Terrorismo en Paquistan

Estudio del fenómeno yihadista en Pakistán, Afganistán, Chechenia, las repúblicas exsoviéticas y las conexiones de sus células en los Balcanes y el Reino Unido.

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varios detenidos tras intentar derribar el avión de Musharraf

Two arrested after "reportedly" failed assassination attempt on Pres.

MIL-2LD PAKISTAN-BLAST
Two arrested after "reportedly" failed assassination attempt on Pres.
Musharraf ISLAMABAD, July 6 (KUNA) The Law-Enforcement Agencies (LEA) Friday arrested two suspects after a reportedly failed assassination attempt on President Pervez Musharraf in Rawalpindi city.

Immediately after reports of shots in the air near a military airbase, forces conducted a raid on the roof of a rental house in the Asghar Mall area of Rawalpindi, LEA sources told KUNA.

They said about 45 rounds, 3 light machine guns, and two anti-aircraft guns fixed on the roof were recovered. Two suspects were arrested while trying to escape on a motorbike.

Media reports said a rocket was fired as the helicopter of President Pervez Musharraf was taking off from the airbase.
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Después del asalto a la mezquita roja con el resultado de casi 300 muertos según algunas fuentes, parece que empiezan a producirse acciones de venganza en la zona tribal federalmente administrada. Habrá que esperar acontencimientos este viernes después de la oración.
Reaction to Lal Masjid operation

Soldier, cop killed in NWFP attacks

By By our correspondent

PESHAWAR: Police and paramilitary forces came under attack at several places in the NWFP on Tuesday, following the killing of Abdul Rashid Ghazi and his companions in a military operation in Islamabad.

A security official was killed and 10 policemen were injured in attacks at the Kotal post, the meeting-point between Kohat District and Darra Adamkhel tribal territory. In another remote controlled bomb attack, anArmy sepoy, Ghafoor, was killed and Naik Ajmal was injured near the building of the Kohat Development Authority on Tuesday night.

Apparently, militants were involved in the swift retaliatory attacks aimed at avenging the death of Ghazi and others in the military action at Lal Masjid. As many as 10 policemen, including a DSP, were seriously injured in two roadside bomb blasts on Timergara-Dir Highway near Khall in Dir Lower district, about 16 kms from Timergara.

In the first incident the mobile van of Khall police station hit a bomb planted near a waiting room at Tormang at about 11 am wherein ASI Tahir Khan, constables Hayat Khan, Amir Zeb and Daud and driver Wazir Zada were seriously injured. The van was badly damaged in the blast.

The second blast occurred at Sher Palam when a vehicle of Swabi police, returning from security duty at Shandoor polo festival, hit a roadside planted bomb. Ihsanullah Khan, DSP, Gadoon Circle, his gunman, constables Ziaur Rahman, Abdul Amin, Amjad and driver Rafiq received serious injuries and were taken to district headquarters hospital, Timergara where the condition of injured excluding DSP and a sepoy was stated to be out of danger.

DSP investigation Timergara, Amin Khan told newsmen it was a remote controlled bomb blasts targeted policemen. Fortunately, no life was lost, but police officials injured in the incidents. Meanwhile, in Batagram hundreds of protesters took to streets against the Lal Masjid and Jamia Hafsa assault. They held demonstration in front of a Madrassa and later assembled on Gilgit Road near the offices of International Committee of Red Crescent (ICRC) and Save The Children run by CARE International.

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The charged protesters mostly youth entered the offices and ransacked them and before leaving the set the offices ablaze. It is interesting to mention that during protest rally and attacking of the offices that continued for couple of hours no one amongst the police force nor high ups of the civil administration rushed to the site for bringing the situation under control. The protesters rushed towards mountains on both banks of the road whereas they taken position for resisting any move regarding their arrest.

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la prensa paquistaní informa de preparativos para una operación militar en el Waziristán. Se habla de la zona de Tank, aldea de la que hablamos hace unos días donde se estaban dando casos de reclutamiento de niños para los talibanes. Fuente: periódico DAWN
July 13, 2007 Friday Jamadi-us-Sani 27, 1428


Operation likely in tribal areas
By Alamgier Bhittani and Zulfiqar Ali

TANK/PESHAWAR, July 12: The army started deploying troops in NWFP’s southern districts, adjoining the Waziristan region, amid reports that an operation to curb militancy and extremism was imminent.

Sources told Dawn on Thursday that 12,000 troops, backed by artillery units, were moved to Tank and Dera Ismail Khan districts from Okara.

Troops took over the building of a vocational college in Tank city and were stationed in paramilitary forts in the remote district. Security forces were also being deployed in Lakki Marwat and Bannu districts, considered to be hotbed of militancy.

Besides, troops have also been stationed in the northern Swat and Lower Dir districts. Security officials said that two army divisions were being deployed in the NWFP and tribal areas.

Local Taliban expressed resentment over the troops’ redeployment in North Waziristan. They asked the government to pull troops back by July 15 and threatened that if it was not done, they would not abide by the peace agreement.

Militants’ spokesman Abdullah Farhad accused the government of violating the peace agreement signed on September 5, 2006, under which it had to withdraw all troops.

Sources said that soldiers reinforced their positions around Miramshah town, headquarters of the North Waziristan Agency, and started checking vehicles, looking for heavy arms.
Noticias similares en el ASIA TIMES
South Asia
Jul 14, 2007

A new battle front opens in Pakistan
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

SWAT VALLEY, North-West Frontier Province - To Pakistan's Western allies, the military's attack on the radical Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) in Islamabad was a crackdown on a Taliban asset, much like crackdowns on other militant organizations across the country.

For the administration of Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf, though, the move is viewed as the first blow against an emerging extremist armed movement committed to the enforcement of Islamic sharia law.

A leading figure in this movement summed it up on Thursday: "God willing, Pakistan will soon have an Islamic revolution." Maulana Abdul Aziz was speaking at the funeral of his brother, Abdul Rasheed Ghazi, who was one of more than 60 people killed in the seven-day siege of the Lal Masjid. The brothers ran the pro- Taliban mosque and Aziz was apprehended outside the mosque before the main military action began on Tuesday.

With the Lal Masjid saga all but over now, the second phase in the battle against an "Islamic revolution" has began many kilometers away in the picturesque Swat district in North-West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Reaction to the events at the Lal Masjid has been the strongest here, as it is home to the banned pro-Taliban Tehrik-Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Mohammadi (TNSM - Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Laws).

The Pakistan Army has mobilized thousands of troops in the area, and on Friday it was declared "highly sensitive" and parts of it placed under an unofficial curfew. Over the past few days there have been incidents in which several security personnel have been killed.

Unlike the Lal Masjid's small complex, this new battlefield will be a huge valley where militants will be able to trap soldiers at sites of their choice, and the army will be free to bomb their hideouts in the high mountains.

Uneasy calm
By Thursday evening in the Mingora district of Swat, the military had already made its presence felt. The airport and other important installations were guarded by Frontier Corps and Swat Scouts. All government buildings were protected by bunkers made from sandbags.

Earlier, a convoy of tanks and artillery trucks crossed a bridge leading into town seconds before a bomb went off. The military vehicles picked up speed, but were chased by a civilian car that rammed into the police escort and exploded. Three policemen and three passers-by were instantly killed.

"I caught a brief glimpse of the suicide bomber as he was about to ram his car into the convoy. He was a bearded man of about 40 years," a shaken policeman, Bakht Rahman, told this correspondent.

With the bomb at the bridge and the suicide attack as foretastes, a military operation in the Swat Valley is beyond doubt, probably within a few weeks, if not days.

This will pit the army against a radical armed insurgency dedicated to an Islamic revolution with the aim to establish a firm base in Pakistan from where it can fuel the Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan and ultimately announce a regional caliphate.

A tuned-in leader

There is an air of anticipation in the area, with occasional shouts of "Long live Imam-Dhari." Imam-Dhari is a small town in the Swat district where Maulana Fazalullah, the head of the TNSM, lives.

It was time to pay a visit. I had no trouble finding my way there - everyone knew the location, and everyone was a TNSM member. Imam-Dhari is, after all, the headquarters of the TNSM.

After passing through a narrow alley, we reached the modest house of Fazalullah, and within five minutes I was chatting to him. At first he was visibly disconcerted as I had not made an appointment or been referred by anyone, but local custom dictated that he welcome the stranger standing at his door. So I received a hug from the short 28-year-old man with a long beard and a black turban.

"I am extremely sorry that I cannot spare much time for you because you did not warn me that you were coming, and I am avoiding the media because it is a delicate situation here," Fazalullah said.

"I need to go to my FM radio station now to announce that I am not behind any attacks, and secondly people should not become outraged by the presence of the military in the area. I need to be in constant contact with the people of the area to ask them to restrain themselves from attacks or violence," said Fazalullah.

Fazalullah - "Maulana Radio" as he is widely known - runs FM stations that have been banned by the local authorities. One of his pet subjects is electronic goods, which he wants destroyed, including televisions.

"They [Pakistan Army] are here because they are a Pak-American army. They are here not to guard us but to protect British laws. We are the flagbearers of Islamic sharia - that's why they are here, to prevent us demanding Islamic law."

Fazalullah is wanted on a number of charges, including running the FM stations and aiding the Taliban, but the authorities are reluctant to take action against him because of his large following.

"The government objected to my FM radio stations. I rejected those objections. These are non-commercial stations from which I only broadcast Islamic programs. There are other FM stations which are also illegal, but since they broadcast music and vulgarity, the government does not take heed of them," Fazalullah said.

All roads in the area, including the important artery of the Silk Road leading to China, have been blockaded by TNSM members. Fazalullah insisted he had nothing to do with this, saying it was a reaction by the masses against Islamabad's Lal Masjid operations.

"The TNSM is not the only organization in this area. There are others, including the Jaish-i-Mohammed, the Harkatul Mujahideen, the Jamaat-i-Islami, but whatever is done by them is blamed on me.

"Even today's attack on the military will be blamed on me. I tell you, I was with Maulana Abdul Aziz and am still with him, but I am convinced that implementing sharia is the duty of the government, not of any individual. We just aim to demand that the government implement sharia," said Fazalullah.

In the months prior to the attack on the Lal Masjid, students from adjoining men's and women's seminaries had waged a high-profile campaign to impose sharia law in the capital, including abductions and sit-ins in government buildings.

"As far as the Lal Masjid is concerned, we are with it, and if we had the resources we would have gone there to fight with them. Lal Masjid was fighting for a just cause."

Imagen

Fazalullah was dismissive of the official charge that he is a member of the Taliban movement. "It is not a charge, it is an honor. I say that I am with the Taliban and I consider [Taliban leader] Mullah Omar as my amir [head]."

The TNSM was founded by Fazalullah's father-in-law, Sufi Mohammed, in the early 1990s. He gathered more than 10,000 youths to fight in Afghanistan when the US-led invasion began in 2001. With the Taliban withdrawing so fast, these youths took the brunt of the casualties.

When Sufi Mohammed returned from Afghanistan, he was arrested and put in jail, where he remains. The TNSM was almost destroyed, but it has become stronger over the past few years through the efforts of Fazalullah and his network of about 107 FM stations in Swat Valley and nearby Bajaur Agency.

Thousands of people - young and old - are part of the TNSM. Fazalullah calls it a peaceful movement in favor of virtue and against vice. The Western alliance in Afghanistan calls it a Taliban asset in Pakistan that distributes huge dividends to the Taliban movement. Pakistan calls it a serious threat to its national security.

Whatever the perspective, once the showdown starts between the Pakistan Army and the TNSM, one thing is sure: the conflict will transcend any borders.

Syed Saleem Shahzad is Asia Times Online's Pakistan Bureau Chief
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Nuevo atentado terrorista por el método de empotrar un vehículo cargado de explosivos contra una columna
Miranshah suicide attack death toll rises to 18
Updated at 1700 PST
MIRANSHAH: At least 18 Pakistani security men were killed Saturday when a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-packed car into their convoy in a remote tribal region near the Afghan border, a foreign news agency reported.

The convoy was heading to Miranshah, the main town of the North Waziristan tribal district, when the bomber attacked it at around 11:30 am (0630 GMT), Director General ISPR Major General Waheed Arshad said.

"The number of soldiers martyred in the attack has risen to 18," Arshad said, updating earlier reports. "Twenty-eight soldiers were wounded.

"More bodies were recovered from the badly mangled wreckage of the vehicles which were hit in the suicide attack."

Earlier, the ISPR earlier confirmed death of eight security men in the incident.

Director General ISPR Major General Waheed Arshad told Geo News that a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-packed car into the convoy of security forces at around 11:20am.

Eight security men were martyred and 20 others were wounded in suicide attack, in which two vehicles of the convoy were damaged, he added.

Security forces have started investigations of the incident.
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12 muertos y 40 heridos al entrar una columna en una zona que había sido minada por los insurgentes.
12 security men martyred in Swat landmine blast
Updated at 0905 PST
SWAT: At least 17 persons including 12 security men were killed Sunday when a security forces convoy struck against landmines in Matta area near Swat.

Director General ISPR has said 10 security men were martyred and 29 were wounded in the incident.

Imagen

According to reports vehicles of a convoy of the security forces in Matta police precinct near Mengora struck against landmines resulting in death of 12 security men.

Intense firing started immediately after the explosion, in which two policemen were also wounded. The injured persons were transferred to the civil hospital Matta. Several of them said to be in a critical state.

Director General ISPR has said 10 security men were martyred and 29 were wounded in the incident. He said that four other persons possibly civilians were also killed in the incident.

According to some reports three landmines were exploded in the way of a convoy of the security forces, in which several security men were martyred and wounded.

According to sources some houses were also destroyed in the incident and residents were killed. People have taken out body of a girl from wreckage of a house, while three dead bodies were traced in the debris of a house near a petrol station.

Unidentified gunmen still firing, while security forces helicopters hovering over the area. Director General ISPR Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad has confirmed blast in the security force convoy in Swat adding that 40 forces’ men were wounded in the explosion on Sunday.

He said the convoy struck with landmines and three explosions were heard.
After the incident Matta area has been sealed.
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Más sobre el reclutamiento de niños para terroristas suicidas
Taliban recruiting children for suicide attacks

KABUL: Fourteen-year-old Rafiqullah said the men at the Pakistani Madrassa showed him and two classmates videos of suicide attackers. They taught the boys to drive a car and let them ride motorcycles. Then the militants gave Rafiqullah his mission: kill an Afghan governor.

The teenager walked eight hours over the porous border from Pakistan to the eastern Afghan city of Khost, where a man named Abdul Aziz tried to pump up his courage, Rafiqullah said. Aziz gave him an explosives-laden vest, and the teenager confessed his fears.

“I said I was afraid to carry out the suicide attack, and Abdul Aziz pointed a gun at me and said ‘I’ll kill you if you don’t,’” Rafiqullah told The Associated Press while he was in the custody of Afghan authorities over the weekend.

Last month a 6-year-old boy in Ghazni province said Taliban militants forced him to put on a suicide vest and walk up to American soldiers — a potential attack foiled when the boy asked Afghan soldiers for help. A gory Taliban video that surfaced in April showed militants instructing a boy of about 12 in Pakistan as he beheaded an alleged traitor with a knife.

Rafiqullah said at least two other teenage boys his age had been indoctrinated to carry out suicide attacks at his Madrassa, or religious school, in a village named Kotki in South Waziristan. He said he doesn’t know where the boys are or if they will launch attacks.

The use of such young combatants constitutes a war crime, the United Nations says. Unable to pay for his son’s schooling, Rafiqullah’s father instead sent his boy to a Madrassa about five hours from their hometown of Shamin Khail.

An agent with Afghanistan’s intelligence service said Rafiqullah, who goes by one name, comes from the Mehsud tribe, who live on both sides of the border, and that “a number” of children are missing from that tribe. “These Madrassas are far away from their villages, and the boys are sent away for six or seven months at a time,” the intelligence officer said.

“During that time they can brainwash them very easily. They separate them from the group, show them fake films of US soldiers going to the bathroom on the Qur’aan. Those films encourage them to carry out attacks.”

The agent, who can’t be identified according to agency rules, said Rafiqullah was the ninth would-be suicide bomber officials had caught in the last year. He said all nine suspects had come from Pakistan.

The intelligence officer was present during the interview with Rafiqullah but didn’t appear to affect the teen’s answers. He alleged that a Department 242 of ISI is looking for orphans and drug-addicted children they can indoctrinate to become fighters or suicide bombers. A senior Pakistani security official dismissed those claims as a “heap of lies”.

Asked whether the ISI has a “Department 242”, the official said no. He asked for anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Rafiqullah said a man at his Madrassa named Malawi Aminullah sought out volunteers for attacks among the 150 to 200 teenage boys at the religious school. When Rafiqullah and two others showed interest, Aminullah showed them films and gave speeches encouraging them to carry out attacks.

“He said, ‘Do you want to go to heaven? Then you should launch a suicide attack. The people who live in Afghanistan are not Muslims,’” said Rafiqullah, occasionally wringing his hands together nervously.

“Now I understand that everyone here is Muslim.”

Afghanistan’s education minister, Mohammad Hanif Atmar, said Madrassas in Pakistan don’t qualify as schools.

“They use the name Madrassa but it’s really a terrorist training centre,” Atmar said at a news conference announcing that Afghanistan would be building more religious schools.

When asked why he thought the militants were using children to carry out attacks, Rafiqullah refused to say anything. The Afghan intelligence agent said the teen and his family were likely withholding details for fear of incurring the wrath of Baitullah Mehsud.

Norkio Izumi, the chief of child protection for the Afghanistan office of Unicef, said officials had anecdotal evidence that armed groups in the region are recruiting child fighters. She said there wasn’t enough documented evidence to say if the practice is increasing.

Maj John Thomas, a spokesman for Nato’s International Security Assistance Force, said officials have not seen a trend of children being used in attacks, but that such incidents raise concerns about potential child-age bombers.

“Whenever a patrol goes through a marketplace they’re swarmed by children and this is actually something that troops look forward to,” Thomas said. “If they have to be suspicious of the children it’s not going to help them establish the rapport they would like to with the local population.”

Rafiqullah on Saturday said he hoped the Afghan government would release him so he could tell his home villagers that Afghans are Muslims and shouldn’t be attacked. The Afghan intelligence official said Rafiqullah’s father might not return him to his home village for fear that militants could target him.
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En los últimos días ha habido mucha polémica sobre si los EEUU lanzarían un ataque en el interior de Paquistán contra las bases de al Qaeda-nucleo central. Los paquistaníes respondieron irritados pidiendo pruebas a los americanos. Parece ser que algo hay.
ISLAMABAD: United States has alleged that terrorists being given training at nine locations in North Waziristan tribal region. Pakistan and United States would act in silence against terrorists in Waziristan, sources said.

According to the sources US authorities have pinpointed locations of terrorism training camps to Pakistani authorities and an anti-terrorism drive has been started.

United States has warned of dire consequences if terrorists attacked the country, the sources said.

The action against Abdullah Mahsud in Zhob was also part of the silent operation continued under the US pressure, sources added.

http://thenews.jang.com.pk/updates.asp?id=26498
La historia a la que se refiere el periodista es la operación contra el sanguinario Abdullah Mahsud, que se suicidó con una granada de mano antes de ser capturado el otro día. Este terrorista había estado internado en Gitmo.
Abdullah Mahsud blows himself up

Imagen

Three militants held in raid on Zhob JUI-F leader’s house

By By Muhammad Ejaz Khan

QUETTA: One of the top Taliban militants and a former inmate of US prison in Guantanamo Bay, Abdullah Mahsud, blew himself up to avoid arrest during an operation by the security forces in the Zhob district on Tuesday.

Zhob district administration officials said an unspecified number of militants were also killed in a raid at the house of a local leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), while three people, including a younger brother of Mahsud and the son and the brother of the host have been arrested.

All the dead had links with the Taliban of Afghanistan, a district administration source told The News by telephone from Zhob. Sources said Abdullah Mahsud and some other militants were taking breakfast in the house of Shaikh Ayub Mandokhel, the JUI-F Secretary-General, in Killi Shekhan, when the security forces raided the house. Shaikh was not present in the house at the time, the sources added.

Security forces, acting on a tip-off, cordoned off the house and tried to arrest the inmates. However, the militants opened fire with automatic weapons on the security forces, which was returned, the officials said, adding that the exchange of fire continued for several hours.

Seeing no let-up in the siege of the security forces, the 32-year-old militant commander, who had lost his left leg in a landmine explosion before the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in September 1996, blew himself up, apparently to avoid arrest, an official told The News.

Mahsud sustained multiple injuries in his stomach, nose and right eye and died on the spot. Eyewitnesses and independent sources said the explosion was so powerful that it also killed some of Mahsud’s fellow militants.

The body of Mahsud was taken to Zhob Airport on Tuesday afternoon for onward transportation to an undisclosed location. However, due to inclement weather the special flight was cancelled and the body was brought back to the morgue of the Zhob district hospital.

Police said that three people were arrested in the operation and taken to an unknown location for investigation. They are Abdul Rehman Mahsud, the younger brother of Abdullah, Shaikh Hasan Mandokhel, the brother of Shaikh Ayub, and Shaheryar Mandokhel, Ayub’s son.

Agencies add: Interior Ministry spokesman Brig (retd) Javed Iqbal Cheema told a weekly press briefing that the movement of Abdullah Mahsud was being monitored for the last two to three days and on Monday night he was reported in the house of Shaikh Muhammad Ayub, accompanied by another individual with the name of Abdul Rehman Mahsud.

“Abdullah Mahsud blew himself up with a grenade,” Cheema told AFP. “It appears he did not want to be captured alive,” he said. A Pakistani intelligence official said on condition of anonymity Mahsud was intercepted on his way back from Afghanistan’s Helmand province, where he had fought with the Taliban for the past year or more. The official said there was no evidence that Mahsud organised violence that had flared across Pakistan since the deadly Lal Masjid raid earlier this month.
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Sobre la incursión que se iba a realizar en territorio pakistaní para capturar o matar al HVT Top 2 (Al Zawahiri), y que se suspendió con los hombres ya en el aire y a punto de cruzar la frontera, circulan varios rumores en foros anglos:

* Las unidades participantes eran la Task Force 141 (CAG/Delta y DEVGRU), los hombres del SAD y un equipo reclutado para la ocasión entre colaboradores de confianza de la zona y hombres de OEs pakistaníes.

* El asalto iba a ser directo, ni a 10km e inserción a pie ni nada, a tiro limpio hasta no dejar a nadie vivo. Se contaba con el cerco pakistaní y con emplear los Pandur.

* La orden de suspender el ataque fue debido a que se perdió el contacto desde Pakistán con algunas unidades militares y con colaboradores de la CIA en la zona, y no se sabía si podia esperarse una emboscada masiva al equipo de OEs al llegar.

* Este incidente fue el que propició la creación del SSB y el plan de entrenamiento para las unidades de OEs pakistaníes y afganas.
Cry havoc and unleash the hawgs of war - Otatsiihtaissiiststakio piksi makamo ta psswia
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Hablamos del SSG paquistaní involucrado en esa operación, o era otra FOE de ese país?
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No especifican, hablan de "paki SOF units and teams", me parece que dada la fecha debía de ser el SSG, aunque no tengo ni idea del margen de confianza que esta unidad tendría, ya que trabajan en estrecha colaboración con el ISI, y de esos si que no se fiaban los americanos.

El temor a que les estuvieran esperando vino por una posible filtración ya que desaparecieron de la faz de la tierra dos de los guias que iban a llevar a los de OEs pakistanies a desplegarse para sellar la zona, podian ser traidores o que hubieran sido capturados e interrogados... y con la perspectiva de que derribasen una decena de Chinooks y un par de Combat Talon... creo que Rumsfeld hizo bien.
Cry havoc and unleash the hawgs of war - Otatsiihtaissiiststakio piksi makamo ta psswia
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