Islamic Terrorism in India

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Archive for the ‘Swat Valley’ Category

Pakistan soldiers prefer fighting “Hindu India” than Taliban ‘muslim friends’

Posted by jagoindia on May 26, 2009


 

Pak soldiers prefer fighting “Hindu India” than Taliban ‘muslim friends’ : Report
May 10th, 2009 –  by ANI  –
London, May 10 (ANI): Pakistan Government may claim that it is fighting its ‘own war’ in the North West Frontier Province’s Malakand and Swat Divisions, and is not merely taking action under the US pressure, but one thing is quite evident that the Pakistani army do not want to pump bullets into their ‘muslim friends’ rather they prefer fighting against India.
Amid all frantic calls being made by the international community, and especially by the Obama Administration that the real threat to Pakistan comes from its internal factors and not from India, majority of its security personnel still believe that India remains their primary threat, the Telegraph reports.
The report stated that eventhough the Pakistan army has made sacrifices in its fight against terrorism, soldiers trained and dedicated to the idea of fighting “Hindu India” resent the idea of killing fellow Muslims on their own soil.
“I do not like the Taliban but I do not want to fight against them.They are our Muslim brothers. I do not want to fight America’s war,” said Zulmay Khan, a soldier with Frontier Corps.
The statement perhaps clarifies all the speculations regarding Pakistan Army’s will and capability to counter the extremists.
Officers, who have been in the thick of things for long planning out strategies for the army, also believe that Pakistan’s primary concern is India despite the fact that the Taliban’s advancing writ poses an ‘existential threat’ to the nation.
The report quoted a retired Major of Pakistan Army, Major Ikram Seghal, as saying that most troops would remain on the Indian border, despite the increasingly frantic calls from Washington to concentrate on the enemy within.
The problem is that now Pakistan is battling jihadis whom it trained to fight wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir, which was directed by the country’s leadership itself.
Nobody believe that the Taliban would be flushed out of the country or the region by the Pakistan military, but fear is growing that whatever happens in the current operation, Swat will prove a self-inflicted wound that will fester for years, the report said. (ANI)

The report stated that even though the Pakistan army has made sacrifices in its fight against terrorism, soldiers trained and dedicated to the idea of fighting “Hindu India” resent the idea of killing fellow Muslims on their own soil.

Pak soldiers prefer fighting “Hindu India” than Taliban ‘muslim friends’ : Report

May 10th, 2009 –  by ANI  –

London, May 10 (ANI): Pakistan Government may claim that it is fighting its ‘own war’ in the North West Frontier Province’s Malakand and Swat Divisions, and is not merely taking action under the US pressure, but one thing is quite evident that the Pakistani army do not want to pump bullets into their ‘muslim friends’ rather they prefer fighting against India.

Amid all frantic calls being made by the international community, and especially by the Obama Administration that the real threat to Pakistan comes from its internal factors and not from India, majority of its security personnel still believe that India remains their primary threat, the Telegraph reports.

The report stated that even though the Pakistan army has made sacrifices in its fight against terrorism, soldiers trained and dedicated to the idea of fighting “Hindu India” resent the idea of killing fellow Muslims on their own soil.

“I do not like the Taliban but I do not want to fight against them.They are our Muslim brothers. I do not want to fight America’s war,” said Zulmay Khan, a soldier with Frontier Corps.

The statement perhaps clarifies all the speculations regarding Pakistan Army’s will and capability to counter the extremists.

Officers, who have been in the thick of things for long planning out strategies for the army, also believe that Pakistan’s primary concern is India despite the fact that the Taliban’s advancing writ poses an ‘existential threat’ to the nation.

The report quoted a retired Major of Pakistan Army, Major Ikram Seghal, as saying that most troops would remain on the Indian border, despite the increasingly frantic calls from Washington to concentrate on the enemy within.

The problem is that now Pakistan is battling jihadis whom it trained to fight wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir, which was directed by the country’s leadership itself.

Nobody believe that the Taliban would be flushed out of the country or the region by the Pakistan military, but fear is growing that whatever happens in the current operation, Swat will prove a self-inflicted wound that will fester for years, the report said. (ANI)

Posted in Hindus, India, Islam, Islamofascism, Pakistan, Swat Valley, Taliban, Terrorism | Leave a Comment »

Pakistan pounds Taliban; fighters pour into Swat

Posted by jagoindia on May 6, 2009


Pakistan pounds Taliban; fighters pour into Swat

Thousands flee Pakistan fighting

MINGORA, Pakistan – Helicopter gunships and mortar teams pounded militant strongholds, killing dozens outside emerald mines, the military said, as Taliban reinforcements poured down from their mountain hideouts and seized homes and government buildings.

The army began taking the fight to militants entrenched in both the Swat Valley and in Buner, just 60 miles (100 kilometers) from the capital, as Pakistan’s leader prepared to hear demands from President Barack Obama for forceful action from a struggling ally.

The latest actions will please Washington, which is urging Pakistan to crack down on militants blamed for rising violence at home and in Afghanistan.

Since fighting broke out Tuesday, thousands of men, women and children have fled Swat’s main town of Mingora and surrounding districts, fearing an imminent major military operation. The government said it believes refugees could reach 500,000.

“It is an all-out war there. Rockets are landing everywhere,” said Laiq Zada, a 33-year old who fled the valley late Tuesday and was now in a government-run tent camp out of the danger zone. “We have with us the clothes on our bodies and a hope in the house of God. Nothing else.”

The clashes followed the collapse of a 3-month-old truce in Swat that was widely criticized in the West as a surrender to the militants, who had fought the army to a standstill in two years of clashes that saw hundreds of civilian casualties.

It is uncertain whether the Pakistani public has the stomach for a long battle. The truce gave militants time to rest and reinforce their positions and any operation would involve fierce fighting in urban areas and would likely cause significant civilian casualties and property damage.

The Swat Taliban are estimated to have up to 7,000 fighters against some 15,000 troops who until recent days had been confined to their barracks under the peace deal.

The military said Wednesday’s offensive killed about 35 militants positioned near emerald mines in the Swat Valley and 27 in neighboring Buner, where troops have halted a Taliban push toward the capital Islamabad.

The Taliban killed two soldiers with a roadside bomb and two more in an assault on a power plant near Mingora, a military statement said.

“Armed militants have come down from their hideouts into the cities and have occupied civil houses and government buildings” as well as planting bombs to target both troops and civilians, it said.

The militant casualty figures could not be verified independently, and there was no official word on deaths or injuries among civilians.

An Associated Press reporter in Mingora said gun and mortar fire started Tuesday and continued through the night into Wednesday. An intelligence official said helicopters and mortar teams were pounding militant positions in Mingora and other parts of Swat.

“The situation is very tense there. Taliban are present at the homes of local residents. They are also present at strategic positions. They are using light weapons to ambush troops,” said the official on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media.

Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas declined to say whether the events heralded the start of major operations, saying only that “all the contingency plans are worked out” for carrying one out.

In recent days, however, there have been signs the mood toward the Taliban is changing. Many politicians, commentators and religious leaders now say the movement’s true nature was exposed by its refusal to go along with the peace deal despite the government’s best efforts.

Pakistan agreed to a truce in the valley in February. As part of the agreement, the government imposed Islamic law last month in the region in hope insurgents would lay down their arms — something they did not do.

The developments brought Islamabad’s faltering campaign against extremism into sharp focus as President Asif Ali Zardari prepared for talks Wednesday in Washington with Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai on how best to counter an increasingly overlapping spectrum of extremist groups behind surging violence in the neighboring countries.

The Obama administration hopes to build a strong and lasting regional alliance, linking success in Afghanistan with security in Pakistan. Toward that end, the administration is encouraging Pakistan to confront — not make peace with — the Taliban and other militants.

“We need to put the most heavy possible pressure on our friends in Pakistan to join us in the fight against the Taliban and its allies,” Richard Holbrooke, the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, told a congressional committee Tuesday. “We cannot succeed in Afghanistan without Pakistan’s support and involvement.”

In an interview with CNN, Zardari defended his country’s ability to fight the militants within its borders. “It doesn’t work like that. They can’t take over,” he said. “How can they take over?”

Fearing war could consume the region, thousands fled Mingora on Tuesday. Refugees clambered onto the roofs of buses after seats and floors filled up. Children and adults alike carried belongings on their heads and backs.

“I do not have any destination. I only have an aim — to escape from here,” said Afzal Khan, 65, who was waiting for a bus with his wife and nine children. “It is like doomsday here. It is like hell.”

Associated Press writers Chris Brummitt and Munir Ahmad in Islamabad, Zarar Khan in Takht Bai, Mardan, and an Associated Press reporter in Mingora who was not identified for security reasons contributed to this report.

Posted in Islamofascism, Pakistan, Swat Valley, Taliban, Terrorism | Leave a Comment »

J-K cops warn of Taliban moving closer to India

Posted by jagoindia on April 13, 2009


J-K cops warn of Taliban moving closer to India
CNN-IBN, April 09, 2009

New Delhi: The Taliban is moving closer to India’s borders, warns Jammu and Kashmir Police chief.

Jammu and Kashmir Director General of Police Kuldeep Khuda has told CNN-IBN that there has been a spurt in infiltration after Taliban gained control of Swat Valley and in parts of North West Frontier Province in Pakistan.

Kuldeep Khuda says the Taliban are now working in close coordination with terror outfits active in Pakistan.

“The Taliban have been active in the frontier province of Pakistan. Now they have moved closer to our borders. They have been active in Lahore and that gives an indication that they are getting more interested towards the eastern border of Pakistan. That also indicates there is more coordination between terrorists’ outfits in Pakistan. Of course we have to keep in our strategy for future and there has been some spurt in infiltration after the Taliban gained more prominence in Pakistan. It is a matter of concern and we are dealing with it,” says Khuda.

“In the month of March there has been activity on part of the terrorists to move around. We has some encounters, 28 terrorists, lots of foreigners among them, Pakistanis I should say… they got killed and fortunately our system of intelligence has improved a lot and we are getting good results. We had to keep all this in especially in view of elections which are on hand,” he adds.

He also says different terror groups have been launching coordinated attacks in the state.

“Whenever we have encounters generally we find a specific group being targeted. The mix of the two groups has been there in the past but generally incident of that kind of combined operation by various groups has been less. So these terrorist outfits have been working in a sort of lose coordination with each other but it is not they are totally independent of each other. They are being financed, outsourced , being equipped well from across by a single agency… that’s the elements within the Pakistan establishment and they have no reason not to operate in coordination with each other,” he says.

An advisory has already been issued to politicians in the state.

Earlier, the Union Government, too, had warned of terror strikes during elections.

Union Home Minister P Chidambaram had on March 27 sent out a letter to 25 VVIPs warning that they could be the target of terrorists during Lok Sabha elections.

Chidambaram wrote the letter to chief ministers and leaders of different political parties who have Z+ security.

Posted in India, Islamofascism, Kashmir, Pakistan, State, Swat Valley, Taliban, Terrorism | 1 Comment »

India concerned as Tailban strikes Sharia law deal with Pakistan. The Islamic threat is closing in on the civilized world

Posted by jagoindia on February 18, 2009


Taliban strikes Sharia law deal with Pakistan

India concerned over Sharia law in Malakand
17 Feb 2009, 0334 hrs IST, Indrani Bagchi, TNN

NEW DELHI: As senior Indian officials and US special envoy Richard
Holbrooke discussed American policies for the Pakistan-Afghanistan
region, the ceasefire between Islamabad and the Taliban in Swat valley proved to
be a dramatic example of the Islamist extremist threat closing in on
the civilised world. Stepping out of his meetings with foreign
minister Pranab Mukherjee, Holbrooke told reporters, “What is
happening in Swat now is a common threat to the US, India and
Pakistan, who now face a common enemy.”

In a dramatic and more extreme replay of the 2006 peace deal between
the Pakistan government and the Taliban, President Asif Zardari signed
Sharia law for the Malakand division and Swat valley on Monday, a day
after the Pakistan Taliban, led by Baitullah Mehsud, announced a
10-day ceasefire.

India is looking at the deal with growing trepidation, as it brings
the Taliban much closer. Nobody in the Indian government would comment
on record, but privately, there is growing concern here, which was
discussed in detail with Holbrooke. But much more important, it shows
the Pakistan government submitting to the growing powers of the
Taliban.

The Pakistan government’s deal with the Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat
Muhammadi (TNSM) to promulgate Sharia may be replicated in other
divisions in the NWFP.

The distress about the deal in Swat also comes from the fact that
after Swat, it could well be Peshawar, and then it’s a leap to
Islamabad.

India believes Taliban needs to be squeezed in terms of funds, weapons
and legitimacy, but many also suspect that the Pakistan army continues
to be the chief patron of the Taliban, as it believes Taliban to be
essential to its policy of strategic depth in Afghanistan and bleeding
India to death.

Pakistan government reportedly gave in on the Sharia laws to stop
further violence in these areas which the army just could not stop.

The ceasefire with the Taliban, Indian sources believe, is not likely
to make the Taliban give up either its ideology, weapons or intent to
undermine the Pakistani state. While Islamabad has released many
arrested Taliban commanders in return for one Chinese engineer, there
is no talk about the Taliban disarming.

The peace deal, therefore has no other strategic objective, apart from
stopping the violence. But by giving in to the Taliban demand and
getting a limited concession for 10 days, Islamabad may only be
prolonging the inevitable.

Posted in Afghanistan, India, Islam, Islamofascism, Pakistan, Sharia, Swat Valley, Taliban, Terrorism | Leave a Comment »

Video:- Taliban control in Swat Valley, Pakistan

Posted by jagoindia on February 14, 2009


A chilling look at what the future of Pakistan looks like.  Swat is the first place to fall

video

Posted in Islam, Islamofascism, Pakistan, Swat Valley, Taliban, Terrorism | Leave a Comment »