Thursday, September 17, 2009

Success of Sept 7th & 14th Airstrikes: Al Qaeda Leader and Uzbeck Commander Confirmed Killed


As most loyal Holger readers know, I try to put up each and every predator drone strike that the U.S. carries out in NW Pakistan but often, the end results of those strikes are lost in the shuffle or simply not reported. Well, in American strikes on September 7th and September 14th in the North Waziristan area of NW Pakistan, predator hellfires killed two key jihadi leaders - an Al Qaeda leader from Pakistan and a Uzbeck commander more than likely working with the Taliban.

When you start adding up the number of high value targets that have been taken out by the predator drone program that the U.S. has been utilizing in NW Pakistan, the success has been amazing. And if you haven't noticed...in the past three months there hasn't been a single outcry from Pakistani officials for the actions to stop. Now we know why.

Here's the complete story from Breitbart:


Pakistan: Al-Qaida commander killed in US strike

ISLAMABAD (AP) - An al-Qaida operations chief in Pakistan and an Uzbek militant commander were believed killed in U.S. missile strikes in the northwest of the country earlier this month, Pakistani officials said Thursday.
If confirmed, the deaths of Ilyas Kashmiri and Nazimuddin, alias Yahyo, indicate America's policy of using unmanned drones to attack targets on Pakistan's side of the Afghan border is working.

The tactic has been publicly criticized by the Pakistani government, but many believe officials here secretly endorse it.
Operations chief Ilyas Kashmiri, a Pakistani national, was believed killed in a Sept. 7 attack on a compound in North Waziristan, said an intelligence officer and a senior government official.
A strike in the same region on Sept. 14 that destroyed a vehicle is believed to have killed Nazimuddin, the officials said.
North Waziristan is part of Pakistan's tribal belt, a lawless region where al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri are rumored to be hiding.
The Pakistani officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media about the topic.
They said the information was based on intercepted communications between militants and from informers in their ranks.
Speaking last week, a U.S. counterterrorism official said Kashmiri was in charge of al-Qaida's paramilitary operations in Pakistan and had also been active in recruiting and training operatives to conduct attacks outside of Pakistan.
He also said Kashmiri had been a member of the militant group Harakat ul-Jihad-i-Islami, which he joined in the early 1990s after fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan. The U.S. official also requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record.
The Pakistani officials said Kashmiri was accused of playing role in failed assassination attempts against former President Pervez Musharraf.
Little is know about Nazimuddin, but a man bearing the same name and alias appears on a U.S. Treasury list of individuals—most of whom are alleged Islamist terrorists—whose assets are blocked.
The United States has fired more than 50 missiles from unmanned drones into the tribal regions since last year in a campaign targeting al-Qaida and Taliban commanders.
Among the several top al-Qaida militants killed in the strikes are Abu Khabab al-Masri, an explosives expert responsible for its chemical and biological weapons efforts, and Usama al-Kini, believed to have planned the attack on Islamabad's Marriott Hotel.
Just last month, one of the strikes killed Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Meshud.
Pakistan protests the U.S. missile strikes as violations of its sovereignty and says they fan support for the insurgents, but Washington has shown no sign of abandoning a tactic it says is disrupting militant operations.
Separately, Pakistan's military said it had killed 10 insurgents and arrested a militant commander accused of beheading troops in the northwestern Swat Valley, notching up more successes in its offensive there.
Sher Muhammad Qasab was captured this week at an undisclosed location in the valley, army spokesman Col. Akhtar Abbas said. Abbas said Qasab, who had a bounty of 10 million rupees ($121,000) on his head, had beheaded many troops in Swat when the Taliban was in control.
The 10 militants were killed by security forces Thursday as they tried to sneak into the region's main city of Mingora, Abbas said.
The four-month old Swat offensive has been praised by the U.S., which wants to see Pakistan fighting militants in its rugged northwest who are blamed for plotting and carrying out attacks on U.S. and NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan.
Also Thursday, a 18 pound (8 kilogram) bomb exploded outside a shop in the northwestern city of Kohat, wounding six people, police said.
Police officer Jahangir Khan said the blast destroyed the store. No one claimed responsibility.

No comments: