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Swat Liberated - Valey under Pakistan control

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Pakistan army regains control of Swat valley, 220 militants killed


Islamabad - Pakistan's military claimed Wednesday that it had regained control over the restive Swat valley, saying that up to 220 pro-Taliban militants had been killed since capturing large swaths of territory in the region in late October.

'The militants have vacated the Swat area and are now running away towards the western mountains,' chief Army spokesman Major-General Waheed Arshad said. 'Since military operations started in late October, the military has killed between 215 and 220 militants.'

The offensive began when the government sent additional troops to the scenic valley, only four hours drive from the capital Islamabad, to rein in around 5,000 armed followers of radical Muslim cleric Maulana Fazlullah, who is fighting to impose strict Islamic law.

Fazlullah's armed followers had captured dozens of villages and at least three main towns in Swat, including a police station in Matta, renaming it the 'Taliban Police Station.'

The government of President Pervez Musharraf grew alarmed at the rebels' gains, at the same time it was beset by a political crisis that saw him decree a state of emergency on November 3.

The army used helicopter gunships and artillery to pound rebels positions in the mountains for a month, and used its ground troops in the second phase of the operation, which began last weekend. More than 50 militants were killed in the past four days, the army said.

The firebrand cleric had also urged the local population to carry out suicide attacks against security forces while speaking on a pirate local radio station, which was shut down on Tuesday when government troops seized his headquarters.

Some Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters who fled to the region after US-led forces invaded neighbouring Afghanistan in 2001 were also believed to be aiding Fazlullah's militia.

Army spokesman Arshad said operations of the army and paramilitary units would continue until the rebels were completely flushed out of the area.

He declined to give government casualty figures, but some unconfirmed reports said several dozen troops had died in recent combat.


Pakistan puts Army boots on the ground in Swat

Even as he remains publicly embroiled with the secular opposition, Pakistan's Gen. Pervez Musharraf's real war with militants is heating up – and far from public view. The outcome is pivotal to Pakistan's longer struggle with militancy.

This week, Pakistan's Army sent 15,000 ground troops into Swat, a scenic valley in the North West Frontier Province. Although a settled area barely 100 miles from the urbane capital, Islamabad, Swat is the stronghold of a Taliban-like extremist group boasting about 5,000 fighters.

At least 15 militants were reported killed since troops landed on Sunday, according to Agence France-Presse:

"The militants suffered heavy losses and their casualties were numerous," [local government spokesman Amjad] Iqbal said as government forces tried to dislodge the militants from bases in the district of Kabal and the nearby Shangla hills.

He said two rebel commanders loyal to hardline cleric Maulana Fazlullah -- who wants to introduce Islamic Sharia law in the region and preaches holy war against the government -- were killed.

Fighting in Swat has been escalating for weeks. But the skirmishes have ended in humiliating defeats for the Army, mostly because 3,000 paramilitaries – rather than actual soldiers – were sent to do the fighting. Many have surrendered without putting up a fight or have been captured and publicly executed.

As the Financial Times highlighted in early November, those defeats exposed a troubled spot in Pakistan's war on terrorism:

Western diplomats say the military setbacks illustrate how Gen Musharraf's protracted struggle to hold on to power is proving a costly distraction from the fight against pro-Taliban insurgents. "It has been very difficult to get his attention for quite some time," says one.

Moreover, the pattern of mass surrenders is a worrying indication of a serious malaise in a US-funded fighting force that is of critical importance to the west's ability to prosecute the war in Afghanistan. While the 92,000 Pakistani troops deployed along the Afghan border may not be mutinous, their will to fight against fellow-Muslims in the tribal areas, and now also in much of northern Pakistan, is ever more in question.

This week may mark a turning point. It is the first time that bona fide Army boots have been put on the ground. The move was quickly welcomed in editorials.

The Daily Times, an English-language daily in Pakistan, seemed to suggest that it was high time for such action:

Finally the army has begun its ground offensive in Swat after days of sniping at the Al Qaeda militants from its helicopter gunships, killing 35 on the first day.

This is a change from the humiliating reversals which the militants inflicted on the paramilitary personnel earlier on…

The News, another influential English-language daily, called on the government to exhibit a policy of greater resolve:

…t is necessary to show that the state is determined to enforce its writ. This can be done by closing down the illegal radio stations that fuel passions and hatred, refusing to reach deals with militants and, at the same time, drawing ordinary people into the battle against extremists by offering them the benefits that a benevolent, caring state must be able to provide.


Washington is closely watching the developments as well, according to the Los Angeles Times.

U.S. officials are closely monitoring the situation in the northwestern district of Swat, a picturesque former princely state. Islamic militants, employing tactics used in the tribal borderlands, have overrun villages here, beheading security personnel and imposing their own harsh brand of Islamic law.

Western military observers consider the confrontation a pivotal one, possibly presaging a much wider push by Pakistani and foreign militants out of the largely lawless tribal belt along the Afghanistan border and into so-called settled areas, where Pakistan's federal government is supposed to have authority.

Bloggers on Pakistan welcomed the troop deployment, but wondered about its timing.

Munaeem, a Canadian blogger of Pakistani origin who follows Pakistani affairs, writes:

…[T]he question is why the government did not take action when [Fazlullah] started his criminal activities. They should also shake up the local administration. According to reports, they are corrupt and tyrant. Their tyranny and corruption have made Maulana Fazlullah popular.

Aadil, commenting on another blog about Pakistani affairs, sees a sinister connection between this week's operation and Musharraf's reelection bid:
To many, it is a conscious effort on part of the regime to make the situation worse at a point of time when general elections are just around the corner. It could be a ploy to postpone the general elections and buy some more time for political manouvering [sic] on part of Mr. Musharraf plus it could be a signal to the US of America that the war is on and that he still could play an important role in their so called war against terror.

The Daily Times warned:

The Pakistan army, as it operates in Swat, must recognise that the present operation is just the opening of a larger battlefront.

Pakistan puts Army boots on the ground in Swat | csmonitor.com


Official: Over 200 militants killed in NW Pakistan_English_Xinhua
Official: Over 200 militants killed in NW Pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Over 200 militants have been killed through security forces operations since the start of operation in northwestern Pakistan's Swat valley, Interior Ministry Spokesman Brig Javed Iqbal Cheema said on Tuesday.

Addressing a weekly news briefing here, Cheema said he hoped the situation in Swat would return to normal before the elections.

Cheema said the operation to neutralize hardcore militants in Swat valley was progressing very well and had secured areas of Kanju, Kuza Bande, Bara Bande and Mam Dheri.

The security forces were consolidating their positions and people of the area were wholeheartedly cooperating with the government in its efforts to eliminate terrorists.

Around 2,500 security forces soldiers were sent to Swat valley on Oct. 24 to stop illegal activities of militants.



Here's a journalists account of what's going on in Swat! I have some wonderful memories of Swat. Can't imagine it to be anything like this! The Pathans of Swat were some of the more liberal ones in the frontier province.

Exclusive: Inside Pakistan's Swat Valley

Pakistan's Swat Valley is 150 grueling miles, and a world away from Islamabad.

We left early this morning, and it is lucky we did. It took more than five hours to make the trip through treacherous mountain passes paved only in gravel, and small villages where covering my face and hair was imperative.

We were in the heart of Taliban country, but this wasn't Afghanistan -- it was Pakistan.

I started reading about the Swat Valley on my way over to Pakistan early last week. I knew that it was a former tourist spot surrounded by a staggering wall of mountains. The mountains are still spectacular, but the tourists are nowhere to be found. I also knew that it was now considered too dangerous for foreigners, especially Westerners, which is why we did our best not to look that way.


When I met our guide this morning he had left his polo shirts and khaki pants home. He, the cameraman, and British producer Bruno Roeber were all dressed in native garb. Despite Bruno's bright blue eyes, the men blended in fairly well.

Our guide told me to bring a large black or white scarf and to wear it over my head. Half way up the mountain he could see I wasn't very good at handling a head scarf, and he pulled over to show me how. It must drape your shoulders as well.

As we got closer to Swat and were passing through a village, I peered out the window and our guide calmly said, "Look straight ahead, don't let them see your face."

But the streets were so swarmed with people that it was difficult not to be noticed.

And then we hit the traffic jam -- an unimaginable traffic jam. On a high mountain pass we came to a dead stop because they were doing some blasting up ahead. We were surrounded by huge, brightly colored trucks filled with cattle, rice, hay and people. Drivers were squeezing in between the cars. Our guide told me to stay in the car, make sure my hair was covered and not look around. Finally, after an hour we began moving again.
People in the region are terrified. Of the more than 1.5 million people here, more than 200,000 have fled. We saw long lines of vehicles with families and their belongings packed on top, evacuating Swat Valley today.

Girls schools have been closed and ransacked, bombers have staged attacks and businesses have been shuttered. Many people say their businesses are completely ruined.

And followers of a radical Islamic cleric, Maulana Fazlullah, have had no trouble scaring away or slaughtering the few Pakistan government forces have been sent to the area. A dozen were publicly beheaded in recent weeks, and dozens more were taken hostage. They were later released but only after the government freed dozens of insurgents in exchange.


Getting out of the car to do standups was tricky. We did not want to stay in one place too long, or we would attract attention and word would spread that foreigners were in town. In fact, the place I wanted to do a standup was off limits.

"They are looking to take an American hostage over on that side of the river," our local cameraman said. "You should not go there."

So we stayed in the area he told us to. I shot several on-camera pieces, including one right across the river from Taliban headquarters. We attracted huge crowds, and as soon as we did we hopped back in the car.

People we talked to in the small area of Swat that has not yet fallen to the Taliban blame one man for the problems here -- Musharraf. There is talk that President Musharraf may soon mount a major operation here to show that his emergency declaration is intended to battle terrorists, but most people here want to know why he hasn't acted sooner.
I talked to a few people on the streets, but our time was limited. It was getting dark and it was a long way home.

I implore the government to free Pakistani territory! The liberation of Swat should have the highest priority in the government's to do list.
 
And followers of a radical Islamic cleric, Maulana Fazlullah, have had no trouble scaring away or slaughtering the few Pakistan government forces have been sent to the area. A dozen were publicly beheaded in recent weeks, and dozens more were taken hostage. They were later released but only after the government freed dozens of insurgents in exchange

By negotiating with Terrorist and giving in to there any demands.sorry mate i think Military is behind this whole fiasco.
All the cowards in military that gave up without fighting should be fired from there jobs as they signed on to protect Pakistan and thats exactly they didn't do.unless GHQ said not to fight i want some one to please prove me wrong
.:hitwall:
but most people here want to know why he hasn't acted sooner.

Whole world is asking the same?
 
May be govt avoiding this operation because it might turn into pashtun or taliban vs army. And all these insurgent are hiding behind local population.
 
Musharraf has not acted earlier since there are 'x' number of troops and 'y' number of trouble spots. Therefore, based on the intelligence, he had to prioritise.

It is just too bad Swat came into prominence.

It is all very easy to blame when there is a problem, but how many are checking as to how many other areas have not become a problem?

It is all very easy to criticise and pontificate.

Gunships will not help, nor with artillery.

Good administration will!

It is all the more easier since all (the govt and the terrorists) are of the same faith and so none can use Faith and religion to incite the locals!

It is the poor administration over the years that is responsible and not the Pakistan military or even Musharraf himself!
 
We've attacked FATA more aggressively than we are tackling the Swat issue. We needed to start attacking yesterday!
 
I don't know how many of you have been to this region. But let me tell you, the place is gorgeous and the people over there are a lot of fun. You have these wonderful streams that flow. There are some thabas made on top of these flowing streams. It's a sight!

Now it's being destroyed. Pakistan is being destroyed.

Liberation of Swat is of utmost importance. Pakistan is occupied! This is our call of duty, we must save Pakistan in whatever way we can.

Don't let this be another incident that you just let it happen.

Swat region, Pakistan's jewel, is newest front line

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: For much of the past century, the mountainous region of Swat was ruled as a princely kingdom where a benign autocrat, the Wali, bestowed schools for girls, health care for everyone and the chance to get a degree abroad for the talented.

Now the region, Pakistan's scenic jewel, is the newest front line between Islamic militants sympathetic to the Taliban and Al Qaeda and Pakistan's nervous security forces, whose fighting for the first time has moved beyond Pakistan's tribal fringe and into more settled areas of the country.

The battles are part of an expanding insurgency within Pakistan aimed directly at the government of General Pervez Musharraf, rather than at the NATO and American forces across the Afghan border.

Many here say it is fueled by anger over the government alliance with the Bush administration and what is seen as a pro-American agenda that has taken on greater prominence with the return of the opposition leader, Benazir Bhutto, who accuses the militants of trying to take over the country.

So grave is the threat in the Swat region, too dangerous for foreign journalists to visit, that more than 2,000 Pakistani soldiers were dispatched to quell the fighters in July. For three months they remained mostly inactive, intimidated by the militants. Reinforcements sent last week were hit by a suicide bomber who killed 17 paramilitary soldiers.

On Thursday, government forces retaliated. Helicopters attacked about 500 militants at Khwazakhela, according to the home secretary for the North-West Frontier Province, Badshah Gul Wazir, killing at least 60 men. The militants said they had captured 44 men and were holding them hostage.

In many ways, Swat reflects in microcosm the reasons Pakistan has been transformed into such a dangerous place: The aggressiveness of the Islamic militants; the passivity of the Pakistani government and security forces; the starved civilian apparatus, including schools and hospitals, which could be the backbone of a counterinsurgency.

The intimidation takes many forms. Two days after the suicide attack, the heads of two members of the Frontier Constabulary were paraded through the dusty streets of Matta, a village over 30 kilometers, or about 20 miles, north of Saidu Sharif, the capital of Swat.

Grim messages accompanied the heads, calling the soldiers allies of the United States and threatening beheading for anyone else siding with the Americans, according to residents here who received news from relatives in the area.

Since the clashes began, schools have been closed, a vital polio vaccination campaign for children has been abandoned and police posts have been left empty, residents said. Lawlessness rules, by their accounts.

"The militants control about 10 percent of the territory" of the North-West Frontier Province, where Swat is situated, said Sher Mohammed, a lawyer who lives in the area and also here in Peshawar, where he was interviewed. "But psychologically they have terrorized the entire area. No one feels secure."

The atmosphere of fear and uncertainty pervades not only the larger North-West Frontier Province but also is taking hold in large cities, including the capital, Islamabad, and the nearby garrison city of Rawalpindi, where suicide attacks are now common compared to their frequency only a year ago.

Such attacks are increasingly deadly. The truck carrying Bhutto was hit by at least one suicide bomber during her arrival motorcade in Karachi two weeks ago, killing 140 of her supporters.

Bhutto left Pakistan on Thursday afternoon for her home in Dubai after lying low for most of the week behind a curtain of security provided by her political party at her family compound in Karachi.

"Pakistan is under siege," said Farook Adam Khan, a prominent lawyer who was educated at Sandhurst, the British military academy, and is a former anticorruption prosecutor appointed by Musharraf.

Khan warned that the militancy embodies the fury over the alliance between Musharraf and the Bush administration in the campaign against terror. "It's the anger at the pro-American policies, particularly the Musharraf-Bush axis."

A briefing earlier this year on law and order by the Home Department of the North-West Frontier Province, which is run by political allies of Musharraf, showed that the government was well aware of the mounting militancy.

The report, obtained by The New York Times, refers, in part, to "free movement of militants, their financial, physical and moral support growing in the presence of large number of law enforcement agents."

Another part of the report states in stark terms: "Morale of law enforcement agents and the people supportive of government on the decline. Talibanization, lawlessness and terrorism on the rise."

The briefing suggested that the government should lend support to moderate imams who would spread messages of tolerance, but that has yet to happen, a senior security official said here.

Another recommendation, to send more soldiers, was carried out in July but saw the army being intimidated by the militants. The extra complement sent last week attracted the suicide bomber that killed 17 soldiers.

Many of the militants around Swat are members of Tehreek Nafaz-e-Shariat Muhammadi - the Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Laws - one of a number of extremist groups allied with the Taliban operating in the area.

The movement, led by an Islamic cleric, Maulana Fazlullah, was banned by the Musharraf government in 2002. But it has steadily gained strength, particularly in the past year, demonstrating what many here say is the weakness of the government in asserting itself not only in the tribal areas but beyond.

Fazlullah, who runs an FM radio station known as Maulana Radio, is the son-in-law of Sufi Mohammad, the pro-Taliban founder of the Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Laws.


Mohammad was imprisoned by the Pakistani authorities at the end of 2001. But while he has remained behind bars, the group has gained adherents including some from among retired army officers, according to Zia ur Rehman, an analyst at the Sustainable Policy Development Institute in Islamabad.

Other supporters of the group included traders angered at the local government's policy of expanding taxes and farmers upset at high interest rates for loans to buy land. They were impressed by the group's insistence that taxes and interest rates were un-Islamic. All the while, civil servants sympathetic to the militants were posted to Swat, a senior government official here said.

Residents said that last year Fazlullah established the FM radio station and began radical sermons calling for the caliphate, the organization of Muslim power that held sway for centuries after the death of the Prophet Muhammad.


He specially targeted uneducated women cloistered at home. They readily answered his appeals for donations. They also responded to his appeals to turn off television sets and shut down music. Fazlullah organized burning of television sets in village centers and forced the closure of video shops.

When Fazlullah appealed for help in building a large madrassa, or Islamic school, at Imam Dehri on the banks of the Swat River, it was built in short order by volunteer labor, the residents said.

Then his demands grew tougher, including a call for the banning of polio vaccinations for children, health officials here said. Fazlullah claimed the vaccination made men impotent. The local administration made a deal: Fazlullah could keep his radio station if he allowed the vaccinations to go ahead.


But the government-sponsored polio vaccination, backed by Unicef, which began in most of Pakistan this week, was canceled in Swat because the security situation was considered too risky, the health officials said.

The impact of the militants in Swat has been devastating for women, said Rukhshanda Naz, the director of the Aurat Foundation, which works for women's rights. Nearly a dozen girls' schools have been bombed by the militants in the last year, she said. When Fazlullah demanded that girls' schools be closed, civil servants in Swat agreed to a compromise. The schools would be kept open, but in a government letter, girls over age 8 were instructed to wear burqas, Naz said.

Last month all girls' schools were closed, she said.

Women who had been trained by the Aurat Foundation since 2000 on how to run for local council positions and had succeeded in winning seats are also now being told not to turn up, Naz said.


Like many others here, Naz says the militancy in the North-West Frontier Province is provoked by Musharraf's unpopular alliance with the United States.

A long way from Swat, in a well-appointed house in Islamabad decorated with photographs of Jacqueline Kennedy, the queen of England and Charles de Gaulle, the son of the last Wali of Swat, Miangul Aurangzeb, 79, laments the fall of his beloved kingdom.

"An autocratic state can be a very nice one," Aurangzeb said in an interview in his living room. "My grandfather and father and myself were on the better side."

When the Pakistani government swallowed Swat in 1969, Aurangzeb's father stepped down. Although he is the heir, Aurangzeb has never ruled.

He has his own explanation of why the militants are on the rise, a variation of that given by others in the region.

"Musharraf wants the support of the Americans, so he frightens the Americans and allows these people to come so Bush will give more money and weapons," he said. "This could have been curbed a year ago."

Ismail Khan contributed reporting.

Swat region, Pakistan's jewel, is newest front line - International Herald Tribune
 
Not to worry.

Things will pan out.

The terrorist will be shown the door and maybe you and I can have a holiday there, sooner than later.
 
Swat is one of those places that could be huge tourist havens. If only some idiots would leave the area :crazy:



36fd60a113a1721393bf1efd8bb88bbb.jpg


"Then his demands grew tougher, including a call for the banning of polio vaccinations for children, health officials here said. Fazlullah claimed the vaccination made men impotent. The local administration made a deal: Fazlullah could keep his radio station if he allowed the vaccinations to go ahead."

No doubts Fazullah is basing this on his extensive medical research!!

Of course, once his deal was met, he changed his tune. So much for his firm medical stand on the issue!!
 
Not to worry.

Things will pan out.

The terrorist will be shown the door and maybe you and I can have a holiday there, sooner than later.

I'm sure they will, but its taking too long. Like Asim said we want them out yesterday!
 
Swat is one of those places that could be huge tourist havens. If only some idiots would leave the area :crazy:



36fd60a113a1721393bf1efd8bb88bbb.jpg




No doubts Fazullah is basing this on his extensive medical research!!

Of course, once his deal was met, he changed his tune. So much for his firm medical stand on the issue!!
It already was!

I loved my trips to Swat whenever possible during the summer.

He's using scaremongering techniques just to invent an issue between the government and the people. The entire world's children are taking this medication and only Swat men would get impotent by this?
 
Pakistan puts Army boots on the ground in Swat

Even as he remains publicly embroiled with the secular opposition, Pakistan's Gen. Pervez Musharraf's real war with militants is heating up – and far from public view. The outcome is pivotal to Pakistan's longer struggle with militancy.

This week, Pakistan's Army sent 15,000 ground troops into Swat, a scenic valley in the North West Frontier Province. Although a settled area barely 100 miles from the urbane capital, Islamabad, Swat is the stronghold of a Taliban-like extremist group boasting about 5,000 fighters.

At least 15 militants were reported killed since troops landed on Sunday, according to Agence France-Presse:

"The militants suffered heavy losses and their casualties were numerous," [local government spokesman Amjad] Iqbal said as government forces tried to dislodge the militants from bases in the district of Kabal and the nearby Shangla hills.

He said two rebel commanders loyal to hardline cleric Maulana Fazlullah -- who wants to introduce Islamic Sharia law in the region and preaches holy war against the government -- were killed.

Fighting in Swat has been escalating for weeks. But the skirmishes have ended in humiliating defeats for the Army, mostly because 3,000 paramilitaries – rather than actual soldiers – were sent to do the fighting. Many have surrendered without putting up a fight or have been captured and publicly executed.

As the Financial Times highlighted in early November, those defeats exposed a troubled spot in Pakistan's war on terrorism:

Western diplomats say the military setbacks illustrate how Gen Musharraf's protracted struggle to hold on to power is proving a costly distraction from the fight against pro-Taliban insurgents. "It has been very difficult to get his attention for quite some time," says one.

Moreover, the pattern of mass surrenders is a worrying indication of a serious malaise in a US-funded fighting force that is of critical importance to the west's ability to prosecute the war in Afghanistan. While the 92,000 Pakistani troops deployed along the Afghan border may not be mutinous, their will to fight against fellow-Muslims in the tribal areas, and now also in much of northern Pakistan, is ever more in question.

This week may mark a turning point. It is the first time that bona fide Army boots have been put on the ground. The move was quickly welcomed in editorials.

The Daily Times, an English-language daily in Pakistan, seemed to suggest that it was high time for such action:

Finally the army has begun its ground offensive in Swat after days of sniping at the Al Qaeda militants from its helicopter gunships, killing 35 on the first day.

This is a change from the humiliating reversals which the militants inflicted on the paramilitary personnel earlier on…

The News, another influential English-language daily, called on the government to exhibit a policy of greater resolve:

…t is necessary to show that the state is determined to enforce its writ. This can be done by closing down the illegal radio stations that fuel passions and hatred, refusing to reach deals with militants and, at the same time, drawing ordinary people into the battle against extremists by offering them the benefits that a benevolent, caring state must be able to provide.


Washington is closely watching the developments as well, according to the Los Angeles Times.

U.S. officials are closely monitoring the situation in the northwestern district of Swat, a picturesque former princely state. Islamic militants, employing tactics used in the tribal borderlands, have overrun villages here, beheading security personnel and imposing their own harsh brand of Islamic law.

Western military observers consider the confrontation a pivotal one, possibly presaging a much wider push by Pakistani and foreign militants out of the largely lawless tribal belt along the Afghanistan border and into so-called settled areas, where Pakistan's federal government is supposed to have authority.

Bloggers on Pakistan welcomed the troop deployment, but wondered about its timing.

Munaeem, a Canadian blogger of Pakistani origin who follows Pakistani affairs, writes:

…[T]he question is why the government did not take action when [Fazlullah] started his criminal activities. They should also shake up the local administration. According to reports, they are corrupt and tyrant. Their tyranny and corruption have made Maulana Fazlullah popular.

Aadil, commenting on another blog about Pakistani affairs, sees a sinister connection between this week's operation and Musharraf's reelection bid:
To many, it is a conscious effort on part of the regime to make the situation worse at a point of time when general elections are just around the corner. It could be a ploy to postpone the general elections and buy some more time for political manouvering [sic] on part of Mr. Musharraf plus it could be a signal to the US of America that the war is on and that he still could play an important role in their so called war against terror.

The Daily Times warned:

The Pakistan army, as it operates in Swat, must recognise that the present operation is just the opening of a larger battlefront.

Pakistan puts Army boots on the ground in Swat | csmonitor.com


Official: Over 200 militants killed in NW Pakistan_English_Xinhua
Official: Over 200 militants killed in NW Pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Over 200 militants have been killed through security forces operations since the start of operation in northwestern Pakistan's Swat valley, Interior Ministry Spokesman Brig Javed Iqbal Cheema said on Tuesday.

Addressing a weekly news briefing here, Cheema said he hoped the situation in Swat would return to normal before the elections.

Cheema said the operation to neutralize hardcore militants in Swat valley was progressing very well and had secured areas of Kanju, Kuza Bande, Bara Bande and Mam Dheri.

The security forces were consolidating their positions and people of the area were wholeheartedly cooperating with the government in its efforts to eliminate terrorists.

Around 2,500 security forces soldiers were sent to Swat valley on Oct. 24 to stop illegal activities of militants.
 
Amen!!

But this will only be the beginning - has to only be the beginning. If the battle is not taken to their other safe havens, they will regroup and make life miserable for the people of Swat for not supporting their "Un Islamic nightmare".
 

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