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Instability In Pakistan- Merged Thread

A little more in depth analysis.

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1842131,00.html



Pakistan's military and the U.S. forces operating across the country's mountainous border with Afghanistan have become locked into a confusing and potentially dangerous game of brinkmanship over how to fight the al-Qaeda and Taliban militants sheltering on Pakistani soil. U.S. military strikes on Pakistani soil are provoking increasingly strident warnings from Pakistan's military and political leadership, and they are continuing despite Washington's reassurances about respecting Pakistani sovereignty. Still, many believe the Pakistanis are engaged in ritual denunciation of U.S. actions primarily for domestic political consumption.

Exasperated by Pakistan's failure to wipe out the militant sanctuaries on its soil, Washington decided earlier this month to take matters into its own hands. The first known ground assault of the campaign, staged by U.S. Special Operations troops in Angoor Adda, a village in South Waziristan, was followed by stepped up air strikes on suspected militants by pilotless drones. Pentagon officials had suggested in recent weeks that the U.S. would be "testing" the new Pakistani government by stepping up its attacks in western Pakistan to gauge Islamabad's reaction. Previously, U.S. actions had been been limited to launching missile strikes or hot pursuits into Pakistani territory without the consent of the Pakistani government. The Sept. 3 attack was the first significant cross-border U.S. ground strike without prior Pakistani approval — a change approved by President Bush in July. That raid, which Pakistan's military says killed up to 20 people including civilians, triggered angry criticism across Pakistan. As the protector of his country's sovereignty and nervous about rising anti-American sentiment, Pakistan's army chief issued an unprecedented warning in response to the raid. "No external force is allowed to conduct operations inside Pakistan," Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said. The statement was cheered by an anxious public and, in a sign of the military's influence, it was echoed by leading members of the government who had, until then, been reluctant to speak on the issue.

The ramping up of U.S. operations, Pakistani government and military officials believe, reflect a desperate bid to "get Bin Laden" before the Bush Administration leaves the White House. "It is all about the U.S. elections and Bush's legacy," says an aide to newly elected President Asif Ali Zardari. "But what purpose has it served? They have not got any high-value targets, and the public outrage only threatens to destabilize our new democratic government."

Zardari's government claims to be escalating its own campaign against the militants after attempts at negotiations proved fruitless, and believes that its own efforts are undermined by U.S. operations. "The [Pakistani counterinsurgency] operation in Bajaur is the most intense for many years. It is not popular with the public, but we are doing it," says the Zardari aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "And in Waziristan, after a lot of effort we got the Waziri tribes to unite against [Taliban commander] Baitullah Mehsud. But after all these drone strikes, they got dejected."

The U.S. has launched six air strikes into the tribal areas in the course of this month alone, the latest coming on Sept. 17 at a suspected militant training camp in South Waziristan. For all their insistence on sovereignty, the Pakistani army has not reacted militarily, nor has the government taken steps to break off diplomatic ties. Their only complaint, military analysts said, is over the use of ground troops. For the past six years, the CIA has routinely flown pilotless drones over Pakistan's tribal areas to collect intelligence and fire at select targets. Only when attacks have claimed large-scale civilian casualties, as in the abortive 2006 attempt to kill al-Qaeda No.2 Ayman al-Zawahiri, have the Pakistani authorities bothered to go through the more advanced motions of protest.

While this month's air strikes have passed with only comment from the Pakistan army, fears of a U.S.-Pakistan confrontation were sparked on Sept. 16 by media reports that Pakistani paramilitary troops may have fired warning shots to prevent U.S. military helicopters from returning to Angoor Adda. The Pakistan army swiftly denied the incident. "The helicopters did not enter Pakistani territory and the Pakistan army did not do the firing," says Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, the military's chief spokesman. "The firing was done by local Waziri tribesmen."

Still, the Associated Press followed up by reporting that the Pakistan army had issued fresh orders "to open fire on U.S. troops if they launch another raid across the Afghan border." Again, General Abbas, who was quoted in the story, disputes the claim: "The comments were taken out of context," he says. "There was no new order issued. As the army chief has said, we reserve the right to defend our territory and reply to aggression."

The picture was made even more confusing by Wednesday's strike, at a suspected militant training camp in the village of Bagh in South Waziristan. That air-strike came just hours after the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen had visited Islamabad to calm fears about U.S. encroachment on Pakistan's turf. According to a statement issued by the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, "Admiral Mullen reiterated the U.S. commitment to respect Pakistan's sovereignty and to develop further U.S.-Pakistani cooperation and coordination."

Speaking to Reuters, unnamed local intelligence officials said that the Wednesday strike was the product of improved "U.S.-Pakistani intelligence sharing". But Ahmad Mukhtar, the Pakistani defense minister, says he was taken aback by the attack. "The Mike Mullen visit was very nice and he was very understanding," Mukhtar says. "And now these air strikes have come as a surprise. There is no understanding that the air strikes should happen from the U.S. Whatever is on our side of the border, we will deal with. There is anxiety in the country, and the situation here was meant to be resolved now."

Zardari, who returned to Pakistan from a visit to London as news of the incident broke, had also suggested he believed that air strikes would end. Speaking to reporters after a lengthy meeting with Prime Minister Gordon Brown, he said: "I don't think there will be any more [air strikes]." In his meeting with Brown, Zardari had urged the British prime minister to persuade the Americans to refrain from further attacks on Pakistani soil. "The U.K. agrees with us that such moves are counterproductive," says the Zardari aide, who had been present at the meeting.

Still, despite the apparent discord over continuing air raids, it would be a mistake to exaggerate the differences between Washington and Islamabad on the issue. The U.S. has given the Pakistani military about $6 billion in aid since 9/11, and recently announced a plan to supply Pakistan with 18 new F-16 fighter planes to be armed with satellite guided bombs to take out militant encampments. "That's the element that is missing in the fight now on their western border," Air Force Major General Burton Field told a House panel earlier this month. Lacking precision-guided bombs, the Pakistani military has been forced to rely on ground operations against Taliban and al-Qaeda militants, which eliminates the element of surprise. And, says analyst Ayesha Siddiqa. "As far as the army's reaction is concerned, I haven't seen the Pakistan army say it no longer needs F-16s and military aid."

Siddiqa suggested that Gen. Kayani's protests over the raids may have been designed for domestic consumption."And where the public is concerned, there have been only a few demonstrations in Peshawar, which is natural," she added. "But again, that hasn't stopped the queues outside McDonald's and the visa section of the U.S. embassy. I think there is a lot of unhappiness and discomfort in Pakistan. But the reality, as Prime Minister Gilani recently said, is that we can't do anything. I think what the Americans have calculated is that this will not get out of control, and they will continue to pursue their policies."

—With reporting by Mark Thompson/Washington
 
Gordon Brown says it is time for "action, not words"

Three-quarters of the most serious terror plots being investigated by UK authorities have links to
Pakistan, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said.

He was unveiling a £6m ($8.9m) deal with Pakistan he called "the most comprehensive anti-terrorist
programme" between the UK and another country. He is in Pakistan meeting President Asif Ali Zardari,
following talks with India's premier Manmohan Singh.

UK police want to quiz a Pakistani suspect in the Mumbai attacks. They want to interview Mohammed
Ajmal Amir Qasab - the sole gunman taken alive - about terror groups operating from Pakistan.

Mr Brown's series of meetings in the region came as Pakistan accused India of violating its airspace. India
has denied this but has announced a security overhaul. It blames Pakistan-based militants for the Mumbai
attacks, which killed at least 170 people, including one Briton. Mr Brown said he had wanted to express
his condolence for the Mumbai attacks at first hand.


'Work together'

He said the "terrible terror outrages" had shocked the whole world and the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba
(LeT) militant group, thought to be responsible, had "a great deal to answer for". He added: "No country
should have to go through what India has had to go through as a result of the Mumbai outrages.

"I've said to Prime Minister Singh we will give every help that we can. We will work together in tackling
terrorism. And we will work together on issue of security. We also know that there have been arrests in
Pakistan. "We also know that the group responsible is LeT and that they have a great deal to answer for."

India has urged Pakistan to take action over the recent attacks. Pakistan denies any involvement, but has
promised to co-operate with the Indian investigation. Mr Zardari has pledged to take "strong action" against
terrorists, but has also called on India to share more information about the attacks.

Partnership plan

During a news conference in Islamabad with Mr Zardari, Mr Brown proposed the start of a new partnership
with Pakistan to fight terrorism. The "pact against terror" funding will go towards anti-car bomb equipment
and material to educate people out of becoming extremists, he said.

"The time has come for action and not words, and I want to help Pakistan and other countries root out
terrorism. "In return for this action we will continue to expand our counter-terrorist assistance programme
with Pakistan, and it will be more than ever, the most comprehensive anti-terrorist programme Britain has
signed with any country."

Speaking during a surprise visit to Afghanistan on Saturday, Mr Brown said wherever there was terrorism,
it had to be fought. He described Pakistan's border region with the country, where he met troops fighting
the Taleban, as one end of a "chain of terror" that could stretch to Britain if more was not done to tackle
the threat of al-Qaeda.

The prime minister's visit to Afghanistan came a day after four Royal Marines were killed in two separate
bomb attacks. Mr Brown spoke of his "disgust and horror" at the willingness of the Taleban to use a
13-year-old child to deliver a bomb in a wheelbarrow to a Marine patrol, killing three men and the boy.

The PM is expected to update MPs on the security situation in Afghanistan in a statement to the House
of Commons on Monday.

India has denied this but has announced a security overhaul. It blames Pakistan-based militants for the
Mumbai attacks, which killed at least 170 people, including one Briton.




 
Taliban on agenda as Zardari visits Afghanistan, CNN

KABUL, Afghanistan (CNN) -- Pakistan's president will use his first visit to Afghanistan
to discuss how the country's can unite to defeat terrorists.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari travels to the Afghan capital, Kabul, Friday to meet
Hamid Karzai and other high-ranking government officials. The visit comes amid
ongoing warfare and tension along the Afghan-Pakistan border.

Some of the Taliban militants conducting attacks in Afghanistan have been based in
Pakistan's North West Frontier Province and nearby tribal regions. The group's
resurgence has prompted U.S. commanders and the incoming Barack Obama
administration to put more of a focus on confronting militants along the volatile border.

In the past, Afghan and Pakistani leaders have blamed the other for the security
problems in the region. Zardari will be accompanied by the governor of North-West
Frontier Province, as well as his foreign minister and adviser on internal affairs.

The two presidents also will discuss expansion of bilateral relations and trade, and
they plan to hold a joint press conference. The two leaders have met before, and
Karzai visited Pakistan in September to attend Zardari's swearing-in ceremony.
 
Yrys said:
Gordon Brown says it is time for "action, not words"

Three-quarters of the most serious terror plots being investigated by UK authorities have links to
Pakistan, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said.

He was unveiling a £6m ($8.9m) deal with Pakistan he called "the most comprehensive anti-terrorist
programme" between the UK and another country. He is in Pakistan meeting President Asif Ali Zardari,
following talks with India's premier Manmohan Singh.

UK police want to quiz a Pakistani suspect in the Mumbai attacks. They want to interview Mohammed
Ajmal Amir Qasab - the sole gunman taken alive - about terror groups operating from Pakistan.

Mr Brown's series of meetings in the region came as Pakistan accused India of violating its airspace. India
has denied this but has announced a security overhaul. It blames Pakistan-based militants for the Mumbai
attacks, which killed at least 170 people, including one Briton. Mr Brown said he had wanted to express
his condolence for the Mumbai attacks at first hand.


'Work together'

He said the "terrible terror outrages" had shocked the whole world and the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba
(LeT) militant group, thought to be responsible, had "a great deal to answer for". He added: "No country
should have to go through what India has had to go through as a result of the Mumbai outrages.

"I've said to Prime Minister Singh we will give every help that we can. We will work together in tackling
terrorism. And we will work together on issue of security. We also know that there have been arrests in
Pakistan. "We also know that the group responsible is LeT and that they have a great deal to answer for."

India has urged Pakistan to take action over the recent attacks. Pakistan denies any involvement, but has
promised to co-operate with the Indian investigation. Mr Zardari has pledged to take "strong action" against
terrorists, but has also called on India to share more information about the attacks.

Partnership plan

During a news conference in Islamabad with Mr Zardari, Mr Brown proposed the start of a new partnership
with Pakistan to fight terrorism. The "pact against terror" funding will go towards anti-car bomb equipment
and material to educate people out of becoming extremists, he said.

"The time has come for action and not words, and I want to help Pakistan and other countries root out
terrorism. "In return for this action we will continue to expand our counter-terrorist assistance programme
with Pakistan, and it will be more than ever, the most comprehensive anti-terrorist programme Britain has
signed with any country."

Speaking during a surprise visit to Afghanistan on Saturday, Mr Brown said wherever there was terrorism,
it had to be fought. He described Pakistan's border region with the country, where he met troops fighting
the Taleban, as one end of a "chain of terror" that could stretch to Britain if more was not done to tackle
the threat of al-Qaeda.

The prime minister's visit to Afghanistan came a day after four Royal Marines were killed in two separate
bomb attacks. Mr Brown spoke of his "disgust and horror" at the willingness of the Taleban to use a
13-year-old child to deliver a bomb in a wheelbarrow to a Marine patrol, killing three men and the boy.

The PM is expected to update MPs on the security situation in Afghanistan in a statement to the House
of Commons on Monday.


pity Blair/Broon etc and his pretend govt hadn't taken the same stance with the IRA as he has with al queda etc rather than giving into them and allowing them into government and giving them everything they wanted.....  double standards, two faced twisted scumballs.....

India has denied this but has announced a security overhaul. It blames Pakistan-based militants for the
Mumbai attacks, which killed at least 170 people, including one Briton.
 
Threatened Pakistan schools close

_45255505_pak_swat_dir_226.gif


Private schools in Pakistan's troubled north-western Swat district have
closed to comply with a Taleban edict banning girls' education, officials
say.

The edict was issued on schools in Swat by a Taleban cleric in a radio
broadcast last month. A 15 January deadline was set. Owners say the
schools will not reopen until the conflict in Swat is resolved, or the
Taleban revoke the ban.

The government says it will do all it can to protect education.

Security pledge

School owners in Mingora, the administrative centre of Swat district,
say even if they keep the schools open, parents are unlikely to send
their children in view of the Taleban threat.

"The local administration called a meeting of Mingora's school owners
two days ago and promised to provide security to us if we remained
open, but no-one is ready to run the risk,", Ahmad Shah, a Mingora
school owner, told the BBC.

There are more than 350 privately owned schools in Swat, each with
separate sections for boys and girls, according to data available from
a local association of schools. Over the past year, most of them were
ordered closed by the Taleban, except 96 schools that operated in
Mingora town. They have now closed, bringing all privately
administered girls' education in Swat to an end.

The Taleban have destroyed nearly 150 schools in the last year.

Minister for Information and Broadcasting Sherry Rehman said on
Friday that the government would work with the provincial administration
to protect education, particularly for girls, in North West Frontier Province.
She expected a resolution in the National Assembly against the attacks on schools.
 
Musharraf: Pakistan 'treated unequally' in war on terror

(CNN) -- Pakistan's former president said his country is being treated "unequally"
to other countries, despite being a staunch ally of the United States in its war on
terror. "Pakistan is being treated so unequally while we are the ones who are in
the lead role fighting the global war on terror," said Pervez Musharraf, interviewed
by CNN's Wolf Blitzer for "The Situation Room."

"This is what hurts Pakistan. It hurts the leadership. Indeed, it hurts the government.
It hurts the people of Pakistan," said Musharraf, speaking from Dallas, Texas, during
a book tour in the United States.

The interview took place amid reports Friday of U.S. drones striking militant targets
in Pakistan just days after the start of the Obama administration -- which has made
combating al Qaeda and Taliban militants in the Pakistan tribal region near Afghanistan
its most immediate national security priority.

Musharraf was asked whether he is comfortable with the continuation of the attacks,
even with a new U.S. president in place. "Nobody in Pakistan is comfortable with the
strikes across the border. There is no doubt in that. Public opinion is very much against it,"
he said. "But as far as this issue of the new president -- President Obama having taken
over and this continuing -- but I have always been saying that policies don't change with
personalities; policies have national interest, and policies depend on an environment.

"So the environment and national interest of the United States being the same, I thought
policies will remain constant," he said.  Musharraf also addressed a statement he made
about the $10 billion in assistance from the United States that Pakistan has received,
calling it a "pittance for a country which is in the lead role to fight terrorism."

He emphasized his gratitude to the United States for the funding, but said the amount is
low compared to billions spent in Afghanistan and "maybe over a trillion dollars" in Iraq.
"Please don't think that this $10 billion was such a great amount that we ought to be
eternally grateful while we know that we deserve much more and we should have got
much more and we must get much more if we are to fight the global war on terror," he said.

Musharraf stressed that Pakistan was "in the lead role fighting a war for you for 10 years,
between '79 and '89," a reference to Pakistan's alliance with the United States and the Afghan
mujahedeen rebels during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Musharraf emphasized that for
42 years, up until 1989, Pakistan had been a "strategic partner" of the United States.

But many Pakistanis felt abandoned by the United States after the Russians pulled out of
Afghanistan. Musharraf said the 1989 "peace dividend" went to Europe -- East Europe.
Pakistan was "left alone" from 1989 to 2001, and during that period, the militant Taliban
movement took control of Afghanistan.

"What did Pakistan get out of fighting for 10 years with you? Nothing, sir," he said, explaining
why public opinion in Pakistan has been "so much against the United States."

Musharraf said public opinion in his country is strongly against strikes by U.S. drones against
militants in the Pakistani tribal region. While al Qaeda and the Taliban must be confronted,
he said, "public opinion is certainly against the methodology being adopted."

Musharraf, once Pakistan's army chief, resigned under intense political pressure in August as
the ruling coalition began taking steps to impeach him. He swept to power in 1999 in a
bloodless coup. Asked why al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who is thought to be somewhere
in the border region, hasn't been found, he replied:

"I would like to ask the United States why he hasn't been found. They have their intelligence. There
are -- you have more intelligence capability. I would like to ask the United States, why Mullah Omar
has not been found, who is the leader of all of the Taliban in Afghanistan?"
 
He should just ask Pakistan's Inter-Services-Intelligence where Omar is, and likely bin Laden also. They're the ones supporting him.
 
What hurts Pakistan is their support of fundamentalism which now has infected their country at all levels of society. Pakistan is the classic state within a state. The center has ceded control of the tribal areas to the taliban and it looks to me like Karachi has been infiltrated by the taliban and have close ties with organized crime. The west also bear some responsibility for the mess by pulling the rug out from under Musharraf and backing Bhutto. Now we have Bhutto's corrupt husband Mr 10% in charge.
Pakistan's weakness is also our achilles heel in Afghanistan.

I hate to say it but one way to improve security in Afghanistan is to see an Indian invasion of Pakistan. I would think that such an invasion would draw jihadists like moths to a flame.
 
More bad news for Pakistan (and the region):

http://www.captainsjournal.com/2009/01/25/has-swat-fallen-to-the-taliban/

Has Swat Fallen to the Taliban?
BY Herschel Smith
12 hours, 6 minutes ago
The Captain’s Journal has kept close watch over the Talibanization of the FATA.  Amir Mir gives us reason to believe that Taliban control over the FATA and NWFP is almost complete.

Fifteen months after the launching of a military operation in the lush-green picturesque valley of Swat by the Pakistan army to dismantle the militant network of Maulana Fazalullah, a major part of the mountainous region seems to have fallen to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan and Swat apparently lives under the Sharia of Fazalullah.

Not too long ago, the idyll Swat valley, with its rolling hills, gushing streams and scenic vistas, was described as Pakistan’s Switzerland. However, ever since the beginning of the military operation in 2007 the law and order situation in Swat has gone from bad to worse, converting this paradise on earth into a valley of death and destruction. Around 10,000 militants of the Tehrik-e-Taliban have been pitted against 15,000 Pakistan army troops since October 22, 2007 when the operation was officially launched. Leading the charge against the Pakistan army is Maulana Fazalullah, who is also known as Mullah Radio for the illegal FM radio channel he operates. Through his FM broadcast that is still operational despite being banned by the NWFP government, Fazalullah keeps inspiring his followers to implement Islamic Shariat, fight the Pakistan army, and establish his authority in the area …

While following in the footsteps of the former Taliban regime of Afghanistan, the militants of Fazalullah are also pursuing a rigid agenda of religious beliefs which is based on a violent jehadi doctrine. Barbers in Swat and its adjoining districts under have been ordered not to shave beards and shops selling CDs and music cassettes ordered to close down. In some places, just a handful of the militants control a village since they rule by fear - beheading government sympathizers, blowing up bridges and asking women to wear all-encompassing burqas. Similarly, the army is manning several police stations in Swat because the police force there had been decimated by desertions and militant killings. The gravity of the law and order situation can be gauged from the fact that one of the busiest squares in Mingora has been renamed by the shopkeepers as ’Khooni Chowk’ because every morning, as they come to their shops, they would find four or five dead bodies hung over the poles or the trees.

Mir also points to the larger organization to which Fazlullah belongs - the Tehrik-i-Taliban, which he decided to join in 2007.

Soon after the Lal Masjid operation, Fazalullah decided to join hands with the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan led by Commander Baitullah Mehsud, in a bid to provide an umbrella to all insurgent movements operating in several tribal agencies and settled areas of the NWFP. Since then, Fazalullah and his followers are toeing Baitullah’s line, whether they are issuing a decree, signing a peace deal with the government or scrapping the same. Therefore, it appears by all accounts that the small coterie of Fazalullah-led militants is working in the same mould as the fanatic clerics of the Lal Masjid did, to make the Swat district hostage to its rigid vision of militant Islam. And remember, the valley is hardly 160 kilometers from Islamabad.

Mir inexplicably calls Fazlulah’s followers a “small coterie” of militants.  If this was true, the Pakistan Army would have been successful in its operations in the FATA and NWFP.  In fact, there is reason to believe that the Tehrik-i-Taliban has as many as a division of fighters in Swat.

The governor of Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province has been quoted as saying that there are 15,000 militants in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

The fighters, who would very nearly constitute a small army division, “have no dearth of rations, ammunition, equipment, even anti-tank mines,”  Owais Ahmad Ghani told a team from the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan led by Asma Jahangir, according to newspaper reports. A militant or a foot soldier earned between  6,000 ($75) to 8000 rupees a month while commanders took home 20,000 rupees to 30,000 rupees, the governor said.

The TTP is apparently so confident in its power and de facto authority in Swat that they have summoned Swat valley political leaders and dignitaries before Sharia courts.

A radical Pakistani Taliban cleric is demanding that a group of more than 50 Swat Valley dignitaries appear in his Islamic “court,” local media says.

Maulana Fazullah (sic), commander of the local Taliban militia in the northwestern Pakistan region, wants its provincial and federal lawmakers, dignitaries, elders and their families to present themselves in his sharia court within a week or be hunted down, the Press Trust of India, quoting local media, reported Sunday.

There are too many media reports to mention that indicate that the organization of al Qaeda is staggering under the heavy load of targeted UAV strikes against its leadership in the tribal areas of Pakistan.  True or not, it should be remembered about the TTP that while they were spawned by the Taliban of Afghanistan and aid them in the struggle against U.S. forces there, they have evolved into a much more radical organization than the original Taliban bent on global engagement, what Nicholas Schmidle calls the Next-Gen Taliban.

The TTP shout to passersby in Khyber “We are Taliban! We are mujahedin! “We are al-Qaida!”  There is no distinction.  A Pakistan interior ministry official has even said that the TTP and al Qaeda are one and the same.  As for their global vision, Baitullah Mehsud has said “We want to eradicate Britain and America, and to shatter the arrogance and tyranny of the infidels. We pray that Allah will enable us to destroy the White House, New York, and London.”

The celebration of the demise of al Qaeda should be a short one, with full knowledge that something just as bad, bigger and more powerful is replacing it in the FATA and NWFP region of Pakistan.  Our attention should return to the global counterinsurgency in which we are engaged, with full commitment to the defeat of militant jihad wherever it becomes manifest.
 
'US missile strikes' hit Pakistan

At least 18 people are reported dead in a suspected US drone attack
near the Afghan border in north-west Pakistan. Two missiles fired by
the drone struck the home of a local tribesman in the Kurram tribal
region, officials say. The building was being used as a Taleban
recruitment office, officials told the BBC.

The US has launched many similar attacks in recent months, mostly
targeting Taleban and al-Qaeda militants in Pakistan's tribal regions.
Local administration officials told the BBC the home was being used
by the organisation of Taleban leader Baitullah Mehsud.

The Pakistani government has not yet commented on the incident.
The attack took place in the Sarpul area of Kurram, about 15km (nine
miles) from the border with Afghanistan's Khost province.

Serious differences

"Smoke can be seen over the area where the missiles struck," a security
official told Reuters news agency. The official said the "Afghan Taleban
were holding an important meeting there when the missiles were fired".
The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Islamabad says the strike is the first to
target the Taleban in the Kurram tribal region.

The area has been the scene of an ongoing sectarian war between Sunni
Taleban militants and local Shia militias. The strike is also the second to
target Baitullah Mehsud's organisation in as many days.

On Saturday, two missiles destroyed a house near the Afghan border
reportedly being used as a meeting place by his men. At least 28 militants,
including foreign fighters, were killed in that attack.

Kurram, which is less than 100km from the Afghan capital, Kabul, served
as the most important launching pad for the Afghan mujahideen during the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Last month, suspected US missile strikes killed at least 25 militants close
to the Afghan border.

More than 20 attacks have been carried out from drones on targets in
north-western Pakistan in recent months.

The US and Pakistan have had serious disagreements over the Afghan
border zone, with Washington unhappy at Pakistani efforts to tackle
militants and Islamabad condemning the US drone attacks.

Pakistani leaders had expressed hope that the new US administration
would halt the controversial air strikes, saying they fuelled public anger
and complicated Pakistan's own counter-insurgency efforts.

But the drone attacks have continued since Barack Obama was
inaugurated as US president last month.
 
Deja-vu in Pakistan crackdown, Wednesday, 11 March 2009

_45557406_007005739-1.jpg

Police arrest opposition supporters in Multan

The latest wave of arrests in Pakistan's most populous province, Punjab, has brought
an unwelcome feeling that this has all been seen before.

Governments in the past have done this and more to prevent opposition groups from
destabilising the system, often with unsavoury results.

But unlike in the past, when the army had carte blanche to step in, either as the arbiter
of political power or as a direct aspirant, the situation this time is far murkier and more
dangerous. The army has lost much of its credibility as an efficient fighting force or as
an able administrator.

In the past eight years it has been widely seen as having failed to curb the militant menace
in spite of having been adequately paid to do so by the international community. When the
military ruler, Gen Pervez Musharraf, finally quit, he left the country politically fragmented,
economically destitute and exposed to the militant threat.

That is why his political allies were soundly beaten in the 2008 elections.

They delivered a split mandate in favour of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and the Pakistan
Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N), two bitter rivals from the 1990s who showed signs they had
grown wiser. That may not be the case any more.

Mandate

After a perfect start a year ago, the PPP's Asif Ali Zardari and the PML-N's Nawaz Sharif have
drifted apart on the issue of the restoration of judges who were sacked by then President
Musharraf in November 2007. heir differences became more stark last month when a court
declared that Nawaz Sharif and his brother Shahbaz were ineligible to hold elected office.
The differences over the restoration of judges are political in nature.

Without saying it in so many words, the PPP made it known to the PML-N and others concerned
that the transfer of power back to civilian rule in March 2008 required an agreement that Mr
Musharraf would not face further action against him. Restoring the judges would challenge that.

But Nawaz Sharif considered this contrary to his election mandate. Many in Pakistan believe that
Mr Sharif considers the restoration of the judges the first step towards laying a legal trap for
Mr Musharraf, who had toppled Mr Sharif's government in a military coup in 1999. Mr Sharif
continued to press for the judges' restoration and quit the federal government in May 2008,
accusing Mr Zardari - who had then been elected president - of being "insincere".

The government did try to wean the Sharifs from protesting lawyers with political offers, but
with little success. Then came the court verdict on the Sharifs. Shahbaz Sharif was deposed
as chief minister of the PML-N stronghold in Punjab province. The Sharifs strengthened their
ties further with the protesting lawyers.

Army role

Nawaz Sharif trained his guns on the president, saying that Gen Musharraf's spirit had "infused
into Zardari". The government has responded by making it known that it would like to form its
own administration in Punjab.

It may not allow the PML-N to come back to power in the country's largest and politically most
influential province, which accounts for two-thirds of its military and bureaucracy.

The general view is that both sides have gone too far to retrace their steps and assume a
conciliatory posture, at least for the time being. In the past, governments have been able
to contain violent protests through administrative means, but have generally failed to
overcome the fallout.

What role will the army play?

One thing is for sure - all of the political elements, even if they are feuding, see the number
one enemy as a politically active military.
 
A crisis about more than judges, BBC News, Sunday, 15 March 2009

_45569096_007027562-1.jpg

Many see great dangers in
the bitter power struggle

Nawaz Sharif has won the latest round in an ongoing battle with the government,
driving in triumph through a police cordon surrounding his house in Lahore. After
a jubilant reception from thousands of supporters, Pakistan's main opposition leader
headed to Islamabad. He is determined to lead lawyers and political activists in the
final leg of what is called a Long March to push their demand for the restoration of
the deposed chief justice.

It is not clear how far he will get: the government has sealed the capital to prevent
protestors from fulfilling their plan to hold an indefinite sit-in in front of parliament.
What is clear is that the challenge has Pakistan's military establishment and
international allies very worried.

Power struggle

Top diplomats including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have called Mr Sharif
and the President, Asif Zardari, in recent days. The army chief of staff has been
holding meetings with the prime minister. All are urging a political resolution
to the crisis. It is obvious by now that this is about more than judges.

Of course it is true that the restoration of the chief justice, sacked two years ago
by the then military leader Pervez Musharraf, has been a bone of contention between
Mr Sharif and Mr Zardari for months.

Mr Sharif accuses the president of failing to honour three written agreements to reinstate
the top judge. Mr Zardari argues it is a constitutionally complex issue, but his critics say
he is afraid the restored judiciary would challenge aspects of his rule.

However, the controversy over the Long March mushroomed into a political crisis several
weeks ago, when the Supreme Court disqualified Nawaz Sharif and his brother Shahbaz
from holding elected office. The Sharifs saw this as a deliberate attempt, backed by the
president, to remove them from power, despite Mr Zardari's denials.

That suspicion was reinforced when Asif Zardari imposed federal rule on the Punjab
province - the power base of Nawaz Sharif's Muslim League Party (PMLN). In effect
the Sharifs' government was dismissed while the president's representatives began
negotiations with other parties to permanently replace the PMLN.

Why is this power struggle so dangerous?

Alarming rhetoric

First of all, because it puts the main opposition party into a violent confrontation with
the government. That harkens back to the instability of the 1990s, when Mr Sharif's
Muslim League and Mr Zardari's Pakistan Peoples' Party traded terms in power, each
undermining the other. Secondly, it pits the centre against the Punjab. Again history
demonstrates that when the two are in conflict, the government struggles to function.

Some observers believe Mr Zardari may have tried to remove the Sharifs' provincial
government for that reason. The president can mobilise the resources of the state,
but Mr Sharif can mobilise popular and material resources, such as his efforts to send
thousands of people to lay siege to the capital.

Third, it pits the country's two biggest parties against each other.

The Pakistan Peoples' Party has representation across the country, particularly in the
province of Sindh, Mr Zardari's base. Nawaz Sharif's Muslim League is the party of the
Punjab, the largest and wealthiest province. Both can rally the street if they want to,
violence cannot be ruled out.

Some observers have also expressed concern at rhetoric which appears to endanger
the fragile threads of Pakistan's federation, implying that a Punjabi leader is trying to
destabilise a Sindhi president.

The West is alarmed because it wants the Pakistani political forces to focus on battling
the Taleban and al-Qaeda on the Afghan border, not each other.

The military is alarmed because it sees threats to the integrity of the state. Few believe
it wants to intervene. Few doubt it will if the situation descends into chaos.

After Mrs Clinton's intervention, President Zardari has offered to appeal against the
Supreme Court decision, but that has not ended Nawaz Sharif's support for the Long
March. A reversal of the court ruling may lead to the reinstatement of his government
in the Punjab, but the opposition leader has made it clear that any political resolution
of the crisis must include the restoration of the chief justice.
 
Pakistan ex-PM ignores 'arrest', BBC News, Sunday, 15 March 2009

Protestors set fire to a bus and fought pitched battles with police (54 sec)

_45568219_pakistan_226map.gif


Pakistan opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has defied an apparent bid to put him
under house arrest in Lahore ahead of a "march" on the capital Islamabad.

Thousands of supporters joined him after he broke through a police barricade
of his home to reach a rally. Police fired tear gas as protesters hurled stones.

Sharif activists later managed to overcome barriers blocking access to the main
highway to Islamabad and Mr Sharif left Lahore in a convoy. The Pakistan Muslim
League (PML-N) supporters plan a "long march" to the capital to demand judges
sacked by the former government be reinstated.

"It's now a matter of the future of Pakistani nation and coming generations,"
Mr Sharif said earlier by telephone from his bullet-proof car. "How can we
abandon our mission halfway?"

Mr Sharif is expected to arrive in Rawalpindi - near Islamabad -in the early hours
of Monday. He is due to be joined there by his brother, Shahbaz Sharif, former
chief minister of the Punjab, and leaders of the lawyers' movement.

Police are said to be surrounding the property in Rawalpindi where his brother
is believed to be staying.

'Fascist tactics'

Sharif activists used mobile hydraulic lifts, apparently brought along for the purpose,
to remove massive containers placed as obstacles on the highway. The BBC's Barbara
Plett says it is not clear if Mr Sharif will be able to reach Islamabad, given the
authorities have blocked routes leading to the capital.

Ahead of the protest, the government has also arrested hundreds of opposition activists
and banned rallies, saying they could trigger violence.

Our Islamabad correspondent says the campaign over the judges has become a power
struggle between Mr Sharif and current President Asif Ali Zardari.She says the unrest
has alarmed the West, which wants Pakistan to focus on the battle against the Taleban
on the Afghan border.

President Zardari - the widower of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto - promised to
bring back the judges when he took office last year following his wife's assassination.

Early on Sunday, riot police blocked access roads to Mr Sharif's home and reportedly
baton-charging his supporters. Leaving his home later in the morning, Mr Sharif told a
crowd: "The house arrest is illegal and immoral. All these decisions are unconstitutional,"
reported AFP news agency. Party spokesman Ahsan Iqbal told the BBC: "A government
which claims to be a democratic government is coming with such heavy-handed fascist
tactics."

But interior ministry chief Rehman Malik told the BBC the police were outside Mr Sharif's
home for his own protection because of the threat from terrorists.

Long-running tensions

Mr Sharif was ousted as prime minister in 1999 during a coup by General Pervez Musharraf,
who ruled until August 2008. Tensions between Mr Zardari and Mr Sharif date back to the
1990s, but the two formed a brief partnership in government after parliamentary elections
in February 2008. Mr Sharif's party later left the alliance, complaining of reluctance by
Mr Zardari's Pakistan People's Party to reinstate the judges sacked by the last government.

Relations have been further strained in recent weeks by a Supreme Court decision to ban
Mr Sharif and his brother Shahbaz from elected office, and President Zardari's decision to
put their stronghold in Punjab province under direct rule from Islamabad.

But on Saturday, in a move seen as a conciliatory gesture, the government agreed to seek
a review of the Supreme Court ruling.

The political instability comes as Pakistan faces an economic crisis and a growing militant
insurgency based in the north-west.
 
In pictures: Pakistan protests, Sunday, 15 March 2009, 9 pictures

_45568590_007026639-1.jpg

1.Pakistan opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has defied an apparent
house arrest order, to join a protest in Lahore. Riot police had
surrounded the former prime minister's home in the city in the early hours.

_45568759_007026934-1.jpg

4.Our Pakistan correspondent says the unrest has become a power
struggle between Mr Sharif and current President Asif Ali Zardari -
the widower of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

_45568760_007027132-1.jpg

6. Police scattered the crowds and beat a number of stragglers
with batons, only for the demonstrators to regroup and counter-
attack with fresh supplies of sticks and stones.

 
Sharif 'joins' Pakistan protest, 21:54 GMT, Sunday, 15 March 2009

_45569755_sharif_ap226.jpg

Nawaz Sharif has been a long-term
opponent of the President Zardari

Pakistani opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has joined supporters on a march to the capital
Islamabad to stage an anti-government protest.

There have been reports that President Asif Ali Zardari has agreed to reinstate sacked
Supreme Court chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. The reinstatement of Mr Chaudhry and
other judges has been a key opposition demand amid a growing political crisis.

Mr Sharif earlier defied an apparent bid to place him under house arrest. Hundreds of
police surrounded his home in Lahore but the government denied that he was being
detained.

Mr Sharif's party, the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N), has been planning a "long march"
to arrive in Islamabad on Monday to stage a sit-in to demand the reinstatement of judges
sacked by former President Pervez Musharraf.

Mr Sharif is expected to arrive in Rawalpindi - near Islamabad - in the early hours of
Monday. He is due to be joined there by his brother, Shahbaz Sharif, former chief minister
of the Punjab, and leaders of the lawyers' movement demanding the judges' reinstatement.

Correspondents say the campaign over the judges has become a power struggle between
Mr Sharif and current President Asif Ali Zardari.
 
Yes, it's a new country, which secede from its neighbourg,
Afganitan  ;) ...
 
Mass Demonstration Defies Pakistani Government, NY Times, March 15, 2009

16pstan3_600.jpg

Police officers clashed with protesters in Lahore on Sunday as government efforts
to suppress a demonstration collapsed.


Pakistan judge 'to be reinstated', at 00:16 GMT, Monday, 16 March 2009

_45569759_chaudhry_afp226.jpg

Iftikhar Chaudhry and other judges
were sacked by Gen Musharraf


There are moves in Pakistan to restore the sacked former Supreme Court chief justice, Pakistani
officials have said. Pakistan's High Commissioner to the UK, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, told the BBC
an announcement was expected soon on Iftikhar Chaudhry's reinstatement.

The move comes as anti-government protesters are planning to march on the capital to demand
his reinstatement. Opposition leader Nawaz Sharif earlier left a police blockade around his home
in Lahore to join the protesters.

Riot police had surrounded Mr Sharif's home in an apparent bid to place him under house arrest
but the government denied that he was being detained.

The reinstatement of Mr Chaudhry and other judges sacked by former President Pervez Musharraf
has been a key opposition demand amid a growing political crisis. There were clashes as police
fired tear gas and baton charged Sharif supporters who threw stones at the police.

Sharif activists later managed to overcome barriers blocking access to the main highway to
Islamabad and Mr Sharif left Lahore in a convoy.

Rest of the article on link
 
A Pakistani Police Academy was just attacked with pictures from the attack below:

capt.photo_1238391993428-1-0.jpg


A TV grab shows Pakistani policemen trying to take cover as a body is seen in the foreground in Lahore after gunmen attacked a police training school. At least 20 people were killed Monday after gunmen stormed the school, police officials told AFP.
(AFP/NDTV)


capt.7e60779fa6bc4799b4b0a20f312199aa.pakistan_lhr111.jpg


Pakistani police officers take cover outside a police training school on the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, March 30, 2009. Pakistani soldiers and other security forces laid siege Monday to the police academy that heavily armed gunmen attacked earlier, killing 11 officers and taking others hostage in a brazen assault that underscored the growing threat militancy poses to the U.S.-allied, nuclear-armed country.
(AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)


capt.8a0136d74d884079b89b935446873373.pakistan_lhr112.jpg


A Pakistani police officer takes cover behind a fallen horse outside a police training school on the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, March 30, 2009. Pakistani soldiers and other security forces laid siege Monday to the police academy that heavily armed gunmen attacked earlier, killing 11 officers and taking others hostage in a brazen assault that underscored the growing threat militancy poses to the U.S.-allied, nuclear-armed country.
(AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)


r4287276245.jpg


r3247370385.jpg


r3706200248.jpg


Policemen lie dead and injured after a shooting at a police training centre in Lahore March 30, 2009. Militants holed up in the police training centre in the Pakistani city of Lahore on Monday after storming the building, with estimates of the dead ranging up to 20. Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said 52 police were wounded in the attack but gave no word on the number killed, while Geo News television channel said the toll was 20.
REUTERS/Mohsin Raza (PAKISTAN CONFLICT SOCIETY IMAGE OF THE DAY TOP PICTURE)
 
Perhaps it's time for a "Pakistan Instability" superthread?

Other threads the mods should consider for merging with this include:

"The Bhutto Assasination" thread

"Pakistan March 2009 unrests" thread

"Monster Bhutto created" thread

Attacking into Pakistan (Western intervention) thread



Done, thanks.
Bruce


http://www.smh.com.au/world/warning-that-pakistan-is-in-danger-of-collapse-within-months-20090412-a40u.html

Warning that Pakistan is in danger of collapse within months
Paul McGeough
April 13, 2009

PAKISTAN could collapse within months, one of the more influential counter-insurgency voices in Washington says.

The warning comes as the US scrambles to redeploy its military forces and diplomats in an attempt to stem rising violence and anarchy in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"We have to face the fact that if Pakistan collapses it will dwarf anything we have seen so far in whatever we're calling the war on terror now," said David Kilcullen, a former Australian Army officer who was a specialist adviser for the Bush administration and is now a consultant to the Obama White House.

"You just can't say that you're not going to worry about al-Qaeda taking control of Pakistan and its nukes," he said.

As the US implements a new strategy in Central Asia so comprehensive that some analysts now dub the cross-border conflict "Obama's war", Dr Kilcullen said time was running out for international efforts to pull both countries back from the brink.

When he unveiled his new "Afpak" policy in Washington last month, the US President, Barack Obama, warned that while al-Qaeda would fill the vacuum if Afghanistan collapsed, the terrorist group was already rooted in Pakistan, plotting more attacks on the US.

"The safety of people round the world is at stake," he said.

Laying out the scale of the challenges facing the US in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Dr Kilcullen put the two countries invaded by US-led forces after the September 11 attacks on the US on a par - each had a population of more than 30 million.

"But Pakistan has 173 million people and 100 nuclear weapons, an army which is bigger than the American army, and the headquarters of al-Qaeda sitting in two-thirds of the country which the Government does not control," he told the Herald .


Added to that, the Pakistani security establishment ignored direction from the elected Government in Islamabad as waves of extremist violence spread across the whole country - not only in the tribal wilds of the Afghan border region.

Cautioning against an excessive focus by Western governments on Afghanistan at the expense of Pakistan, Dr Kilcullen said that "the Kabul tail was wagging the dog". Comparing the challenges in the two, he said Afghanistan was a campaign to defend a reconstruction program. "It's not really about al-Qaeda. Afghanistan doesn't worry me. Pakistan does."

But he was hesitant about the level of resources for, and the likely impact of, Washington's new drive to emulate an Iraq-style "surge" by sending an extra 21,000 troops to Afghanistan.

"In Iraq, five brigades went into the centre of Baghdad in five months. In Afghanistan, it will be two combat brigades [across the country] in 12 months. That will have much less of a punch effect than we had in Iraq.

"We can muddle through in Afghanistan. It is problematic and difficult but we know what to do. What we don't know is if we have the time or if we can afford the cost of what needs to be done."


Dr Kilcullen said a fault line had developed in the West's grasp of circumstances on each side of the Durand Line, the disputed border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"In Afghanistan, it's easy to understand, difficult to execute. But in Pakistan, it is very difficult to understand and it's extremely difficult for us to generate any leverage, because Pakistan does not want our help.

"In a sense there is no Pakistan - no single set of opinion. Pakistan has a military and intelligence establishment that refuses to follow the directions of its civilian leadership. They have a tradition of using regional extremist groups as unconventional counterweights against India's regional influence."

In the absence of a regional diplomatic initiative to build economic and trade confidences before tackling the security issue, the implication, Dr Kilcullen said, was that India alone could not give Pakistan the security guarantees Islamabad required.

The special US envoy Richard Holbrooke has been charged with brokering a regional compact by reaching out to Iran, Russia and China, and Dr Kilcullen said: "This is exactly what he's good at and it could work.

"But will it? It requires regional architecture to give the Pakistani security establishment a sense of security which might make them stop supporting the Taliban," he said.

"The best case scenario is that the US can deal with Afghanistan, with President Obama giving leadership while the extra American troops succeed on the ground - at the same time as Mr Holbrooke seeks a regional security deal," he said. The worst case was that Washington would fail to stabilise Afghanistan, Pakistan would collapse and al-Qaeda would end up running what he called 'Talibanistan.'

"This is not acceptable. You can't have al-Qaeda in control of Pakistan's missiles," he said.


"It's too early to tell which way it will go. We'll start to know about July. That's the peak fighting season … and a month from the Afghan presidential election."

 
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