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US-backed military offensive in Pakistan costs scores of lives
By Peter Symonds
23 March 2004
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A week of fierce fighting between 6,000 heavily-armed Pakistani
troops and suspected Islamist militants in the tribal areas bordering
Afghanistan has resulted in heavy casualties on both sides. The
army has surrounded an estimated 400 to 500 fighters entrenched
in a number of heavily fortified mud brick structures in South
Waziristan and has been pounding the area using artillery, helicopter
gunships and combat aircraft.
Just who is resisting is unclear. Late last week Pakistans
military strongman, President Pervez Musharraf, commented that
the strong opposition indicated that the army might have trapped
a high value target. Media speculation based on US
and Pakistani military sources focussed initially on key Al Qaeda
leader Ayman al-Zawahiri then on Uzbek cleric Qari Tahir Yaldash,
an ally of the ousted Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
The military has announced the detention of more than 100 people
including Arabs, Chechens, Uzbeks and ethnic Uighurs from western
China. It is uncertain, however, how many of the fighters are
Al Qaeda and how many are local tribesmen, hostile
to the intervention of the Pakistani army into the autonomous
border areas. The military is carrying out DNA testing on the
bodies of several of the dead fighters. Claims that Zawahiri or
Qari Tahir Yaldash has been trapped or killed are now being downplayed.
The Musharraf regime has a vested interest in capturing or
killing a top Al Qaeda figure in order to boost its standing in
Washington. Under strong US pressure, more than 70,000 Pakistani
troops have been scouring the tribal border areas since February
in tandem with a US-led offensive involving more than 10,000 troops
against anti-government forces inside Afghanistan.
The entire operation is a desperate attempt by the Bush administration
to produce a public relations coup in the lead up to the US elections
by capturing Osama bin Laden or other top Al Qaeda and Taliban
leaders. Alongside regular US troops, the Pentagon has dispatched
special forces units to the area, including Task Force 121, which
was credited with Saddam Husseins capture in Iraq. Last
week they were joined by 100 British SAS troops.
US and Pakistani officials have denied any US involvement in
the Pakistani military operation, which has already generated
protests and threatens to further undermine Musharrafs shaky
political position. Washington and Islamabad both insist that
no US soldiers are operating inside Pakistan and that US cooperation
is limited to the providing of intelligence from satellites, Predator
drones and other devices.
However, other evidence indicates that the US military is closely
involved in, if not directing events. An article in the British
Telegraph newspaper revealed that as far back as December,
the CIA identified the villages in South Waziristan now under
attack as a possible refuge for Zawahiri. Army spokesman Major
General Shaukat Sultan has admitted that Pakistan troops have
been joined by a dozen or so US intelligence agents.
In the midst of the current offensive, General John Abizaid, head
of the US militarys Central Command, made an unannounced
visit yesterday to Islamabad for what was said to be routine
talks.
Musharraf is heavily dependent on the Bush administration politically
and economically. He received a further boost last week when visiting
US Secretary of State Colin Powell announced that Washington had
granted Pakistan the status of major non-NATO ally
which allows greater access to US military technology, defence
equipment and training. But Musharrafs support for Washingtons
global war on terrorism and its occupation of Afghanistan
and Iraq has generated widespread opposition inside Pakistan.
The latest offensive has fuelled further anger in the tribal
areas, which traditionally have enjoyed a degree of autonomy from
Islamabad and have been a virtual no-go area for the army and
police. In asserting its authority, the Pakistani military is
employing methods of collective punishment that hark
back to the British colonial period. In comments to the media,
Lieutenant General Safdar Hussain, who is in charge of the current
operations, singled out the Yargul Khel tribe as responsible for
assisting foreign terrorists. Im determined
to punish this tribe and make them an example, he declared.
The fighting in South Waziristan is the fiercest of the entire
campaign. It erupted last Tuesday when Pakistani forces attempted
to detain local tribesmen and encountered strong resistance. At
least 15 soldiers and an estimated 26 opposition fighters were
killed in the initial battle. The Pakistani military sealed off
the area with thousands of troops, but has been unable to end
the armed resistance despite the use of air power and artillery.
Thousands of civilians have been forced to flee their homes
and a number of men, women and children have been killed. Rahman
Wazir, 25, from Wana told the press: More people are moving
than I could imagine. Men and women are crying. They have left
their homes and they have left their orchards.
Associated Press gave details of an incident last week in which
a 12-year-old boy Din Mohammed was killed by shellfire. His two
sisters Haseena, 10, and Asmeena, 2, were treated for shrapnel
injuries at the Rehman Medical Complex in Wana. We were
eating lunch and all of a sudden the shelling began and it hit
our courtyard. I loved my brother a lot. What did we do to deserve
this? Haseena asked.
The British-based Independent reported that two dozen
residents were killed on Saturday when five vehicles were fired
upon. Locals disputed claims by the military that a bus had been
fired on by opposition militants, insisting that a Pakistani helicopter
had strafed the vehicle. Zain Ullah said that 12 of his relatives,
including five women, had died in the attack and three of his
dead cousins children were injured.
Last weekend dozens of students held a demonstration against
the military operation in the town of Dera Ismail Khan. The
government has made this drama for the benefit of the USA,
demonstrator Sherbez Ansari told the media. The result is
the tribal people have suffered. We are sure there are no terrorists
in our area. No Al Qaeda.
In Peshawar, the capital of the North West Frontier Province,
hundreds of people marched to protest against the US and the civilian
casualties caused by the fighting. Demonstrators chanted Get
out, FBI and Stop the war in the tribal areas in the
name of Al Qaeda.
Tribal leader and MP Maulan Khalil-ur-Rehman pointed out that
Washington had backed Al Qaeda and other foreign Islamists during
the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.
The foreign fighters living in Wana were heroes
of Islam when they were fighting the Soviets, but now we are told
by Musharraf and America they are terrorists.
Last Sunday, a gathering of 70 prominent Islamic clerics in
Islamabad issued a religious ruling declaring that the operation
in South Waziristan was an unjustified war by the
Pakistan army.
In a bid to stem growing opposition, the Pakistani military
agreed to a temporary ceasefire on Monday to allow tribal elders
to attempt to broker a deal with the Yargul Khel chiefs. The delegation
was to present three government demands: to release 12 soldiers
and two government officials; to hand over tribesmen involved
in the fighting; and to kick out and help capture foreign fighters.
It is unlikely, however, that these demands will be accepted,
making further fighting inevitable.
See Also:
US launches huge military operation to
capture bin Laden
[1 March 2004]
Pakistan intensifies
military operations in Afghan border areas
[4 November 2003]
US military insists
on right of hot pursuit inside Pakistan
[22 January 2003]
Musharraf gives go-ahead
for US military operations in Pakistan
[9 May 2002]
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