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India-Pakistan
Kharotabad: Trendy vacation spot for the Taliban
2011-10-17
And secret medical care for wounded Talibunnies from a major NGO?
People in Kharotabad live in constant fear over the possibility of drone attacks in their neighborhood, considering that over the past six months, the Afghan and local Taliban have seemed to turn this part of Quetta as a veritable militant vacation spot.

Every four months, Taliban fighters return from the jihad in Afghanistan and rent out dozens of residences in this vicinity. Their presence is a major concern for people living in adjoining areas, especially since this is the area where the US alleges the Quetta Shura is hiding out.

A few madrassas in Kharotabad also provide 'free' boarding to these militants. They move about freely, making it obvious that Kharotabad is a safe haven for the Taliban.

Students from religious schools in the area are being recruited for the Afghan Taliban. They are said to be 'trained for jihad' in Afghanistan by Afghan 'commanders', before they are sent on terror missions. At least six to eight new, unarmed recruits leave Kuchlak Bazar, near Quetta, on brand new motorbikes every morning, headed towards Afghanistan.

They are told to avoid traveling on main roads and instead take lesser known mountainous routes via Kuchlak to Qamar Din Karez on the Af-Pak border. They also avoid traveling in groups -- two persons per motorbike. They are also given Rs5,000, plus enough money for fuel.

Most of these boys join Taliban with their parent's consent, and many others embark on this 'holy mission' without the knowledge of their guardians.

A faction of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), led by MNA Maulana Esmatullah and his party, is a source of influence for these young students of Balochistan. Mullah Omar's messages are also sent through Kandahar to Quetta.

The Afghan and local Taliban who are injured during their missions, are said to be receiving free medical treatment at five prominent private hospitals. The administration at these hospitals said that an big international NGO funds their medical care.

"We are being paid by this NGO for the medical care being provided to the wounded or sick Taliban militants," an administrator at Dr Abdul Khaliq Memorial Hospital alleged. The NGO does not allow local authorities access to these "under-treatment" Taliban. The NGO puts up a 'don't know' front.

The NGO's head of sub-delegation said, "We have not set up any field hospitals in Balochistan to provide medical assistance to the Afghan Taliban or other militants."

However, the NGO is supporting three private hospitals in Quetta for providing assistance to the injured. "Doctors at Ikram Hospital and Imdad Hospital are providing medical assistance to people injured in bomb blasts, firing incidents and other forms of violence," he said.
Posted by:ryuge

#10  In defense of B52 strikes (strategic bombing) and sensor technology, not entirely unlike what is used today:

Operation Igloo White was a covert United States Air Force electronic warfare operation conducted from late January 1968 until February 1973, during the Vietnam War.[1] This state-of-the-art operation utilized electronic sensors, computers, and communications relay aircraft in an attempt to automate intelligence collection. The system would then assist in the direction of strike aircraft to their targets. The objective of those attacks was the logistical system of the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) that snaked through southeastern Laos and was known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail (the Truong Son Road to the North Vietnamese).[1]

Igloo White was rushed into service during the Battle of Khe Sanh and successfully passed its first operational test. Combined with Operation Commando Hunt in 1969, the system served as the keystone of the U.S. aerial interdiction effort of the Vietnam War.

Costing between $1 and $1.7 billion dollars to design and build (and another billion dollars per year to operate over the five-year life of the operation) and possessing and controlling some of the most sophisticated technology in the Southeast Asia theater, the effectiveness of Igloo White still remains in question.
Posted by: Sofa-Soldier   2011-10-17 19:20  

#9  Old Patriot - I agree with Sofa-Soldier on this, although for reasons other than his.

Unless you can be pretty damned sure that you are only hitting military targets, ARCLIGHTs constitute mass killing of non-combatants. There are good reasons we don't do that - reasons that have to do with our own integrity, quite apart from the worthiness of the general society involved.

OTOH I have no objection to JDAMs on specific targets, with the knowledge that there might well be collateral casualties whose allegiance is, let us say, grey ....
Posted by: lotp   2011-10-17 17:36  

#8  It seems that the NGO's funds and accounts could be siezed under current terrorism laws.
Posted by: 3dc   2011-10-17 17:24  

#7  Laat die kinders speel
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-10-17 16:55  

#6  #5 ARCLIGHT Quetta and the whole operation will come crashing down. So will the government of Pakistan - a twofer.
Posted by Old Patriot


Not to discount the validity of the ascertion, but I recently heard a similar suggestion, B52 strikes, etc. It was met in the forum with unbelieveable outrage. Claims of genocide, racism, etc. Just a friendly caution.
Posted by: Sofa-Soldier   2011-10-17 16:23  

#5  ARCLIGHT Quetta and the whole operation will come crashing down. So will the government of Pakistan - a twofer.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2011-10-17 14:22  

#4  Sounds like an opportunity to for us to creatively 'modify' the motorbike supply to the community.
Posted by: Glenmore   2011-10-17 13:08  

#3  Notice they didn't say which NGO....
Posted by: tipover   2011-10-17 12:21  

#2  Yet Pakistan remains in denial regarding their support to the insurgency.
Posted by: Sofa-Soldier   2011-10-17 10:58  

#1  Ah, the Fleshpots of Quetta...

Probably not up to the standards of R&R in Bangkok in '69...
Posted by: Fred   2011-10-17 10:49  

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