Archive for the ‘Fight against Terrorism and Drugs’ Category.

Military operation underway in Afghanistan

KABUL (AP) — Thousands of U.S. Marines and hundreds of Afghan troops moved into Taliban-infested villages with armor and helicopters Wednesday evening in the first major operation under President Obama’s revamped strategy to stabilize Afghanistan.
The offensive in the once-forgotten war was launched shortly after 1 a.m. Thursday local time in Helmand province, a Taliban stronghold in the southern part of the country. The goal is to clear insurgents from the hotly contested Helmand River Valley before the nation’s Aug. 20 presidential election.

Dubbed Operation Khanjar, or “Strike of the Sword,” the military push was described by officials as the largest and fastest-moving of the war’s new phase. British forces last week led similar missions to fight and clear out insurgents in Helmand and neighboring Kandahar provinces.

“Where we go we will stay, and where we stay, we will hold, build and work toward transition of all security responsibilities to Afghan forces,” Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Larry Nicholson said in a statement.

Southern Afghanistan is a Taliban stronghold but also a region where Afghan President Hamid Karzai is seeking votes from fellow Pashtun tribesmen.

The Pentagon is deploying 21,000 additional troops to Afghanistan in time for the elections and expects the total number of U.S. forces there to reach 68,000 by year’s end. That is double the number of troops in Afghanistan in 2008, but still half of much as are now in Iraq.

The Taliban who ruled Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001 and were ousted from power following a U.S.-led invasion, have made a violent comeback, wreaking havoc in much of the country’s south and east forcing the United States to pour in the new troops.

Capt. Bill Pelletier, a spokesman for the Marines said the troops involved in the Thursday operation were sent in by a mixture of aircraft and ground transport under the cover of darkness.

The operation is aimed at putting pressure on insurgents, “and to show our commitment to the Afghan people that when we come in we are going to stay long enough to set up their own institutions,” Pelletier said.

Reversing the insurgency’s momentum has been one of the key components of the new U.S. strategy, and thousands of additional troops allow commanders to push and stay into areas where international and Afghan troops had no permanent presence before.

While Marine troops were the bulk of the force, recently arrived U.S. Army helicopters were also taking part in the operation in Helmand province.

In March, Obama unveiled his strategy for Afghanistan, seeking to defeat al-Qaeda terrorists there and in Pakistan with a bigger force and a new commander. Taliban and other extremists, including those allied with al-Qaeda, routinely cross the two nations’ border in Afghanistan’s remote south.

The governor of Helmand province predicted the operation would be “very effective.”

“The security forces will build bases to provide security for the local people so that they can carry out every activity with this favorable background, and take their lives forward in peace,” Gov. Gulab Mangal said in a Pentagon news release.

Obama’s strategy aims to boost the size of the Afghan army from 80,000 to 134,000 troops by 2011 — and greatly increase training by U.S. troops accompanying them — so the Afghan military can defeat Taliban insurgents and take control of the war. The White House also is pushing forces to set clear goals for a war gone awry, to get the American people behind them, to provide more resources and to make a better case for international support.

There is no timetable for withdrawal, and the White House has not estimated how many billions of dollars its plan will cost.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Source: MSNBC

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US forces ‘likely’ caused Afghan deaths

June 20, 2009 - 1:15PM .
A failure by US forces to follow procedures in deadly air strikes last month in Afghanistan “likely” caused the death of at least 26 civilians, the US military said.

During a May 4 battle with Taliban insurgents in western Afghanistan, US air crews and ground troops acted in line with the laws of armed conflict, but three air strikes by a B-1 bomber “did not adhere to all of the specific guidance” under US combat rules and orders, a military investigation concluded.

“Not applying all of that guidance likely resulted in civilian casualties,” said a summary of the probe released on Friday.

The investigation found that about 26 civilians died in the incident but said it was possible that a higher number were killed.

The Afghan government has put the civilian toll for the incident at 140.

The investigators wrote that “no one will ever be able conclusively to determine the number of civilian casualties that occurred on May 4, 2009.”

The report described an intense battle with Afghan security forces calling for assistance from a team of US Marines near the village of Gerani in the Farah province.

Trying to help Afghan forces pinned by the insurgent gunfire and secure the evacuation of wounded soldiers, the Marine unit called in air strikes.

A first wave of strikes by F/A-18 fighter jets hit intended targets without causing civilian casualties, according to the report.

After nightfall, a B-1 Lancer bomber was called in to relieve the F/A-18s and carried out three strikes using 500-pound and 2000-pound bombs.

In two of the three raids, the bombing likely caused civilian deaths, the report said.

In both cases, air crews and the ground commander believed they were targeting insurgent forces that were still firing on Afghan government and coalition forces.

But neither the ground force commander nor the bomber crew “could confirm the presence or absence of civilians already in the building,” it said.

In the third strike, the crew of the bomber and ground force commander spotted a group of adults that they suspected were Taliban forces “moving rapidly in the dark across difficult terrain in an evenly-spaced formation.”

The ground commander ordered the B-1 bomber to hit a building where he believed the insurgents had moved.

The aircraft then dropped a 2000-pound bomb on the building, heavily damaging it and a nearby structure.

In a series of recommendations, the investigation said it was vital for the US mission in Afghanistan to adopt tactics that put a priority on avoiding civilian casualties.

The probe said that US and coalition forces should review and refine all combat rules, including the use of air power, for situations where there is a risk of civilian casualties.

Units in the country and due to deploy need to carry out immediate training once the new guidance is in place, it said.

The probe also called for better public relations efforts in cooperation with Afghan ministries, better communication with leaders of local non-governmental organisations and the creation of investigative teams that can quickly respond to reports of possible civilian casualties.

AFP

Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

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Pakistan receives four Mi-17 helicopters from US for anti-Taliban ops

Our Bureau
Fri, Jun 12, 2009

US Embassy officials, in Islamabad, announced today that The United States delivered four Mi-17 cargo helicopters to the Pakistani army yesterday to support Pakistan’s counterinsurgency as well as humanitarian efforts.

The United States is in the process of identifying additional Mi-17s that may be made available to Pakistan in the future, officials said. The US military has several of the Russian-built medium-weight, single-rotor helicopters in its inventory, primarily for training purposes, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters today.

The helicopters, delivered at the request of the Pakistani government, will increase capabilities in current operations against militant extremists, officials said. They’ll also support efforts to care for thousands of Pakistanis displaced from their homes by the fighting.

Whitman called the helicopter delivery an example of the support the United States is ready to provide the Pakistanis, as requested. “We stand ready to help Pakistan in any way we can to fight the internal threat that exists there,” he said.

Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of US Central Command, said today he’s “very proud” of indirect support the United States has been able to provide Pakistan, including training assistance as well as the helicopter delivery.

Petraeus praised the speed in which the delivery was made. “Within two or three weeks of request from them for helicopter support, we wheeled four Mi-17s just refurbished out of the back of a Colt yesterday,” he said.

Meanwhile, the United States is exploring other, longer-term means of supporting Pakistan, including the Pakistani Counterinsurgency Capabilities Fund, Whitman said. The Defense Department has requested $700 million for the fund as part of the fiscal 2010 budget.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates supports the program, which he told Congress will complement State Department efforts already under way or being planned, while enabling U.S. Central Command to help Pakistan increase its counterinsurgency capabilities.

Gates called these efforts “a vital element of the president’s new Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy.”

Source: Defenseworld.net

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Dozens killed in Afghanistan

12 June, 2009 10:46:00

A British soldier was among more than two dozen people killed in a surge of attacks in Afghanistan, authorities said Friday, with violence at record levels two months ahead of presidential elections.
The new bloodshed was announced as General David Petraeus, commander of US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, warned Thursday of more “tough months” ahead in the battle against extremist insurgents here.

The British soldier, serving in NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), was killed near the southern city of Kandahar, the British defence ministry said.

The death takes to 134 the number of foreign troops to lose their lives in Afghanistan this year, most of them in bomb blasts.

Southern Afghanistan sees the worst of the Taliban insurgency and the United States is moving 17,000 extra combat troops into the area with about 4,000 military trainers also due to deploy to the country.

Insurgents meanwhile attacked a police post in southern Helmand province late Thursday, kicking off heavy fighting, the interior ministry said in a statement. ordinance

A dozen “enemies of peace” were killed, including two commanders, it said.

Taliban insurgents also attacked an patrol of Italian ISAF troops and Afghan security forces in southwestern Farah province on Thursday, the provincial governor said.

Two Afghan soldiers were killed and two wounded, governor Rohul Amin Amin said. Three Italian soldiers were also hurt, he said.

The Taliban suffered an unknown number of casualties, he said.

The fighting was in Bala Buluk district, which has seen heavy fighting in recent weeks. US air strikes on Taliban fighters in the district last month killed up to 140 civilians, according to the Afghan government.

Also Thursday, a bomb in Kandahar killed three private security guards working for a bank, police said.

Another four private security guards were killed in another bombing in southern Zabul province, an Afghan official said.

The Taliban claimed both bomb attacks.

ISAF said meanwhile that four Afghan civilians were killed in a traffic accident involving one of its vehicles in the northeastern province of Kunar on Thursday.

Two more civilians were killed in the same province on Thursday by ISAF mortar rounds fired against insurgents, it said.

Violence has surged in recent weeks across Afghanistan with Taliban-led insurgents carrying out more attacks and troops cracking down on militant strongholds ahead of presidential elections set for August 20.

There have also been incidents in previously calm areas such as the northern province of Baghlan where a dozen Taliban and two Afghan soldiers were reported killed in fighting on Wednesday.

Petraeus said in Washington that the past week had seen the highest level of security incidents in Afghanistan since the Taliban’s ouster from power in late 2001.

From January to May, insurgent attacks in Afghanistan were up by 59 percent from the same period a year earlier, according to NATO figures.

“There is no question that the situation has deteriorated over the course of the past two years and that there are difficult times ahead,” said Petraeus, who heads the US Central Command.

He said the levels of violence would rise in part “because we are going to go after their sanctuaries and safe havens as we must.”

Source: Military World

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Nigerian militant group claims attack on pipeline

Jun 13, 9:00 AM (ET)

PORT HARCOURT, Nigeria (AP) - Nigerian militants say they have sabotaged a pipeline in the restive southern Niger Delta region.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta said in a statement it had blown up a pipeline Friday run by Chevron Corp. (CVX)’s local subsidiary.

The commander of the joint task force in the delta confirmed a pipeline operated by Chevron had been damaged.

Violence has been escalating in the region as the military intensifies operations to flush out rebels battling for a larger share of the country’s oil revenues.

MEND has issued repeated warnings recently to oil companies to pull all staff from the region. The group on Friday also announced it had released a British hostage held for more than six months.

Source: My Way

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Pakistan Army Says 23 Terrorists Killed in Northwest Fighting

10 June, 2009 02:01:00

Farhan Sharif

– Pakistan’s military said 23 terrorists were killed in the last 24 hours in various parts of the northwestern Malakand and Dir districts. Two soldiers also died.

“Fierce fighting” took place between troops and insurgents in parts of Peochar Valley, the military said in a statement on its Web site today. Wali Ullah, a terrorist commander, surrendered to the army in Besham, Swat.

Pakistani security forces say they are close to driving insurgents from the Swat Valley and neighboring districts. More than 1,300 militants and over 100 soldiers have been killed in the six-week operation.

Tribesmen, who have been fighting militants in the Upper Dir district, made progress in securing more villages, the statement said. Terrorists demolished two schools and a bridge in the area.

Security forces also battled militants in the northwest district of Bannu, near the border with Afghanistan, according to the statement. As many as 800 terrorists came from North Waziristan and were planning to attack various parts of the North West Frontier Province, the statement said.

Troops killed 70 militants in two days of fighting in Bannu, GEO television reported, without saying where it got the information.

At least 16 people were killed and 48 were injured in a suicide bomb attack yesterday on a hotel in Peshawar, the capital of the North West Frontier Province. This was the seventh attack on the city since the army operation began.

UN Employees

The United Nations evacuated its employees from Peshawar after two of its employees died in the bomb attack. Dozens of international aid workers were at the five-star Pearl Continental when the suicide bombers struck.

Aid agencies were helping the two million people displaced by fighting in the northwest, the biggest exodus since 1947.

The Taliban advanced to within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of Islamabad in early April, violating an accord to end fighting in exchange for the government placing the provincially administered tribal area under Islamic law.

The Obama administration says the militants in Pakistan’s mountainous tribal regions threaten the stability of the nuclear-armed nation and hamper the war effort by the U.S. and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in neighboring Afghanistan.

President Barack Obama has said a U.S. aid package to Pakistan worth $1.5 billion a year would be conditional on the government tackling extremists

Source: Military World

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UK soldiers survive Afghan blast

03 June, 2009 10:25:00

Four Oxfordshire-based soldiers walked away unscathed after their vehicle set off a roadside bomb in Afghanistan.

The servicemen, from Bicester-based 206 Squadron, were in an armoured vehicle on patrol in northern Helmand.

Capt Gordon Fletcher, Staff Sgt Paul Bingham, L/Cpl Daniel Rushton and Craftsman Jamie Bewick were able to drive away after hitting the device.

On Wednesday it was announced a British soldier had been killed in an explosion on patrol in southern Afghanistan.

Capt Fletcher, of the Royal Logistic Corps, was the vehicle commander.

‘State of shock’

He said: “After the initial shock of the explosion and the dust cloud in the vehicle had subsided our first reaction was one of disorientation.

“[We were] trying to take in the severity of the event that had just happened, followed by what felt like minutes but most probably seconds of almost silence.

“Due to the size of the explosion we were unsure of the extent of the damage to the vehicle. On further examination the vehicle was able to drive on its own accord out of the contact area.

“Part of the vehicle training and safety brief covers the wearing of both seat belts and helmets which ultimately saved the crew from sustaining any major injuries during the blast.”

Craftsman Bewick, of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, was driving the vehicle.

He said: “At first you are in a state of shock but then your training kicks in and the priority is the crew, ensuring everybody is uninjured and safe.”

The troops were part of a re-supply convoy of essential equipment when their vehicle was hit last month.

A total of 166 British service personnel have been killed on operations in Afghanistan since 2001.

Source: Military World

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Counterterrorism: A Role for the FBI, Not the CIA

By Robert Baer
Wednesday, Jun. 03, 2009

As CIA Director Leon Panetta journeys to Capitol Hill to testify this week, there is reportedly a movement afoot in the Obama Administration that could diminish the agency’s role in counterterrorism. Dubbed the “global justice” initiative, the new law-enforcement approach would give the FBI and the Department of Justice a more prominent part in collecting evidence against and questioning terrorists and bringing more cases to a civilian criminal trial, according to the Los Angeles Times. The CIA will still collect intelligence on counterterrorism. And no one right now is talking about putting a ban on CIA interrogations of terrorism suspects. But given the right political climate, that is where this initiative could be heading.

And that, despite what some CIA loyalists might reflexively think, would be great news for the agency. In fact, if I were Panetta, I would neatly gift wrap counterterrorism, put a bow on the top, and hand it over to FBI Director Robert Mueller. It can’t be any clearer that renditions, harsh interrogations (if not torture) and secret prisons have been a catastrophe for the CIA, promising to tie it up legally for years to come, not to mention completely overshadow its successes. With the torture scandal sucking up all the oxygen, who today remembers that it was the CIA in the months before 9/11 that was jumping up and down on the table warning that bin Laden was about to attack us? (Read “The CIA’s Silent War in Pakistan.”)

None of this is to say the FBI can’t do a good job at counterterrorism. On the contrary, the FBI investigated the 1998 African bombings, breaking open our understanding of al-Qaeda. Special agents in the FBI’s New York office came to know al-Qaeda as well as anyone in the government. However, the FBI was forced to take a backseat when the CIA resorted to abusive interrogations, depriving us of expertise we so badly needed.

There’s an old piece of wisdom inside the Beltway, one that carries a lot more truth than most: the FBI catches bank robbers, and the CIA robs banks. I suppose you have to swim in this sea to really understand what this means.

But to give you an idea, the other day I was on the phone with an FBI agent about a wanted terrorist. I’d heard he was holed up in some city in the Middle East. The FBI agent asked how I knew this. A rumor, I answered, adding I had no idea whether there was any truth to it. I’m certain the FBI agent took notes, but only to file them away. An FBI agent needs solid, actionable information — solid enough to arrest people, convict them in a court of law and put them behind bars. In this case, the FBI needed an address, a phone number, a license plate — anything to act on. On the other hand, the CIA is conditioned to steal anything that looks like a secret, even a suspect one, letting analysts in Washington sort out the truth from fiction. The FBI and CIA cultures couldn’t be more different.

The biggest mistake the Bush Administration made was not criminalizing 9/11 and making the FBI the lead investigator. This would not have stood in the way of Pakistan arresting 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (K.S.M.). In a war of ideas, we would have been well served as a country to have put K.S.M. on public trial, confronting him with damning evidence and exposing the bloody insanity of a man who has caused the death of more Muslims than anyone in modern history. But now, thanks to waterboarding and other interrogation abuses, this option may be closed off to us. (Read “Why the CIA Turned Down Dick Cheney.”)

Another problem with not giving the 9/11 investigation to the FBI was that we did not get a full account of what happened on 9/11. The CIA analysts who prepared the questions used in the interrogations wanted to know one thing: when and where was the next attack coming. By the time it came around to asking K.S.M. about the archeology of 9/11 — such as who recruited the 15 Saudis, the muscle — K.S.M.’s responses could no longer be relied on. After the daily waterboardings, he said anything he thought his interrogators wanted to hear.

A lead FBI role on terrorism does nothing to prevent the CIA from collecting as it has in the past. It can forward leads to the FBI, and let the FBI decide the evidence it should follow up on or, as often as not, discard.

Baer, a former CIA field officer assigned to the Middle East, is TIME.com’s intelligence columnist and the author of See No Evil and, most recently, The Devil We Know.

Source: TIME

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Mexico drug traffickers corrupt politics

MEXICO UNDER SIEGE

The cult-like La Familia Michoacana has contaminated city halls across one state, federal officials say. It sometimes decides who runs and who doesn’t, who lives and who dies.

By Tracy Wilkinson
May 31, 2009

Reporting from Patzcuaro, Mexico — There are few places in Mexico that better illustrate the way traffickers have corrupted the political system from its very foundation than Michoacan, the home state of President Felipe Calderon.

A relatively new and particularly violent group, La Familia Michoacana, is undermining the electoral system and day-to-day governance of this south-central state, pushing an agenda that goes beyond the usual money-only interests of drug cartels.

Whether by intimidation, purchase or direct order, drug gangs can sometimes dictate who is a candidate and who is not, and put some of their own people in races — a perversion, critics say, of democracy itself.

Just last week it became clear how deeply embedded La Familia is. Federal authorities detained 10 mayors and 20 other local officials as part of a drug investigation, saying the organized-crime group has contaminated city halls across the state. The roundup comes at the height of the electoral season, as Michoacan and the rest of Mexico approach local and national contests July 5.

Dozens of mayors, city hall officials and politicians have been killed or abducted in Michoacan as La Familia has extended its control in the last couple of years.

When congressional candidate Gustavo Bucio Rodriguez was slain at his gasoline station last month, authorities went out of their way to convince political leaders that he was the victim of common crime, showing them a surveillance tape of the killing by a lone gunman.

A few days earlier, the message was unmistakable. Nicolas Leon, a two-time mayor of Lazaro Cardenas, site of Michoacan’s huge port, was tortured and shot to death. Left on his body was a message signed “FM” (Familia Michoacana) warning that supporters of the Zetas, the enforcement arm of a rival trafficking group, would meet the same fate.

Unlike some drug syndicates, La Familia goes beyond the production and transport of marijuana, cocaine and methamphetamine and seeks political and social standing. It has created a cult-like mystique and developed pseudo-evangelical recruitment techniques that experts and law enforcement authorities say are unique in Mexico.

No party has been spared its influence or interference, politicians of all stripes said in a series of interviews conducted before the arrests of the mayors.

“It is a way to win power with fear, where the authorities either don’t have the capability to fight it, or have the capability but not the inclination,” said German Tena, president of the Michoacan branch of the country’s ruling National Action Party.

“There are mayors and politicians who ‘let things happen,’ and there are some who have sold their soul to the devil,” said a high-ranking Michoacan state official who agreed to discuss the sensitive topic of corruption in exchange for anonymity.

Generally, though, traffickers’ political influence in Michoacan has less to do with winning office and more with controlling officeholders, to create a buffer of protection that allows their business to proceed unimpeded, said a security advisor to Calderon.

Several political leaders said they tell candidates to keep a low profile and counsel supporters not to be too public about their endorsements. And they rarely publicize the illegalities they see.

“If we know or hear that a candidate is mixed up with narcos, we are not going to denounce it,” said Fabiola Alanis, who heads the Democratic Revolution Party in Michoacan. “It is not my job. It would put my candidates in danger. There is nothing to guarantee that they would wake up alive.”

The Obama administration recently added La Familia to its “kingpin” list, a designation that makes it easier for U.S. authorities to go after its assets, including any money in U.S.-owned banks.

“La Familia is absolutely a priority,” a senior U.S. law enforcement official said. With its swift rise to the short list of dangerous cartels, La Familia is “a modern success story in Mexican narcotics trafficking,” the official added.

And with similar speed, La Familia has established footholds in the United States. The organization has drug-running operations in 20 to 30 cities and towns across the country, including Los Angeles, the official said.

For decades, Michoacan has been popular with traffickers, who were attracted to its fertile soil, abundant water, the rugged hillsides that provide cover and the Pacific port that eases transport. Especially in the rough, sparsely populated southern tier of the state known as the Tierra Caliente (Hot Land), a few gangs profited from vast marijuana plantations and, later, dozens of methamphetamine labs.

La Familia emerged this decade as a local partner of the so-called Gulf cartel, whose operatives were moving into the region along with their ruthless paramilitary force, the Zetas. La Familia and the Zetas gradually muscled out most of the other gangs, and La Familia announced its dominance by tossing five severed heads onto the floor of a dance hall in the Michoacan city of Uruapan in September 2006. The gruesome calling card soon became all too common in areas where drug traffickers settle accounts.

Upon assuming the presidency in December of that year, Calderon launched the first of tens of thousands of troops against drug traffickers here.

Nonetheless, La Familia is stronger today than ever. It has expanded into the neighboring states of Guerrero, Queretaro and Mexico, which abuts the national capital, Mexico City, while battling remaining pockets of the Gulf cartel.

La Familia also has steadily diversified into counterfeiting, extortion, kidnapping, armed robbery, prostitution and car dealerships. The group offers money or demands bribes; increasingly, people in Michoacan pay protection money to La Familia in lieu of taxes to the government.

At least 83 of Michoacan’s 113 municipalities are compromised by narcos, said a Mexican intelligence source speaking on condition of anonymity.

Purported leaders include Nazario Moreno Gonzalez, “El Mas Loco” (The Craziest), who is described as a religious zealot who carries a self-published collection of aphorisms (his “bible,” authorities say) and insists that the group’s traffickers and hit men lead lives free of drugs and alcohol.

Another leader, Dionicio Loya Plancarte, “El Tio” (The Uncle), is a former military officer. Both have million-dollar bounties on their heads.

They recruit at drug rehab centers and indoctrinate followers with an ideology akin to religious fundamentalism, complete with group prayer sessions. Some armed guards wear uniforms with the FM logo, witnesses say. Failure by a recruit to live by the rules is said to be punishable by death.

Moreno Gonzalez has also forbidden the sale and consumption of methamphetamine in Michoacan because it is such a destructive drug. It is for export only, primarily to the U.S. The Mexican army recently seized 200 pounds of ready-to-ship meth in a single raid, and the attorney general’s office has identified 39 labs in the state.

Another leader, Rafael Cedeño Hernandez, was captured last month while he and more than 40 other alleged La Familia associates were celebrating a baptism in a fancy hotel in Morelia, the state capital. They were still in their party clothes — Cedeño in a crisp white guayabera shirt, one woman in a yellow fluffy frock — when police paraded them, handcuffed, before television cameras.

Cedeño’s brother, Daniel, was running for Congress. After the arrest, he quit the race.

Daniel Cedeño Hernandez was not the only candidate for national office accused of having ties to drug traffickers. Valentin Rodriguez, a powerful two-time mayor running for Congress in a district around Patzcuaro, here in central Michoacan, has fended off repeated accusations that he has worked with La Familia.

“I am completely clean,” Rodriguez told Mexican journalists in early April when the accusations surfaced again. “If those [jerks] have proof, let them show it,” he said.

Efforts during the last two weeks of April to reach Rodriguez, who goes by the nickname The Dagger, were unsuccessful. He grew up so poor, people who know him say, that he couldn’t afford to go to school. Today he has the largest avocado-packing plant in Michoacan, worth, by his own account, $30 million.

Rodriguez, who represents the Institutional Revolutionary Party, has acknowledged that he was questioned by federal prosecutors investigating drug trafficking. He was never formally charged.

Last week, another congressional candidate was gunned down (he survived) in Michoacan; Julio Cesar Godoy, a congressional candidate who is the brother of the state’s governor, was hauled in for questioning as part of the narco-politics investigation; and the body of a founding member of Godoy’s party was discovered in neighboring Guerrero a month after he was abducted.

In 2007, two Labor Party candidates in a local race were intercepted on a road in the Tierra Caliente by gunmen who handed a cellphone to one of them. At the other end was this candidate’s just-kidnapped wife, begging for her life. The demand: Drop out of the party and run on behalf of another party, to ensure its victory. They did, and the party won.

The story is told by Reginaldo Sandoval, president in Michoacan of the Labor Party, who was himself abducted, held for a day and ordered to silence his criticism of the government and organized crime and to leave the state.

“It is difficult for us to work without fear, especially for those candidates who have a possibility of winning,” said Sandoval, who remains in Michoacan. “We are at the mercy of the organized criminals and drug traffickers. We have lost the drug war.”

wilkinson@latimes.com

Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times

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Pakistan ups Taliban chief reward

Friday, 29 May 2009 16:33 UK

Pakistan has increased its reward for a Taliban chief in the Swat valley to 50m rupees ($600,000, £372,000).

The figure is more than 10 times the original bounty for radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah.

Officials acted after Pakistani Taliban leaders warned of more bomb attacks in cities in retaliation for a government offensive in the north-west.

Authorities in Peshawar have banned public gatherings a day after at least 10 people died in two separate attacks.

On Wednesday at least 24 people died in a bomb attack in Lahore which targeted a police station and intelligence agency offices.

As fighting continued in Swat on Friday, the army said 28 militants had been killed in the last 24 hours and seven arrested. It said five soldiers and two civilians were injured in clashes.

The figures cannot be independently verified.

Sharia law

Analysts say the Taliban leader is the architect of a nearly two-year uprising in the Swat valley intended to enforce Sharia law.

The price on his head is payable dead or alive, officials said.

Interior Secretary Syed Kamal Shah told Pakistan’s APP news agency that the increase was made to “accelerate the efforts” for his arrest.

Interior ministry officials say Maulana Fazlullah is behind “various subversive activities”.

Authorities have offered cash rewards for the arrest of 21 Taliban leaders, including Maulana Fazlullah’s spokesman, Muslim Khan.

Adverts listing the men - 18 with pictures - appeared in several newspapers on Thursday.

Top Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud already has a $5m bounty on his head, posted by the US.

Hakimullah Mehsud, Taliban commander for the Orakzai and Khyber tribal regions, told the BBC that the attack in Lahore was in response to the army’s operation in the Swat valley.

He warned of further attacks on “government targets” in Lahore, Islamabad, Rawalpindi and Multan and said citizens should “evacuate their cities”.

As the city of Peshawar struggled to return to normal after Thursday’s blasts, the government in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) imposed a ban on gatherings of five or more people, while restrictions were put on motorists.

All educational institutions in the city have also been closed down. Correspondents say that many people in the city are gripped by fear.

Source: BBC News

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Terrorist flees to Lebanon, FBI confirms

By ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press Writer Adam Goldman, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK – A master bomb maker who once targeted commercial airliners and was suspected of aiding the Iraq insurgency has fled to Lebanon, an FBI official has confirmed.

There is information that 73-year-old Abu Ibrahim was reportedly in Tripoli, a city in northwest Lebanon, the official said earlier this week. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation continues.

The Palestinian terrorist is accused of bombings in the 1980s. He was indicted in the 1982 bombing of Pan Am Flight 830. The explosion killed a 16-year-old boy and wounded more than a dozen passengers as the plane headed to Honolulu from Tokyo.

The FBI has been looking to catch Ibrahim for decades and has recently increased its efforts to arrest him. In April, an FBI committee recommended Ibrahim be placed on agency’s list of most wanted terrorists.

The FBI is also trying to tap a State Department reward program to boost the bounty for his capture to millions of dollars. Ibrahim’s real name is Husayn al-Umari.

Ibrahim has remained out of reach for decades while living in Baghdad. With the help of the Iraqi Intelligence Service, Ibrahim ran a feared terrorist organization called “15 May,” according to federal court documents and terrorism experts. The group is named for the date Israel was founded.

Ibrahim, a devout Sunni who was born in Tripoli, is suspected of carrying out more than two dozen attacks on mainly American, Israeli and Jewish targets in a career that spans decades.

The Iraqi government also used him to conduct terrorism operations against Syria and Iran. In his book, former CIA spy master Duane R. Clarridge wrote that Ibrahim had a “talent for constructing ingenious machines of death, such as refrigerator trucks whose cooling pipes were filled with liquid explosives.”

He’s accused of training a slew of operatives in the art of bomb making whose expertise metastasized across the Middle East, including Mohammed Rashed and Abu Zyad. Rashed is behind bars at the Supermax maximum-security prison in Florence, Colo. He’s scheduled to be released in less than four years.

Some still remain unaccounted for, like Zyad.

Zyad, 60, was born in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. He assisted Ibrahim in Baghdad in the early 1980s, according to CIA investigative notes obtained by The Associated Press. The notes say Zyad lived in Sudan for two years before leaving for Algiers, Algeria, in 1989. His current whereabouts are unknown.

A former senior CIA official who was stationed in Baghdad after the Iraqi invasion in 2003 said there were serious suspicions that Ibrahim had helped the insurgency.

The official said Ibrahim had recently slipped into Lebanon through Syria after coalition forces began to increase efforts to drive insurgents out of the Mosul area and the Saladin Province in Iraq, where Ibrahim had been operating.

The former CIA official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he still works in the Middle East, said that Ibrahim had also gone to Tripoli. Ibrahim’s second wife, Selma, is from Tripoli.

“He’s got a lot of resources there,” the official said.

Ibrahim’s family also has connections to the Badawi Palestinian refugee camp on the northern fringes of Tripoli, according to the CIA notes.

The U.S. does not have an extradition treaty with Lebanon.

___

Associated Press investigative researcher Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this report.

Source: Yahoo News

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Bulgarian rangers arrive in Afghanistan

22 May, 2009 01:20:00

Early this morning the Bulgarian rangers from 101st Alpine battalion of the military establishment in Smolyan arrived in Afghanistan.

The platoon will implement tasks on the guarding of the base, convoying and escorting of cargo in the Afghan capital Kabul and Kabul province.

The preparation of the Bulgarian soldiers continued for around four months.

There are two women among the rangers and the youngest soldier is 21.

In the end of last week at the official ceremony in front of the cathedral “St. Visarion Smolenski” a certificate for readiness was handed to 3rd guard platoon – participant in the NATO-ISAF mission in Kabul.

Source: Military World

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Pakistani military shows off captured Taliban base

May 22, 9:42 PM (ET)

By CHRIS BRUMMITT

BANAI BABA ZIARAT, Pakistan (AP) - A Pakistani flag now flies over army troops dug in on a strategic ridge that until two days ago was held by the Taliban, a base where militants trained fighters, built tunnels and equipped caves with electricity and air vents.

The takeover of the highest Taliban stronghold in the Swat Valley by troops who stormed up its jagged, rubble-strewn slopes is evidence of the success of Pakistan’s month-old army offensive. The action has been welcomed by the United States, which fears the nuclear-armed country is capitulating to the militants.

But much of the region still remains in the hands of the militants, including Buner - a district just 60 miles from the capital Islamabad and the focus of intense air and ground operations in recent weeks, according to witnesses and police officers who spoke to an Associated Press reporter in its main town Friday.

Several residents pointed to the mountains and warned that the Taliban were not far away.

Police were still too frightened to enter parts of Buner and the town of Dagar, 12 miles away, which the military said was “liberated” from the Taliban.

“We have been destroyed by the Taliban,” said white-bearded Ayub Khan, as army trucks rumbled past a ruined market and a charred gas station where a suicide bomber had killed four soldiers in the early days of the battle.

The Obama administration has declared eliminating militant havens in Pakistan vital to its goals of defeating al-Qaida and winning the war in neighboring Afghanistan. U.S military officers say insurgents use Pakistan as a base to launch attacks over the frontier in Afghanistan.

But Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Schloesser, the top U.S. general in eastern Afghanistan, said there was evidence that insurgents were crossing into Pakistan, possibly to join the fight in Swat and other regions of the northwest where militants are holed up.

His comments come amid concern in Washington and Islamabad that the ongoing buildup of 21,000 additional U.S. forces in Afghanistan may end up pushing Taliban militants into Pakistan, further destabilizing its border region.

The Swat offensive has triggered an exodus of nearly 1.9 million refugees, more than 160,000 to sweltering camps, while the rest have been taken in by relatives, friends or in rented accommodation. Foreign countries and the United Nations are donating money to relieve the crisis.

Unlike other campaigns against Taliban and al-Qaida militants, the current offensive has broad political and public support in Pakistan, but some fear that could drain away if the refugees are seen to be neglected or the fighting drags on.

The army claims to have killed more than 1,000 militants, but said Friday the Taliban control the main town of Mingora; Piochar, a side-valley farther north that is a Taliban base; and several other districts. The army said those areas are increasingly surrounded by Pakistani troops.

“The noose is tightening around them,” Maj. Gen. Saajad Ghani, the commander of operations in Upper Swat. “Their routes of escape have been cut off. It’s just a question of time before the Taliban leadership is eliminated.”

He and another senior commander estimated the operation could last another two or three months.

The army took more than a dozen reporters to the camp after flying them to the valley by helicopter from Islamabad. The scenic region that once attracted honeymooners and skiers has largely been off-limits to the media since fighting broke out.

While foreign governments are praising the Swat operation, they will be looking closely to see whether the country expands the offensive into other parts of the border region, especially Waziristan, which has been hit by repeated strikes by U.S missiles since last year.

Critics say the Pakistani army does not have the will or capability to completely take out the militants, given its close historical links to extremist groups it fostered for use as proxies in Kashmir, a region disputed with longtime foe India.

Previous operations in the northwest have resulted in widespread damage to property and significant civilian casualties.

The army has not given any tolls for civilians killed, but say there have been very few. Refugees have reported several examples. The militants have largely been unavailable for comment since the fighting began.

Flying over the valley, there was no major damage visible in several towns and cities - a sign, perhaps, that the military is making good on its promise not to use artillery and airstrikes in urban area or where civilians could be hiding.

The facilities at the Taliban camp on the ridge point to a disciplined and well-funded adversary, which is believed to have about 4,000 fighters.

At 7,500 feet, the complex was about the size of two soccer fields, with panoramic views of the valley on all sides.

Ghani said it was an operational, communications and training center for the Swat insurgency that had been there for several years.

“They wanted to retain it at all costs,” he said at the base, where a dozen Pakistani army soldiers are dug in, wary the Taliban may return. “This was symbolic for them.”

The heights were first bombed by jets and helicopters, leaving several large craters, before troops stormed it earlier this week.

Ghani said four soldiers had been wounded and that 200-300 fighters had been killed, but there was no evidence of this, such as graves or blood. Capt. Kamal Butt, who led the final assault, said there were no bodies when he arrived, suggesting the insurgents had fled. There was no explanation of where the bodies might have gone.

The cave mouths and bunkers were made with brick walls several feet thick and topped with large tree trunks, dirt and leaves. Flies buzzed in and out of the cave housing the kitchen, outside of which stood a bullet-scarred wheelbarrow filled with lentils.

The caves and tunnels had electricity and rudimentary ventilation systems. A system of pipes and tanks ensured those staying at the camp had water from several faucets.

Officers laid out text books belonging to pupils who, according to the headings in them, underwent guerrilla training. One was dated May 2, 2009. They said many of the students were forced to attend. They also showed reporters three sacks of chemicals used for making bombs, wires and detonators.

The offensive was launched after the militants abandoned a peace deal widely criticized in the West and moved into Buner. Coupled with a video showing the insurgents whipping a women, the advance seems to have galvanized politicians, the media and members of the public into supporting the war.

“Fighting an insurgency in your own country is hell,” said Col. Abdul Rehman. “But when the whole country is behind you, you feel better.”

Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon in Buner and Fisnik Abrashi in Afghanistan contributed to this report.

Source: My Way

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U.S. disputes Afghan civilian death toll

Officials say video evidence, reports show fewer villagers killed in raid

NBC News and news services
updated 4:30 p.m. PT, Wed., May 20, 2009

Video evidence recorded by fighter jets and the account of the ground commander suggest no more than 30 civilians were killed in a two-day battle in western Afghanistan this month, the U.S. military said Wednesday, a stark contrast with Afghan claims that 140 civilians died.

The footage shows insurgents streaming into homes that were later bombed, said Col. Greg Julian, the chief U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan. He said ground troops observed some 300 villagers flee in advance of the fighting, indicating that not many could have been inside the bombed compounds.

The figures, which the Americans called preliminary, are far lower than the numbers villagers provided to an Afghan government commission days after the May 4-5 battle in the villages of Gerani and Ganjabad in Farah province.

NBC News first reported on the interim investigation on Tuesday.

Julian said the exact number killed might never be known and U.S. investigators were still trying to determine what happened. U.S. investigators initially visited the area and said the number and size of the mass graves did not support the Afghan claims of 140 dead. No corpses were exhumed.

Investigators later reviewed hours of cockpit video from the fighter jets as well as audio recordings of the air crew’s conversation with the ground commander. Julian said the military would release the footage and other evidence in the coming days.

U.S. officials initially suggested that Taliban grenades may have been responsible for at least some of the civilian deaths. But in later statements, the military placed the blame on Taliban militants who put civilians at risk by dashing into their homes.

The United States has been criticized in recent weeks by Afghan officials after the controversial in the Bala Buluk district. A dispute on the number of civilians killed in the clash threatens to heighten tensions between the two nations.

If the Afghan commission’s death toll of civilians is correct, the Bala Buluk incident would be the largest single case of civilian deaths since the 2001 invasion.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has long pleaded with the U.S. to minimize civilian deaths during its military operations and not use airstrikes in the villages. He says civilian deaths at the hands of foreign troops erode support for the fight against the Taliban, who have made a comeback after they were ousted in the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.

Gun camera video from B-1 bomber
But according to U.S. officials, gun camera video from the B-1 bomber responsible for the strike shows a large number of Taliban fighters “regrouping” in a compound after a firefight with U.S. Marines and Afghan security forces, then entering two separate buildings.

The B-1 dropped two 2,000-pound bombs on the buildings, U.S. officials told NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski.

The U.S. military officials contended that the civilians that were apparently in the buildings had been herded into the buildings beforehand and used as human shields by the Taliban, Miklaszewski reported. The official results of the interim military investigation are expected to be released within days.

Meanwhile, America’s new ambassador to Afghanistan told victims of the clash Tuesday that the U.S. would work to avoid civilian casualties.

Karl Eikenberry’s appearance alongside Karzai seemed to be an attempt to soothe the tension.

Addressing victims’ families and others at the main mosque in Farah city, Eikenberry, a former U.S. general who served twice in Afghanistan, invoked his military honor to assure them that he meant what he said.

“I assure the people of Afghanistan that the United States will work tirelessly with your government, army and police, to find ways to reduce the price paid by civilians and avoid tragedies like what occurred in Bala Buluk,” Eikenberry said, according to a transcript of remarks provided by the U.S. Embassy.

“All those people who wear a turban and have local clothes are not Taliban,” Karzai told the gathering. U.S. troops “should cut down bombardment on them,” he said.

America’s top military officer warned Monday that the deaths of Afghan civilians caught up in U.S. combat operations could cripple President Barack Obama’s revamped strategy for the seven-year-old war.

“We cannot succeed … in Afghanistan by killing Afghan civilians,” said Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Mullen’s comments follow accusations by New York-based Human Rights Watch that measures put in place by the U.S. military to safeguard civilians during operations were inadequate.

Villagers told the watchdog that fighting broke out in Bala Buluk after Taliban arrived demanding a share of their poppy income, but it was during U.S. airstrikes that most civilians were killed.

In its preliminary report last week, the group condemned the Taliban’s practices of using civilians as human shields and deploying fighters in populated areas. But Human Rights Watch said its interviews did not suggest residents were used as human shields in Bala Buluk.

Eyewitness accounts
Villagers also told researchers that the firefight between Taliban and Afghan and U.S. forces had ended before the evening bombings began, though some did say Taliban were still in the compounds.

Col. Greg Julian, the chief U.S. military spokesman, has said video shot from an American aircraft during the battle “strongly refutes” the allegation that airstrikes killed the majority of civilians, as alleged by villagers.

“You can see these insurgents running at the last two locations that were struck,” Julian said, suggesting there were militants present in the later stages of the fight.

NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski contributed to this report.

© 2009 msnbc.com

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US military: 44 Afghan cases of white phosphorus

May 11, 2:46 PM EDT

By JASON STRAZIUSO
Associated Press Writers

KABUL (AP) — The U.S. accused Afghan militants Monday of using white phosphorus as a weapon in “reprehensible” attacks on U.S. forces and in civilian areas.

The accusation comes two months after an 8-year-old Afghan girl named Razia was wounded by white phosphorus in a battle between militants and NATO troops. Razia has received 10 skin grafts at the U.S. military hospital at Bagram. A U.S. military spokeswoman said her injuries could have been caused by either side.

U.S and NATO troops frequently use white phosphorus to illuminate targets and create smoke screens. But human rights groups denounce its use as a weapon, or over populated areas, for the severe burns it causes.

Also Monday, the Pentagon replaced the top U.S. and NATO general in Afghanistan, Gen. David McKiernan, as President Barack Obama tries to turn around a stalemated war. Replacing McKiernan will be Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who has had a top administrative job at the Joint Chiefs of Staff for less than a year.

The U.S. military declassified documents Monday showing at least 38 instances where militants had used white phosphorus in attacks or where weapons had been found in eastern Afghanistan, where the U.S. primarily operates. The NATO-led force supplied information on six other instances in the country.

The U.S. said militants used white phosphorus in improvised explosive attacks at least seven times since spring 2007, some in civilian areas. The documents showed 12 attacks where militants used white phosphorus in mortars or rockets, the majority of which came the last two years.

The most recent militant attack came Thursday, when a NATO outpost in Logar was hit with two rounds of indirect white phosphorus fire, the documents said. Most troops in Logar, just south of Kabul, are American.

Afghan authorities have also said Taliban fighters may have used a burning agent - possibly white phosphorus - in a major battle on May 4, after doctors discovered unusual burns among the dead and wounded. President Hamid Karzai has said up to 130 civilians died in that battle; the U.S. blamed militants for deliberately putting civilians in harm’s way.

Doctors are treating 16 patients with severe burns from that battle, said Nader Nadery, an official with the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.

Col. Greg Julian, the top U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan, said the U.S. didn’t use white phosphorus in last week’s fight in Farah province.

Farah’s governor told the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission that many of those killed in the battle had severe burns, Nadery said. The governor said that Taliban fighters may have attacked the villagers with a flammable material, though not necessarily white phosphorus, Nadery said.

The militants’ use of white phosphorus as a weapon could cause “unnecessary suffering” as defined in the laws of warfare, U.S. spokeswoman Maj. Jenny Willis said.

“This pattern of irresponsible and indiscriminate use of white phosphorus by insurgents is reprehensible and should be noted by the international human rights community,” she said. Willis said the military doesn’t necessarily know militants are using white phosphorus deliberately, but that its use is still “indiscriminate.”

Militants find white phosphorus rounds in old weapons stores left over from decades of war, she said, but also get newer rounds from “neighbors,” a reference to militant networks in Pakistan.

A Taliban spokesman couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

The U.S. allegations come after Human Rights Watch last week called on NATO to release information into a March 14 battle in Kapisa - one province northeast of Kabul, where many French troops are stationed - in which Razia was burned by white phosphorus munitions.

Willis said the NATO-led force can’t be certain which side fired the round that wounded Razia.

“Either scenario is possible, and equally regrettable. One thing is certain: Razia will have the best care that we can give her,” she said.

White phosphorus may have been used by NATO troops as a smoke screen or to mark targets, Willis said. The release of information about militants’ use of white phosphorus was not meant to refute the Human Rights Watch statement, she said.

“We declassified it because there seems to be a general lack of awareness that insurgents are in fact accessing and using white phosphorus, so this is an effort to correct the record,” she said. “We’re not trying to exonerate ourselves for what happened to Razia, because we just don’t know. It could have been our fault.”

White phosphorus is not banned by any treaty that the United States has signed.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Pakistan claims 200 Taliban slain

Published: May 10, 2009 at 11:26 AM

MINGORA, Pakistan, May 10 (UPI) — Pakistani military leaders Sunday said 200 Taliban militants were killed during a one-day period in the Swat and Shangla districts.

An army statement said at least two soldiers were killed while another died of wounds he suffered earlier, CNN reported. The statement also said an unspecified number of civilians were slain by the Taliban.

“Indiscriminate mortar firing and planting of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) in the streets and roads by the miscreants in the populated areas of Thana, Malakand and Mingora, resulted into civilian casualties,” the statement said.

Sunday’s fighting came after Pakistani officials eased a civilian curfew overnight, allowing residents to flee. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees estimated150,000 to 200,000 civilians had fled the scene of the fighting in the North-West Frontier Province, with another 300,000 either moving or expected to flee.

With government forces using helicopter gunships, tanks and artillery to attack militants, “massive displacement” of civilians is likely, a U.N. spokesman said.

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Pakistan army will ‘eliminate terrorists’

Fri May 8, 2009 12:48am BST

By Junaid Khan

MINGORA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistan’s government ordered the army to eliminate militants on Thursday, setting the stage for a major offensive against Taliban fighters battling security forces in a northwestern valley.

The government’s handling of the Swat valley has become a test of its resolve to fight a growing Taliban insurgency that has alarmed the United States.

President Asif Ali Zardari, in Washington for talks, assured U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday of Islamabad’s commitment to defeating al Qaeda and its allies.

Security forces used jets and helicopters to pound Taliban positions in Swat, 130 km (80 miles) from Islamabad, as thousands of civilians took advantage of a break in a curfew to flee.

With hundreds of thousand of people already displaced by fighting, aid groups said the new exodus of tens of thousands was intensifying a humanitarian crisis.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani said in a televised address the militants were trying to hold the country hostage at gunpoint.

“Decisive steps have to be taken,” Gilani said.

“In order to restore honour and dignity of our homeland and to protect the people, the armed forces have been called in to eliminate the militants and terrorists.”

Gilani did not announce the launching of an offensive but said the government would not bow before terrorists and would force them to lay down their arms.
Reinforcements have been arriving in Swat as a peace pact collapsed. On Wednesday, soldiers launched assaults in the outskirts of the region’s main town of Mingora, where the Taliban have occupied important buildings.

Authorities agreed in February to a Taliban demand for the introduction of Islamic sharia law in the former tourist valley but the militants refused to disarm, and pushed out of Swat closer to nuclear-armed Pakistan’s capital.

That raised alarm in the United States. Pakistani action against militants in its northwest is vital for U.S. efforts to defeat al Qaeda and stabilise Afghanistan.

HUMANITARIAN CRISIS

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused Islamabad of abdicating to the Taliban while Obama expressed grave concern about the “very fragile” government.

Security forces launched an offensive on April 26 to expel militants from two of Swat’s neighbouring districts, Dir and Buner, and security has deteriorated sharply in Swat since then.

Army chief General Ashfaq Kayani told his top commanders earlier the army was fully aware of the gravity of the internal threat and would “employ requisite resources to ensure a decisive ascendancy over the militants.”

U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates, speaking to reporters in Kabul shortly before Gilani’s announcement, said the Taliban had overreached by attacking Buner, 100 km (60 miles) from Islamabad, and he was “very satisfied” with the Pakistani response.

There was “very little chance” of the militants gaining control of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, Gates said.
Investors in Pakistani stocks have been unnerved by the fighting and the main index ended 1.02 percent, or 73.20 points, lower at 7,125.66 points on Thursday.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees expressed his deep concern about the safety of people displaced by the fighting while the International Committee of the Red Cross said a humanitarian crisis was intensifying.

Medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres said it had to halt its emergency medical care because of the fighting which had trapped untold numbers of people in their homes.

Many fled when the authorities relaxed a curfew.

“We can’t stay here when bombs are falling,” said resident Mohammad Hayat Khan as he loaded his family of 14 onto a pick-up truck. He said there had been shelling near his home.

Many others were heading out of Mingora on foot, loaded up with whatever they could carry.

A son of radical cleric Sufi Mohammad, who brokered the Swat deal, was killed in a clash in Dir district, the military said, adding nine other militants were killed.

(Addtional reporting by Augustine Anthony and Zeeshan Haider; Writing by Robert Birsel; Editing by Jerry Norton)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved.

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Going into summit, Pakistan seeks U.S. helicopters

By Bridget Johnson
Posted: 05/03/09 04:21 PM [ET]
The Hill

The leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan will meet in Washington this week as Pakistan has requested equipment including helicopters from the U.S. to fight extremists.

The White House is hosting a summit Wednesday with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who is up for re-election in August, and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of Benazir Bhutto who has had his hands full trying to rein in terrorists while his country’s economy has withered.

President Obama will meet jointly and separately with the two leaders, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Friday. Karzai and Zardari will also meet with administration officials and lawmakers.

And as Congress weighs aid for Pakistan — and Pakistan remains resistant to any strings attached — the country is saying that what they’ve got isn’t enough to fight the al-Qaeda and Taliban forces who threaten not only Pakistan’s stability but the coalition effort in neighboring Afghanistan.

At a regular press briefing in Islamabad on Thursday, Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Abdul Basit said the country sought more equipment in order to battle insurgents.

“We are determined and resolved to fight terrorism and extremism and this had been widely appreciated all over the world,” Basit said. “As far as our capacity is concerned, obviously there are gaps. For instance, we face shortage of helicopters as well as night vision equipment. We are engaged with U.S. in order to plug these gaps.”

There was no indication whether the equipment would be sought in addition to the $7.5 billion over five years already proposed for Pakistan by Obama. The Pakistani spokesman said other countries including the United Kingdom had been approached for help with adding helicopters yet “no worthwhile response” had been received.

“According to information available to us, the administration in U.S. is in touch with the Capitol Hill and there will be a possibility of moving forward in this regard,” Basit said.

About a month ago, Pakistan reportedly wanted the U.S. to hand over control of its unmanned drones and corresponding intelligence for strikes against terrorist strongholds. Pakistan had argued to visiting envoy Richard Holbrooke and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen that the attacks were only making the fight against the extremists worse.

“We have conveyed the concerns of the government and the people of Pakistan that these drone attacks are damaging rather than helping the overall strategy to counter terrorism,” Basit said Thursday. “…We do have differences on this particular issue and rest assured this will be taken up again during the forthcoming trilateral summit in Washington.”

Also on the table will likely be the peace deal that Islamabad recently brokered with the Taliban to let the insurgents implement Sharia law in the Swat valley, which has raised alarm among human-rights activists and has not resulted in the disarming of the Taliban as stated in the agreement.

The deal also hasn’t ended hostilities, as the Taliban beheaded two Pakistani government officials in Swat on Sunday.

Zardari, scheduled to arrive in Washington on Monday, will meet Tuesday with members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and members of the Congressional Pakistan Caucus.

Karzai and Zardari will be feted at a dinner hosted Wednesday evening by Vice President Biden and at a Thursday lunch with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The D.C. meeting won’t be the only trilateral summit on the agenda for Karzai and Zardari. Next month, the two leaders will sit down with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran. The first meeting of the trio was held in Afghanistan last week.

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Official: Attack on Pakistan security post leaves 13 insurgents, 2 troops dead

May 2, 1:26 AM EDT

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Militants attacked a Pakistani security post near the Afghan border on Saturday, triggering a battle that left 13 assailants and two troops dead, an official said.

The incident early Saturday in the Mohmand tribal region - where Pakistan’s army recently declared victory over militants who had begun to threaten the nearby city of Peshawar - also injured three troops, said Syed Ahmad Jan, a senior administrator in Mohmand.

“Our security forces returned fire after coming under attack this morning, and when the insurgents escaped they left the bodies of 13 of their comrades,” Jan said.

Pakistani generals claimed earlier this year to have dismantled Taliban mini-states in Mohmand and the neighboring Bajur region, from where insurgents were attacking U.S. troops in Afghanistan as well as Pakistani forces and officials.

Pakistani troops are currently battling militants in Buner, a district much closer to the capital, in an operation praised by U.S. officials who have expressed growing alarm about the stability of the nuclear-armed country.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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UK, Australia promise more troops, Taliban threaten new offensive

30 April, 2009 08:16:00
Military World

Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan say they will launch a new campaign of suicide bombings and attacks on pro-government and international forces. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Stienmeier discussed increasing his country’s troop presence with President Hamid Karzai, after the UK and Australia promised to increase theirs.

As the US prepares President Barack Obama’s surge of troops and civilian trainers to Afghanistan, the Taliban declared that they will counter with a fresh campaign of bombings and other attacks.

A spokesperson told the AFP news agent that the campaign will be called “Operation Nasrat” and will start on Thursday. Targets will include foreign troops and diplomats, Afghan government officials and MPs and smployees of the Defence, Interior and Intelligence Ministries.

Military officials tend to dismiss the significance of such threats.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced Wednesday that his country, which is the second-biggest contributor to the Nato-led force, will increase its troop presence to 9,000 for the August presidential election. Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said that his country’s presence will increase by 450 to 1,550 troops.

On the day that Steinmeier met Karzai, four German troops were wounded in a suicide car bomb attack in northern Kunduz province. Germany has 3,500 soldiers in Afghanistan.

The US military on Wednesday claimed to have killed 42 suspected Taliban in clashes in Uruzgan, Helmand and Logar provinces.

The Education Ministry announced on Wednesday announced that 70 Afghan teachers, students and other education workers wer killed and another 140 injured over the last year. It said that about a quarter of the casualties were caused by crime and the rest by “terrorist attacks”.

About 480 schools are closed because of insecurity, while about 100 were reopened after local people put pressure on the Taliban to spare schools, ministry official Asif Nang said.

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