a long period of time and it will take a long period of time to wipe it off also. but ideology can not be killed by gun.
You have to change their minds and that can only be done through a united effor from ALL fronts i.e. govt, media, ulema.

but here everyone is doing its part to make the situation worse rather than making it better.

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

LOL... The elected govt of Pakistan, the true representatives of the people, are ASKING the security establishment to actually do their job!

Extraordinary!

I hope they ask nicely, otherwise the Army may just decide to ignore their actual job completely, and focus exclusively on their real estate holdings!

Re: PM: Military asked to wipe out terror and sanctuaries.

A corrupt & inept govt cannot fix anything right with the exception of filling their own pockets...hmmmmmmmm