Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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shravan
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by shravan »

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PE: Was the operation in Swat Valley [this year] nothing but a big show put up by the army for the benefit of Washington - of course, with the "collateral damage" of displacing 3.4 million people?

AJ: It appears so more and more with the passage of time. In the beginning, it appeared they were serious in eliminating the terrorists there. However, knowingly or unknowingly, they gave enough time to top terrorists like Sufi Mohammad and Maulana Fazlullah and their followers to escape. As a result, the terrorists disappeared from Swat Valley but re-emerged elsewhere.

Parts of Swat Valley and other areas where the TNSM [the banned pro-Taliban Tehrik-Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-
Mohammadi - Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Laws] had established its control may have fallen back to the military, but the terrorists can always come back. Swat Valley is not in the tribal areas. It would have made a lot of sense if they had quietly encircled Swat Valley before the operation so that nobody could escape.

The Swat operation has created such a huge refugee problem that it may defeat every sincere effort to smash terrorism. I do not know whether the military created this crisis knowingly as part of their double game or because of a bad counter-terrorism strategy. If they let that happen unknowingly, it is still more dangerous. This would mean that they are not capable of carrying out anti-terrorist operations even if they are willing to.

PE: Can you expand on the strategic importance of Swat as a corridor linking Pakistani Kashmir and Afghanistan?

AJ: Swat's strategic importance is that it lies somewhere between the borders of Afghanistan and Kashmir. If the "Taliban" get entrenched here, they can spread from there in every direction, ultimately linking Afghanistan and Kashmir through one or more corridors. The terrorists from Kashmir and Afghanistan would be able to freely move between the two. The differences between the jihadis in Afghanistan and those in Kashmir would go and they would unite under one jihadi command. Muslim extremists would emerge a lot stronger as a result. The Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan would establish new sanctuaries in the Himalayas from where they would carry out attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan and elsewhere. It would be a lot more difficult to fight and dislodge them from the Himalayas than from Afghanistan.

PE: Whoever was responsible for the recent bombing in Lahore of an Inter-Services Intelligence facility had very good on-the-ground intel on the ISI - not surprisingly, considering the Taliban were "invented" by the ISI in the first part of the 1990s. It has been speculated that the bombing was planned and financed by al-Qaeda, with logistical support by Kashmiri guerrillas and with Pakistan Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud's TTP [Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan] group contributing with suicide bombers. Sounds like a CIA fantasy scenario. Any truth to it?

AJ: We do not know and probably will never know for sure who carried out the recent bombing in Lahore in which an important Brelvi cleric, Sarfraz Naeemi, died. The investigating agencies in Pakistan rarely finish the investigations in such cases. One or more Pakistani chapters of al-Qaeda may have been behind it. The Pakistani chapters of al-Qaeda such as the Jaish-i-Mohammad and different factions of the former Harakatul Ansaar have operated in Pakistan freely even after 9/11.

General Musharraf's regime never took any action against them under the false pretext that they were not fighting in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the West also did not consider them part of al-Qaeda because they were primarily engaged in the jihad in Kashmir. The reality was that the Pakistani Deobandi jihadis, such as Maulana Masood Azhar and Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil, were the human links between the jihad in Kashmir and the jihad in Afghanistan. The two jihads have always been two sides of the same coin.

PE: Baitullah Mehsud seems to have been converted into the new Osama bin Laden. What's fact and fiction? Is he really the new emir of Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas [FATA]? Is he really the top "al-Qaeda facilitator", according to CIA spin? What sort of "Kashmiris" are collaborating with him? What does he really want?

AJ: Jihad International Inc continuously needs a figurehead. Baitullah Mehsud was catapulted into the new Bin Laden role a couple of years ago because Jihad International Inc appeared to be losing the war in the absence of a figurehead such as Bin Laden. The ISI had fielded him to counter the growing influence of Abdullah Mehsud, who was spinning out of ISI control. Abdullah Mehsud had deviated from the given script by kidnapping Chinese citizens in Pakistan.

Now, Baitullah Mehsud also seems to have spun out of their control. Hence, he also has to be eliminated, and be replaced. Baitullah Mehsud won the first battle against the ISI by having another terrorist, Qari Zainuddin, murdered, who had been propped up by the ISI to take the place of Baitullah Mehsud. This is a flawed policy. Every terrorist has the tendency to spin out of control. If Qari Zainuddin had succeeded, he would have emerged a more dreaded terrorist and would have spun out of his handlers' control. To answer the last part of your question, I would say that many Pakistani jihadi groups have joined Baitullah Mehsud and others have established links with his organization.

PE: Is al-Qaeda using Kashmiris in FATA and North-West Frontier Province [NWFP]?
AJ: Al-Qaeda in the shape of the Jaish-i-Mohammad, Harakatul Jihad Islami and Harakatul Mujahideen has been operating in Pakistan despite formal bans. They were allowed to operate because they also waged jihad in Kashmir as well. As support for militancy dwindled in Kashmir, they went to the FATA to wage jihad against the state of Pakistan. "Kashmiris" from the Valley of Kashmir are mostly not interested in international jihad. Their jihad is aimed at liberating their state from India. The only Kashmiri group from the valley interested in global jihad is the Hizbul Mujahideen.

PE: According to your best estimates, how many Saudi jihadis are roaming around FATA? And what about Uzbek and Chechen
gun experts? Is "historic" al-Qaeda, with Bin Laden dead or not dead, now playing a sort of very long-range, behind-the-scenes, "wiser" advisory role?

AJ: They are probably in the hundreds. They keep coming and going. But, that is surely not the question. They are not playing leading parts. It is the Pakistani jihadis who are assuming leadership roles.

The historic al-Qaeda may or may not be dead, but it has definitely gone in the background. The new Jihad International Inc appears to be aiming at Pakistan rather than at the West. It seems to be trying to take over Islamabad and to turn it into a springboard for global jihad. The difference between the "historic" al-Qaeda and the new Jihad International Inc is that the latter is dominated by Pakistani jihadis while the former was Arab-oriented with an Arab, Bin Laden, at the top. The other difference is that new Jihad International Inc is aiming at India as a primary target while al-Qaeda under Bin Laden wanted to destroy America.

PE: What's the potential for the TTP to really threaten Peshawar [capital of NWFP], considering that Peshawar is not Talibanized, and mostly voted for a Pashtun nationalist party last year?

The TTP has a lot of potential for destruction in Pakistan, but cannot occupy any part of it without the support from rogue elements in the state. After all, they do not take over territory through elections. Khyber Agency was very liberal before the ISI started supporting the Lashkar-i-Islam led by Mufti Shakir and Mangal Bagh. Khyber Agency had returned a very liberal lawmaker, Lateef Afridi, to parliament. When the TTP thought it right to take over Peshawar, the ANP [Pashtun nationalist Awami National Party] would simply evaporate in the air. The ANP leaders are already living in virtual hiding. But this would not happen without active support from rogue elements in the state.

PE: The Taliban in Pakistan are a social movement as well. They seem to strike a chord with the general population when they portray Islamabad as a puppet of US imperialism and Zionism. But if Islamabad manages to portray the Pakistani Taliban as merely a terrorist group, do you think that would be enough to win the battle for Pakistanis' hearts and minds?

AJ: The Zardari-Gillani government [President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani] won the hearts and minds of the people when they won elections [last year]. The propaganda against the democratically elected government comes from sympathizers of the Taliban in the media and politics. These Islamists feel more comfortable under military rule. The vast majority of Pakistanis never supported terrorism in any form.

PE: What's substantially wrong with US President Obama's AfPak strategy? Did he get his priorities right? How come he doesn't even mention Kashmir?

AJ: The Obama administration is not striking very hard on the source of global jihad, which is the jihad in Kashmir. My sense is the Obama administration understands the issue of terrorism more than the [George W] Bush administration. But, it seems to have accepted pressure from India, and is not mentioning the Kashmir conflict. The earlier idea of appointing a special envoy to Kashmir was a brilliant idea and abandoning it, I think, is the biggest mistake they are making. The Pakistani military will not stop supporting jihad in Kashmir without the resolution of the Kashmir conflict. Pakistan and India cannot resolve the Kashmir conflict without active involvement of America. Meanwhile, the jihad in Kashmir will keep giving birth to global jihadis.

PE: To what measure are the US Predator drone war on FATA, the heaps of "collateral damage", the contemptuous Pentagon denials, the connivance of Zardari's government, Pakistan's "national sovereignty" in tatters, leading towards either Talibanization or at least a movement for the emergence of Pashtunistan? Will Pakistan eventually break up?

AJ: I do not think that the drone attacks are leading to more "Talibanization" or a nationalist movement for Pashtunistan. But, unfortunately, they are not helping to curb the rise of extremism either. They are at best a short-term solution to stop Taliban attacks inside Afghanistan from Pakistani territory. They are not a long-term solution either. It is only the sympathizers of the Taliban who pose as liberals who are spreading this false theory. This theory ignores the reality that Talibanization pre-existed the drone attacks.

Islamic extremism or what they mistakenly call Talibanization in the West is directly opposed to Pashtun nationalism. It is eroding Pashtun nationalism in a big way. The most favorite targets of the "Taliban" include symbols of Pashtun nationalism, like the tomb of saint-poet Rehman Baba, which they have bombed out, as well as schools, artists' houses, etc.

I do not even think that the drones are attacks on Pakistan's sovereignty. The Americans are carrying out drone attacks in the Pakistani tribal belt with the knowledge and support of the Pakistani government, especially the military. They should be considered joint operations. It is another kind of double game Pakistan is playing; helping the Americans to carry out drone attacks secretly and denying it publicly.

Contrarily, it is the rise of Islamic extremism that is eroding the sovereignty of Pakistan. Many parts of the country are directly under the control of the extremists, where they apply sharia law. Is this not erosion of sovereignty? In reality, the state is continuously receding in the background. When the Taliban send a letter to an audio-video market in Lahore, the traders come out and make a bonfire of "un-Islamic" videotapes" to avoid Taliban attacks. Is this not erosion of Pakistani sovereignty? On the call of the Taliban, the banks in Peshawar ask their employees to stop wearing Western dresses because it is un-Islamic. Where is Pakistan's so-called sovereignty in this case? The Taliban are asking non-Muslim minorities like Sikhs and Hindus to pay jyzia, an Islamic tax, in some parts of the country. That is the real attack on Pakistan's sovereignty.

PE: You see jihad expanding to the borders of Jammu and Kashmir in India, in the east, and Afghanistan in the west. The outcome of all this would mean jihadis moving freely between Kashmir and Afghanistan. Is this plan A for the ISI and the Pakistani army, with no plan B?

AJ: The ISI is very good at adapting to emerging situations. Most of their plans do not work as intended. It is neither plan A, nor plan B. I think it is an unintended result of the privatization of jihad. The Pakistani military had been privatizing jihad in Kashmir from the very beginning, and later in Afghanistan in the 1980s. After 9/11, the ISI further privatized jihad and outsourced it to former ISI officers.

Parts of NWFP like the Khyber Agency were outsourced to a former ISI officer, Major Amir (retired), who came into limelight when he tried to destabilize the first Benazir Bhutto government in 1989-90. Under ISI pressure, he was retired but not punished. He again came into the limelight when the Nawaz Sharif government unearthed an ISI plot, known as Midnight Jackals, to destabilize his government.

Major Amir is the brother of Maulana Mohammad Tayyab, who heads an extremist Takfiri group, Jamat Ishaat Al Tauheed Wal Sunnah, popularly known as Panjpiris. This group was deeply involved in the rise of the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan and the TNSM. The group seems to be working at joining the two jihads. The two brothers played important roles in the formation of the TTP and the radicalization of the TNSM. TTP leader Maulana Faqir Mohammad is their follower and studied in their madrassa [Islamic seminary] in Swabi [in NWFP]. The conclusion is that even former ISI officers tend to deviate from the given script and spin out of control.

PE: Is there any support left - by people living on both sides of the Line of Control [LoC] that separates Indian-administered Kashmir and Pakistan-administered Kashmir - for jihad? Or will this continue to be just an ISI obsession?

AJ: Unfortunately, there is still a lot of support for jihad on both sides of the LoC. The ISI has been exploiting this support and will continue to do so until the Kashmir conflict is resolved for good.

PE: What's the ultimate solution for Kashmir? What does the majority, on both sides of the LoC, really want? And who's more flexible, those living in India or in Pakistan?

AJ: It is too premature to talk of an ultimate solution. The Kashmir conflict is too complex to talk about in just an interview. The real issue is that India is not ready to deviate from its position and Pakistan is not ready to accept the status quo as the solution. Once both countries are ready for a solution, finding a solution will not be a problem. There are a few dozen of them. The majority of the people in the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir may want to join Pakistan, but that would not be fair to the large majority of people in the Jammu and Ladakh regions. The two states should resolve their territorial conflict in a diplomatic way. Religion should not be allowed to determine the international borders once again, after 62 years.

Note
1. Shadow War: The Untold Story of Jihad in Kashmir (Hardcover) by Arif Jamal, Melville House (May 19, 2009). ISBN-10: 193363359X. Price US$26.95, 352 pages.

Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007) and Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge. His new book, just out, is Obama does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009).
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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From AfPak to SomPak?

UK’s Foreign Office Minister for Africa, Asia and the UN, Lord Malloch- Brown:
“The main terrorist threat comes from Pakistan and Somalia – not Afghanistan.”

The Telegraph
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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American arrested in NYC terror case
An American has been charged with receiving training from al-Qaida and providing the terrorist organization with information about the New York City transit system.

Court papers unsealed on Wednesday in New York federal court identified the defendant as Bryant Neal Vinas, who was believed to be cooperating in a terrorism case in Europe.
As can be easily predicted, Mr. Bryant Neal Vinas was arrested in, where else, Pakistan.
Link
A young man whose journey from Patchogue to Pakistan took him to an al-Qaida training camp and an attack on a U.S. military base emerged yesterday as a key player in al-Qaida plots against area mass transit systems, as he continued to cooperate in multiple investigations of international terrorism.

Bryant Neal Vinas, 26, was captured in Pakistan in November. He pleaded guilty secretly in January to aiding in a 2008 rocket attack on U.S. troops in Afghanistan, training with al-Qaida and supplying information on city subways and the Long Island Rail Road to the terrorist group, according to Brooklyn federal court records unsealed yesterday.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by svinayak »

He is mole of Uncle to penetrate
arun
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Excerpts from Al Jazeera's interview of the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen datelined July 23, 2009.

On Pakistan’s penchant for running with the terrorist hares while hunting with the anti-terrorist hounds:
Haven't we seen this before though with Pakistan? Where it looks like they're co-operating with the US for a while but then it seems like they give the Taliban some room to grow? It seems like Pakistan plays a bit of both sides where as long as the threat is there, then they'll continue to get more US attention, money, support and weapons.

When I go to the region, one of questions that's both in Afghanistan and Pakistan is are you staying with us this time or are you going to leave again? And in fact, we've left both those countries historically.

And my message is that we are here with you and we're here for the long run. And I think [that in the] long run, the potential for that kind of double game which has been played in the past starts to get reduced.

But I don't think it will go away overnight. There's a huge trust deficit that has been generated over time and I think that's a deficit that we're going to have to work hard to close on. And that is in support of both those countries.
On the Pakistani States links with terrorists:
What do you think about the close - and some people say too close - relationship between the Pakistani ISI (intelligence service) and the Taliban?

Well one of the things I have learned in my frequent visits to Pakistan over the last year - I've been there almost a dozen times - is again that it is another extraordinarily complex relationship. And it's one that I've spoken very publicly about.

I believe that in the long run the ISI has to change its strategic thrust which has been to foment chaotic activity you know in its border countries. And I think in the long run ... and that has been a Pakistan view to its own survival and its own security. And I think in the long run that's got to change.

Pakistan is the one who gets to vote on that not everybody else.

It's frequently discussed and I have those discussions. And yet the ISI has also served ... some very positive intelligence needs both in the country and certainly between our two countries.

So, I think it's something we keep discussing, keep looking at. In the long run, its about the security for Pakistan and better security in the region for both those countries.

What do you mean when you say they've had a strategic thrust - the ISI has had a strategic thrust to foment choas in bordering countries?

What I mean is that they have clearly focused on support of ... historically of militant organisations both east and west. I mean that's been a focus of theirs in Kashmir historically as well as in FATA. And I think ... that fundamentally has to change.

And there are discussions which have been ongoing in respect to that and the leadership recognises that and there is a big challenge dealing with that based on what their history is and what they need to do for the future.
The complete interview:

Al Jazeera
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Syed Saleem Shahzad chronicles the case of two jihadi’s who despite years of rendering their terrorist services to the Pakistan Army and the ISI have been sold down the river by them:
Jul 30, 2009

Pakistan turns on its jihadi assets

By Syed Saleem Shahzad

…………… Islamabad has begun a crackdown on jihadi assets its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) raised in the 1990s for asymmetric warfare against India after losing three battles against its much bigger neighbor. …………

Asia Times
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Seven arrested in the US over terror plot
A father, his two sons and four other men living in North Carolina have been arrested on suspicion of plotting "violent jihad" abroad.

Officials said the men were led by Daniel Patrick Boyd, a married 39-year-old who lived in an unassuming lakeside home in a rural area south of Raleigh, where he and his family walked their dog and operated a drywall business.

But court records indicate Mr Boyd was a veteran of terrorist training camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan who fought against the Soviet Union.

The charge said Mr Boyd, trained in Afghanistan and fought there between 1989 and 1992 before returning to the United States. Court documents charged that Mr Boyd, also known as Saifullah, encouraged others to engage in jihad.

His faith was so strong that, this year, he stopped attending worship services in the Raleigh area and instead began meeting for Friday prayers in his home.

In 1991, Mr Boyd and his brother were convicted of bank robbery in Pakistan accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-Islami, or Party of Islam.

They were each sentenced to have a foot and a hand cut off for the robbery, but the sentenced was later overturned.
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The wives of the men said at the time they were glad the truth about their husbands had finally become known. The wives said the couples had US roots but the United States was a country of "kafirs" Arabic for heathens.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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And the one that got away is speculated to be where else other than that epicentre of global terrorism, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:
8th terror suspect likely in Pakistan

By Mandy Locke and Yonat Shimron - Staff Writers
Published: Tue, Jul. 28, 2009 08:56PM
Modified Tue, Jul. 28, 2009 09:06PM

Federal authorities are searching for Jude Mohammad, a Raleigh man who was previously arrested in Pakistan last fall when he attempted to travel into restricted tribal areas, The Associated Press is reporting.

Mohammad is the eighth man wanted in connection with a terror plot outlined in federal documents released Monday. Seven others were arrested in the Triangle on Monday morning.

The Associated Press is also reporting that authorities believe Mohammad is in Pakistan. …………………..

The News & Observer
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Arrested Paki student was days away from a terror attack: UK
A U.K.-based Pakistani student, one of the 12 alleged terror suspects arrested in April, was just "days away" from launching a major terror attack in the country, a secret immigration court has heard.

All the 12 suspects, including 10 Pakistani men, were released without any charge after the Scotland Yard could not produce enough evidence against them.

Details of the attack as planned by the Pakistani student were revealed during the immigration hearing here.

The student, identified only as 'XC', had used coded emails to discuss a terror plot, the government said.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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US extremists with training abroad raise concerns

WASHINGTON — Antiterrorism officials are increasingly concerned about American-bred extremists who travel abroad for terror training and then return home, sometimes quietly recruiting followers over the years.
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On Monday, the FBI arrested Daniel Patrick Boyd, 39, charging he was the ringleader of a group of aspiring international terrorists.

The charges "underscore our ongoing concerns about individuals returning to the United States after training or fighting on behalf of extremists overseas," said Justice Department spokesman Richard Kolko.

"As a general matter, such individuals may be in a unique position to solicit others in the U.S. to follow their example, given their combat experience, their network of overseas contacts and their credibility among young radicals seeking an authority figure," Kolko said.
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The internal terrorism bulletin says Boyd is part of what investigators believe is an unsettling trend of Americans attracted to terrorist groups.

Often, such individuals are what officials call "self-recruiting," using only an Internet connection to plug into a network of like-minded people who help point them toward militant groups.

Just a week ago, federal prosecutors revealed they had in custody an American, Bryant Neal Vinas, who was raised on Long Island, N.Y., converted to Islam and traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan to train alongside senior al-Qaida operatives.

And on Monday, a Virginia man was sentenced to life in prison for joining al-Qaida and plotting to assassinate then-President George W. Bush. Authorities say he joined al-Qaida while attending college in Saudi Arabia.

The police bulletin, issued the evening after Boyd's arrest in North Carolina, also cites a case of what authorities say were aspiring terrorists in Oregon. In that case, prosecutors won a conviction of a man for trying to set up a terror training camp in 1999 in Bly, Ore.

Boyd and the others arrested Monday are not charged with planning attacks in the United States. Prosecutors say the seven men repeatedly traveled overseas hoping to engage in violence, and trained in military tactics at a private property in North Carolina.

The Boyds lived at an unassuming lakeside home in a rural area south of Raleigh and had a family-operated drywall business.

In 1991, Boyd and his brother were convicted of bank robbery in Pakistan. They were also accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-Islami, or Party of Islam. Each was sentenced to have a foot and a hand cut off for the robbery, but the decision was later overturned.

Their wives told The Associated Press in an interview at the time that the couples had U.S. roots but the United States was a country of "kafirs" :lol: — Arabic for heathens.

Sabrina Boyd said in her statement that her husband was in Afghanistan fighting against the Soviet Union "with the full backing of the United States government." :eek:
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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X Posted.

Hardly surprising.

In a society where adults in Government Institutions like the Army see Jihad as an useful motivational tool for fighting as evidenced by their motto “Iman, Taqwa, Jihad fi Sabilillah “, or translated “Faith, Piety and Jihad in the Way of Allah”, it is but a matter of time before someone recognises the usefulness of Jihad as a motivational tool to get children to fight.:
Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy: 'Children are tools to achieve God's will,' the Taliban commander told me

Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Twenty-five children appear in a Taliban propaganda video wearing the traditional Pakistani shalwar kameez. They sit cross- legged on the ground rocking back and forth reciting the Koran. A white bandana tied across their forehead, reads: "La illaha illala: There is no God but God."

The compound they are in is bare. In one corner, three young boys hold automatic guns keeping watch. Their teacher, dressed in brown military fatigues walks around reading aloud from a book titled Justifications for Suicide bombing and makes a list on a whiteboard – "Reasons for killing a spy". The text on the screen reads "Preparing suicide bombers".

In another chilling video, three boys speak about their desire to become suicide bombers. The video introduces Zainullah, who later blows himself up killing six, Sadique, who blows himself up killing 22, and Masood who kills 28. The video contains footage of their attacks and in the background a young child sings: "If you try and find me after I have died, you will never find my whole body, you will find little pieces."
Qari Abdullah, a Taliban commander in charge of child recruitment, told me children are an essential element of Jihad. "If you're fighting, then God provides you with the means [to win]. Kids themselves are tools to achieve God's will. And whatever comes your way, you sacrifice it."

Children as young as five and six years old are being recruited from poor families, he said. "The kids want to join us because they like our weapons."
From here:

The Independent
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Pakistan identified as the home for the top brass of terrorism:
British HC claims presence of Osama, Omer in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD ( 2009-07-29 20:22:48 ) :British High Commissioner in Pakistan Robert Brinkley on Wednesday claimed that Osama Bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri and Mullah Omer are present within the limits of Pakistan.

He demanded of the Pakistan government to help apprehend Osama. …………….......

Aaj TV, Pakistan
The denial from Pakistan’s Foreign Office:
British high commissioner claim about presence of Al-Qaida in Pakistan territory baseless: FO spokesman

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has said the claim made by British High Commissioner that Osama, Mullah Omar and Alzahwari were present in Pakistan was baseless, adding action will be taken in this respect if solid evidence is provided.

Reacting to British High Commissioner claim, foreign office spokesman Abdul Basit in his exclusive chat with Online on Wednesday said that Pakistan was committed to cleanse its soil fully of terrorists, besides initiating action with full responsibility on western borders, adding that Pakistani Nation was supportive of every action against militants and terrorists. ……………..

Online, Pakistan
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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SSridhar wrote:Seven arrested in the US over terror plot
In 1991, Mr Boyd and his brother were convicted of bank robbery in Pakistan accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-Islami, or Party of Islam.

They were each sentenced to have a foot and a hand cut off for the robbery, but the sentenced was later overturned.
:(
Some more info on the above gentleman, going by the name of Boyd (aka Saifullah) . . .
His mother, Pat Saddler, told reporters at the time that Boyd came to Pakistan in October 1989 and worked as a mechanic helping Afghan refugees. His brother Charles joined him in Pakistan later, working as an engineer, she said. In June 1991, the manager of the United Bank in a Peshawar suburb reported to police that two men, one with “a golden beard” and the other with “a beak-like nose” :lol: , robbed his establishment of $3,200, opening fire with pistols as they fled, according to a police report. Soon, Boyd and his brother, both Muslim converts, were arrested.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by Philip »

Britain shooting itself in the foot by recruiting terrorists into its security services!

MI5 targeted by Islamic extremists in rushed recruitment drive after July 2005 attacks on London
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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X Posted. More from Britain.

The Islamic Republic of Pakistan roles in providing sanctuary for terrorists and the possibility of the Islamic Republic’s spy agency, the ISI, collaborating to proliferate nuclear technology to terrorists is recognised by UK’s Parliament.

UK House of Commons, Foreign Affairs Committee’s Eighth Report on Global Security dealing Afghanistan and Pakistan published on July 21, 2009:
155. It was from the tribal areas in Pakistan that the bomb plots in London, Madrid, Bali, Islamabad, and later Germany and Denmark were planned. The Lashkar e Toiba (LeT) group, which was responsible for the November 2008 Mumbai attacks which targeted Westerners, in particular US and UK nationals, also operates from these tribal areas. ........
158. We conclude that Pakistan's strategic importance derives not only from the sanctuary that its semi-autonomous border areas provide to extremists who seek to cause instability in Afghanistan, but also because of connections between the border areas and those involved in international terrorism. ……………….
160. We conclude that allegations raised during our inquiry about the safety of nuclear technology and claims of possible collusion between Pakistan's intelligence agency, the ISI, and Al Qaeda are a matter of deep concern. ……………
From the chapter titled, “Pakistan's strategic importance and role in relation to Afghanistan” :

LINK

The Index for the complete report and links to its different chapters:

CLICKY
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

Gareth Porter on the links of the Pakistan Armed Forces and more particularly on the links of the current head of the Pakistan Army, Gen. Ahfaq Kayani’s, to terrorists:
U.S. Officials Protect Pak Military on Aid to Taliban

Analysis by Gareth Porter*

WASHINGTON, Aug 4 (IPS) - Despite evidence implicating the current Pakistani Army chief, General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, in a major military assistance program for the Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan over the past few years, senior officials of the Barack Obama administration persuaded Congress to extend military assistance to Pakistan for five years without any assurance that the Pakistani assistance to the Taliban had ended.
The historical evidence on Kayani’s past relationship to the issue suggests that he has no intention of changing Pakistani policy toward the Taliban.

Kayani himself served as head of ISI from late 2004 to late 2007 and presided over the development of a major logistical and training program for the Taliban forces operating out of Pakistan’s Baluchistan province.
The size and scope of the programme of support described in the report were hardly consistent with the idea that assistance to the Taliban is a rogue operation by ISI operatives.

Mullen and Defence Secretary Robert Gates presumably know about Kayani’s past support for the Taliban assistance program. Evidence of continuing ISI assistance to, and safe have for, Taliban forces after Kayani replaced Musharraf as the top Army general was compiled in an intelligence assessment circulated to the top national security officials of the George W. Bush administration in mid-2008, according by David Sanger’s book "The Inheritance."

Kayani was also overheard in a conversation intercepted by U.S. intelligence referring to a high-ranking Taliban leader, Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani, as a "strategic asset," according to Sanger’s account. Haqqani was a Taliban minister during that organisation’s brief period in power during the late 1990s, and his network has been a key target for the U.S. campaign of drone strikes in Pakistan during 2008 and 2009.
From here:

Inter Press Service News Agency
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

X Posted.

Never mind the UN ban, the usual Pakistani prevarications when it comes to terrorism, on display:
Malik says JuD banned, but status still unclear

Nirupama Subramanian

It is not known if the ban is under Pakistan’s anti-terror laws

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik told Parliament on Wednesday that the Jamat-ud-Dawa ……………………. widely known as a front of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is blamed for the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, was “banned” following its designation under Security Council Resolution 1267………............

While the Pakistan government closed down several offices of the JuD following the resolution, Mr. Malik’s statement did not make clear if the group was banned under Pakistan’s anti-terror laws.

In any case, the government has not issued a notification formally banning the group.
An official source, clarifying Mr. Malik’s statement, said the JuD had only been removed from the list of registered welfare charities operating in Pakistan. …………...........

The Hindu
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by enqyoob »

Probably bringing L-e-T nuclear submarines from Pakistan to set off a new earthquake:
INDIA INTERCEPTS NORTH KOREAN SHIP

By Harmeet Shah Singh
CNN

NEW DELHI, India (CNN) -- Indian investigators are investigating a North Korean vessel they say had ignored warnings and sailed close to an unusual location off its remote island chain in the Bay of Bengal.

The vessel, which had a crew of 39, was carrying a cargo of sugar, said K.R. Nautiyal, the deputy inspector-general of the Indian coast guard at the Andamans.

It was bound from Thailand to Iraq but changed course and anchored off Hut Bay without responding to calls from coast guard authorities, he said.

"There were several inconsistencies," Nautiyal said, adding that the vessel would be allowed to leave once the investigation is completed.

Indian authorities first intercepted the ship on Wednesday and fired warning shots into the air when it did not answer radio calls, according to the coast guard.

It is under investigation at Port Blair, the main administrative center of the archipelago.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

Canada’s National Post recognises the Islamic Republic of Pakistan’s terrorist supporting ways with an editorial appropriately titled “Pakistan’s Two-Faced Game”:
Pakistan's two-faced game

National Post
Published: Saturday, August 08, 2009

If anything has been proven by the reported killing on Wednesday of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud, it is that Pakistan is fully capable of liquidating Islamist terrorists operating on its soil -- when it wants to. Unfortunately, Pakistan targets only those murderers who, like Mehsud, threaten the regime in Islamabad -- not those who seek to wage jihad in neighbouring India or Afghanistan.

The Pakistanis have long been playing a two-faced game. They pretend to be partners in the War on Terror when it suits their own purposes, then pretend not to know what is going on in their own tribal provinces when they would rather not be drawn into the war against radical Islam. ……………......

National Post
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

X Posted.

Andre Gerolymatos chronicles the deep-seated and longstanding terrorist supporting ways of the ISI in the Vancouver Sun.

Bearing in mind the Pakistan’s Army motto of “Iman, Taqwa, Jihad fi Sabilillah” or “Faith, Piety and Jihad in the way of Allah”, it comes as no surprise that Andre Gerolymatos characterises the Pakistan Army as “the medium by which political Islam is rapidly taking over the country” and concludes that “it is clear that Pakistan’s intelligence establishment has become a fellow traveler of political Islam”:
Political Islam And Pakistan’s Intelligence Service

By Andre Gerolymatos 08-18-2009
Professor at Simon Fraser University and Chair of Hellenic Studies.


………………. Currently, Pakistan is a thinly veiled democracy and for most of its existence it has been ruled by the military. However, unlike Turkey in which the military has been the bulwark of secularism, in Pakistan the army is the medium by which political Islam is rapidly taking over the country. The roots of this state of affairs reach back into the British Raj and are the byproduct of divide and rule policies of colonialism.

It was British policy beginning in the late 19th century to enlist Indian soldiers from the so-called “martial races” of the Northwestern Frontier. ……………

As a result of the ‘martial races’ recruitment policy, a disproportionate number of South Asian soldiers and officers were recruited from Muslim and Sikh tribes. After Pakistan’s creation in 1947, successive Pakistani governments continued to recruit from the same geographical regions, following the British policy of cultivating the “martial races”. ………………

These recruits also served in Pakistan’s intelligence service (the ISI) and the fact that they have family and tribal ties in the troubled North-West region of Pakistan has created a unique relationship for Pakistan’s intelligence establishment with the Northwest Frontier.

In the early 1980s, for example, General Akhtar Abdur Rahman, the director of ISI was, like many Pakistani officers, a Pashtun from Peshawar on the Afghan frontier. In 1987, General Hamid Gul, a devout Muslim from the Punjab with close ties to the Saudis, replaced him as head of the ISI. ……….

Zia’s regime was given legitimacy by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979…………..

When the Americans decided to take on the Soviets in the region they also opted to work through Pakistan’s intelligence community. Under this arrangement, funding was channeled through the ISI to the mujahedeen. The ISI, in turn, used Pakistani Islamic organizations and parties to build up militant Islamists movements in Afghanistan. The Afghan-Soviet war, effectively, greatly enhanced the power of the ISI, while solidifying its links with Islamic militants both in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The power and influence of the ISI within Pakistan has continued to grow after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan as well as its contacts with radical Islamic organizations. The triangular link between the Pakistan government, the ISI, and fundamentalist mujahedeen continued under Benazir Bhutto (who came to power in December 1988). ……………..

Bhutto’s government was directly involved in infiltrating Taliban recruits into Afghanistan in the 1990’s, while Bhutto claimed that Pakistan was merely returning Afghan refugees to their homeland. Indeed, without ISI support, the Taliban could not have made the gains they did in Afghanistan during the early 1990’s.

The direct links between Pakistan’s government and the ISI continued after Bhutto. Several key members of Musharraf’s military regime, which came to power in 1999, including Musharraf himself, were also officers in the ISI. Due to their support of radical Islamic factions, the ISI has been linked to wide-ranging terrorist activities in recent years, including the Daniel Pearl murder, scores of assassinations within Pakistan, the bombing of a church in Islamabad, and more recently to the terrorist the attacks in Mumbai.

The ISI has been directly involved with the formation and ongoing support of the Taliban. After 1992, the ISI developed a strategy that not only undermined the secular Afghan government, but also nourished the Afghan Islamist movement. The ISI contributed to the formation of the Taliban and helped to recruit Pakistanis as well as Afghans. By 1993 the Taliban had become a formidable force with direct ties to the ISI and through it access to recruits from Pakistan’s religious schools.

The ISI’s deliberate entanglement with the Taliban and other extreme groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba has made political Islam a major factor in Pakistan. The ISI - created by the British, nurtured by the Americans and the Saudis - has become a serious impediment to Pakistan’s social and political evolution. The events in Mumbai in 2008 have demonstrated that parts of the ISI are now almost interchangeable with extreme Islamic organizations. Although it is difficult to determine to what degree militant Muslim groups have penetrated the ISI, it is clear that Pakistan’s intelligence establishment has become a fellow traveler of political Islam. Ultimately, this outcome will further contribute to the mutual paranoia that characterizes the Pakistan-India relationship.

Vancouver Sun
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by shravan »

Translated Link
Secret CIA prisons: a British association will sue the government
LEMONDE.FR with AFP | 17.08.09 | 15h27

The British Association for the defense of prisoners Reprieve announced Monday August 17 that it would sue the British government about the restoration in 2004 to U.S. forces of two terrorist suspects at a later transferred to Afghanistan.

Reprieve is seeking the UK government to make public the names of these two men, captured by the British in Iraq in February 2004 and handed over to Americans before being transferred to Bagram airbase in Afghanistan. Have their identity would Reprieve to present their case before a court to determine whether their detention is lawful or not.

The association believes that both men are Pakistani and prénomment Salah el Din and Saifullah. But these elements are not sufficient to completely identify and trace their families. The law firm Leigh Day and Co, working for Reprieve, said in a letter to British Minister of Defense, Bob Ainsworth, the two captives "may have been tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading" .

Britain had agreed in February to have captured in Iraq and handed over to U.S. agents, who moved to Afghanistan for interrogation. Before that admission, London had always assured not be involved in the scandal of flights and secret CIA prisons abroad. John Hutton, who was then Defense Minister, had stated before the House of Commons they were both members of the Pakistani Islamist group Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, near the network of Al Qaeda and suspected of having conducted attacks in November 2008 in Bombay (India), which had 174 deaths.

The British authorities have the urgent duty, moral but also legal, repair the damage "caused to two inmates, said about this case Clive Stafford Smith, director of Reprieve. The MoD said it was considering the matter, stressing that the two men are now "in the custody of the U.S. government (...). We have no reason to believe the unsubstantiated accusations of Reprieve on their status is correct. "
---
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

While Muhamad Jibril Abdurahman, the “Prince of Jihad”, might have conducted his terrorist operations in Indonesia, there unsurprisingly is a connection with the epicentre of global terrorism, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:
‘Prince of Jihad’ arrested in Indonesia: police

Wednesday, 26 Aug, 2009 | 02:48 PM PST |

JAKARTA: The owner of a radical Islamist website who calls himself the ‘Prince of Jihad’ in his blog postings has been arrested in connection with the Jakarta hotel bombings, police and a lawyer said Wednesday.

Counter-terror squad officers arrested Muhamad Jibril Abdurahman, alias Muhamad Ricky Ardan bin Mohammad Iqbal, near Jakarta late Tuesday and also raided the office of his website, Arrahmah.com, a police spokesman said.

Police believe the Pakistan-educated suspect helped channel funds from abroad to finance the July 17 twin suicide bombings on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels that killed nine people, including six foreigners. ....................

AFP via Dawn
Reuters, quoting Security expert Sidney Jones, confirms Jibril’s link to the epicentre of global terrorism, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:

Indonesian police arrest suspect over hotel blasts
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

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Family of arrested Indonesian terrorist confirms link to the epicentre of global terrorism, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

The Indonesian terrorist attended a Pakistani Madrassah for three years where he would no doubt have been ideologically motivated to support acts of terrorism:
Jibril studied at Pakistan center linked to al-Qaeda, says family

Dicky Christanto , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Fri, 08/28/2009 11:18 AM | Headlines

After several days of silence about the overseas connections of suspected terrorist Muhammad Jibril, a member of his family finally commented on it to the public on Thursday.

“He attended a traditional Islamic school in Pakistan for around three years,” Irfan S. Awwas, Jibril’s uncle, told journalists.

However, Irfan didn’t elaborate further on the name of the school.

Information about Jibril’s experience overseas is important to the police, who are investigating his international links to terror networks.

Muhammad Jibril Abdul Rohman alias Muhammad Ricky Ardhan, has been detained since Tuesday as the police suspect he is one of the international couriers who helped distribute funds used to finance the bombings of two Jakarta hotels in July.

Jibril’s father Muhammad Iqbal alias Abu Jibril, previously refused to give a clear statement about Jibril’s activities abroad.

“He only went on a Umrah pilgrimage last year,” he said.

When asked whether Jibril had been involved with the Al Ghuroba study club, many members of which are suspected al-Qaeda couriers, Irfan did not provide a straight answer.

Instead of answering the question, he asked back, “What's wrong with joining Al Ghuroba? It has never been declared as a forbidden organization in Pakistan.” ……………….

Jakarta Post
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

The Pakistan Army has really got in deep with terrorists.

Terrorist group Al Qaeda funded the Pakistan Army’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to destabilise Benazir Bhutto’s government in 1988.:
Friday, August 28, 2009

Al Qaeda funded ISI to destabilise Benazir’s govt: former FIA official

* Mumtaz says Osama bin Laden paid millions of dollars to ISI

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: The Al Qaeda funded the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to destabilise the Benazir Bhutto’s government in 1988, a private TV channel quoted former Federal Investigation Agency director Malik Mumtaz as saying on Thursday.

According to the channel, Mumtaz said former premier Nawaz Sharif, former ISI chief General (r) Asad Durrani, Brigadier (r) Imtiaz and Major (r) Amir allegedly hatched the plot against BB’s government. .............................

Daily Times
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by Sanku »

Delhi concerned: Trained Pak men 'guiding' pirates off Somalia coast
On April 28, a Russian warship apprehended 12 Pak nationals — along with Somali pirates — for attempting to attack a tanker off Somalia’s coast.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

Headline should have read Pakistani Origin Canadian sentenced.

Article describes Saad Khalid of having “moved to Canada from Pakistan when he was 8” .

Just a harbinger of many more references to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan given that so many of the "Toronto 18" were of Pakistani origin :wink: :
Canadian man sentenced 14 years for bomb plot in Toronto

2009-09-04 10:49:05

OTTAWA, Sept. 3 (Xinhua) -- A 23-year-old Canadian man was sentenced 14 years in prison Thursday for his part in a bomb plot in 2006 to attack downtown Toronto in protest of Canada's mission in Afghanistan.

Saad Khalid is a member of the so-called "Toronto 18," a group of terror suspects who plotted a conspiracy two years ago to bomb such sites as the Toronto Stock Exchange, the headquarters of Canada's intelligence agency and a military base…………….

Khalid moved to Canada from Pakistan when he was 8. ……………….


Xinhua
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

Excerpt from UK PM Gordon Brown’s Sept 4th speech to IISS titled Afghanistan - National Security and Regional Stability.

Clearly spells out the Pakistani connection to the UK’s terrorist problems:
............... as we removed the Taleban from power and drove Al Qaeda from Afghanistan, so Al Qaeda relocated to the remote mountains of Pakistan.

A new crucible of terrorism has emerged. The Director-General of our security service has said that three quarters of the most serious plots against the UK have had links that reach back into these mountains. At present the threat comes mainly from the Pakistan side, ................
………….. the main element of the threat to the UK continues to emanate from Al Qaeda and Pakistan. ..............
PM speech on Afghanistan
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

No place on earth is too obscure to be immune from the depredations of Pakistani connected terrorism.

Six Pakistani men arrested in Liberia for entering on fake U.S. passports with the possible intent to carry out terrorism :

Liberia arrests 6 Pakistanis at airport
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by Lalmohan »

^^^ more likely to be gun runners? or diamond smugglers?
arun
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Post by arun »

The Islamic Republic of Pakistan’s links to global terrorism continues to be exposed.

Indonesia's national police chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri reveals that Indonesian terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah ran terrorist training camps in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and that arrested terrorist Mohamad Jibril, implicated in the July 17 2009 hotel bombings in Djakarta, was trained in one such terrorist training camp located in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan :
Indonesia: Jakarta bombings suspect received training in Pakistan

Jakarta, 7 Sept. (AKI/The Jakarta Post) .......................

Jibril received military training from several Jemaah Islamiyah activists for about a year, from 1999- 2000," Bambang said during a hearing at Indonesia's House of Representatives.

"The training was conducted in Pakistan while he was studying there." ...........................

Adnkronos
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by SSridhar »

arun wrote:
Indonesia: Jakarta bombings suspect received training in Pakistan

Jakarta, 7 Sept. (AKI/The Jakarta Post) .......................

Jibril received military training from several Jemaah Islamiyah activists for about a year, from 1999- 2000," Bambang said during a hearing at Indonesia's House of Representatives.

"The training was conducted in Pakistan while he was studying there." ...........................

Adnkronos
We know of the close relationship between LeT and Jemmah Islamiyyah of Indonesia and Abu Sayyaf group of the Philippines. In c. 2003, their cell in Karachi was disrupted. However, the above goes 4 years before that.

Pakistan should now investigate Hafeez Saeed. Leave alone any evidence from kufr Indians, it is the truue blue Islamic brethren now saying that training was imparted in Pakistan and the 2003 report said it was LeT that was operating these training camps.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by Philip »

GUILTY!!!
Three guilty of airline bomb plot bigger than 9/11

Abdulla Ahmed Ali, a British-born Islamic extremist, and two fellow plotters have been found guilty of planning a terrorist airline bombing more devastating than the Sept 11 attacks.

Published: 3:21PM BST 07 Sep 2009

Abdullah Ahmed, Tanvir Hussain, Assad Sarwar Photo: PA
The 28-year-old was the leader of an east London al Qaida-inspired terror cell, a Woolwich Crown Court jury found.

Tanvir Hussain, 28, and Assad Sarwar, 29, were also found guilty of planning to detonate home-made liquid bombs in suicide attacks on transatlantic aircraft.

Airline bomb plot: The restrictions on passengers

The conspiracy was the most complex and daring British-based plot in modern times. A previous trial had found the men guilty of conspiracy to murder but failed to establish whether they planned to blow up aircraft.

With thousands killed in the air and on the ground as the aircraft bound for major US cities were brought down, the damage from the attack would have exceeded the carnage caused by the attacks on New York's twin towers.

Counter terrorist police, the security services and prosecutors spent more than £35 million foiling the plot and bringing Ali to justice.

The arrest of the gang in August 2006 sparked tight restrictions on carrying liquids on to aircraft that led to travel chaos.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... n-911.html
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by hulaku »

Islamic extremist guilty of airline bomb plot

Posting in full
ISLAMIC extremist Abdulla Ahmed Ali was today found guilty of conspiring to murder thousands in an unprecedented airline bomb plot.The 28-year-old was the leader of an east London al Qaida-inspired terror cell, a Woolwich Crown Court jury found.

He planned to detonate home-made liquid bombs in suicide attacks on transatlantic aircraft bound for major north American cities.

Ali was responsible for the most complex and daring British-based terrorist conspiracy in modern times.

With thousands killed in the air and on the ground, the explosions would have exceeded the carnage of the September 11 attacks.

Counter terrorist police, the security services and prosecutors spent more than £35 million foiling the plot and bringing Ali to justice.

The arrest of the gang in August 2006 sparked tight restrictions on carrying liquids on to aircraft that led to travel chaos.

The guilty verdict will come as an enormous relief for Government ministers who endured heavy criticism for introducing the draconian luggage restrictions.

It will also be seen as a vindication of the decision to retry Ali after he was found guilty of conspiracy to cause explosions last September. The previous jury failed to reach verdicts on the airline plot.

British-born Ali, of Walthamstow, was inspired by the July 7 bombers and Osama bin Laden and considered taking his baby son on his suicide mission.

He planned to smuggle home-made bombs disguised as soft drinks on to passenger jets run by United Airlines, American Airlines and Air Canada.

The hydrogen peroxide devices would have been assembled and detonated in mid-air by a team of suicide bombers.

Ali singled out seven flights to San Francisco, Toronto, Montreal, Washington, New York and Chicago that departed within two-and-a-half hours of each other.

Authorities on both sides of the Atlantic would have been left powerless to stop the destruction once the first bomb exploded.

Police said the plot was drawn up in Pakistan with detailed instructions passed to Ali during frequent trips to its lawless border with Afghanistan.

They believe a mystery al Qaida bombmaker was responsible for the ingenious liquid bomb design, concealed within 500ml Oasis or Lucozade bottles.

Surveillance teams watched Ali on his return to Britain as he assembled his terror cell, gathered materials and identified targets.

Undercover officers looked on as the unemployed former shop worker used cash to purchase a £138,000 second-floor flat in Forest Road, Walthamstow.

They planted a secret bug that revealed it was converted into a bomb factory where Ali met others to construct the bombs.

The flat was also used as a location for Ali and others to record suicide videos threatening further attacks against the West.

In his video Ali warned the British public to expect "floods of martyr operations" that would leave body parts scattered in the streets.

Ali was watched as he used public phone boxes, mobile phones and anonymous email accounts to keep in touch with mystery terrorist controllers in Pakistan.

On his arrest, he was found to be carrying an elaborate and damning blueprint for the plot scrawled in a battered pocket diary.

Airport security arrangements and details of flights, including the seven highlighted services, were discovered on a computer memory stick in another pocket.

Along with Ali, Assad Sarwar 29, of Walton Drive, High Wycombe, and Tanvir Hussain, 28, of Nottingham Road, Leyton, were also found guilty of involvement in the airline bomb plot today.

But Ibrahim Savant, 28, of Denver Road, Stoke Newington, Arafat Waheed Khan, 28, of Farnan Avenue, Walthamstow, Waheed Zaman, 25, of Queen's Road, Walthamstow, were found not guilty of the airliner plot.

The jury failed to reach a verdict on Umar Islam, 31, of Bushey Road, Plaistow, of the airliner plot.

But Islam was convicted of conspiracy to murder.

Donald Stewart-Whyte, 23, of Hepplewhite Close, High Wycombe, was found not guilty of both conspiracy to murder on aircraft and conspiracy to murder.

Ali, Sarwar and Hussain were convicted of conspiracy to murder in the first trial but retried, along with the five other men, for the airliner plot after the first jury failed to reach verdicts on those charges.
http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Isl ... 5624412.jp
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by sanjaykumar »

Giving evidence to the jury in his own defence, Sarwar told them of a method he had learned to calculate the strength of hydrogen peroxide. He told jurors that his tutor in Pakistan, a Kashmiri freedom fighter called Jameel Shah, had given him advice on handling HMTD and how to boil down the volatile hydrogen peroxide without injuring himself.

"You tend to place it in a large metal pot over a camping stove, keeping it at a low temperature," he said. "You need to monitor it constantly because if it gets too hot, it could catch fire.

"That's how they do it in Pakistan, in the outdoors."

Both Sarwar and Ali were in Pakistan for what police believe was terrorist training at the same time as members of the cell that attacked London on 7 July 2005. Ali was still Pakistan both on the day of attacks on the capital's transport system that killed 52 innocent people and at the time of the attempted attacks of 21 July.



http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/se ... stan-links
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by sanjaykumar »

In case it was missed, Islamic killers against India are freedom fighters but against England (the fount of civilisation) are terrorists.
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by VijayKumarSinha »

I didn't find anything about this recent judgement on this 'Toronto-18' terrorist in BR forums, therefore, I am posting this news link here:

I am absolutely certain that Jingos would be hugely SHOCKED :shock: to know that he is of Pakistani origin so once again, yeh apne khandaan aur apne mulk ka naam roshan kar raha hai.

Also, The Globe And Mail is a prominent Canadian newspaper based in Toronto.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/nat ... le1274654/
Colin Freeze

Brampton, Ont. — From Friday's Globe and Mail
Last updated on Thursday, Sep. 03, 2009 11:21PM EDT


.A terrorist bomb-plotter has received a 14-year sentence for his role in a scheme to blow up government targets in downtown Toronto.

Saad Khalid, 23, who pleaded guilty in the so-called Toronto 18 conspiracy, was credited with seven years for time in pretrial custody. He will spend a maximum of seven more years in prison. He can apply for parole in two years four months.

Thursday's ruling may bode ill for accused in the case who have yet to face trial. Mr. Justice Bruce Durno said that even taking into account many mitigating factors – Mr. Khalid's youth, sincere regret, guilty plea and non-central role – Canadian courts have an obligation to punish terrorism harshly.


“ To be even a bit player in a serious and significant plan is a serious and significant infraction ”
— Russell Silverstein, Saad Khalid's lawyer


“Canadian society relies on ballots and not bullets or bombs to change policy,” Judge Durno said in a 48-page decision he read aloud in court.

“ … Terrorist offences are the most vile form of criminal conduct.”

Mr. Khalid was close shaven Thursday and wore a black blazer, a tie and jeans to the courtroom, which was packed with his family, journalists, counterterrorism operatives, government lawyers and at least one police agent.

The young man buried his head in his hands after hearing his sentence, but his lawyer later said his client was actually pleased.

“He's perfectly happy,” Russell Silverstein said outside court. “ ... It could have been a lot worse.”

“To be even a bit player in a serious and significant plan is a serious and significant infraction,” he added.


Statement of facts in Khalid case
The Crown's blow-by-blow of the Toronto 18 plot, laid out in a statement of uncontested facts filed this summer in the case of R. v. Saad Khalid, solely for the purpose of his trial

View

.
On June 2, 2006, Mr. Khalid was caught in a police sting. Hundreds of police swept across Toronto to round up more than a dozen Muslim youth. Mr. Khalid was caught unloading boxes marked “ammonium nitrate” from the back of a truck.

He admitted he knew the fertilizer was intended to be used to construct truck bombs to be detonated in the downtown core. He pleaded guilty in May.

The Crown alleges that only two suspects were privy to the full details of the bomb plot, and that their targets were the Toronto Stock Exchange, the Toronto headquarters of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and an unspecified military base along Highway 401.

“Saad Khalid was not the prime mover in the plot,” Judge Durno said, describing the young man as an accomplice kept ignorant of the fine points. Even so, the accused “knew serious bodily harm or death were likely” and “was not just a gopher” who unloaded fertilizer.

Mr. Khalid not only knew the gist of a overarching bomb plot but also bought electrical equipment, rented storage units, and even recruited an accomplice.

“I acknowledge that I made a huge mistake, and not a day passes by that I am not filled with regret for my role in this despicable crime,” Mr. Khalid told the court during a sentencing hearing last week.

He described himself as university student from a good home, but said he fell in with more radical Muslims because of a “disagreement on the issue of Canadian foreign policy, specifically Canada's involvement in Afghanistan.”

Mr. Khalid's Pakistani family raised him in Saudi Arabia, then moved Canada. The death of Mr. Khalid's mother when he was 15 left him “vulnerable” to terrorist recruiters, the judge said. He was a teenager at the time of his arrest.

Mr. Khalid spent three years in jail, some of it in segregation, before deciding to plead guilty.

Judge Durno accepted Mr. Khalid's remorse, but only to a point.

He agreed the young man had truly changed in prison, and that he likely would pose no threat to society upon release.

Still, terrorist crimes need to be punished severely as “they attack the very fabric of Canada's democratic ideals,” Judge Durno ruled.

Only a handful of cases have been prosecuted under Canada's Anti-Terrorism Act, a controversial piece of legislation passed by Parliament in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.

One of Mr. Khalid's co-accused, a teenager who was a peripheral member of the group, has already been found guilty of participating in a terrorist group through attending a training camp.

Charges against six of the original Toronto 18 suspects were stayed. Cases involving Mr. Khalid's nine co-accused are expected to start by the beginning of next year.

Publication bans shield the identities of the co-accused.

A 37-page statement of the Crown's case, uncontested by Mr. Khalid, is posted on globeandmail.com in an edited form to conform with the publication ban.

The document describes how the bomb-plot suspects were followed, wiretapped and infiltrated by police agents before the 2006 roundup. The document “provides a chilling and terrifying glimpse of what was likely to occur,” Judge Durno ruled.
arun
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

VijayKumarSinha wrote:I didn't find anything about this recent judgement on this 'Toronto-18' terrorist in BR forums, therefore, I am posting this news link here:
It has been posted here on this thread before :wink: .

An article on the sentencing of Saad Khalid, member of the Toronto 18, has been posted on this very page.

See Sept. 4th post on this page.
Philip
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by Philip »

The Terror plot,hatched in Pak to kill "10,000" people,a far greater attack than 9/11! Go on western "Christian" nations,keep selling your lethal arms to Pak and watch the awful consequences.

Airline terror trial: The bomb plot to kill 10,000 people
Three British Muslims have been convicted of planning a series of co-ordinated suicide bomb attacks on transatlantic airliners, which could have killed up to 10,000 people.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/?source=refresh
By Duncan Gardham, Security Correspondent
Published: 11:00PM BST 07 Sep 2009

Abdullah Ahmed, Tanvir Hussain, Assad Sarwar Photo: PA

The al-Qaeda cell plotted to cause mass murder by detonating home-made liquid explosives on board at least seven passenger flights bound for the US and Canada. The plot had the potential to be three times as deadly as the 9/11 attacks of 2001.

The convictions followed Britain’s largest counter-terrorism operation and two criminal trials which, in total, cost an estimated £60million.

Three guilty of airline bomb plot bigger than 9/11 All three men convicted on Monday had been found guilty at an earlier trial last year of conspiracy to murder, but prosecutors said it was vital to secure a conviction on another charge of conspiring to blow up the aircraft in order to prove that the threat to air traffic was genuine.

Their arrests in 2006 resulted in immediate worldwide restrictions on passengers carrying liquids in their hand luggage. A ban on containers larger than 100ml is still in place.

When the men were arrested, one of the plotters, Abdulla Ahmed Ali, had a computer memory stick in his pocket which highlighted seven flights from London to six cities in the US and Canada, each carrying between 241 and 286 passengers and crew.

The flights all departed within 2 hours and 35 minutes of each other, to Chicago, Montreal, Toronto, San Francisco, Washington and New York and police believed there would have been no chance of stopping the attacks once all the aircraft were in the air.

Investigators also believed that the men were considering an even larger attack after they were bugged discussing plans for as many as 18 suicide bombers, which could have led to 5,000 deaths in the air and as many again on the ground.

The case has also led to a review of visa restrictions on Britons travelling to the US, and yesterday’s convictions, which came during the diplomatic row over the release of the Lockerbie bomber, focused yet more attention in the US on how Britain deals with terrorists. Ali, 28, Assad Sarwar, 29, and Tanvir Hussain, 28, were found guilty of conspiracy to murder by detonating bombs on airliners at the end of a six-month trial at Woolwich Crown Court in London. A jury at their previous trial had failed to reach verdicts on whether such a plot existed.

The men made suicide videos, and they were bugged by MI5 which revealed how they discussed details of the plot. They were also filmed in their bomb factory in east London where they had practised making bombs from household goods, including soft drink bottles, batteries and disposable cameras.

But new evidence was put to the jury at their retrial in the form of a series of emails in which the men used code words to discuss their plans with an al-Qaeda fixer based in Pakistan. The emails and conversations suggested that the plot was in its final stages, possibly days away from execution.

MI5 believed the plotters were linked to the highest levels of al-Qaeda through a British man called Rashid Rauf, who was also involved in the build-up to the attacks of July 7 and July 21 2005. Rauf was reported to have been killed by an unmanned drone in Pakistan last year but senior security sources have told The Daily Telegraph that he may have survived.

The jury found a fourth man, an Islamic convert called Umar Islam, 31, guilty of conspiracy to murder, but could not decide if he knew about the plan to blow up aircraft.

Three others, Ibrahim Savant, 28, Arafat Waheed Khan, 28, and Waheed Zaman, 25, were acquitted of the airlines plot but the jury could not decide if they were guilty of conspiracy to murder.

The Crown Prosecution Service must now decide whether those men, who were also tried last year, should face a third trial.

An eighth man, Donald Stewart-Whyte, 23, was acquitted of all charges.

Six of the eight men, most of whom were British-born and university educated and three of whom were converts, had recorded fiery videos that blamed the West for the slaughter of Muslims and promised floods of martyr operations in return.

Security sources have called the investigation the most significant since the Second World War.

Ali, from Walthamstow, east London, was described in court as the leader who was able to identify in other Muslims a kindred spirit or vulnerability while Sarwar, from High Wycombe, Bucks, was the bomb-maker and Hussain the quartermaster, helped to prepare the bombs.

The others were described as foot soldiers ready to respond when the time was right.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner John McDowall, head of the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, said the men intended to commit “mass murder on an unimaginable scale”.

“If these terrorists had been successful, many people would have lost their lives. Many more would have died if they had chosen to detonate their bombs over land,” he said. “But their plans were thwarted by the police and security services.”
PS:Why are the British keeping "mum" on the ethnic origin of the airline bomb plotters? Did these beardies fall from firdaus?
sanjaykumar
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by sanjaykumar »

Obviously from the country of South Asia.
arun
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Re: Pakistani Role in Global Terrorism

Post by arun »

Headline in an Australian newspaper to be complimented for capturing the essence of global terrorism, namely links to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

No pussy footing around the fact that the UK Aircraft bombing plot, along with very many other terrorist plots around the world, has a link to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan by obfuscating those links with misleading references to Asian’s, South Asian’s or Muslim’s:
Pakistan link in UK airline bomb plot

20:39 AEST Tue Sep 8 2009

By Guy Jackson

A plot to blow up at least seven transatlantic aircraft using liquid bombs was masterminded from Pakistan, intelligence services said as more details emerged on Tuesday of the complex planned attacks.

British police were forced to go to extraordinary lengths to build their case against the men who prosecutors say were hoping to cause more deaths than the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The trial, which ended in the convictions of three British Muslims on Monday, was peppered with evidence that members of the London-based gang were frequently in communication with figures linked to al-Qaeda in Pakistan.

"In terms of al-Qaeda involvement, there is a large part of this plot that has been thought through or invented in Pakistan," one senior counter-terrorism source said after the trial.

The jury were shown intercepted emails in which Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 28, Tanvir Hussain, 28, and Assad Sarwar, 29, asked Pakistani contacts for advice on building bombs in drinks bottles to detonate on flights over the Atlantic........................

Reports said the men's main point of contact was Rashid Rauf, a British-born Muslim who fled to the tribal areas of Pakistan in 2002 after the murder of his uncle and developed strong links with al-Qaeda.

Intelligence services also reportedly believe he was a key contact of the gang in the 2005 bombings of the London transport system which killed 52 people.

The trial heard that Ali had already been identified as a dangerous radical when he was stopped at London's Heathrow Airport in June 2006 on his return from a trip to Pakistan.

Customs officials found a large quantity of batteries and a high-sugar powdered drink in his luggage. Both are ingredients for homemade bombs.

He was not arrested but police broke into his flat one night and installed hidden cameras and microphones.

Over the next few months, they watched as Ali and his colleagues experimented with injecting drinks bottles with a mixture of the explosive liquid hydrogen peroxide which they planned to carry on to flights and detonate with a bulb filament. ..................

Fearful that the gang were close to carrying out the plane bombings, the US authorities put pressure on Pakistan to arrest Rauf in 2006. .....................

Rauf escaped from police custody in Pakistan in mysterious circumstances in 2007.....................

Nine MSN
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