Afghanistan | ||
Osama's top aide Nasir al-Wahishi killed in drone strike | ||
2011-01-03 | ||
Nasir al-Wahishi, a top al-Qaeda commander, who reportedly served as an aide of Osama bin Laden, was killed in a US drone attack in northwestern Pakistan on December 28.
Wahishi was killed when two missiles were fired on a militant camp at the Ghulam Khan sub-district of North Waziristan, Kyodo reported quoting Pakistani officials. Al-Wahishi is among four top al-Qaeda commanders killed in American drone strikes which assumed unprecedented proportions in 2010. Those killed by US missiles include al-Qaeda number 3 Abu Mustafa al-Yazid, Sheikh Fateh al-Misri, al-Qaeda's operations head for Afghanistan and Pakistan, who replaced Yazid. The two other commanders killed were Abdallah Umar al-Qurayshi, who co-ordinated Osama bin Laden's Arabs in Afghanistan, and explosives expert Abu Atta al-Kuwaiti. The drones have also felled top Taliban commanders including its chief Baitullah Mehsud and the trainer of suicide bombers Qari Hussain Mehsud. The officials claimed Wahishi had served as secretary of bin Laden until 2003. He was arrested in Iran and extradited to Yemen in 2003. The al-Qaeda commander was among 23 Yemeni captives who made a dramatic escape from maximum security prison in Sana'a, in 2006 and was at large since then. The Yemeni figures in the Interpol's Orange Notice as well as US State Departments and UN Sanctions List.
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Suicide bombers trainer Qari Hussain killed | ||||
2010-10-17 | ||||
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According to one report, Qari Hussain was injured in the attack on a house in Mir Ali in which eight foreigners, including German militants, were killed. According to intelligence sources, those killed included Qari Hussain, known as Ustad-i-Fedayeen (teacher of suicide bomber), and his two guards. They said that Qari Hussain, who was sleeping in the house at the time, was severely injured and taken to Miram Shah where doctors amputated one of his legs and he died there.
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India-Pakistan |
Death toll rises to 35 |
2010-09-05 |
THE corpse count from a Pakistani Taliban suicide kaboom on a Shiite Muslim procession rose to 65 on Saturday as critically wounded people breathed their last in hospitals, while a suspected US missile strike waxed seven hard boyz in a chronically unhinged tribal area. About 150 people were maimed and some remained at death's door after the kaboom on Friday in the south-western city of Quetta, police official Mohammed Sultan said. The attack was the second in a week against Shiites for which the Pakistani Taliban claimed credit. A triple suicide kaboom on Wednesday killed 35 people at a Shiite hoedown in the eastern city of Lahore. 'Our war is against American and Pak security forces, but Shiites are also our target because they, too, are our enemies,' Pak Taleban commander Qari Hussain Mehsud told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named. He said he was proud -- proud, y'understand? -- the US had added the Pak Taliban to its international terrorism blacklist on Wednesday "We been tryin' to get out of the bush leagues for year, and now we finally made it!" and threatened attacks in coming days in the US and Europe. 'We will prove that we have ability to strike right in their countries,' Mehsud said. Shiite leaders blamed the government, and with good reason, for failing to protect them and called a general strike in Quetta, where all schools were closed for a day of mourning. Shiites make up an estimated 20 per cent of the population in the mostly Sunni Mohammedan country, although figures are imprecise and disputed. |
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India-Pakistan |
Pak Taliban threatens to hit US, Europe |
2010-09-03 |
Looks like more OT for the Drone Boys... Pakistan's Taliban on Friday threatened to launch attacks in the United States and Europe "very soon" and dismissed a move by Washington to add the group to its terrorism blacklist. "The U.S. listing of TTP as a terrorist organisation is a sign of them bring scared. It shows the U.S. and its allies are scared of us," Qari Hussain Mehsud, a senior TTP leader, told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. |
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India-Pakistan | |
Pakistani Taliban Boasts Creating Problems for Local Militants | |
2010-05-16 | |
The failed May 1 Times Square car bombing is rattling the Waziristan tribal badlands of Pakistan. Tribal chieftains and militant leaders are furious with Pakistani Taliban commander Hakimullah Mehsud and his deputy, master bomb maker Qari Hussain Mehsud, for making Internet videos boasting of responsibility for the attempt and promising more attacks soon. America's Predator drones have been working overtime ever since, killing and wounding dozens of suspected militants. But beyond that, Waziris fear action from Pakistan's military, which was already under extreme U.S. pressure to launch an offensive against militants in the region. Hoping to lower that risk, tribal and militant heads formed a jirga--a tribal delegation--of roughly a dozen representatives to speak to Hakimullah. According to a Pakistani tribal commander, the jirga met twice with Qari Hussain near the North Waziristan town of Mir Ali. Representatives from some of the region's most important insurgent groups, including the Afghan Taliban, were there: Afghan leader Sirajuddin Haqqani sent a delegate, the tribal commander says, and a South Waziristan subcommander, asking not to be named for safety's sake, confirms that his leader, Mullah Nazir, was represented as well. According to tribal journalist Sailab Mehsud, the jirga was led by Mir Ali-based insurgent heads Hafiz Gul Bahadur and Maulvi Sadiq Noor. All three Waziristan chiefs have ceasefire deals with Islamabad, even though they're at war against U.S. troops across the border in Afghanistan. The talks were preceded by a lavish tribal banquet, but they ended badly, says the anonymous commander, who asks not to be named for security reasons. "We are already at war," the tribal commander quotes him as telling the jirga, "and our leader has been killed"--a reference to Hakimullah's predecessor, Baitullah Mehsud, who died in a drone attack last August. "Why should we be on the defensive against these infidels? They are firing at us, so we should be firing back at them everywhere." The jirga urged him to be more cautious, but it was no use. "If you put your hand in a snake's hole, you'll get bitten," a tribal elder said. "If they [the Americans] are snakes, then we are snakes too," Qari Hussain snarled back.
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India-Pakistan | |||
Today's Fizzle Bomber Round-up | |||
2010-05-06 | |||
NY bomb suspect 'met Taliban explosives expert' (AKI) - Pakistani investigators believe Faisal Shahzad learned about explosives from a senior Taliban expert at a training camp in Pakistan. Mohammad Rehan, one of eight people arrested in Pakistan late Tuesday, is accused of introducing Shahzad to militants gave him lessons in handling explosives. According to security sources Rehan was arrested in the Pakistani southern port city of Karachi. He is suspected of taking Shahzad to the northern city of Peshawar and then to North Waziristan, which is now a Taliban stronghold. Officials believe Shahzad, a Karachi-born Pushtun, had no relationship with any militant organisation until Rehan put him in contact with Qari Hussain Mehsud, the chief of the Pakistani Taliban's suicide squad and explosives expert. Mehsud is believed to have provided training to Shahzad on improvised explosives on a recent visit to Pakistan. Officials from Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence have detained Tauseef Ahmed, a friend with whom Shahzad stayed on his last trip to Karachi, and Shahzad's father-in-law Iftikhar Mian. Father of fizzle bomber questioned (AKI) - US and Pakistani investigators are reported to have interviewed the father of Times Square car bombing suspect and four others linked to a notorious Pakistani militant group, intelligence officials told the American cable network, CNN, on Thursday. Bahar Ulhaq, a retired senior Pakistani air force officer, was questioned by senior investigators in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar. He is the father of Faisal Shahzad, the 30-year-old Pakistani-American suspect, in the failed car bomb attack in Times Square on Saturday. Ulhaq, who lives in the Peshawar suburb of Hayatabad, was not detained or arrested, a source told CNN. Another official said the team was questioning four men suspected of having links to the banned militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed. Fizzle Bomber's Ties to Pakistan Taliban Probed
If the links are verified, it would mark a stark shift in how the Pakistan Talibanan affiliate of the Taliban in Afghanistanand related jihadist groups in Pakistan pursue their goals. Until now, they have focused on attacks within Pakistan and in India, not the U.S.
Pakistani investigators also are probing Mr. Shahzad's possible connections with Jaish-e-Muhammad, an outlawed Islamist militant group, after the arrest Tuesday of Tohaid Ahmed and Mohammed Rehan in Karachi. A senior Pakistani government official said the two men were believed to have links to Jaish. Mr. Ahmed had been in email contact with Mr. Shahzad; Mr. Rehan took Mr. Shahzad to South Waziristan, the official said. There, Mr. Shahzad received training in explosives in a camp run by Qari Hussain, the official said. Mr. Hussain is a senior commander with Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, the Pakistan Taliban's formal name, and trains suicide bombers, the official said. Mr. Hussain is also a cousin of Hakimullah Mehsud, the Pakistan Taliban's chief. Mr. Shahzad has admitted to investigators that he received training from militants in Waziristan, U.S. officials said. After several trips to Pakistan, Mr. Shahzad came back to the U.S. with significant amounts of declared cash, law enforcement officials said. "That's not that unusual, for immigrants to move with lots of cash," he said. "There just wasn't anything in his [immigration file] that raised any red flags." U.S. and British intelligence officials estimate that about 100 Westerners have in recent years taken advantage of lengthy trips to the region to complete training at jihadi camps in Pakistan and returned to their home countries, according to Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at Georgetown University. That figure includes Najibullah Zazi and David Headley, who recently pleaded guilty in the U.S. in terror cases, and numerous British terror plotters. It also includes Mr. Shahzad, who told border officials in February 2010, upon returning to New York City, that he had been visiting his ailing father in Pakistan. The size of American and British populations of Pakistani descent is so large that it makes detailed scrutiny of travel overseas difficult. There are more than 200,000 Pakistani-Americans, and more than 400,000 Britons of Pakistani heritage. Other countries with smaller diasporas in the U.S. do draw close attention. Americans traveling to Yemen, a hotbed of al Qaeda activities, receive close scrutiny upon return. Last year, the Federal Bureau of Investigation launched a program out of its Minneapolis field office to keep an eye on American Somalis traveling to their homeland. Before Mr. Shahzad's capture, U.S. officials gave little credence to the claims of Taliban involvement, but investigators are now probing the possible connection. "Pakistani Taliban links to the Times Square incident are entirely plausible," said one U.S. counterterrorism official. Family relative Kifayat Ali Khan, a lawyer, said Mr. Shahzad had spent little time in the village, because he studied in various educational institutions, including a Pakistan Air Force college in Peshawar, the main city in northwestern Pakistan.
One thing that puzzles U.S. terrorism experts: the lack of sophistication in the planned attack, considering Mr. Hussain's reputed expertise and emphasis on suicide bombs. One theory is that Mr. Shahzad may not have been fully embraced or fully trained by the Pakistan Taliban, who may have been suspicious of a U.S. citizen seeking training. "They may not have shown him all their tricks, but just set him loose. If he pulls off an attack, great, they got a 'freebie,' and if not, no harm done," said Brian Fishman, a terrorism analyst at the New America Foundation in Washington, a think tank that focuses on security issues. Others speculated that the attempted attack might have been a personal play by Mr. Mehsud, the Taliban leader, to avenge U.S. drone strikes, bolster his own embattled leadership credentials and regain popular support for a terrorist group that has angered many Pakistanis with its urban attacks. "The one thing that does get you support in Pakistan is action against America and American policiesthat would be a boost for his standing," said Richard Barrett, coordinator of the United Nations al Qaeda/Taliban Monitoring Team. | |||
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Home Front: WoT | |||
Times Square bomb round-up | |||
2010-05-03 | |||
The Middle East Media Research Institute first reported the discovery of an online video claiming responsibility for the attempted car bombing in Times Square. The video shows a montage while an unseen person speaks in Urdu. The speaker is allegedly Qari Hussain Mehsud, a spokesman for the Pakistan Taliban, formally known as the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan. The video does not specifically refer to the Times Square incident, describing it only as "this attack." Marc Sageman, a terrorism expert and former Central Intelligence Agency officer in Pakistan, said the Pakistan Taliban has a history of claiming responsibility for events they had nothing to do with. He said the group falsely claimed credit for a series of blackouts that hit the northeast several years ago and for a mass shooting in upstate New York last year. Over the past year, on at least eight different occasions, people linked to radical Islamic thought attempted to carry out or carried out attacks on targets inside the U.S. That includes the failed Christmas Day bombing on board a Detroit-bound airliner, the shooting rampage at Ft. Hood in Texas, three separate bomb plots foiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation last September, and a handful of earlier plots broken up last spring and summer. Investigators said that the vehicle's Connecticut license plates didn't match the make of the car. The license plate's last known location was Kramer's Used Auto Parts in Stratford, Conn., according to a law enforcement official familiar with the investigation. No one answered the phone there Sunday.
F.B.I. agents and detectives had identified and were seeking to interview the owner of the Pathfinder, which was traced to Connecticut. The owner's name was not made public. The license plate on the S.U.V. was connected to a different vehicle that was awaiting repairs in Stratford, Conn., where F.B.I. agents and the local police awoke the owner of the repair shop at 3 a.m. Sunday. The shop owner, Wayne LeBlanc, who runs Kramer's Used Auto Parts, said that the authorities had seized a black Ford F-150 pickup truck. "We're trying to help them identify who took the plates," he said. The S.U.V. had no E-ZPass, but license plate readers and cameras at the area's tollbooths were being checked to determine where the car had entered Manhattan, one official said. Investigators were reviewing similarities between the incident in Times Square and coordinated attacks in the summer of 2007 at a Glasgow airport and a London neighborhood of nightclubs and theaters. Both attacks involved cars containing propane and gasoline that did not explode. Those attacks, the authorities believed, had their roots in Iraq. | |||
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India-Pakistan |
Government offers reward for leads on Taliban chiefs |
2009-11-03 |
![]() The rewards were offered in a black and white government advertisement on the front page of The News daily and flashed on Pakistani television channels overnight. 'Anyone who captures these people dead or alive or provides concrete information, the government will award them a cash reward,' it said. 'The banned Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) terrorists are daily involved in deadly activities and because of their activities innocent Muslims are going to the valley of death,' it added. The largest rewards, of 50 million Pakistan rupees, were offered for TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud, senior leader Wali ur-Rehman Mehsud and Qari Hussain Mehsud, once described as a master trainer of suicide bombers. Eleven other commanders had rewards of 20 million rupees and rewards of 10 million rupees were on offer for five others. |
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India-Pakistan |
Militants recapture strategic town in S Waziristan |
2009-10-22 |
![]() On Monday, the army captured the small town of Kotkai, the birthplace of Pakistani militant chief Hakimullah Mehsud, who has attacked high-profile targets across the country over the past few weeks. But security officials told the Reuters news agency that militants had struck back on Tuesday and retaken Kotkai. However, the Pakistani army still controlls the hills surrounding the town. The town is also the hometown of Qari Hussain Mehsud, a senior militant commander who also trains teenagers to become suicide bombers. Military sources say 90 insurgents and 13 troops have been killed since the long-awaited risky offensive began on Saturday. Nearly 30,000 army soldiers have been deployed to fight against the militants based in the northwestern tribal area of South Waziristan, bordering Afghanistan. A United Nations report said the prospect of the attacks in Waziristan had prompted 80,000 people to flee the area while the raids are expected to make another 170,000 homeless, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the insurgents had long campaigned to destabilize the South Asian country. "We are in a state of war. They will make every effort to destabilize the country." |
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India-Pakistan |
Baitullah Mehsud, LJ join hands in Karachi |
2008-09-04 |
![]() An intelligence agency official told Daily Times that Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud was in contact with various groups in Karachi. The newly established group is presently headed by Raheemullah alias Naeem alias Ali Hassan, son of Wilayat Khan. A resident of Street 3, Shehzad Cinema, Qasba Colony, Orangi Town, Raheemullah, 35, usually wears a Sindhi cap and has been affiliated with the LJ and Harkatul Mujahideen. Raheemullah is accused of carrying out various terrorist acts in Karachi, including the assassination of Shia scholar and MMA Sindh leader Allama Hassan Turabi.The sources said that the law enforcement agencies have arrested several members of Raheemullah's group, however, others are still at large and are now planning to sabotage the network cracking down on terrorists. Daily Times learnt that Raheemullah established contact with Baitullah Mehsud and many Karachi-based activists, including Qari Abid Mehsud, Khalid Dare Walla, Mufti Ilyas, Colonel Tufaan, Qari Hussain Mehsud, Abdul Wahad Mehsud of Kunwari Colony in Metroville and Faizullah Mehsud, a resident of Sohrab Goth, have joined him. |
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