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Pakistan nabs last attacker, ends siege of army HQ

MOHAMMAD YUSUF   10/11/09 12:45 AM ET   AP

Pakistanattack

RAWALPINDI, Pakistan — Pakistan's army says commandos have caught the last militant who attacked its headquarters and took dozens of hostages.

Spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas says the capture Sunday morning brings to an end a 22-hour standoff in the garrison city of Rawalpindi outside the capital.

He says the final militant who was caught is wounded.

Pakistani commandos raided a building inside the army headquarters early Sunday and freed 25 people held hostage.

Three captives and four hostage-takers were killed, as were two of the rescuers.

The attack demonstrated militants' ongoing strength in Pakistan despite military action against them.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) – Pakistani commandos raided a building inside army headquarters early Sunday and freed 25 people held hostage for more than 18 hours by Islamist fighters, a military spokesman said. Three captives and four hostage-takers were killed, while one militant was believed to be on the run.

The audacious assault on the country's military establishment showed the strength of militants allied with al-Qaida and the Taliban ahead of a planned army offensive on their heartland in South Waziristan along the Afghan border and signaled that any push there would be met with more attacks across Pakistan.

The government said the siege had steeled its resolve to go through with the South Waziristan offensive, calling it "inevitable." The United States and Pakistan's other Western allies want the country to take more action against insurgents also blamed for soaring attacks on U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Explosions and gunshots rang out as commandos moved into a building in the complex just before dawn Sunday, while a helicopter hovered in the sky. Three ambulances were seen driving out of the heavily fortified base close to the capital, Islamabad.

Two hours after the raid began, two new explosions were heard. The army said it was "mopping up" the remaining insurgents.

Up to five heavily armed militants took the hostages after they and about four other assailants attacked the main gate of the army headquarters Saturday, killing six soldiers, including a brigadier and a lieutenant colonel. Four of the attackers, who were wearing army uniforms, were killed.

No group claimed responsibility, but authorities said they were sure that the Pakistani Taliban or an allied Islamist militant group were behind the strike. The city is filled with security checkpoints and police roadblocks.

Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said 20 of the hostages had been kept in a room guarded by a militant wearing a suicide vest who was shot and killed before he managed to detonate his explosives.

He said the 25 who were freed included soldiers and civilians. Three captives were killed, along with four militants, he said. "It was a very skilled rescue operation," he said.

One of the hostage-takers was believed to be on the run, and the military was searching for him, Abbas said.

Saturday's siege followed a car bombing that killed 49 on Friday in the northwestern city of Peshawar and the bombing of a U.N. aid agency earlier in the week that killed five in Islamabad. The string of attacks destroyed any remaining hope that the militants had been left a spent force by the death of Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in a U.S. missile strike in August.

A week ago, Baitullah Mehsud's successor, Hakimullah Mehsud, told journalists summoned to a briefing in South Waziristan that the Taliban would launch more attacks on military, government and other targets in the country.

The army – which until 2001 had patronized various militant groups for use as proxies in Afghanistan and India – had previously been unwilling to go into Waziristan. Three earlier offensives there have ended in failure, and no one thinks the fight against an estimated 10,000 well-armed fighters there will be any easier this time.

But there are hopes the army may have learned from its successful operation in the northwestern Swat Valley this year.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said a Waziristan offensive was now "inevitable."

"We are going to come heavy on you," he warned the militants.

In its brazenness and sophistication, Saturday's assault resembled attacks in March in the eastern city of Lahore by teams of militants against the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team and a police training center, which the insurgents took over for eight hours before security forces retook it.

The attack began shortly before noon when the gunmen attacked the main gate with assault rifles and grenades after bundling out of a white van that reportedly had army license plates.

"There was fierce firing, and then there was a blast," said Khan Bahadur, a shuttle van driver who was standing outside the gate. "Soldiers were running here and there," he said. "The firing continued for about a half-hour. There was smoke everywhere. Then there was a break, and then firing again."

After a 45-minute gunfight, four of the attackers were killed, said Abbas, who initially told the Geo television news channel that the assault was over and the situation "under full control."

But more than an hour later, gunshots rang out from the headquarters compound, and Abbas then confirmed that other gunmen had eluded security forces and slipped into the compound.

A police intelligence report obtained by The Associated Press on Saturday had warned in July that members of the Taliban along with Jaish-e-Mohammed, a militant group based in the country's Punjab province, were planning to attack army headquarters after disguising themselves as soldiers. The report was given to the AP by an official in the home affairs ministry in Punjab's home department.

Officials said Saturday that they had raided a house in the capital where the attackers were believed to have stayed. They found military uniforms and bomb-making equipment.

Militants regularly attack army bases across the country and bombed a checkpoint outside the army compound in Rawalpindi two years ago – one of several major bombings to hit the garrison city in recent years. But rarely have the Taliban mounted an armed assault in the city involving multiple fighters.

____

Associated Press writers Chris Brummitt and Asif Shahzad contributed to this report from Islamabad.

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RAWALPINDI, Pakistan — Pakistan's army says commandos have caught the last militant who attacked its headquarters and took dozens of hostages. Spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas says the capture S...
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan — Pakistan's army says commandos have caught the last militant who attacked its headquarters and took dozens of hostages. Spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas says the capture S...
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08:27 AM on 10/11/2009
Probably it will take attacks on the ISI itself for Pakistan to wake up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kiranitisme
Politics
07:00 AM on 10/11/2009
Folks, what goes around comes around. I'm talking about terrorist attacks in India.
02:47 AM on 10/11/2009
one day these an-imals will be China's problem and they will step in and deal with it... and the muslims will pray to allah for the americans to come back because the Chinese won't think twice about blowing them all to he-ll
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
12:29 AM on 10/11/2009
This was a highly fortified, supposedly secure facility. The Taliban invaded it and got to the inner most sanctum of the area.

Exactly why would anyone think that the nukes which Pakistan possesses are secure? All this proves is that Pakistan remains the clear and present danger which Iraq never was. The Pakistan military is corrupt, weak, and ineffective and despite the Taliban and the militants being their primary problem, they keep 90% of their military and equipment poised for war with India, and do not train them on how to deal with an insurgency such as this.
02:37 AM on 10/11/2009
I personally NEVER thought they were secure

I would say that the vulnerability of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and nuclear technology is probably the greatest threat to the world today.

and the rest of your post is spot on. Pakistan is country with misplaced priorities among its leadership. And I'm only talking about the ones that are NOT sympathetic to the taliban and it's goals.
12:29 AM on 10/11/2009
Rawalpindi does not strike me as a 'tribal area' where the Pakistani army is not in control. "We" seem to be up against a form of revolutionary subversion fueled by a combination of nationalist lust for getting rid of foreigners with Islamic contempt for all the foreigners involved, heaped onto the historic disgust of Muslims for Hindus, India and the Brits. Makes the IRA seem pretty tame by comparison.
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05:06 PM on 10/10/2009
Thanks for the update. Unfortunately it said nothing about the taliban or al qaidaian position
on the latest Madonna extravaganza.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sysmgr1345
03:56 PM on 10/10/2009
They want to come there and fight? We have no choice but to give them a fight.
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03:20 PM on 10/10/2009
Well, it gives Pakistan an excuse to smack them again.
02:38 AM on 10/11/2009
and they won't nearly do enough
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Erdgeist
per omnia extrema
02:56 PM on 10/10/2009
If our generals are not like Rip Van Winkle the biggest problem with Afghanistan has always been Pakistan. Essentially, the HQs of al Qaeda and the Taliban are in Pakistan--not Afghanistan.
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03:21 PM on 10/10/2009
They were in afghanistan, now pakistan, and they will gravitate back to a low-security zone if we leave. They are like storms looking for low pressure zones.

Better to hit them on both sides.
02:41 AM on 10/11/2009
absolutely true

If there is an anthill in your neighbors yard and you think stepping on the ones that cross into yours will solve the problem, you might be the US government.
02:03 PM on 10/10/2009
I wish some really good investigative reporter would look into this pseudo-symbionic relationship we have with Pakistan. They are not and will never be our allies or friends. As they said in the Godfather, "It was Barzini all along!". Any country that does not sanction the activities of A. Q. Khan and then worry about nuclear proliferation is not naive. They are dumb.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
12:32 AM on 10/11/2009
Pakistan is the clear and present danger that Iraq never was. This was supposed to be a very secure area, yet they penetrated it without a great deal of trouble, and without a large contengiency. Pakistan is not an ally, but if they do not deal with the Taliban and Al Qaeda then they are as much the problem as are the other two.
12:34 AM on 10/11/2009
Everybody I know is boycotting Texas products. Sorry.
12:33 AM on 10/11/2009
I agree. I remember, being a very old dude, when we 'adopted' Pakiston with the CENTO pact (Central Asian Treaty Organization) to resist Soviet expansion in the area. That literally drove the Indian subcontinent into the arms of the Russians and permanently corrupted the Pakistani state where American money for the military distorted everything and fueled the arms race with India. We thought we had our reasons...now not so much.
01:34 PM on 10/10/2009
Why is this relegated to a simple catchy headline and not the main story?

I'm looking forward to Obama's speech as much as anyone, but this is a much more important story on a global scale
01:55 PM on 10/10/2009
Why? That stuff goes on in all areas of the world every day ... none of our business ...
02:00 PM on 10/10/2009
You're right, it isnt our business. What goes on and has been going on in the middle east for the last 5,000 years has not been our business for centuries.

But that never stopped us (The West as a whole) from interfering in something that was never our business to begin with
06:37 PM on 10/10/2009
It is our business. This is a practice run. Next: Islamabad and then the nukes.
02:51 AM on 10/11/2009
you are absolutely correct

Americans are very self centered people and that is why our news is so limited.

Most mainstream media sources here bury the important world news items in the back.
01:00 PM on 10/10/2009
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20091005/D9B55KK01.html

Very recent article. Gives a lot of insight into the Pakistan Taliban, who they are
what they want --- Sharia for all of Pakistan.
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05:18 PM on 10/10/2009
The post above was meant as a reply to your comment. Again, thanks for the
link. It was an informitive article. I couldn't resist throwing the snide slap at
mindless noise and pop culture in there. To many cars driving around going
THUMPTHUMPTHUMPBOOMBOOMBOOM in my neighborhood today. Windows
rattling, dogs barking, itchy trigger finger.
05:55 PM on 10/10/2009
Around here it's motorcycles with open pipes.
11:40 PM on 10/10/2009
wade ~~~ i have read that before ... hopefully we can land a big one in his lap on that pretty blue rug .... from the sounds of this atricle we are doing a pretty good job of holding our own over there...as soon as O sends them some back up we can run them rats even father down the rabbit hole....
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12:28 AM on 10/11/2009
Hopefully the President will begin to rely more on small special operation
units. The last shootout in Nuristan where we lost 9 soldiers was an accident
waiting to happen. Sitting in a fixed position waiting for the enemy to come to
you is a recipe for disaster. Just ask the French.