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Gunmen hold hostages in Pakistan army headquarters
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 10 - 10 - 2009


Heavily armed militants were
holding up to 15 soldiers hostage inside Pakistan's army
headquarters early Sunday more than 12 hours after they
stormed the complex in an audacious assault on the heart of
the most powerful institution in the nuclear-armed country, AP reported.
Six soldiers, including two ranking officers, and four
militants were killed in the attack by assailants who wore
military uniforms. The strike appeared to be a warning to
the military that its planned offensive on the insurgents'
stronghold along the Afghan border would be met with
attacks against targets across Pakistan.
The government said the assault on the headquarters, which
followed a bloody market bombing and a suicide blast at a
U.N. aid agency in the past week, had strengthened its
resolve to push into South Waziristan _ a mountainous
region home to al-Qaida leaders where security forces have
been beaten back by insurgents before.
The spasm of violence was confirmation that the militants
had regrouped despite recent military operations against
their forces and the killing of Pakistani Taliban leader
Baitullah Mehsud in a CIA drone attack in August. His
replacement vowed just last week to step up attacks around
the country and repel any push into Waziristan.
Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said «four or five»
assailants were holding between 10 and 15 troops hostage in
a building close to the main gates of the complex in
Rawalpindi, a city near the capital, Islamabad. No senior
military or intelligence officials were among those being
held, he said.
Abbas said special forces had surrounded the building.
«They will decide how and when to act,» he said,
declining to comment on whether authorities had attempted
to talk to the hostage takers or whether they had made any
demands.
No group claimed responsibility, but authorities were sure
that the Pakistani Taliban or an allied Islamist militant
group were behind it.
Late Saturday, sporadic gunfire was heard coming from the
complex.
In its brazenness and sophistication, the 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 12 hours before security forces retook it.
Saturday's attack began shortly before noon when the
gunmen, dressed in camouflage military uniforms and
wielding assault rifles and grenades, drove in a white van
up to the army compound and opened fire, Abbas and a
witness said.
«There was fierce firing, and then there was a blast,»
said Khan Bahadur, a shuttle van driver who was standing
outside the gate of the compound. «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.
He 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. The city is filled with security checkpoints and
police roadblocks.
«We are trying to finish it (the siege) at the earliest,
clear the area of terrorists and restore complete
control,» Abbas said.
Abbas said six soldiers were killed, included a brigadier
and a lieutenant colonel, and five wounded, one critically.
Pakistani media said the Taliban had claimed
responsibility for the attack.
A police intelligence report in July obtained by the
Associated Press on Saturday warned 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 they had raided a house in the
capital where the attackers were believed to have stayed.
They found military uniforms and bomb-making equipment.
The United States has been pushing Pakistan to take strong
action against insurgents using its soil as a base for
attacks in Afghanistan. The army has previously been
unwilling to go into Waziristan with significant force, but
has likely been emboldened by its successes against the
militants in the Swat Valley earlier this year and the
killing of Baitullah Mehsud.
«I want to give a message to the Taliban that what we did
with you in Swat, we will do the same to you there (in
Waziristan), too,» said Interior Minister Rehman Malik.
«We are going to come heavy on you.»
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.
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 Monday that killed five in Islamabad.
The attacks showed the militants are capable of striking a
range of targets across the country.
The man who attacked the U.N. office was also wearing a
security forces' uniform and was granted entry to the
compound after asking to use the bathroom.
Islamist militants have been carrying out nearly weekly
attacks in Pakistan, but the sheer scale of Friday's
bombing in Peshawar _ which killed nine children _ pushed
the government to declare it would take the fight to the
lawless tribal belt along the border where al-Qaida leader
Osama bin Laden may be hiding.
Any operation in Waziristan will be very difficult.
Militants are believed to have 10,000 well-armed fighters
there, and winter will arrive in one month's time and could
bog down troops. The army must also ensure that insurgents
do not regroup elsewhere in the northwest, including Swat.


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