Saturday, March 6, 2010

Let It Be So...Pakistan Claims Top Taliban Leader Killed In Helicopter Gunship Attack


Okay, we've all been here before seeminly a dozen times as the Pakistanis have claimed the death of top Taliban and al Qaeda leaders so let's all get our grains of salt shots out...but the Pakistanis certainly seem pretty adamant about this news. From the article at Reuters:


Pakistan said a senior Pakistani Taliban commander with al Qaeda links may have been killed when helicopter gunships attacked a building he was in, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said on Saturday.

"We had real-time intelligence that Faqir Mohammad was in a meeting with another commander, Qari Zia-ur-Rehman, in the basement of this hideout at the time of the attack," Malik told Reuters.
"I would be surprised if he's alive. I hope we'll have confirmation in a day or so."
Malik said another Taliban commander, Fateh Mohammad, had been killed in the raid.

Now, make no mistake here...if indeed the Pakistanis got Faqir Mohammad, this would be the news of 2010 so far - this is one big fish.

At the same time, you will notice that the heat has really been turned up in Mohmand province and at the same time, we notice that this was a helo attack - not an airstrike by fixed wing aircraft or a UAV. To me, this sounds like it was really good and really hot intelligence on this meeting and the nearest strike force was the helo aircraft.

I would guess over the next few days we'll hear the Taliban voice that this news is false, that Faqir Mohammad is alive and well and buttfucking goats and young boys as usual but at least it looks like the intel was pretty reliable.

And who knows, maybe the Pakistanis got lucky. Let's hope so.



Top Pakistani Taliban leader may be dead: minister

(Reuters) - Pakistan said a senior Pakistani Taliban commander with al Qaeda links may have been killed when helicopter gunships attacked a building he was in, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said on Saturday.

"We had real-time intelligence that Faqir Mohammad was in a meeting with another commander, Qari Zia-ur-Rehman, in the basement of this hideout at the time of the attack," Malik told Reuters.
"I would be surprised if he's alive. I hope we'll have confirmation in a day or so."
Malik said another Taliban commander, Fateh Mohammad, had been killed in the raid.
The militant hideout in the Mohmand ethnic Pashtun tribal region near the Afghan border was attacked by Pakistani forces on Friday, killing at least 16 insurgents.
Faqir Mohammad, is rated as a senior commander of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the main alliance of Pakistan's home-grown militants based in the northwest.
He is the main Taliban commander in the Bajaur region, adjacent to Mohmand and also on the Afghan border, which the army said last week had been cleared of militants after nearly two years of clashes.
Mohammad is a veteran militant who is known to have had close links with al Qaeda leaders including the militant group's number two, Ayman al-Zawahri. He is seen as a supporter of Taliban forces battling NATO troops in Afghanistan.
Security analysts the deaths would be a major blow for the Pakistani Taliban.
"The death of Faqir Mohammad, Zia-ur-Rehman and Fateh Mohammad will have a major soothing effect for Bajaur and nearby areas," said Mehmood Shah, a former security chief for the tribal areas.
The United States has praised Pakistan's action against its indigenous militants but wants its ally to go after Afghan Taliban groups who cross the frontier to attack Western forces in Afghanistan.
Pakistan says it lacks the resources to open up new fronts, and analysts say it sees Afghan militants as a counterweight to the influence of rival India in Afghanistan.
Despite resisting U.S. pressure to launch an offensive against Afghan Taliban factions, Pakistan has arrested several senior members of the Afghan Taliban in recent weeks, including a top military commander, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.
Pakistan's mountainous Pashtun lands have been a global militant hub since Islamist fighters, backed by the United States and Pakistan, flocked there to battle Soviet forces over the border in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

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