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India-Pakistan
Army captures Pakistani Taliban leader's hometown
2009-10-24
Soldiers captured the strategically located hometown of Pakistan's Taliban chief Saturday after fierce fighting, officials said, the army's first major prize as it pushes deeper into a militant stronghold along the Afghan border.
The Talibs will now attempt to take it back again.
A suspected U.S. missile killed 22 people elsewhere in the northwest, but apparently missed a top Taliban figure, authorities said.
Curses! Foiled again!
Pakistan's eight-day-old offensive in the Taliban and al-Qaida stronghold of South Waziristan is considered its most critical test yet in the campaign to stop the spread of violent Islamist extremism in this nuclear-armed, U.S.-allied country. The army operation has prompted a wave of retaliatory attacks by militants this month that have killed some 200 people.
They've been conducting those "retaliatory attacks" for the past five years and the victims have included Benazir Bhutto. Probably President Ten Percent is thinking "they got the old woman, they'll get me if I don't stamp them out like the roaches they are!"
The battle for Kotkai town took several days and involved aerial bombardment as soldiers captured heights around the town.
Always a better idea than replaying Dien Bien Foo.
Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said troops were now ridding the town of land mines and roadside bombs planted by the insurgents.
Planted, I'm guessing, when they retook the town, knowing the Mighty Pak Army was gonna take it back from them eventually.
Kotkai is symbolically important because it is the hometown of Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud and one of his top deputies, Qari Hussain. It also lies along the way to the major militant base of Sararogha, making it a strategically helpful catch. "Thank God, this is the army's very big success," Abbas said. "The good news is that (communications) intercepts show that there are differences forging among the Taliban ranks. Their aides are deserting them."
I wouldn't get my hopes up too far, since there are other ones flocking to the standard from Punjab and parts of Sindh. And probably from Jeddah and Dhubai and Ferghana and Grozny.
Pakistan is under intense international pressure to clear its tribal areas of insurgents, many of whom are blamed for attacks on U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan. The government has pressed ahead in South Waziristan despite a wave of violence that has put the nation on edge.
The wave of violence was there long before the offensive was there. It picked up in 2002, when the jihadi establishment split with the Perv establishment.
Bombings on Friday alone killed 24 people, including 17 headed to a wedding.
The reception was simply ruined.
The army said Saturday that three more soldiers had died, putting the army's death toll at 23, and 21 more militants had been killed, putting their overall death toll at 163.
That's a 7:1 kill ratio, assuming the Paks aren't lying, which they prob'ly are. I doubt that's high enough, given the flow of reinforcements. Y'gotta kill 'em quicker than they can reconstitute.
Access to the tribal belt is severely restricted, making independently verifying the army's information all but impossible.
Multiply Pak casualties by three or four and divide the turban casualties by two, at least. That puts the deaders approximately even, which I'm guessing is about right, even with air support.
The U.S. has launched scores of missile strikes at militant targets in the tribal belt over the past year, killing several top militants including former Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud. The latest strike hit Chuhatra village in the tribal region of Bajaur, local government official Mohammad Jamil said. The missile hit a hide-out of the militants that included a tunnel. The target appeared to be Faqir Mohammad, a prominent Taliban leader, but he is believed to have escaped, Jamil said. Most of the 22 killed were Afghan nationals, he said.
That's too bad. Faqir would look ever so much better as a corpse. Bajaur's as far north of South Wazoo as you can get and still remain within the FATA.
Pakistan formally protests the missile strikes, saying they violate its sovereignty and raise sympathy for the Taliban, while the U.S. rarely discusses the attacks. Analysts believe the two sides have a secret deal allowing the strikes.
That would seem eminently sensible. No doubt that was worked out under the hated Bush administration.
The U.S. has shown no sign of easing the drone-fired attacks even when Pakistan is waging its own fight in the tribal areas. Asked if the missile attacks are a distraction or help, the army spokesman said Pakistan would prefer to go it alone. "We do not want any assistance or interference from outside," Abbas said.
"On the other hand, we're not doing a real good job of tracking down Faqir Mohammad, are we? But that makes the assumption tracking him down is something we want to do..."
He further added that a mysterious explosion Wednesday in North Waziristan -- initially described by intelligence officials as a suspected U.S. missile attack -- had turned out to be a blast caused when explosives being loaded onto a vehicle accidentally detonated.
"Mahmoud! Your stogie!"
[KABOOM!]

The U.N. says some 155,000 civilians have fled the region. The International Committee of the Red Cross said Saturday that it is worried about civilians left behind, but it has no way to verify claims about their status because it has no presence there.
Nor is it all that easy to tell the civilians from the combatants. Both the women and the Talibs wear burkas, and subteens are routinely fitted for boom vests.
"We want access both to the areas affected by the fighting and also to the people arrested as part of the operation," said Sebastien Brack, a Red Cross spokesman in Islamabad.
"Oh, yasss! We want to send out people in to wander in and out of the warring sides, disrupting their operations and provided lotsa hostages for the Talibs! That is our way!"
The army has deployed some 30,000 troops to South Waziristan against about 12,000 Taliban militants, including up to 1,500 foreign fighters, among them Uzbeks and Arabs.
And Chechens. Don't forget the Chechens. And the occasional Brit, though usually they're not named Nigel or Percy.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Probably one more typical agreement between ISI and Taliban...
Posted by: Large Snerong7311   2009-10-24 19:36  

#2  "Kotkai - home of the Big Pie Hat™"
Posted by: Frank G   2009-10-24 15:29  

#1  if the Taliban really wants this town, why not retreat and let them reenter? Then go back in to hammer them some more? Then again and again until no more Taliban. No rebel force does well again a fully equipped military. the problem the military has is getting them to stand and fight. So, if you find a place where they will, use it to destroy as many as you can.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon   2009-10-24 14:26  

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