Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf said that the country might be forced to take matters into its own hands, which could include working with the Taliban, if it continues to feel alienated by the rest of the world. Musharraf said that Pakistan was in a terrible state – with its economy in crisis, high unemployment, [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Taliban’
Musharraf hints at pact with Taliban, military takeover to protect Pak from crisis
Malik denies presence of Taliban leadership in Quetta despite US rage
There is no top leadership of Taliban in Quetta, and the Pakistan government will take immediate action if any evidence of its presence is provided, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said on Monday. Malik made these comments while talking to media persons after visiting the CID building, The Nation reported. Meanwhile, the United States has renewed [...]
Taliban neither Islamic nor Pakistani, but mercenary killers: Malik
The Taliban are neither Islamic nor Pakistani, and the entire nation stands united against terrorism, and will ultimately uproot the menace from the country, Federal Interior Minister Rehman A Malik has said. Malik called on the bereaved families of the police personnel martyred in the terrorists attack in Police Lines Islamabad, and extended Eid felicitations [...]
Suicide bombers hit NATO base, Jalalabad airport
KABUL (Agencies) – The Taliban launched a pre-dawn attack on a major NATO base in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, triggering a firefight with foreign and Afghan forces that left eight militants dead.
Another 10 people, including three children, were killed in a motorcycle bombing at a market in a remote area of northern Afghanistan in an attack apparently targeting a local pro-government militia leader.
NATO later announced that three foreign troops were killed in southern Afghanistan after an insurgent attack, without giving further details.
The Taliban said 14 suicide bombers were involved in the strike on the base at Jalalabad Airport, which was the target of a similar attack in June. But the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said only one was wearing a suicide vest.
“The forward operating base received small arms fire from an unknown number of insurgents and after gaining positive identification of insurgent fighting positions an ANA (Afghan National Army) and ISAF quick reaction force was sent to the area,” it said.
Hours later, 10 people, including three children, were killed and 18 others were wounded when a motorcycle packed with explosives detonated in a market in the remote Imam Saheb district of northern Kunduz province.
District chief Mohammad Ayoub Haqyar told AFP that the explosion bore the hallmarks of previous Taliban attacks but there was no immediate confirmation of responsibility.
A pro-government militia commander was among the dead and was the likely target, he added. “It’s too early to say (for certain) but we believe Commander Abdul Manan could have been the target. He was killed,” said Haqyar.
A second motorcycle bomb attack on Saturday wounded five people, including a child, in the southern city of Kandahar, a security official and a local hospital doctor said.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said by telephone from an undisclosed location that 14 suicide bombers were involved in the attacks and that as many as 30 foreign soldiers had been killed.
Just north of Nangarhar province, of which Jalalabad is the capital, Taliban insurgents fought Afghan and ISAF troops in Kunar province for several hours. Three Taliban fighters were killed, ISAF said.
Afghanistan: Taliban attack NATO base
Taliban militants have attacked a NATO military outpost near the airport in the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad.
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said the attack on its forward operating base in Nangahar province lasted two hours.
Karzai holds ‘secret talks’ with Taliban to contain Haqqani network
Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai has reportedly held a secret meeting with three Taliban leaders in an effort to weaken the Haqqani network. Jalaluddin Haqqani, a commander in the 1980s Afghan war against the Soviets, leads the Haqqani movement. The network, based in the North Waziristan’s tribal area along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, is thought to [...]
Time not ripe for NWA operation: Army
KALAYA (Reuters) – Pakistan will consider mounting an anti-Taliban offensive in North Waziristan only when other tribal areas are stabilised, a senior military officer said on Tuesday, a position likely to anger ally Washington.
Pakistan has resisted mounting US pressure to launch a major operation in North Waziristan to eliminate the Haqqani Taliban faction, one of the most dangerous forces fighting American troops over the border in Afghanistan.
Army has repeatedly said it is too stretched fighting Taliban insurgents in other forbidding mountainous regions, and that only it can determine if and when to strike.
Lt-Gen Asif Yasin Malik, the main military commander for the northwest, said it would take at least six months to clear militants from Bajaur and Mohmand, two of seven semi-autonomous tribal agencies, described as global hubs for militants.
“What we have to do is stabilise the whole area. I have a very large area in my command,” he told reporters on a trip to Orakzai Agency. “The issue is I need more resources.”
There are already six brigades in North Waziristan which carry out daily operations, he said.
The US announced $2 billion in military aid for Pakistan last week as the countries sought to dispel doubts about IslamabadÂ’s commitment to uprooting insurgents from safe havens on its soil.
In March, Pakistani troops launched an offensive in Orakzai, which officials described as the nerve centre for Taliban, which included training camps.
Officials said 654 militants were killed in what they described as a successful campaign that ended in June. Militants often dismiss official death tolls. Nearly 70 soldiers were killed.
Pakistan says a series of army offensives severely weakened homegrown Taliban. But militants often melt away, set up strongholds elsewhere or try to return to areas they lost.
At a military camp in Orakzai, weapons and bomb-making equipment army officers said were captured from Taliban hideouts were on display for the media. These included machineguns, rows of AK-47 assault rifles and a suicide vest stuffed with ball bearings.
Officials say militants are no longer capable of staging major operations and are resorting to sniper attacks and roadside bombings. Militants attacked a checkpost manned by paramilitary soldiers in Orakzai on Tuesday, killing one soldier, local officials said.
The army is getting villagers involved in efforts to keep the Taliban from returning by providing some of them with rifles.
“By 2012 things should have turned it around totally,” said Malik.
Petraeus: Taliban allowed into Kabul
General David Petraeus said Friday that Western troops have allowed Taliban leaders into Kabul in order to talk with the government. The top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan was speaking in London.
NATO ready to help in Taliban talks
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen says the alliance is ready to help in the Afghan government’s efforts to pursue peace talks with the Taliban. At a NATO meeting in Brussels Thursday, Rasmussen said the NATO-led force in Afghanistan is willing to provide “practical assistance” for reconciliation efforts. He did not elaborate but noted the alliance will keep up military pressure on the Taliban.
Karzai confirms contact with Taliban
Afghan President Hamid Karzai has confirmed reports that his government has been holding talks with the Taliban.
The U.S. envoy to the region, Richard Holbrooke, said the United States supports the Afghan government’s continuing contact with the Taliban.
Karzai reaches out to Taliban
Afghan President Hamid Karzai used the anniversary of the start of the war in Afghanistan to open the inaugural session of a peace council. VOA reports that the council was appointed to help reconcile with the Taliban and other militant groups.
Taliban attack NATO fuel convoy in Pakistan
Suspected militants have attacked a depot where tankers were being filled with fuel to supply Nato troops in Afghanistan. As many as 27 transporters were set alight close to the Pakistan capital Islamabad.
NATO choppers entered Pak to kill suspected Al-Qaeda, Taliban
KABUL (Reuters) – Two NATO helicopters killed 30 suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban elements on Pakistani soil after a rare manned pursuit across the border from Afghanistan, NATO forces said on Sunday.
The two Apache attack helicopters from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) crossed the border from eastern Afghanistan on Friday after the insurgents attacked a remote Afghan security outpost in Khost province.
ISAF spokesman Sergeant Matt Summers confirmed that the helicopters had attacked after crossing into Pakistan. He did not comment on which countriesÂ’ forces were involved, but the US is the only coalition member that uses Apaches.
The US regularly uses pilotless drone aircraft for missile strikes in PakistanÂ’s borderlands.
However, manned military flights across the border are extremely rare. ISAF said in a statement issued late on Sunday that the helicopters were following its rules of engagement when they crossed into Pakistan.
Two Kiowa helicopters returned to the area on Saturday and killed at least four more insurgents, the statement said.
ISAF was not immediately able to confirm whether the Kiowa helicopters had also crossed the border. US forces make up the majority of ISAF troops in Afghanistan’s east. A new book by veteran US journalist Bob Woodward claims that the Central Intelligence Agency also has a 3,000-man “covert army” of elite, well-trained Afghans, who conduct secret operations in Pakistan, according to The Washington Post.
The newspaper obtained an advance copy of the book, which is due for release on Monday.
Despite the presence of almost 150,000 foreign troops, violence is at its worst across Afghanistan since US-backed Afghan forces ousted the Taliban in late 2001.
Musharraf made desperate attempts to save Taliban, bin laden from US wrath after 9/11: Report
Following the 9/11 terror strikes, when the US had made up its mind to bombard Afghanistan, Pakistan”s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and then President Pervez Musharraf made full efforts to save the Taliban and tried to persuade a red-faced Bush administration to hold a dialogue with the Taliban, as the ISI always regarded it as one [...]
Mullah Omar declares victory for Taliban “imminent†in Afghanistan
Taliban leader Mullah Omar has said that victory for the Taliban is imminent in Afghanistan, while the NATO-led campaign has been “a complete failure”. “The victory of our Islamic nation over the invading infidels is now imminent and the driving force behind this is the belief in the help of Allah and unity among ourselves,” [...]
Taliban chief says victory close
Taliban leader Mullah Omar says his fighters are winning the war in Afghanistan and that the Nato-led campaign has been “a complete failure”. In a rare statement, the elusive leader called on U.S. President Barack Obama to withdraw his troops “unconditionally and as soon as possible”.
Twitter helped to free me from Taliban captors: Released Japanese journalist
Japanese journalist Kosuke Tsuneoka has said that if there was anything that saved him from being killed by his Taliban captors, it was his familiarity with the social networking site Twitter. Recalling his harrowing experience in Taliban captivity, Tsuneko said that back in late June, circumstances looked bleak for him. He was on the brink [...]
Suicide bomber kills at least 20 in Pakistan
At least 20 people have been killed in what’s thought to be the latest Taliban attack in Pakistan.
Taliban kill 8 Afghan police in raid
Afghan officials say Taliban rebels have killed eight police officers in a raid in the northern province of Kunduz. VOA reports that Taliban were stepping up strikes in what once was a relatively secure part of Afghanistan.



