Sunday, October 18, 2009

First Battles In South Waziristan See Pakistani Army Kill 60 Taliban


From all the reports I am seeing of the first two real days of the South Waziristan operation, it is madness. The reports are that the Pakistanis are bombarding the shit out of the Taliban hideouts by uses of jet fighters and the ground operations are showing some hellacious firefights. From the article at Dawn, the latest tallies show 60 Taliban killed and 5 Pakistani troops killed. Here's a bit from the article:


In last 24 hours, reportedly 60 terrorists have been killed in operation Rah-e-Nijat,’ the military said in a statement.
‘Casualties of security forces are five soldiers (dead) and 11 are injured.’
Ground forces launched the three-pronged push on Saturday, starting a much-anticipated assault in a bid to crush networks blamed for some of the worst attacks that have killed more than 2,250 people over the past two years.

Jets carried out fresh air strikes on Sunday at Ladha and Makeen in the north, backing up troops who encountered resistance on the ground, a military official told AFP in the northwest on condition of anonymity.
He said five Taliban hideouts were destroyed. Another official said the army captured militant-held village Spinkai Raghzai, erecting a checkpoint en route to Kotkai, the home town of Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud.
It's my feeling that the next week will be the key to this operation. If the Pakistani army can move forward fairly easily and take over some Taliban stronghold villages, we could very well see the Taliban and the other factions in the area start to lose heart and move into escape mode. At the same time, if the Pakistanis can knock off a couple of Taliban leaders, it will send a shockwave across the province. The tricky part for the Pakistanis is if they get bogged down and/or if they seem some large number of troops get captured - those captures in the past of government troops have almost always led to some appeasement by the government and the fact of the matter is this - in the past, when Pakistani troops, especially Frontier Corps troops, find themselves surrounded or in dire straits, they are quick to surrender.

The encouraging part here is that the air power is still being used - that is going to be huge here as we will probably see the Taliban try to mass up more than usual to resist some of the Paki troops - if the air strikes can hone in on those pockets of amassed Taliban, we could see some death counts in the hundreds.


South Waziristan clashes kill 60 militants

PESHAWAR: Security forces pounded Taliban bases from the air and bore down on their leader's hometown on Sunday, intensifying a major offensive against the militants which it said had killed 60 militants.
More than 100,000 people have fled South Waziristan, part of the tribal belt on the Afghan border that US officials call the most dangerous place on earth, staying with relatives or renting accommodation to escape the fighting.
Thousands of al-Qaeda-linked fighters are holed up in the tribal belt, where the army says the offensive is concentrated on strongholds of the Tehrik-i-Taliban (TTP) movement.
On the second day of the offensive, Taliban armed with rockets and heavy weapons put up strong resistance at Sharwangi, an area of impenetrable forest high in the mountains as fighter jets bombed positions, officials said.
The military said 60 Taliban followers had been killed, although the region is cut off from the outside world and information on militant casualties is impossible to independently verify.
‘In last 24 hours, reportedly 60 terrorists have been killed in operation Rah-e-Nijat,’ the military said in a statement.
‘Casualties of security forces are five soldiers (dead) and 11 are injured.’
Ground forces launched the three-pronged push on Saturday, starting a much-anticipated assault in a bid to crush networks blamed for some of the worst attacks that have killed more than 2,250 people over the past two years.
‘The resistance is not as stiff as we were expecting, maybe because we are still moving and not yet reached the strongholds of the Taliban like Kotkai, Makin, Ladha and Kanigurram,’ one military official told AFP.
About 20,000 to 25,000 troops headed into action after Pakistan vowed to act after attacks left more than 170 people dead in less than two weeks.
Jets carried out fresh air strikes on Sunday at Ladha and Makeen in the north, backing up troops who encountered resistance on the ground, a military official told AFP in the northwest on condition of anonymity.
He said five Taliban hideouts were destroyed. Another official said the army captured militant-held village Spinkai Raghzai, erecting a checkpoint en route to Kotkai, the home town of Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud.
Numerous offensives against militants in the tribal belt have met with limited success, costing the lives of 2,000 troops and ending generally with peace agreements that critics say simply gave the enemy a chance to re-arm.‘The operation will continue until the objectives are achieved. The army has blocked all entry and exit points of Waziristan,’ said army spokesman Major General Athar Abbas.
Commanders have outlined an offensive lasting six to eight weeks, with the goal of finishing before the onset of harsh winter snows.
There are an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 TTP fighters in South Waziristan and up to 25,000 across Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt, which has a history of fierce independence and a powerful culture of revenge.
Its tribesmen famously resisted the British in the 19th century and its mountain terrain is pockmarked with goat tracks, caves and thick forest.
‘War in Waziristan will not be a simple one. Waziristan is like a black hole,’ Rahimullah Yusufzai, a tribal affairs expert, told AFP.
US officials say al-Qaeda fled into the tribal areas after US-led operations toppled the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001 and is now using the area as a base for plotting attacks on the west and the region.
The offensive by security forces was accompanied by an indefinite curfew slapped on parts of South Waziristan, officials said.
Since August, more than 100,000 civilians have been registered by local authorities after fleeing South Waziristan, normally home to 600,000 people, said a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), Ariane Rummery.
‘Over the last five days, 3,065 families (around 21,000 people) registered... before this latest influx there had been about 80,500 people or 11,000 families,’ she told AFP.
Pakistani officials say the number of displaced could rise to 200,000 people, who are staying mostly with relatives or renting rooms in the neighbouring districts of Tank and Dera Ismail Khan.

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