Bismillah ar Rahman ar Rahim REALPakNationalists

January 24, 2011

DEATH OF COLONEL IMAM PROVES JIHADI TREACHERY

Filed under: Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 8:34 am
TREACHEROUS KILLERS OF COL IMAM

TREACHEROUS KILLERS OF COL IMAM

If it was not already apparent from the murder of Khalid Khawaja last year the death of Col Imam clearly proves that the jihadi militants are not allies or assets of Pakistan but operating with no regards to loyalty or nation.

It would be proper to note here that Col Imam was outspoken against the American strategies in Afghanistan rather he was proponent of dialogue with Taliban leaders to determine an acceptable political solution to the fighting. For his efforts, the jihadi militants murdered him.

He warned that American attempts to divide the Taliban by bribing commanders was doomed to failure. “Their strategy will not work,” he said. “This carrot-and-stick strategy is going to backfire badly.”

But the manner of the death of the “godfather of the Taliban” suggests that there were some thing he could not foresee – and that even the powerful spy agency has very limited influence over the militants within their own borders.

This should be a grave warning to those who continue to believe the lies of jihadi militants that they want a peace while they are at the same time killing our soldiers and our citizens. Even those who have raised them from the beginning and stood by their cause are being murdered.

December 29, 2010

NEW TERROR SYNDICATE THREATENS PAKISTAN

Filed under: Defense,Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 11:11 am

In the past one lashkar was different from another lashkar and each could be treated differently with regards to its position towards the state. But today that has changed. New evidence reveals that a new terror syndicate is threatening Pakistan’s sovereignty as traditionally independent and opposing militant groups are joining forces to attack Pakistan’s military and government according to a report in The New York Times.

Increased cooperation among insurgent factions also is being reported inside Pakistan, where many of the extremist organizations are based or where their leaders have found a haven.

American and NATO officials said they had seen evidence of loose cooperation among other insurgent groups, including Lashkar-e-Taiba and Tehrik-i-Taliban.

Lashkar is a Punjabi group and is considered one of the most serious long-term threats inside Pakistan. The Punjabi groups, many of which were created by Pakistani intelligence to fight against India’s interests in Kashmir, now appear to be teaming up with Pashtun groups like the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban to fight their creators, the Pakistani intelligence and security services.

Pentagon and military officials who routinely engage with their Pakistani counterparts said officials in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, agreed with the new American and NATO assessments.

“This is actually a syndicate of related and associated militant groups and networks,” said one American officer, summarizing the emerging view of Pakistani officials. “Trying to parse them, as if they have firewalls in between them, is really kind of silly. They cooperate with each other. They franchise work with each other.”

Just as the American support for al Qaeda as proxy fighters in Afghanistan during the Cold War has come back to haunt it in the case of 9/11 and other attempted attacks on American soil, so our own support for militia groups as proxy fighters to liberate Kashmir has turned its venom upon us.

December 8, 2010

Anti-Taliban Heroes Undeterred by Bombs

Filed under: Defense,Taliban — Tags: , , , — admin @ 10:00 am

Pakistan's anti-Taliban heroes

The leader of a tribal militia in northwest Pakistan, undeterred by a suicide bombing in the area a day earlier, said Tuesday he was determined to fight off Taliban attempts to seize control of the region.

The bombers attacked the office compound of the top government official in the Mohmand region Monday during a meeting on ways of strengthening the militias, known as lashkars. At least 40 people were killed and 60 wounded.

“Listen, we are not going to lay down our arms. We will not let the Taliban re-take control of our land. We will fight them,” vowed Dilawar Adezai, whose 1,200-strong militia is one of those set up to help the government fight militants.

Adezai was critical of the level of government support for the militias.

“The government doesn’t even pay for the bullets we fire. It’s very sad. Militants are better off than my men because they get arms and ammunition free and their families receive compensation if they get killed,” he said.

Cash-strapped Pakistan needs all the help it can get in the fight against al Qaeda-linked militants bent on destabilizing its U.S.-backed government.

The army has launched several offensives against militants since last year. But its enemies often melt away when attacked, and suicide bombings persist, scaring away foreign investors needed for the fragile economy.

Pakistani authorities have been encouraging Pashtun tribesmen on the Afghan border to revive traditional militias to counter the rising Islamist militancy.

Under a centuries-old tradition, ethnic Pashtun tribes raise lashkars in their semi-autonomous regions to fight criminal gangs and enforce their tribal codes.

The Taliban have hit back by assassinating tribal elders and militiamen and carrying out suicide bombings.

“The Pakistani Taliban is very strong and we are not. There is no match. You have seen what they did with those who stood up against the Taliban,” said Aisamuddin Mehsud, a tribal elder in South Waziristan who resisted government pressure to form a lashkar.

The stakes are high. Some of the world’s most dangerous militant groups have bases and hideouts in the northwest tribal regions. The United States believes its war on militancy cannot be won unless Pakistan removes them.

“You cannot control such a large area for a long time with just soldiers and you have to push residents to take responsibility for the security of their village or town,” said a senior military official in the northwest.

“Tribesmen know their lives are at risk and militants will continue to attack them, but they have to fight for their survival.”

Mohammad Ali Haleemzai, who heads one of the tribal “peace” committees that oversee lashkar operations, seems determined to help keep the campaign going.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6B64EG20101207

November 22, 2010

Futility of Lashkars

Filed under: Defense — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:41 pm

In its exasperating fight against militancy, the government has been doing some weird things — without caring for the consequences. That’s understandable because a desperate government wants to defeat insurgents at any cost. One such bizarre thing is its support for tribal lashkars, or armed militias, which it paradoxically calls ‘amn’ (peace) caommittees, to fight the Taliban in restive tribal regions and parts of the volatile Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province. In some areas, no doubt, this policy worked. And proponents of this policy would cite the examples of Dhog Darra in Upper Dir, Ambar in Mohmand tribal region and Salarzai in Bajaur Agency where local lashkars successfully confronted the militants. But the cost of this policy dwarfs its gains.

The ‘lashkarisation’ of the tribal society, perhaps the most heavily-armed in the world, brought death and destruction of massive proportions. The vengeful militants have targeted lashkars with impunity, killing and maiming hundreds of volunteers and tribal elders since 2008. In Bajaur Agency, the government, in an effort to seek local acceptance for a military operation, encouraged tribesmen in the Salarzai area to raise a lashkar to fight alongside security forces. Reprisal came shortly. On November 6, 2008, a Taliban suicide bomber set off an explosion amidst a jirga (grand assembly) of Salarzai tribal elders, killing 25 chieftains and injuring dozens more. The jirga was convened to raise a lashkar to fight militants. And it didn’t end here. Tens of Salarzai chieftains were target-killed in suicide and bomb attacks in the days and months to follow. The message was loud and clear: anyone siding with the government would be killed.

In neighbouring Mohmand Agency, the Utmanzai tribe also decided to form a laskhar in the Ambar area. On July 9, 2010, their elders met in the office of a local government administrator in the Yakaghund sub-division to discuss details. The Taliban struck with double suicide bombings, flattening the once bustling marketplace and killing over a hundred innocent tribesmen. Most jirga members survived but Malik Sahibzada Utmankhel, who had successfully commanded an anti-Taliban lashkar in his home village of Prang Ghar area, wasn’t lucky enough.

Now come to Orakzai Agency, where a full-fledged military operation was launched in March this year. But before that, the authorities convinced the tribesmen to form an anti-Taliban lashkar. On October 10, 2008, hundreds of tribesmen from Ali Khel tribe gathered in the Khadizai area to discuss the make-up of the militia. A Taliban suicide bomber detonated an explosive-laden vehicle at the venue, killing 85 tribesmen and injuring over 200 more. The bloody story doesn’t end here. Hundreds of tribesmen have been killed in similar fashion in North and South Waziristan tribal regions, in Khyber Agency and in the semi-tribal area of Darra Adamkhel.

In Adezai and Bazidkhel, two villages on the outskirts of Peshawar, Haji Abdul Malik and Fahimur Rehman, both local nazims, had formed similar lashkars to challenge the Taliban. So far, the two militias have lost scores of volunteers in this unending fight. Disillusioned as they are with the government, they now feel that they have been left at the mercy of a formidable adversary like the Taliban. Another ill of this policy of ‘lashkarisation’ is indiscriminate killings of anyone suspected of being a Talib. The tribal legions, comprising mainly young tribesmen full of vengeance, hound Taliban guerillas in their respective areas and kill them without mercy, burning down their houses and banishing their innocent kinsfolk from their native villages.

The short-term consequences of the policy of ‘lashkarisation’ are appalling, but the future scenario is more horrific. The feuds triggered by lashkars could make the Pashtun society, already embroiled in long-running blood feuds, a living hell, even after militancy is banished from the region for good.

Source: Published in The Express Tribune, November 23rd, 2010.

October 27, 2010

Killing Our Own Children

Filed under: Defense,Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:52 am

How can anybody say that Taliban are patriots? How can someone say they are Muslims even? These are destroying schools for learning and building schools for killing. They are using our children as bombs and killing us at the roots. This is like some demons from hell.

The Taliban have established schools on the outskirts of Pakistan’s Karachi city where sermons are delivered to woo youths, said a teenaged would-be suicide bomber arrested Monday.

Sixteen-year-old Mohammad Salaam, a student of Class IX, had met Tehreek-e-Taliban leader Zahir Shah at one of these schools.

“Shah said that becoming a suicide bomber was my ticket to heaven, and on the Day of Judgement I would have nothing to worry about,” the News International quoted Salaam as saying.

Look at the face of this boy. Taliban would have him dead. This is their goal.

Mohammad Salaam

Speaking to Daily Times, 16-year-old Salam, a student of class IX and a resident of Sohrab Goth, said he met Rehman at a mosque in Sohrab Goth, who then influenced him to carry out a suicide attack.

“They warned me that if I deny carrying out the attack or tell anybody about this, they would slit my throat,” said Salam, adding that it was the fear of being slaughtered that he agreed on the suicide bombing.

“I was ready to leave for South Waziristan but fortunately saved in the raid,” he explained.

Preliminary investigation has revealed that the arrested militants were involved in various heinous crimes. They also work for the banned religious outfit of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and often visited slain Baitullah Mehsud, Qari Hussain Mehsud and other prominent TTP commanders including Wahab Mehsud in South Waziristan to share terror related information.

SSP Shahid said militant Rehman was a close associate of the TTP leadership and involved in brainwashing innocent children for suicide bombings.

SSP Aslam added that during interrogation the militants have confessed slaughtering one of their accomplices named Shahid alias Rangar due to suspected involvement with agencies.

He further said that other accomplices of the arrested militants including Umar Farooq, Gul Zareen and Zahir Shah managed to escape from the scene.

We must destroy this menace before it destroys our very future that is our own children.

October 21, 2010

Drone attacks on the Taliban terrorists are permissible in Islamic sharia – by Zalaan

Filed under: Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , , — admin @ 1:33 am
Real Pak Nationalists Against Taliban

Real Pak Nationalists Against Taliban

مدرسہ انسانیت کا فتویٰ
ڈرون کی شرعی حیثیت

سوال : مفتی صاحب آج کل جو طالبان اور القاعدہ کو ڈرون مارے جا رہے ہیں ،ان کے بارے میں آپ کا کیا فتویٰ ہے ؟

جواب : القاعدہ اور طالبان کے جنگجو انسانیت کے دشمن ہیں ، یہ بیگناہ لوگوں کو خود کش دہماکوں میں ہلاک کرتے ہیں ،گلے کاٹتے ہیں اور اپنے مقصد کے لیہ بےقصور لوگوں کو قتل کرتے ہیں اور پھر اس کو اسلام سے منسوب کرتے ہیں اور قبول بھی کرتے ہیں ،قرآن اور سنّت کی تعلیمات کی روشنی میں ان سے حکومت کے لئے قتل کا قصاص لینا واجب ہے ،پہلے ان کو پکڑا جائے اور اگر مقتول کے ورثا معاف کردیں تو انہیں معاف کر دیا جائے ،مگر ان لوگوں نے ایک ہی دھماکے میں سینکڑوں قتل کیے ہیں تو ممکن نہیں کے سارے ورثا معاف کر دیں پھر ان کو مارنا ہی شرعی سزا ہے ،اگر یہ لوگ ایسی جگہ ہیں جہاں زمینی فوج نہیں جا سکتی اور فضائی بمباری سے معصوم لوگوں کی جن کا خطرہ ہے تو اس صورت میں شریعت ڈرون مرنے کی اجازت دیتی ہے ،کیوں کہ اسلامی مملکت پاکستان معصوم لوگوں کے قتل کا قصاص لینے کا شرعی حق رکھتی ہے .ڈرون چونکہ کم از کم نقصان میں زیادہ سے زیادہ قاتلوں کو ہلاک کرتے ہیں اس لیہ یہ بلکل اسلامی ہیں

سوال : کیا ڈرون مارنے کے لیہ کسی بھی ملک کی مدد لی جا سکتی ہے ؟
جواب : اگر موجودہ حکومت اور فوج قاتلوں کو پکڑنے میں ناکام ہو رہی ہو تو دوسرے ملک سے مدد جائز ہے ،جس طرح افغانیوں نے روس کے خلاف امریکا سے مدد لی

September 9, 2010

Let Government Take Over Flood Rehabilitation, Let Army Fight Taliban

Source: Daily Times

Merciless and vengeful, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has struck once again, this time in a police colony in Kohat. Detonating an explosives-laden pickup inside the compound, just behind the guarded police lines, the blast ripped through almost 300 buildings, including schools, markets and residential homes. The scenes were truly horrific as the majority of the 20 killed were women and children who were inside their homes during iftaar time. It is expected that the death toll will rise as there were still some people trapped under the rubble of the TTP’s latest attack.

Vowing to take revenge for the drone strikes in the tribal areas, the TTP has promised more attacks on security and government officials. Such grim announcements and brutal massacres should not come as a surprise as the past week has demonstrated just how determined the militants are to step up their game now that the military’s attention has been diverted towards flood relief. Anyone who thought that the softest targets in society — women, children and residential areas — would be safe, has not understood the reality of the shadowy enemy we are up against. The militants aim to cause maximum damage, widespread fear and loss of lives to prove their point; what better way than to target the most vulnerable? That is why Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain has urged the security forces to implement well-coordinated and effective action against the terrorists. He has stated that it is vital that military attention be diverted from the floods to the insurgency once again.

After such an attack and chilling warning, it is vital that all efforts be taken to protect such areas. When it has been proclaimed that government, security and police officials are under the most threat, nothing should be left to chance; check-posts, apart from being an irritant, have done nothing to secure the urban and settled areas. We need better intelligence to prevent the militants from moving ahead with their dastardly mission. An insecure security force translates into one that is incapable of securing the citizenry.

As further evidence of the virulent spread of terrorism in all its manifestations, the Vice Chancellor (VC) of Islamia College University, Dr Ajmal Khan, was kidnapped on Tuesday by suspected militants. Dr Ajmal is the cousin of Awami National Party’s Chief Asfandyar Wali Khan. It is suspected that the VC has been taken to the Khyber Agency in an eerily similar fashion to the November 2009 kidnapping of the VC of Kohat University of Science and Technology, Dr Lutfullah Kakakhel, who was also spirited off and kept in captivity by the militants for six months. Targeting senior academics is in line with the Taliban view of obliterating education. Another girls school has been blown up in Kalam. This is sadly a routine activity for the militants.

The terrorists are spreading and setting off their attacks like literal hand grenades in almost all regions of the country — tribal and urban. From Kohat to Hangu, where a blast targeting two police mobile vans killed one constable, and Karachi, where an activist of the Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat was gunned down, no place seems safe from the grip of terrorism. It is time that a full throttle plan is enforced against this scourge that is making its malignant presence felt every single day.

It is time that the flood relief transitioned into rehabilitation. It is time that the government and civil administration of the country take over managing the flood efforts from the army so that an organised military offensive once again strikes at the heart of the Taliban insurgency. Without the army fully engaging in eliminating the terrorists, such attacks are likely to be witnessed with increasing frequency.

August 19, 2010

No Time For Conspiracy Theories

Filed under: Flood,Taliban — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 1:05 pm

floodsWe are in the middle of a crisis of historic proportions. A fifth of the nation is underwater, millions are homeless. The military is working overtime to run rescue and relief missions. And what are the conspiracy theorists doing? Telling the craziest stories you ever heard and distracting from the real need to help our brothers.

Recent years have seen dramatic and devastating weather-related disasters: Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Ike in the USA, earthquake in Haiti, tsunami in Indonesia, wildfires in Russia, landslides in China, record heat waves in Finland, and now terrible flooding in Pakistan.

Serious analysts have said that it is obvious that global warming has caused much of this disaster.

“We will always have climate extremes. But it looks like climate change is exacerbating the intensity of the extremes,” said Omar Baddour, chief of climate data management applications at WMO headquarters in Geneva.

But finding real solutions and ways to prevent further destruction has not stopped the conspiracy theorists from trying to distract people from the real reasons with their ridiculous stories.

The latest story going around is that the floods are caused by something called ‘HAARP’, a High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, a program of the US military to analyze the skies for missles. Conspiriacy theorists believe that it is a weather control program.

This is beyond stupid. If the USA had a weather control program, do you really believe that George W Bush would have allowed the Hurricanes that almost sank his government? Never. Even with the floods, it is clear that jihadi groups are using this as an opportunity to attack Pakistan. It benefits their schemes to control the people with fear. Do these conspiracy theorists say that TTP is using this weather machine? Ridiculous.

While this flood is the worst in history, it is sadly not the first time that we have experienced the flooding. It is not some magic weather control machine, it is simply the

This is no time for conspiracy theories, it is time for REAL Pakistani Nationalists to come together to save our brothers and sisters and to save our country.

August 18, 2010

Taliban Using Floods As Opportunity to Attack Pakistan

Filed under: Taliban,terrorism — Tags: , — admin @ 12:16 pm

As if they were simply vicious animals, Taliban jihadis are using the desparate flood disaster as opportunity to attack and kill innocents.

Taking advantage of the chaos caused by devastating floods insurgents in Pakistan clashed with police on Tuesday night officials said. The new disruption came as financial aid and donations to help flood devastated areas finally began pouring in, three weeks after the flooding began.

So far the floods have killed over 1,500 people and made countless more homeless. Thousands of villages have been submerged and about a fifth of the whole of Pakistan has been affected.

The flooding is severe in the northwest of the country. The northwest region is also the epicenter of the fight against al-Qaida and the Taliban. Hoping to take advantage of the fact that so many police and troops were occupied with flood relief efforts militants began their attacks on Tuesday evening.

A small group of militants killed two members of an anti-Taliban militia in the Adezai area of Peshawar as they headed to pray at a mosque late Tuesday, according to Ali Khan, who is the Peshawar police chief. The violence continued as dozens more militants left their hideouts in the Khyber region and attacked police posts in the Peshawar area.

Only a monster can murder some men as they are on their way to mosque. Only a monster can murder some people hoping to take advantage of the fact that police are helping rescue disaster victims.

August 10, 2010

Kamran Shafi Speaking SENSE!

Source: Dawn, “Silence is not an option”

Relatives and policemen carry the flag-draped coffin of Sifwat Ghuyur, a senior police officer, to a burial site during his funeral in Peshawar

Relatives and policemen carry the flag-draped coffin of Sifwat Ghuyur, a senior police officer, to a burial site during his funeral in Peshawar

Enough is bloody enough! Enough of deafening silence as our people, women, men and children, are mercilessly killed and maimed and widowed and orphaned by cold-blooded murderers and their handlers and motivators.

How many more Safwat Ghayyurs and Mushtaq Baigs and Faisal Alvis and Malik Saads and Abid Alis and Khan Raziqs will have to die before those who are equipped and paid to prevent, or at the very least anticipate attacks such as those that killed these fine men, will begin to do their jobs? Whilst I have started this piece with the mention of officers in the service of Pakistan, I am by no means making light of the deaths of thousands of nameless innocents such as the women and children in Meena Bazaar, Peshawar, or the hungry poor at Data Darbar, Lahore.

It is time that all of us Pakistanis stood up and loudly asked the establishment a raft of hard, even unpalatable to it, questions and demand answers. We must ask why it is that not a single suicide-jacket maker has been apprehended and prosecuted in all the years that these beasts have been going about their ghastly business. We must ask why not even one explosives supplier has been caught and brought before a court of law. We must ask why not one, just one, motivator has been exposed and locked up so that he may not spread his poison any more.

We must ask why not even one facilitator, people who move these mindless creatures with explosives strapped to their bodies from one place to another, has been arrested and put away. Or why even one suicide attack or car bombing has not been prevented by our much-praised ‘agencies’. We must ask why high-profile officers such as young Safwat Ghayyur were not provided such intelligence cover as would have uncovered the surely elaborate plan hatched by the terrorists to get this officer.

We must ask how it was that the man who apparently fit the profile of a suicide bomber almost perfectly: young, hanging about outside a sensitive agency (the Frontier Constabulary headquarters) waiting for his quarry; probably wild-eyed, entered Peshawar cantonment in the first place. I went to Peshawar a few weeks ago and it took my wife and I and our driver a full three minutes of questioning, checking of our ID cards, opening the hood and the dickey of the car, having a soldier peer into the car and so on, before we were let through just one barricade. There were three within the cantonment before we got to where we were going and the procedure was repeated at each one, albeit in abbreviated fashion. So how did that misguided, mindless youth stroll into the secure area to do his dreadful deed?

We must ask too, what is the very first duty of any agency of any state. Surely it is the protection of its own people first and foremost, and as the end result of that the protection of the country as a whole. We must ask if our much-talked-about agencies are succeeding in these primary duties. We must ask if the attacks that have robbed so many of our people of their very lives are the direct result of a massive and ongoing intelligence failure. The frank answer is that the ‘agencies’ have failed and are failing all ends up in doing their primary duty: witness the audacious attacks by terrorists at any target of their choosing anywhere in the country, including that holy of holies, the GHQ. Including, indeed, on installations, and the transport, of the ISI itself.

Which reminds me. There is an email doing the rounds that tells us that our ISI is the best intelligence agency in the whole wide world. The ranking of the world’s intelligence agencies according to this email is as follows: our very own ISI (and more strength to it, I say), Mossad (Israel), MI-6 (UK), the CIA (US), MSS (China), BND (Germany), FSB (Russia), DGSE (France), RAW (India) and ASIS (Australia). Two immediate questions come to mind. If the ISI is really as good as it is made out to be, how come our country is in the state it is in? Second, if RAW is as bad as to be the 9th worst intelligence agency in the world, how come it can pull off actions as diverse as bombing Data Darbar and R.A. Bazaar in Lahore and Lahore cantonment respectively; arming and provisioning Baloch separatists; and attacking our Ahmadi brothers in their mosques in Lahore? Could it be that RAW is not as bad as the list would have us believe, and the ISI not that good?

Jokes aside, however, we must ask the hard questions and also make demands of our agencies, paid as they are from our taxes and revenue. The very first is to say to them to please secure our own country first and then attempt to project Pakistani power across our borders, say in Afghanistan. It is to say, please use all the significant resources at your command — the list referred to also tells us that the ISI has up to 10,0000 (I kid you not) operatives worldwide — to at the very least open the Thal-Parachinar road so that the poor people who live in Parachinar do not have to get to their homes via Kabul, Afghanistan.

May I say please, sirs, sort out the criminal terrorists in your own country before you attempt to broker peace between Karzai and (some of) the Taliban. May I say please, sirs, if you cannot secure your own country how can you possibly have the gall to boss the neighbourhood around? Look inwards, sirs, at the veritable mess this poor country is in and do something about it. Surely you know that the last time the Parachinar road was opened, 10 men and six women were killed and eight men (all of them our Shia brothers and sisters, please note) were taken as hostages. At least find out where these poor hostages are, and have them released. Surely being number one you can do it.

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