Pakistan military launches ground attack on militants in North Waziristan

Army in N. Waziristan (Credit: independent.co.uk)
Army in N. Waziristan
(Credit: independent.co.uk)

Islamabad, June 30: Pakistan launched a ground offensive against militant strongholds near the Afghan border on Monday after evacuating nearly half a million people from the region, the army said, in the most significant escalation of a two-week long operation to root out insurgents.

The ground offensive is the second phase of a long-awaited operation against militants in the North Waziristan tribal area, a lawless, mountainous stretch of land in northwest Pakistan. The military announced the operation mid-June but has mainly limited its tactics to airstrikes while giving hundreds of thousands of people time to pack up their belongings and leave for safer areas.

The US has long pushed for such an operation to go after militants that use the area as a safe haven from which to attack targets in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

But for years Pakistan has said its forces were too strung out battling militants in other areas of the northwest to go into North Waziristan. The military is also believed to have been reluctant to launch the operation without political support from the civilian government. Until recently the prime minister, Mian Nawaz Sharif, has been pushing for negotiations over military force as a way to end the years of bloodshed caused by militants.

The army began a house-to-house search in Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, the army statement said. It said up to 15 militants were killed in the initial ground advance. The town is also the headquarters for a number of different militant groups such as the Pakistani Taliban. Al-Qaida and the Afghan Taliban also have a presence in North Waziristan.

The operation began days after militants attacked the main airport in the southern port city of Karachi, killing 26 people. Ten attackers died in the five-hour siege that shocked Pakistanis by showing how vulnerable the country’s institutions have become.

The siege of the country’s busiest airport became a turning point in the government’s willingness to negotiate with the militants. A week after the attack, the military announced its troops were starting the North Waziristan operation.

Pakistani forces killed 376 militants during the first 15 days of the offensive, the statement said, adding that 17 soldiers also died. North Waziristan has always been a challenging area for journalists to access but the operation has made it even more difficult to independently verify reports of casualties.

The military said infantry and commandos are leading the ground advance. Three soldiers were wounded in an exchange of fire, the statement said.

Mansur Mahsud, from the Fata research centre, which researches the tribal areas in northwest Pakistan, said they had been receiving reports that many militants had left for neighbouring Afghanistan or the more remote mountainous areas in the northwest after the airstrikes. But he said a ground offensive was still necessary to clear the area.

In the past, critics have accused Pakistan of playing a double game, supporting or tolerating some militants that it sees as useful in maintaining influence in neighbouring Afghanistan, and going after other militants that attack the Pakistani state. The military has said that this operation will pursue everyone equally, but many question how aggressive they will be.

The operation could take three to four months, and it isn’t likely to end militancy across the country immediately, said Mahsud. Militant groups still have a presence in places such as Karachi or Punjab province or other parts of the northwest.

But over time, Mahsud said it will significantly weaken the militants by denying them a place to headquarter their organisations and to train new recruits.

“It cannot end militancy 100% in Pakistan but it can have a significant effect,” he said. “Once this area is cleared the militants are forced to shift to Afghanistan or the mountains.”

About 468,000 people have poured out of North Waziristan, flooding the nearby Pakistani areas of Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan in anticipation of the ground offensive. An additional 95,000 went to Afghanistan, the UN reported.

The Pakistani army has already conducted several military operations in the tribal badlands along the Afghan border, including 2009 offensives in the scenic Swat valley and in South Waziristan, the one-time headquarters of the Pakistani Taliban.

The Pakistani Taliban is a loose network of several local militant groups who want to overthrow the country’s government in a bid to install their own harsh brand of Islamic law. In their decade-old deadly campaign of bombings, shootings and other attacks, they have killed thousands of Pakistanis.

Nawaz Sharif’s government has been trying to negotiate a peace deal with the militants since he took office last summer. The operation has effectively ended prospects of any such move in the near future

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *