Wow, totally revealing stuff coming out of Pakistan right now as the Pakistani military has finished up clearing out the Bajaur region of Taliban and al Qaeda - I actually hadn't played that close of attention to the operations in Bajaur but now, I can see why this area has been so hard to crack. First of all, from the article at Times Online, here's what the Pakistani military found in Bajaur:
So now, I ask myself...what other region or province in Pakistan is as dominated by the Taliban and al Qaeda as Bajaur was? And once I identify those areas, then that is the first place I send predator drones into and bomb the piss out of targets - it's all about getting rats like al-Zawahiri to have to move. Everytime these asshats have to move from one village to another or from one mountain to the next, they risk being spotted. The problem we've had is there has been no Pakistani pressure on Bajaur and certainly no UAV strikes by the CIA there.
I'm sure the CIA and Special Ops are four or five steps ahead of me but I have to look at this news and ask myself, how could we have completely ignored this area of Pakistan as a possible hiding place for the most wanted men ever sought by America?
Pakistani forces have taken control of a warren of caves that served until recently as the nerve centre of the Taleban and al-Qaeda and sheltered Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second-in-command to Osama bin Laden.I don't know about you but looking at the photo up above and knowing that Ayman al-Zawahiri was walking along that cave system recently puts the hair on the back of my neck on end. Just think how close we could have been to al Qaeda's #2. And this all underlines what has been so frustrating about Pakistan...here we have this Bajaur region that the Pakistani military hasn't been able to set foot into in a very long time - what a perfect spot for al-Zawahiri and perhaps bin Laden himself - this wasn't just a hiding place, it was a fucking FORTRESS! If there is one thing I've relished it's been the fact that bin Laden and al-Zawahiri were crammed into a 4 x 6 spider hole cave somewhere freezing their asses off...and now we see this set up and you can tell they were living plenty high off the hog without a real worry about being found or captured or killed.
“It was the main hub of militancy where al-Qaeda operatives had moved freely,” Major-General Tariq Khan, the Pakistan regional commander, said as he gave journalists a tour of Damadola yesterday.
The village, nestling among snow-capped peaks in the Bajaur region along the Afghan border, has been fought over for 16 months. It is the first time that the Pakistani Army has set foot in the village, which had long been dominated by the insurgents operating on the both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
“Al-Qaeda was there. They had occupied the ridges. There were 156 caves designed as a defensive complex,” said General Khan, head of the Frontier Corps responsible for Pakistan’s counter-insurgency campaign in the region. He said that his forces had killed 75 foreign and local militants and cleared a zone up to the Afghan border, and that the campaign against the insurgents was in its final stage.
So now, I ask myself...what other region or province in Pakistan is as dominated by the Taliban and al Qaeda as Bajaur was? And once I identify those areas, then that is the first place I send predator drones into and bomb the piss out of targets - it's all about getting rats like al-Zawahiri to have to move. Everytime these asshats have to move from one village to another or from one mountain to the next, they risk being spotted. The problem we've had is there has been no Pakistani pressure on Bajaur and certainly no UAV strikes by the CIA there.
I'm sure the CIA and Special Ops are four or five steps ahead of me but I have to look at this news and ask myself, how could we have completely ignored this area of Pakistan as a possible hiding place for the most wanted men ever sought by America?
Pakistan's Army takes control of al-Qaeda cave network on Afghan border
Pakistani forces have taken control of a warren of caves that served until recently as the nerve centre of the Taleban and al-Qaeda and sheltered Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second-in-command to Osama bin Laden.
“It was the main hub of militancy where al-Qaeda operatives had moved freely,” Major-General Tariq Khan, the Pakistan regional commander, said as he gave journalists a tour of Damadola yesterday.
The village, nestling among snow-capped peaks in the Bajaur region along the Afghan border, has been fought over for 16 months. It is the first time that the Pakistani Army has set foot in the village, which had long been dominated by the insurgents operating on the both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
“Al-Qaeda was there. They had occupied the ridges. There were 156 caves designed as a defensive complex,” said General Khan, head of the Frontier Corps responsible for Pakistan’s counter-insurgency campaign in the region. He said that his forces had killed 75 foreign and local militants and cleared a zone up to the Afghan border, and that the campaign against the insurgents was in its final stage.
The army began operations in Bajaur in August 2008 and claimed victory in February last year, only for the insurgents to seep back when the Government’s focus switched to Pakistani Taleban fighters in the Swat Valley and South Waziristan.
Journalists were shown caves strewn with blankets and pillows, left in haste as the army approached in January. The village has been largely destroyed by the fighting.
A large mud compound on a hilltop was once believed to be the hideout of al-Zawahiri, one of the world’s most wanted terrorists, who was the subject of a $25 million (£18 million) bounty. “He has been spotted here by the local residents in the past,” said Colonel Nauman Saeed, an army commander.
Al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian doctor, narrowly escaped when missiles fired by a CIA drone struck a house in Damadola in January 2006.
According to officials he and some other al-Qaeda operatives had been attending a dinner but left just before the attack. The ruins of the house hit by the missiles were still present.
Pakistani officials and local residents said that al-Zawahiri had even married a local girl. “He would regularly travel between Bajaur and the Afghan province of Kunar,” Colonel Saeed said.
While the military has been showing off its gains many Taleban fighters and their leaders — including the main regional commander, Faqir Mohammad, have escaped the sweep and may try to return as they have done before. “I would give you a rough estimate that about 25 per cent must have gone across the border; another 10 or 15 per cent might have melted back into the areas of Swat, where they had come from,” General Khan said. “A substantial amount of them have been killed, but that is just an estimate.”
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