Nation/World
Published Sun, Dec 13, 2009 02:00 AM
Modified Sat, Dec 12, 2009 08:27 PM

Pakistan's prime minister hints at a new offensive

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- The Associated Press

ISLAMABAD -- Pakistan may launch a new military offensive in a district near the Afghan border where insurgent leaders are thought to have fled to escape a government onslaught against the Taliban in nearby South Waziristan, the prime minister said Saturday.

The suggestion of another anti-Taliban operation illustrates the intractable challenge facing this nuclear-armed U.S. ally: Even as it squeezes one extremist stronghold in its northwest, insurgents simply regroup in other parts of the rugged, loosely governed region.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the next front may be Orakzai, a district north of South Waziristan in Pakistan's lawless tribal belt. The government has launched a spate of airstrikes there, and the U.N. said Friday that about 40,000 people have already fled.

"The operation in South Waziristan is over. Now there are talks about Orakzai," Gilani told reporters in televised remarks from the eastern city of Lahore.

Gilani later backed down from some of those comments, saying that "our military operation in South Waziristan is continuing" and stressing that "there have been lots of successes" in the fight there. He did not give a timeframe for when the South Waziristan operation would end and one in Orakzai might begin.

Although Pakistan has had a civilian government for nearly two years after several years of army rule, the military remains a powerful force that is likely to have the last say on where it will send its resources and when it will do so.

Spokesmen for the military did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the prime minister's comments. In the past, military officials have been hesitant to put a timeframe on how long troops will stay in South Waziristan even after major operations end.

U.S. pressure

The U.S. has long pushed Pakistan to retake spots along the border that have become safe havens for militants. That pressure is likely to intensify now that 30,000 additional U.S. troops are heading to Afghanistan to take on a resurgent Afghan Taliban.

To the United States' chagrin, Pakistan has focused on groups such as the Pakistani Taliban, which threaten its citizens, rather than militants who attack U.S. and NATO forces across the border. Gilani did not indicate a shift in that strategy Saturday.

Mahmood Shah, a former security chief for Pakistan's tribal regions who has deep contacts in the military, said that Pakistan has succeeded in South Waziristan in that it has destroyed much of the Pakistani Taliban's physical infrastructure, but that it could not ignore Orakzai.

"The Pakistani Taliban train suicide bombers in Orakzai," he added. "This is the right decision; this is the right move."

Pakistan's army launched its ground offensive in South Waziristan in mid-October, saying it was determined to eliminate its top internal enemy in its most forbidding stronghold. The army said it sent about 30,000 troops to take on about 10,000 militants, including many foreign fighters.

The operation has prompted a slew of retaliatory bombings nationwide that have killed more than 500 people. The attacks have continued even as battlefield activities have slowed down.

On Wednesday, the army reported it had killed 589 militants so far, losing 79 soldiers. But none of the top Pakistani Taliban leaders are known to have been captured or killed.

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The tribal belt

Pakistan's tribal belt is largely underdeveloped, and its border with Afghanistan is porous. The areas have long had a semiautonomous legal status, meaning the federal government has little influence. Some areas are thought to have become virtual Taliban mini-states.

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