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India-Pakistan
40 militants killed as gunships pound Swat and Shangla
2007-11-17
Army gunship helicopters continued to pound pro-Taliban militant hideouts in Swat and Shangla districts for the third successive day, killing 40 rebels on Thursday, including a Taliban commander.

The operation raised the casualty toll to around 100 in the three days of clashes, officials said. “The military has not yet launched an operation on a larger scale, but still in the last three days of clashes around 100 militants have been killed,” regional spokesman for operations Amjad Iqbal told reporters at a briefing in Mingora on Friday.
"Yeah. Once we get goin', they're really gonna get it!"
Another military statement said the latest strikes occurred when security forces targeted rebel positions in retaliation for an attack on Saidu Sharif airport, near Mingora city. Cobra gunships and Bell helicopters engaged miscreants north of Kuza Banda, the statement said. “Cobra gunships engaged two suspected bunkers of miscreants north of Saidu Sharif Airport.”

Militant sources refuted the government casualty figures. A local resident did, however, confirm that Taliban commander Matiullah was killed in the strikes on Thursday. Maulana Fazlullah, the militant movementÂ’s fugitive frontman, led the dead commanderÂ’s funeral prayers, he added.

“We launched retaliatory fire. We intercepted militant communications which confirmed they had lost 40 men,” military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad said, adding that he had no details of casualties for Friday’s fighting.

‘Certain areas cleared’: He confirmed that government forces continued to successfully strike militant positions in Swat and Shangla. “We cleared certain areas in Kuza Banda [Swat] and around Alpuri [Shangla district headquarters],” he told Daily Times.

At the same time as the operation in Swat, the army expanded operations in Shangla district, which the Taliban largely took control of a few days ago. Despite the heavy shelling on suspected militants hideouts, which include key government installations in Shangla, reports said the Taliban continued to advance their march into other areas of Shangla. “We have reports that the militants plan to open another front against the government and they have selected Buner district, which borders Swat, Shangla and Swabi,” security officials in Peshawar said. Reports said militants advanced towards Chugharzai and Gul Banda in Buner district. However, security forces are reinforcing their positions in the district.

Another military statement said militants had attacked a security forces convoy with hand grenades on the Mansehra-Battagram road on Friday morning, wounding two soldiers.

Malakand curfew: Meanwhile, the local district administration in Malakand declared a 12-hour curfew from Friday night (2am to 2pm). The administration offered no explanation for the move. However, it is largely understood here that such measures are taken to protect troop and military equipment movement from militant attacks.
Posted by:Fred

#4  PCarroll

Thank you for the comment. You probably have a few more good stories. We look forward to them.
Posted by: mhw   2007-11-17 19:02  

#3  thin as Hillary's veneer of sincerity

9.7

Awesome post PC.
Posted by: Thomas Woof   2007-11-17 13:30  

#2  Thanks Pete for the travel report @ SWAT + North up Wazoo territory.
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-11-17 13:24  

#1  Seeing the Talibunnies in Swat is a real shame. I was in Swat some years ago. How long? Well, the Russkies were still in Afghanistan and the Pathans were still our allies. (I went to Waziristan then, too. Up the Khyber Pass and then turn left for a hundred miles or so. Even then you couldn't do it without a local ethnic Pathan to vouch for you. The main issue was not being thought Russian, so we learned to say "Russie muerke!" - - roughly, "Death to the Russians!" as a way of pre-empting a false judgment by the jihadis with the Kalashnikovs.) But back to Swat. It's a valley that runs roughly N-S up into the Hindu Kush. Spectacularly beautiful - - a kind of Shangri-La. Beautifully maintained agriculture, with everything carefully irrigated from a complex system of hillside channels. I recall a lot of fruit trees, apricots and almonds I think, especially near the southern end of the valley. We travelled with a driver/guide called George - - a little fellow with eyeglasses like the bottom of two Coke bottles. This didn't inspire confidence, and he nearly put us over a ravine once or twice. But the Swat valley was gorgeous and the people were fine and friendly. Stayed at the Swat hotel - - a relic of happier times - - colonial times!! It was November and at night it got bitterly cold. We bought the local Afghan blankets, with the embroidered edges. They look nice but they're as thin as Hillary's veneer of sincerity. At the very north end of the valley the road just stops and a huge mountain looms up to block you. If you got out climbing gear you could maybe traipse over into China. It's a tragedy that the new Saudi-sponsored Wahhabi Talibunnies are messing things up there. It only takes a few brutes with guns to mess up a peaceful society. And I don't think the Pakistan Army has the gumption or the training to tackle them.
Posted by: Peter Carroll   2007-11-17 11:36  

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