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THE STANS
US missile likely kills top Pakistani Al-Qaeda cadre
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) June 4, 2011

His killing will likely be seen as a huge achievement in the United States after Navy SEALs killed bin Laden in Pakistan, itself feted as the greatest psychological victory over Al-Qaeda since the September 11, 2001 attacks.

A US drone strike likely killed Pakistan's Al-Qaeda commander Ilyas Kashmiri, in what would deal a major blow to the terror network a month after Osama bin Laden's death, officials said Saturday.

The 47-year-old is one of the most feared operational commanders of the network that bin Laden founded and has been blamed for a string of high-profile attacks on Western targets, as well as in India and Pakistan.

He has a maximum US bounty of $5 million on his head and Pakistani officials said he was the target of a US drone strike in South Waziristan on the Afghan border on Friday, in which nine members of his banned group died.

His killing will likely be seen as a huge achievement in the United States after Navy SEALs killed bin Laden in Pakistan, itself feted as the greatest psychological victory over Al-Qaeda since the September 11, 2001 attacks.

A senior Pakistani security official said there were "strong indications" that Kashmiri had been killed, but that it was impossible to provide 100 percent confirmation so soon after the attack without access to the bodies.

The corpses were burnt beyond recognition and swiftly buried. Militants barred access to the site of the attack in Ghwakhwa in South Waziristan, a militant stronghold despite a sweeping Pakistani offensive in 2009.

"There are strong indications that he has been killed in the strike, but we cannot confirm it and we are still trying to confirm it," the senior Pakistani official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Pakistani officials said Kashmiri had been in the area for several days and that all those killed were from his Harakat-ul-Jihad al-Islam (HuJI) group.

Senior security officials explained that confirmation would be difficult unless Kashmiri's family or his group officially announced his death.

"According to our reports, he was present here in this area. We have information that he has been killed but no one has seen his dead body," local administration official Naimat Ullah told AFP.

Another security official said two close associates who usually travel with Kashmiri, Amir Hamza and Mohammad Usman, were killed.

Kashmiri is understood to have been in the area to discuss strategy should the Pakistani military launch an offensive in North Waziristan, as has been predicted as part of the fallout surrounding bin Laden's killing.

There was no word on the death from the US side either. A senior US defence official could not confirm Kashmiri had been killed, while the White House refused to comment.

Anti-terrorism experts have long described Kashmiri as one of Al-Qaeda's main operational commanders. He reportedly escaped a US drone strike in North Waziristan in late 2009.

He has been blamed for multiple attacks in Pakistan, including the two most humiliating assaults on the military -- a May 22 siege on a naval air base in Karachi and in October 2009 on the national army headquarters in Rawalpindi.

Counter-terrorism officials believe he was the main coordinator of a terror plot targeting Britain, France, Germany and the United States, which was apparently in the early stages when detected by intelligence agencies in 2010.

Kashmiri's family in the village of Thathi in Bhimber district, more than nine hours' drive from Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-administered Kashmir, said Saturday they had not been in contact with him for six years.

"We came to know through TV. We don't know whether he is dead or alive," his elder brother Mohammad Asghar told AFP by telephone.

A spokesman for Pakistan's umbrella Taliban faction said Kashmiri was "alive and safe", and had not been present at the time of the strike.

In January 2010, a US federal grand jury indicted him for terrorism-related offences in connection with a plot to attack Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten following uproar over blasphemous cartoons.

Listed on US and UN terror blacklists, Kashmiri was born in 1964 in Azad Kashmir. He was about six feet tall and weighed about 200 pounds (91 kilograms).

He had black hair and has been seen with a thick beard dyed white, black, or red at various times.

He had lost sight in one eye, and often wore aviator-style sunglasses. He was missing an index finger, according to the State Department.

Friday's drone attack was the ninth reported in Pakistan's border area with Afghanistan since US commandos killed bin Laden in the garrison city of Abbottabad on May 2.




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'Dangerous' to abandon Pakistan: US military chief
Washington (AFP) June 2, 2011 - The head of the US military said Thursday that Pakistan needs time to come to terms with the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, warning it would be a dangerous mistake to abandon the war partnership.

Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged setbacks in cooperation with Pakistan, which has ordered out much of the US military force that was training forces in counter-insurgency.

But Mullen, in a breakfast meeting with reporters, said Pakistan has been going through "a great deal of introspection" since US special forces killed the world's most wanted man, Osama bin Laden, in a secret raid near the country's top military academy.

"I think we need to give them a little time and space to do that. And that makes all the sense in the world to me," said Mullen, who visited Pakistan last week with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

"I think the worst thing we could do would be cut them off."

Mullen feared a repeat of the instability in the 1990s, when the United States distanced itself from the region after US- and Pakistani-backed Islamic guerrillas drove out Soviet forces in Afghanistan.

If the United States again scaled back involvement, "10 years from now, 20 years from now, we go back and it's much more intense and it's much more dangerous," he told reporters in Washington.

"We're just not living in a world where we can afford to be unengaged in a place like this."

A number of US lawmakers have called into question the billions of dollars in assistance to Pakistan, accusing the country of playing a double game of seeking foreign money while keeping ties to extremists.

Mullen, who has frequently met with his Pakistani counterpart General Ashfaq Kayani in hopes of building a personal rapport, repeated that he did not believe senior Pakistanis knew that bin Laden was living in Abbottabad.

But he conceded that Pakistan has forced "a very significant cutback" in the number of US forces to train its military.

The Pakistani military needed to complete its internal debate on the relationship with the United States "before we get back to a point where we're doing any kind of significant training," said Mullen, who steps down in September.

"It's a country whose sovereignty is precious to them, as ours is to us. We have to remember that."





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THE STANS
Gates in Afghanistan on farewell visit
Kabul (AFP) June 4, 2011
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates flew into Kabul on Saturday for a farewell visit to Afghanistan after four and a half years heading up the war effort at the Pentagon. Gates is expected to visit some of the roughly 90,000 US troops serving in Afghanistan as part of a 130,000-strong US-led international force trying to stabilise the country and reverse a bloody Taliban insurgency. The vi ... read more


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