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  • Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

    US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

    By SHAMIM SHAHID

    PESHAWAR - As many as 20 people were killed when the United States-led allied troops opened indiscriminate firing on the occupants of a house in the border area of Birmal region in South Waziristan Agency in the early hours of Wednesday.
    Three gunship helicopters dropped US commandos in the area and later the soldiers entered the house of Payo Jan in village Jalolkhel. The local people informed that the foreign troops entered the house of Payo Jan at around 3.30 am.
    The local tribesmen informed that soon after entrance of the foreign soldiers, they heard huge sound of explosions and firing. Besides using modern weapons, the US troops also used hand grenades and other explosive material, thus razing to ground certain portions of the house. The US-led allied NATO troops later flew back across the border in Afghanistan.
    The local people informed that 16 people were killed in the US-led allied troops attacks whereas NWFP Governor Owais Ghani stated that 20 persons were killed in the attack. The killed persons besides five men also included three women and three children. The tribesmen confirmed recovering of 10 bodies from the debris.
    Though the tribesmen claimed that all the victims were local yet complete identity of the killed persons couldn't be confirmed so far. Interestingly the site of the US-led allied troops is situated around three hundred metres away from the camp of security forces in the border areas between the two neighbouring countries.
    The first-ever direct attack of the US-led allied troops inside Pakistan resulted in widespread unrest amongst the tribesmen all over the area. Earlier, the US troops entered into Lawara Mandi of North Waziristan some two years ago but returned without any action. And the patrolling by the US drones or violation of Pakistan's airspace by the US-led allied planes is order of the day since long.
    It merits mentioning that in the last two months, the US-led allied troops from their camps across the border in Afghanistan targeted several suspected compounds, killing dozens of militants including foreigners. A number of Al Qaeda fugitives are also included amongst the killed militants.
    Meanwhile, the NWFP Governor Owais Ahmed Ghani has condemned in the strongest words the attack by three Afghanistan-based coalition gunship helicopters and commandos on a village in Birmal area of South Waziristan, in which at least 20 innocent citizens martyred.
    In a statement issued here on Wednesday the Governor said,"It is outrageous", adding that as administrative head of FATA, he was responsible for the safety and security of the citizens of the country in that area. The Governor further stated that this was a direct assault on the sovereignty of Pakistan and the people of Pakistan expect that the Armed Forces of Pakistan would rise to defend the sovereignty of the country and give a befitting reply to all such attacks.
    The Governor expressed heartfelt sympathies with the bereaved families and assured that the Government would try its best.
    Agencies add: US commandos from Afghanistan killed 20 people, including women and children, in a pre-dawn raid inside Pakistan, officials said, an attack branded as an assault on the nation's sovereignty.
    Foreign channels say the US occasionally launches airstrikes against militant targets in Pakistan's border region, sometimes in coordination with the Pakistani army. But a raid by ground troops would be rare.
    Locals say three helicopter gunships dropped international troops in the Musa Nikeh area of South Waziristan, located on the border with Afghanistan, overnight.
    They say the soldiers killed more than a dozen people with gunfire and bombs, including women and children.
    "Troops came in helicopters and carried out action in three houses," Gul Nawaz, a shopkeeper of Angor Adda village, said.
    Witnesses told the BBC that troops entered the house of a local tribesman, opened fire and then lobbed a bomb in the house. They said at least nine bodies had been recovered from the debris. The witnesses said the family was not known for links with militants.
    An official in South Waziristan tribal district, Mowaz Khan, said that helicopters dropped troops into the border village of Jalal Khel, and that the troops shot civilians who had left their homes upon hearing the choppers.
    Pakistan has protested in the past about missile strikes on its territory, aimed at militant targets in tribal areas.
    A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said he had no word of such a raid, and that the force does not have a mandate to attack outside the borders of Afghanistan unless its troops come under fire from within Pakistan.
    Raids with helicopters or aircraft are extremely rare but American media recently reported that the US was planning direct attacks on Pakistani soil. A recent series of missile strikes targeting rebels in Pakistan has been attributed to US-led coalition forces or CIA drones based in Afghanistan.
    Meanwhile, a spokesman of the ISPR has said that ISAF troops landed two helicopters at a village near Angoor Adda in South Waziristan Agency in the wee hours on Wednesday and as per reports received so far, killed seven innocent civilians.
    The spokesman strongly condemned this completely unprovoked act of killing and regretted the loss of precious lives. He blamed the coalition forces for this violent act and said, "such acts of aggression do not serve the common cause of fighting terrorism and militancy in the area."
    1st Lt. Nathan Perry, a spokesman for the US-led coalition in Afghanistan, said it had 'no information to give' about the alleged operation, while a spokesman for NATO troops there denied any involvement. The US embassy in Islamabad declined to comment.
    Residents said the dead were buried Wednesday.
    A NATO spokesman in Afghanistan said foreign forces are generally prohibited from mounting cross-border attacks into Pakistan. The spokesman, who only gave his name as Sgt. Yates, said NATO forces occasionally employ artillery or aerial missiles to target insurgents who attack coalition troops from Pakistani territory, but the rules of engagement are very carefully proscribed. "Our area of operations stops at the border. We don't go over the border period," Yates said.
    Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and NWFP Governor have condemned the attack.
    Gilani said that no external forces could be allowed to launch an offensive on Pakistan's territory, as Pakistan is fully capable to counter militancy and terrorism within its borders.
    NWFP Governor Owais Ahmed Ghani has condemned the attack and termed it as outrageous and rank violation of international norm.
    Meanwhile, the Pentagon declined comment Wednesday on Pakistani charges that at least 20 people were killed in a cross-border raid by Afghan-based international forces.
    "I don't have anything for you on those reports," said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman, refusing further comment.
    A spokesman for the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) said he had no word of such a raid, and that the force does not have a mandate to attack outside the borders of Afghanistan unless its troops come under fire from within Pakistan.

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        Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

        Nato forces enter Pakistan
        Thursday, September 04, 2008
        Children, women among 15 civilians killed; Army terms it unprovoked act; PM, NWFP governor, defence minister condemn incident; Pentagon, US embassy decline comment

        By Mushtaq Yusufzai & Irfan Burki

        PESHAWAR/WANA: United States-led North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) forces killed 15 tribesmen, including women and children, in its first-ever ground operation inside Pakistani territory on Wednesday.

        The allied forces were dropped from two choppers at 3am inside Pakistani village of Musa Neeke in South Waziristan Agency (SWA). They targeted the local population for half an hour, tribal and official sources told The News from the border town of Angoor Adda.

        Although, warplanes, drones and gunship helicopters under the use of allied forces stationed in Afghanistan have time and again violated Pakistani airspace in the past and carried out attacks in the tribal areas, their ground forces never dared entering Pakistani territory even during the Musharraf regime, dubbed as the closest ally of the US in its war against terror.

        Two jet fighters and a similar number of gunship helicopters were also seen hovering over the town apparently to protect the coalition soldiers during their 30-minute ground operation, one kilometre inside the Pakistani territory.

        The residents of Musa Neeke village told The News that the soldiers forced their entry into three houses owned by the Wazir tribesmen - Faujan Wazir, Faiz Mohammad and Nazar Jan Wazir - at a small border village of Zawlolai.

        According to the sources, the soldiers started indiscriminate firing with their automatic assault rifles at the sleeping inmates and killed 15 people, mostly women and children. The residents said two persons were injured in the firing. However, others suggested the number of those injured exceeded a dozen.

        According to the sources, the coalition soldiers shot dead nine family members of Faujan Wazir, including four women, two children and three men. The troops also killed another villager, Faiz Mohammad Wazir, his wife and two of his other family members.

        The soldiers later entered the house of another tribesman Nazar Jan in the same village and shot him dead along with his mother. Two of his family members were seriously injured in the firing.

        Some of the tribespeople killed in the pre-dawn attack were identified as Nazar Jan Jalalkhel, mother of Nazar Jan, Dilbar Jan Jalalkhel, Rahman, Noor Mohammad, Fazlur Rahman, sons of Faujan Khan, two other minor kids of Faujan, two women of Faujan family, Faiz Mohammad Tojekhel and son of Faiz Mohammad.

        According to the residents, the villagers were informed about the incident through announcements made from loud speakers of village mosques. "It was very terrible as all of the residents were killed while asleep," remarked a villager Din Mohammad, while talking to The News from Angoor Adda.

        The tribesmen of Angoor Adda border town condemned what they termed the 'massacre' of innocent villagers in their houses without any justification. "All those killed were poor farmers and had nothing to do with the Taliban," claimed Jabbar Wazir, a resident of Musa Neeke village.

        Also, he said there had been no incident of clash between militants and soldiers or attack on coalition troops inside Afghanistan in the past one week. The village is about one kilometre from Angoor Adda and seven kilometres from the US military base at Machadat in Afghanistan's Paktika province.

        The angry villagers later blocked the main road between Pakistan and Afghanistan in Angoor Adda by placing the bodies of all their slain tribesmen on the road. They chanted slogans against US and Nato military authorities for crossing the border without any provocation and killing innocent people.

        The shopkeepers also closed Angoor Adda bazaar in protest and raised slogans against Pakistani rulers for their failure in protecting its citizens against foreign aggression. The protesters threatened they would leave their villages and migrate to other places if the government did not ensure their protection against the foreign aggression.

        They complained that the Pakistani security personnel deployed on the border town did not show any reaction to the crossing of the border by the coalition forces and carrying ground operation inside Pakistani territory.

        "We wanted to lodge our protest with our military officials on the border but they refused to meet us," complained tribesman Khan Mohammad. Military spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas said on Wednesday that ISAF troops in two helicopters landed at a village near Angoor Adda and as per reports received so far killed seven innocent civilians.

        The spokesman strongly condemned this completely unprovoked act of killing and regretted the loss of precious lives. He blamed the coalition forces for this violent act and said that such acts of aggression do not serve the common cause of fighting terrorism and militancy in the area.

        He said a strong protest with Office of Defence Representatives in Pakistan had been lodged and the Foreign Office also lodged protest with the US government."We reserve the right of self-defence and retaliation to protect our citizens and soldiers against any aggression," remarked Maj Murad, an ISPR officer based in Rawalpindi.

        Meanwhile, NWFP Governor Owais Ahmed Ghani has condemned the attack."I have already raised the issue of repeated predator attacks by the coalition forces with the federal government," the governor said, adding, "This is a direct assault on the sovereignty of Pakistan and the people expect that the armed forces of Pakistan would rise to defend the sovereignty of the country and give a befitting reply to all such attacks." Such attacks, he added, hurt the pro-government and peaceful sentiments among the people of targeted areas.

        APP adds from Islamabad: Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani also strongly condemned the attack, saying, no external forces could be allowed to launch an attack in Pakistan's territory. He said Pakistan was a sovereign country fully capable of countering extremist and terrorist elements within its borders on its own.

        Online adds: Expressing complete ignorance over the attack in the SWA, Federal Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar has said that US and Nato forces deputed in Afghanistan are not allowed to launch attack in country's soil.

        While talking to private TV channel, the defence minister said the government did not allow Nato and US forces to launch any type of attack in Pakistan.

        Agencies add: The US embassy in Islamabad declined to comment. The Pentagon declined comment Wednesday on Pakistani charges that at least 15 people were killed in a cross-border raid by Afghan-based international forces.

        "I don't have anything for you on those reports," said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman, refusing further comment. An ISAF spokesman said he had no word of such a raid, and that the force does not have a mandate

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            Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

            Ground assault by US-led forces: Women, children among 20 killed in Waziristan


            By Our Correspondent

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              Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

              Protest lodged with US ambassador


              By Baqir Sajjad Syed

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                Qureshi denounces Nato attack on Angoor Adda


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                    Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty

                    US confirms raid inside Pakistan



                    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - American forces launched a raid inside Pakistan Wednesday, a senior US military official said, in the first known foreign ground assault in Pakistan against a suspected Taleban haven. The government condemned an incursion that it said killed at least 15 people.

                    The American official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of cross border operations, told The Associated Press that the raid occurred on Pakistani soil about one mile from the Afghan border. The official didn't provide any other details.
                    Pakistan's Foreign Ministry launched a protest, saying US-led troops flew in from Afghanistan for the attack on a village. An army spokesman warned that the apparent escalation from recent missile strikes on militant targets along the Afghan border would further anger Pakistanis and undercut cooperation in the war against terrorist groups.
                    The boldness of the thrust fed speculation about the intended target. But it was unclear whether any extremist leader was killed or captured in the operation, which occurred in one of the militant strongholds dotting a frontier region considered a likely hiding place for Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda's No. 2 leader, Ayman Al Zawahri.


                    Suspected US missile attacks killed at least two Al Qaeda commanders this year in the same region, drawing protests from Pakistan's government that its sovereignty was under attack. US officials did not acknowledge any involvement in those attacks.
                    But American commanders have been complaining publicly that Pakistan puts too little pressure on militant groups that are blamed for mounting violence in Afghanistan, stirring speculation that US forces might lash out across the frontier.
                    Circumstances surrounding Wednesday's raid weren't clear, but US rules of engagement allow American troops to chase militants across the border into Pakistan's lawless tribal region when they are attacked. They may only go about six miles on the ground, under normal circumstances. US rules allow aircraft to go 10 miles into Pakistan air space.
                    In other signs of Pakistan's precarious stability three days before legislators elect a successor to Pervez Musharraf as president, snipers shot at the prime minister's limousine near Islamabad and government troops killed two dozen militants in another area of the restive northwest.
                    Pakistani officials said they were lodging strong protests with the US government and its military representative in Islamabad about Wednesday's raid in the South Waziristan area, a notorious hot bed of militant activity.

                    Prior to the US military confirming the US raid, Pakistan government and military officials had insisted that either the NATO force or the US-led coalition in Afghanistan - both commanded by American generals - were responsible.
                    The army's spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, said the attack was the first incursion onto Pakistani soil by troops from the foreign forces that ousted Afghanistan's hard-line Taleban regime after the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S.
                    He said the attack would undermine Pakistan's efforts to isolate Islamic extremists and could threaten NATO's major supply lines, which snake from Pakistan's Indian Ocean port of Karachi through the tribal region into Afghanistan.

                    A spokesman for NATO troops in Afghanistan denied any involvement in the raid.
                    The Pakistani anger threatens to upset efforts by American commanders to draw Pakistan's military into the US strategy of dealing harshly with the militants.
                    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met last week with Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, the Pakistani army chief. Mullen said he came away encouraged that Pakistanis were becoming more focused on the problem of militants using the country as a safe haven.
                    However, Abbas, the army spokesman, said Wednesday that cross-border commando operations were not discussed and he reiterated Pakistan's position that its forces should be exclusively responsible for operations on its territory.
                    Pakistani officials say the US and NATO should share intelligence and allow Pakistani troops to execute any raids needed inside Pakistan. However, Washington has accused rogue elements in Pakistan's main intelligence service of leaking sensitive information to militants.
                    American officials say destroying militant sanctuaries in Pakistani tribal regions is key to defeating Taleban-led militants in Afghanistan whose insurgency has strengthened every year since the fundamentalist militia was ousted for harboring bin Laden.
                    But there has been debate in Washington over how far the US can go on its own.
                    Citing witness and intelligence reports, Abbas said troops flew in on at least one big CH-47 Chinook transport helicopter, blasted their way into several houses and gunned down men they found there.
                    He said there was no evidence that any of those killed were insurgents or that the raiders abducted any militant leader, but he acknowledged Pakistan's military had no firsthand account.
                    There were differing reports on how many people were killed. The provincial governor claimed 20 civilians, including women and children, died. Army and intelligence officials, as well as residents, said 15 people were killed.
                    Habib Khan Wazir, an area resident, said he heard helicopters, then an exchange of gunfire.

                    Near Islamabad, meanwhile, snipers fired at a motorcade near the capital as it headed to the airport to pick up the prime minister, hitting the window of his car at least twice, officials said. Neither Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani nor his staff were in the vehicles.
                    Muslim Khan, a spokesman for the banned militant organization Tahrik-e-Taleban, claimed responsibility and pledged more attacks in retaliation for army operations in tribal areas and the Swat Valley along the border with Afghanistan.
                    In Washington, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declined to comment on the claimed cross-border raid, but she said the US would continue to work with Gilani's government.

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                      Re: Current Affairs: US commandos attack Pakistan sovereignty


                      The New York Times
                      Jalal Khel, the target of a raid, is near a militant stronghold
                      American Forces Attack Militants on Pakistani Soil
                      By PIR ZUBAIR SHAH, ERIC SCHMITT and JANE PERLEZ
                      This article is by Pir Zubair Shah, Eric Schmitt and Jane Perlez.
                      DERA ISMAIL KHAN, PakistanTaliban and Al Qaeda inside Pakistan, a secret plan that Defense Secretary Robert M. GatesPervez MusharrafNATODonald H. RumsfeldBagram air baseMike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

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