School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

Can some one be held responsible and punished for lying and fooling the Pakistani public? This is height of inefficiency and stupidity of security agencies.

Before taking action against animals, army has to clear first its own house where many parasites hiding in their ranks and supporting these animals. Otherwise any action against these animals will not result much success in eliminating these killers.

School attack exposes Pakistan’s flawed anti-terror strategy

More than 130 children have been killed in a Taliban attack on a school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar. Analysts say the school siege proves the country’s counter-terrorism policies have failed.

A soldier escorts schoolchildren from the Army Public School that is under attack by Taliban gunmen in Peshawar, December 16, 2014 (Photo: REUTERS/Khuram Parvez)

**For months, Pakistani army officials, including Army Chief Raheel Rharif, claimed that the military’s operation against the Taliban – known as Zarb-e-Azb – in the country’s northwestern areas had been extremely successful in destroying the militants’ sanctuaries. But the Islamists’ attack on an army-run school in Peshawar, the capital city of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, on December 16, tells a completely different story. 141 people, mostly children, were slain in the attack. All six attackers were also killed.
**
The Islamist Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) outfit claimed responsibility for the assault as a military operation to rescue the hostages ended after several hours. “This attack is a response to Zarb-e-Azb military offensive and the killing of Taliban fighters and the harassment of their families,” TTP spokesman Muhammad Khorasani told AFP news agency.

The gunmen stormed the Army Public School in the morning hours and started firing at random, according to police officer Javed Khan. Army commandos quickly arrived at the scene and exchanged fire with the gunmen, he added.

“They (the assailants) include target killers and suicide attackers. They have been ordered to shoot the older students but not the children,” said Khorasani.

The siege is over

DW correspondent in Islamabad, Shakoor Rahim, says the gunmen held pupils and school staff inside the principal’s office for many hours after the attack. “The security forces and extremists traded gunfire until the army finally managed to end the siege,” Rahim said, adding that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif immediately went to Peshawar to oversee the rescue operation.

Rahim quoted an eyewitness as saying that the gunmen were clad in white dresses and were speaking Arabic. Omar Hamid, head of Asia Pacific Country Risk at the global analytics firm IHS in London, told DW that the school represented a soft target that directly impacted the Pakistani army. “As the TTP spokesperson has said, he wanted the military to feel their pain,” Hamid said.

Militants still strong

Maqsood Ahmad Jan, an analysts based in Charsadda near Peshawar, says that despite the ongoing military operation in the North Waziristan - close to the Afghan border - the Taliban still have the capacity to launch large attacks. “I don’t think that any military offensive can fully eliminate the Islamists. They just change positions,” Jan told DW.

The much-touted success of Operation Zarb-e-Azb is very much in question

There had been a relative lull in terrorist attacks in Pakistan since June when the South Asian country’s army began an offensive against militants in its restive Waziristan area. Since then, the government has been claiming that operation “Zarb-e-Azb” has crippled the Pakistani Taliban and the numerous al Qaeda affiliated groups. It also says that the capacity of these banned outfits to launch attacks - which have lost 1,100 militants over the past six months - has also been significantly reduced.

“The TTP has been weakened, but retains the ability to carry out attacks like this. it would probably be harder for them to launch attacks further away from their area of operations, say in the eastern Punjab province, but Peshawar is very accessible from the tribal areas and would be an obvious target, as the army formation running the operation is based there,” Hamid pointed out.

**Islamabad-based journalist for Dawn newspaper, Irfan Haider, says that the North Waziristan military offensive has not been effective due to a lack of coordination between the civil and military intelligence agencies.
**
“The militant organizations are operating with different names, making it difficult for the federal and provincial governments to deal with them,” Haider told DW.

However, Pakistani analyst Abdul Agha is of the view that his country’s powerful army is responsible for the continuing strength of the TTP. “They are nurturing and supporting a number of militant groups. The result is that they are still very active,” he told DW.

**Commenting on the army operation, Agha said that “the government is going after the [militant groups] that have turned against the state, or who don’t agree with its long-term plans vis-à-vis Afghanistan. Pakistan wants to eliminate some and will preserve some for the future.”
**

The lawless northwestern tribal region of Pakistan is believed to be a Taliban and al Qaeda stronghold

Political distraction

Jan criticized the KP government, headed by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan’s conservative Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, for its pro-Islamist stance. “Khan has a soft spot for the Taliban. His party’s provincial government has failed to protect the common people from the extremists. The school siege is proof,” Jan commented.

Since August, the PTI has been holding country-wide demonstrations to topple PM Sharif’s central government, which Khan and his party officials claim came into power in May 2013 through rigged parliamentary elections. Experts say that since the embattled premier is busy fighting a political war in the capital Islamabad, he is not in a position to focus on the terrorism issues.

“It is no secret that the PTI is a sympathizer of the Taliban insurgency as the party has repeatedly denounced military action against the extremists on the pretext of opposing American interference. Since Khan started demonstrations against Sharif’s government, his party has remained largely silent on Zarb-e-Azb,” Islamabad-based political commentator, Khayyam Mushir, told DW, adding that the ongoing anti-government protests were a major distraction for the PM Sharif who is further conflicted on what position to take on the terror issue.

“In the past, the military launched several offensives against the Taliban, but we know that the militants are still operating in the country,” Agha said, underlining yet another opinion analysts hold, namely that there has never been any clear-cut strategy to uproot terrorist organizations from the country because the Pakistani establishment still considers Islamist extremists an important ally.

**Islamabad wants to use them in Afghanistan after the NATO drawdown in the coming days, some say, while others assert that the Pakistani military hopes to regain the influence in Kabul it once enjoyed before the US and its allies toppled the pro-Pakistan Taliban government in 2001.
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Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

They died yesterday and today you are back it. Honestly just stop. We can't have 1 day where we aren't back to our standard politic points of views.

Give it a week. Maybe two. Take a break from the crappy politics of Pakistan. The kids who died weren't PPP or Army or PTI. They were kids.

Give their lives some meaning in the smallest terms but just letting this stuff go for a few days. Its three days of mourning in Pakistan. How about for those three days on PA we don't squabble like little children.

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan’s flawed anti-terror strategy

They have died because of failure of security agencies. This has nothing to do with politics. Why do you want to wait? You want another such episode to happen again? This is not the time of mourning, this is the time of action. Sooner the better.

The government you support is also responsible for nurturing and supporting these animals. Read the following news perhaps you were distributing sweats then.

CM Shahbaz wants Taliban to spare Punjab

http://www.dawn.com/news/857697/cm-shahbaz-wants-taliban-to-spare-punjab

LAHORE Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has said that the Taliban and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz both opposed former military dictator Pervez Musharraf and, therefore, he is surprised that this common stance has failed to stop the Taliban from carrying out terror attacks in Punjab.

The TTP have previously spoken against the elections. Last month they warned people to stay away from the rallies of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), Awami National Party (ANP), and the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), saying rallies of these parties are on their hit list.

[TABLE=“class: infobox vevent”]

[TH=“class: summary, colspan: 2, align: center”]2007 Karachi bombings[/TH]

[TH=“align: left”]Location[/TH]
Karachi, Pakistan

[TH=“align: left”]Date[/TH]
18 October 2007

[TH=“align: left”]Target[/TH]
Benazir Bhutto and her supporters

[TH=“align: left”] Attack type
[/TH]
Suicide attack, bomb

[TH=“align: left”]Deaths[/TH]
139+[SUP][1]](2007 Karsaz bombing - Wikipedia)[/SUP]

[TH=“align: left”] Non-fatal injuries
[/TH]
450+[SUP][2]](2007 Karsaz bombing - Wikipedia)[/SUP]

[TABLE=“class: infobox vevent”]

[TH=“class: summary, colspan: 2, align: center”]Benazir Bhutto assassination[/TH]

[TH=“align: left”]Location[/TH]
Liaquat National Bagh, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan

[TH=“align: left”]Date[/TH]
27 December 2007
[17:07 PST]

[TH=“align: left”]Target[/TH]
Benazir Bhutto

[TH=“align: left”] Attack type
[/TH]
Target killing[SUP][1]](Assassination of Benazir Bhutto - Wikipedia)[/SUP]
Shooting
Gun[SUP][2]](Assassination of Benazir Bhutto - Wikipedia)[/SUP]

[TH=“align: left”]Deaths[/TH]
At least 24[SUP][3]](Assassination of Benazir Bhutto - Wikipedia)[/SUP]

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

Hope things are changing , We can trust new moves to fight with terrorism .

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

Unless inside animals are eliminated this problem will continue to haunt people of Pakistan.

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

Agree

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

Rubbish. There will always be isolated attacks, the ferocity of this one is astounding but to say the military operation has failed is rubbish. The relative calm of the last few months is a testament to that. Has the author forgotton the daily attacks in number of cities on a daily basis before the operation. Of course as they get weaker and weaker they will react more ferociously. What does the author expects that before the operation is complete that all the attacks will simply disappear. Also he conveniently ignores the fact that most of these animals are now operating from across the border. Some people are only too eager to have a go at the army.

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan's flawed anti-terror strategy

sir ji, this is not isolated attack. It was planned attack and executed according to wish of 'maut ke saudagran'. This attack is the worst ever happened to Pakistan since jehadi unleashed their killing machines since Mush's time.

Irony of the fact is that children were subject to severe torture and killings for many hours without any remedial action to curtail collateral damage. Definitely responsibility lied somewhere for carelessness and stupidity.

Re: School attack exposes Pakistan’s flawed anti-terror strategy

**Can this gentleman appear again in the media and explain if the terror attacks were neutralized in September, how this terror attack happened, which was highly planned, organized and executed?**What preparations were made to counter any retaliatory act by these demons?
](Taliban capacity for terror attacks neutralised: ISPR | Pakistan Defence)Taliban capacity for terror attacks neutralised: ISPR

Director General ISPR Major General Asim Bajwa. -File Photo

ISLAMABAD: Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Asim Bajwa on Monday said that due to Operation Zarb-i-Azb , the Taliban capacity to carry out terrorist attacks have been neutralised.

During an interview with the BBC, the DG ISPR said, “because the terrorists have been scattered they are only able to carry out random attacks”.

He said that the second-level leadership of the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban have been either killed or arrested during the operation.

DAWN.COM