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Afghanistan
Pakistani Taliban confirm Hakimullah Mahsud titzup
2010-02-09
The Pakistani Taliban confirmed Tuesday that their leader, Hakimullah Mahsud, died from injuries suffered in a U.S. drone missile strike last month, an attack that forces the insurgency to find a new leader for the second time in six months.

The death of Mahsud, engineer of a devastating series of suicide attacks and raids on markets, mosques and security installations across Pakistan in the latter half of 2009, gives the U.S. another major victory in its ongoing campaign of drone missile strikes against top Taliban and Al Qaeda leaders.

A drone strike last August killed Mahsud's predecessor, Baitullah Mahsud. Missiles fired by drones over Pakistan's tribal areas along the Afghan border have also killed 15 senior Al Qaeda commanders since 2004.

However, experts do not expect the loss of Hakimullah Mahsud, 28, to deal a fatal blow to the Taliban as it battles the government in the country's northwest.

After Baitullah Mahsud's death last summer, the Taliban was able to regroup and launch some of the deadliest attacks against Pakistanis in years, including the Oct. 10 commando-style raid on army headquarters in Rawalpindi, a sprawling, heavily guarded complex. The raid left 14 military officers and civilian workers dead.

"Obviously, it's a great setback for them in terms of morale and organizational problems. There's no doubt about it," said Talat Masood, a security analyst and retired Pakistani general. "It will take time for them to recover, but they will definitely recover because they have support in those tribal areas."

Pakistani authorities initially believed that Mahsud had been injured in a Jan. 17 U.S. drone strike that targeted two cars in North Waziristan, a largely Taliban-controlled district in the tribal areas.

However, Taliban sources said their leader was wounded in a drone strike Jan. 14 in Shaktoi, a village in South Waziristan near the North Waziristan border. A Taliban militant in the Orakzai district of Pakistan's tribal areas said Mahsud suffered serious injuries to his legs and abdomen in the attack.

The sources said militants were trying to move Mahsud to Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, for treatment, but he died near the southern Punjab city of Multan, 460 miles northeast of Karachi. Taliban sources said he died Sunday, though that could not be confirmed.

Pakistani security and intelligence sources confirmed Mahsud's death, but denied that he died in Multan and instead said he died somewhere in the tribal region.
Posted by:Ebbesh Speaking for Boskone2051

#9  "it's more like he was severely wounded and required medical treatment that the Taliban just didn't have. He lingered for three weeks without analgesics until sepsis set in"

Oooo, gromky - I love a happy ending. :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2010-02-09 21:02  

#8  One such translator was an American of Haitian descent -- representative of the extraordinary work that our men and women in uniform do all around the world -- Navy Corpse-man Christian [sic] Brossard. And lying on a gurney aboard the USNS Comfort, a woman asked Christopher: "Where do you come from? What country? After my operation," she said, "I will pray for that country." And in Creole, Corpse-man Brossard responded, "Etazini." The United States of America.
Posted by: anymouse   2010-02-09 20:39  

#7  CORPSEMAN!! CORPSEMAN!!!!

ooops, I meant corpsman. My bad.
Posted by: AlanC   2010-02-09 14:47  

#6  Leader of the Pakistani Taliban sounds like a high risk occupation with low pay and no benefits. All the goats you can boink but, c'mon, is it worth it? Vying to take over his position doesn't sound like a good career move to me. But then I guess they don't have too much demand for computer programmers in that neck of the woods.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2010-02-09 11:38  

#5  
#2...
My prayers were answered.
Posted by: Fred   2010-02-09 11:20  

#4  could've tracked the smell
Posted by: Frank G   2010-02-09 10:46  

#3  Pakistani security and intelligence sources confirmed Mahsud's death, but denied that he died in Multan and instead said he died somewhere in the tribal region.

Bribe money cleared, but a little too late?
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-02-09 10:27  

#2  I'd say, it's more like he was severely wounded and required medical treatment that the Taliban just didn't have. He lingered for three weeks without analgesics until sepsis set in.
Posted by: gromky   2010-02-09 10:24  

#1  Sounds like they need a medic with some knowledge, 3 weeks to pronounce death .
Posted by: Oscar   2010-02-09 09:59  

00:01