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Afghan Ministry of Defence official confirms the death of TTP leader Mullah Fazlullah [Update #10]

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Intel reports suggest Pakistan’s most wanted Taliban leader Mullah Fazlullah along with four others killed in US drone attack in Kunnur province of Afghanistan. Other militants namely Imran, umer, Sajjad and Abu Baker. Official confirmation is awaited. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/MullahRadiokilled?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#MullahRadiokilled</a>?</p>— Owais Tohid (@OwaisTohid) <a href="https://twitter.com/OwaisTohid/status/1007355484049993728?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 14, 2018</a></blockquote>
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There were multiple reports of Mullah Radio being killed in past let's see if it's true this time
 
Haven't really paid any attention since Mullah Umar (that too due to UBL and 9/11), they seem to be a dime a dozen.
 
This guy has been killed about half a dozen times....
 
TTP chief targeted in Afghan drone strike: US

WASHINGTON: A US drone targeted and, apparently, killed the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leader Mullah Fazlullah in the Afghan province of Kunar, media reports and US defence sources said on Thursday.

The Voice of America radio reported that a US military official confirmed to its correspondents that a US drone strike had “targeted the TTP leader in an Afghan province near the border with Pakistan”.

The official US radio also quoted unconfirmed reports from the target area as claiming that Mullah Fazlullah had been killed.

A US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the strike was carried out late Wednesday and the TTP chief was its target but he also said that he could not confirm if he was killed.

A spokesman for US Forces-Afghanistan, Army Lt Col Martin O’Donnell, told VOA that “US forces conducted a counterterrorism strike June 13 in Kunar province, close to the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which targeted a senior leader of a designated terrorist organisation.”

Pentagon officials, when asked to comment on the VoA report, said they were not yet in a position to confirm if decline if the strike was successful.

The strike comes amid a seven-day ceasefire between the Afghan Taliban and government security forces to allow Afghan citizens to observe the last days of Ramazan and Eid peacefully.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1414329/ttp-chief-targeted-in-afghan-drone-strike-us
 
TTP chief Mullah Fazlullah killed in US strike, confirms official


PESHAWAR: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Mullah Fazlullah was killed in a US drone strike on June 13, a senior intelligence official confirmed to The Express Tribune.

Fazlullah was reportedly travelling in a vehicle along with four other commanders when they were targeted by a drone strike at 11pm on June 13 in Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

The drone strike was also confirmed by Afghanistan’s Ministry of Defence spokesperson Mohammad Radmanish. “A US drone strike in Afghanistan’s northeastern Kunar province has killed the leader of the TTP,” he told CNN.

Spokesperson for US forces in Afghanistan Lieutenant-Colonel Martin O’Donnell also confirmed the strike. “US forces conducted a counterterrorism strike, June 13, in Kunar province, close to the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which targeted a senior leader of a designated terrorist organisation.”

On Thursday, sources in the security and intelligence agencies had said the elusive chief of the outlawed outfit was killed in the US drone strike in the northeastern province of Kunar.

The drone strike took place hours after Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa left Kabul after holding exclusive one-on-one meeting with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani followed by delegation-level talks. The army chief also had meetings with Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and Commander Resolute Support Mission (RSM) General John Nicholson.

A total of seven meetings have been held between Pakistan and Afghanistan under the recently agreed Afghanistan-Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Stability (APAPPS) – setup after the deadly attack on Intercontinental Hotel attack in Kabul in January 2018.

During the talks, Islamabad had demanded Kabul to hand over 43 militants including Fazlullah in the meetings.

Fazlullah was named TTP chief after the death of Hakimullah Mehsud in a drone strike in November 2013. The TTP leader had a reputation as a ruthless commander prepared to do anything to enforce his uncompromising interpretation of Islamic law.

In 2006, Fazlullah earned the nickname “Mullah Radio” after he began delivering fiery sermons on his own FM station, railing against polio vaccination programmes and girls’ education.

Three years later, the TTP under his command made an unsuccessful attempt to kill 11-year-old Malala Yousufzai. Malala had been writing a blog chronicling the horrors of life under the Taliban. She survived being shot in the head and has gone on to become a global icon of the struggle against extremism.

Fazlullah also green-lighted the heinous 2014 Peshawar carnage wherein gunmen strode through Army Public School corridors and classrooms spraying teachers and pupils with bullets. The men killed 148 people – at least 132 of whom were children.

Mullah Radio was designated a global terrorist by the United States and carried a bounty of $5 million. He had been on the run since his loyalists were routed in a major military operation in Swat district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in 2009.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/173581...ah-killed-us-strike-confirms-afghan-ministry/
 
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Friday telephoned Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa to confirm the news regarding the killing of banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leader Mullah Fazlullah in a drone strike in Afghanistan Province Kunar, the military’s media wing said.

According to Inter-Services Public Relations, Mullah Fazal Ullah was “hiding in Afghanistan since 2009”.

The ISPR termed the killing of Mullah Fazlullah "a positive development", adding that the TTP leader's death "gives relief to scores of Pakistani families who fell victims to TTP terror including the APS massacre".

Earlier there were media reports that a US drone targeted and killed Mullah Fazlullah in the Afghan province of Kunar. The Voice of America radio reported that a US military official confirmed to its correspondents that a US drone strike had “targeted the TTP leader in an Afghan province near the border with Pakistan”.

The official US radio also quoted unconfirmed reports from the target area as claiming that Mullah Fazlullah had been killed.

According to *Radio Pakistan*, the banned TTP chief was leaving a militant centre, known as Pachai Markaz, just before midnight after attending a dinner party along with several key commanders when he was killed. As soon as Fazlullah boarded the vehicle, missiles fired from an unmanned US aircraft hit them, it added.

Ashraf Ghani also made a telephone call to caretaker Prime Minister Nasir-ul-Mulk and confirmed the death of Mullah Fazlullah. PM Mulk thanked the Afghan President for sharing this information and termed it a significant development in the fight against terrorism, Radio Pakistan said.

The premier said, "Finally action has been taken against an enemy of the people and state of Pakistan."

President Ghani also informed PM Mulk about positive developments following the recent ceasefire announcement in Afghanistan which would help pave the way for the Afghan peace process to consolidate.

The caretaker premier assured him of support to facilitate Afghan peace efforts that would remain Afghan-owned and Afghan-led. The two leaders exchanged Eid greeting and best wishes for the people of two countries.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1414363/a...m-killing-of-mullah-fazlullah-in-drone-strike
 
It is time we reciprocate U.S. and Afghanistan for getting rid of our biggest enemy.

However, we won’t do anything and then cry when Ghani goes to Modi.
 
It is time we reciprocate U.S. and Afghanistan for getting rid of our biggest enemy.

However, we won’t do anything and then cry when Ghani goes to Modi.

I was literally about to make this post. But I am sure we will get the usual replies criticising Afghanistan for being unloyal to Pakistan and to Pakistanis. Oh well, easier for our lazy consciences I suppose.
 
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It is time we reciprocate U.S. and Afghanistan for getting rid of our biggest enemy.

However, we won’t do anything and then cry when Ghani goes to Modi.

Ghani and US are again in talks want Taliban and he want Pakistan to get Taliban again on table. Talks with Taliban are halal now?
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I urged the PM and COAS to take practical steps to bring Afghan Taliban residing in Pakistan to the negotiation table. The PM and COAS congratulated me on the success of the ceasefire and called it a great achievement that both sides observed the ceasefire with full compliance.</p>— Ashraf Ghani (@ashrafghani) <a href="https://twitter.com/ashrafghani/status/1007670287326990337?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2018</a></blockquote>
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I was literally about to make this post. But I am sure we will get the usual replies criticising Afghanistan for being unloyal to Pakistan and to Pakistanis. Oh well, easier for our lazy consciences I suppose.

Mistakes have been made from both sides, but the fact is that we have not done anything to win Afghanistan’s loyalty.

It again boils down to the military. They dictate our foreign policy, and having friendly relations with our neighbors is not what they want, because it will decrease their influence and power within the country.
 
Ghani and US are again in talks want Taliban and he want Pakistan to get Taliban again on table. Talks with Taliban are halal now?
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I urged the PM and COAS to take practical steps to bring Afghan Taliban residing in Pakistan to the negotiation table. The PM and COAS congratulated me on the success of the ceasefire and called it a great achievement that both sides observed the ceasefire with full compliance.</p>— Ashraf Ghani (@ashrafghani) <a href="https://twitter.com/ashrafghani/status/1007670287326990337?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2018</a></blockquote>
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How about we clamp down on terrorists who, with Pakistani support, have in the past (and continue to) exert influence in Afghanistan?

Given our own failure to clamp down on terrorists in our country (guys like Chaudhry Abid Raza being given PML-N ticket, just one example) I don't think its likely this will happen any time soon.
 
It again boils down to the military. They dictate our foreign policy, and having friendly relations with our neighbors is not what they want, because it will decrease their influence and power within the country.

I fully agree with you. For as long as the remain the dominant power in the country, we have very little chance of moving in the right direction. It may not be easy reading for those who are diehard military enthusiasts, but they have caused us a lot more harm than good.
 
How about we clamp down on terrorists who, with Pakistani support, have in the past (and continue to) exert influence in Afghanistan?

Given our own failure to clamp down on terrorists in our country (guys like Chaudhry Abid Raza being given PML-N ticket, just one example) I don't think its likely this will happen any time soon.

Army forced PMLN to give ticket to him? I thought Nawaz was the new anti army messiah? And he is a convicted criminal wasn't it Punjab police of shobaz job to arrest him?
 
Ghani and US are again in talks want Taliban and he want Pakistan to get Taliban again on table. Talks with Taliban are halal now?
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I urged the PM and COAS to take practical steps to bring Afghan Taliban residing in Pakistan to the negotiation table. The PM and COAS congratulated me on the success of the ceasefire and called it a great achievement that both sides observed the ceasefire with full compliance.</p>— Ashraf Ghani (@ashrafghani) <a href="https://twitter.com/ashrafghani/status/1007670287326990337?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 15, 2018</a></blockquote>
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You can’t hold talks with people who want to kill you. Taliban Khan urged talks with Taliban when they were masterminding bomb blasts in Pakistan on weekly basis, but he finally woke up after the APS massacre.

However, this is a good time to hold talks with them. Pakistan, the U.S. and Afghanistan government hold the cards now, and after losing one of their major assets, perhaps TTP will be willing to come to an agreement.
 
You can’t hold talks with people who want to kill you. Taliban Khan urged talks with Taliban when they were masterminding bomb blasts in Pakistan on weekly basis, but he finally woke up after the APS massacre.

However, this is a good time to hold talks with them. Pakistan, the U.S. and Afghanistan government hold the cards now, and after losing one of their major assets, perhaps TTP will be willing to come to an agreement.

And i always criticized him for his opinion on having talks with them i am not a blind noora to defend every act of a party leader i support he is no angel. Here we are talking about Afghan Taliban not TTP they are finding their way back to Afghan govt and US and Ghani are willing to sit on table with them and give them space but again asking us to help (they destroyed negotiation twice recently after asking us to engage them in talks and last time once we started that they killed Mullah Mansoor)
 
Army forced PMLN to give ticket to him? I thought Nawaz was the new anti army messiah? And he is a convicted criminal wasn't it Punjab police of shobaz job to arrest him?

I didn't say Army forced PML-N to give him the ticket - its just one example of how extremism has permeated all aspects of our society and people don't really seem overly concerned or surprised by him being given a ticket.

I do think we as a society need to move in a different direction but the Army, as the most powerful institution in our country, must take steps to readdress their use of strategic assets and take a different approach to religious extremism. It must also work to remove its influence in the sphere of Pakistan's politics. We need to ensure they are subservient to any elected government. I am sure you agree with me on this - I know you care deeply about Pakistan and respect your and [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]'s commitment to the betterment of our nation.
 
I didn't say Army forced PML-N to give him the ticket - its just one example of how extremism has permeated all aspects of our society and people don't really seem overly concerned or surprised by him being given a ticket.

I do think we as a society need to move in a different direction but the Army, as the most powerful institution in our country, must take steps to readdress their use of strategic assets and take a different approach to religious extremism. It must also work to remove its influence in the sphere of Pakistan's politics. We need to ensure they are subservient to any elected government. I am sure you agree with me on this - I know you care deeply about Pakistan and respect your and [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]'s commitment to the betterment of our nation.

My concern is weaker Army means we can endup with a middle east like situation because we are not like Malaysia sitting far away peacefully from conflicted zone we are in a strategic geo location with so many stakes.
 
Pakistan: Killing of Pakistan Taliban chief 'significant'

Pakistan's caretaker Prime Minister Nasir-ul-Mulk described the killing of Pakistan Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah in a U.S. drone strike in Afghanistan as a "significant development in the fight against terrorism."

Mulk made the comment in a telephone conversation Friday night with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and thanked him for sharing information about Fazlullah's killing, said a Pakistan government statement.

The call was initiated by Ghani, who tweeted that Fazlullah's killing was "the result of tireless human intel by Afghan security agencies."

A U.S. official said the U.S. believes that it is likely the strike killed Fazlullah, but efforts are ongoing to confirm his death. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss preliminary information.

In his tweet, Ghani said he also called Pakistan's Army Chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa. In both conversations Ghani said he urged Pakistan "to take practical steps to bring Afghan Taliban residing in Pakistan to the negotiation table."

Thursday's drone strike, which reportedly killed Fazlullah and five other insurgents when missiles slammed into the car in which they were driving, occurred just hours before Afghanistan's Taliban began a three-day cease fire.

The cease-fire, which took effect at midnight Thursday, marks the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr, which follows the Muslim holy month of Ramadan when the faithful fast from sunrise to sunset. The Afghan Taliban announced their cease-fire after Ghani unilaterally declared a temporary cease-fire for the holidays on June 7.

In Afghanistan's eastern Logar provincial capital of Pul-e-Alam dozens of unarmed Taliban celebrated the Eid holiday, several greeting Afghan security forces, provincial police chief spokesman Shahpur Ahmadzai said Saturday in a telephone interview.

"We didn't allow them to enter the city with their weapons," said Ahmadzai, adding at least 80 Taliban entered the city in the last two days to visit their families.

The Associated Press spoke to Abdullah Faizani, a Taliban fighter from Logar's Baraki district, who said it has been seven years since he has been to the provincial capital. He said he and 32 friends were in the capital on their motorcycles, many of them festooned with the Afghan flag.

"I am so happy for the cease-fire and it is sad when every day Afghans are killing each other," said Faizani, adding that 15 of his friends died in battles with Afghan security forces in one year. They were all Taliban.

Although he wants an extended cease-fire, he said he would not lay down his weapons permanently until "all the foreign troops leave Afghanistan."

Atta-ul-Rahman Salim, deputy head of Afghanistan's High Peace Council, said Taliban fighters from across the country were reportedly entering into government controlled areas to visit their families "and they were being welcomed by government security forces."

Meanwhile, in his conversation with Ghani, Mulk said that Fazlullah's death would be received throughout Pakistan with relief as Pakistanis had borne the brunt of terrorist attacks by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, which Fazlullah headed.

The Pakistan government statement also said an "action had finally been taken against an enemy of the people and state of Pakistan."

Fazlullah was killed in Afghanistan's northeastern Kunar province. He had ordered the assassination of Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.

Afghan Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a telephone interview that he could not confirm Fazlullah's death because of the remoteness of the area but also because Afghanistan's Taliban are not present in that area.

https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...g-pakistan-taliban-chief-significant-55939045
 
Looks like there's another attempt being made to thaw relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The death of Mullah Fazlullah and the announcement of the Taliban ceasefire cannot be a coincidence.

It could be Afghanistan are trying to bring Pakistan into the negotiations.
 
Looks like there's another attempt being made to thaw relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The death of Mullah Fazlullah and the announcement of the Taliban ceasefire cannot be a coincidence.

It could be Afghanistan are trying to bring Pakistan into the negotiations.

They are actually and according to reports Pakistan already played the role to get them on table i hope this time they dont do what they did twice last time including killing Mansur. COAS Bajwa last week visit to Kabul was part of it. Taliban celebrated the Eid between common people in different districts this time after ceasefire.
 
Looks like there's another attempt being made to thaw relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The death of Mullah Fazlullah and the announcement of the Taliban ceasefire cannot be a coincidence.

It could be Afghanistan are trying to bring Pakistan into the negotiations.

This is good.Pakistan cannot afford to have hostilities with yet another neighbour.
 
PESHAWAR: Mufti Noor Wali Mehsud has been named as the successor of Mullah Fazlullah, who, along with his four lieutenants, was killed in a US drone strike in north-eastern Afghanistan on June 13, 2018.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a conglomerate of terrorist organisations, officially confirmed the death of Mullah Fazlullah in a US drone strike and announced the appointment of his successor on Saturday.

The group also confirmed that Mufit Mazahim, popularly known as Mufti Hazrat, has been picked up as the deputy ameer of the TTP.

Earlier reports were making round in the media that Qari Umar, also known by his pseudonym Ustad Fateh, was appointed as the successor of Mullah Fazlullah.

Mufti Noor Wali was picked to head the TTP at a meeting of its Central Shura soon after the death of Mullah Fazlullah. After the appointment of Mufti Noor Wali, Taliban factions pledged allegiance to their new chief, according to the TTP statement.

The death of Mullah Fazlullah lends credence to Islamabad’s claim that Afghan soil is being used by the TTP as a springboard for launching attacks inside Pakistan. Islamabad has long demanded that Afghan and US forces take action against the TTP terrorists in Afghanistan.

Pakistani officials also blame the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) and National Directorate of Security (NDS), the intelligence agencies of India and Afghanistan, for using the TTP as an asset to perpetrate terrorism in Pakistan.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1736990/1-ttp-picks-mufti-noor-wali-mehsud-successor-mullah-fazlullah/
 
Mistakes have been made from both sides, but the fact is that we have not done anything to win Afghanistan’s loyalty.

It again boils down to the military. They dictate our foreign policy, and having friendly relations with our neighbors is not what they want, because it will decrease their influence and power within the country.

When Ayub Khan and Musharraf were in power - relationships with India, Afghanstan and the US were stellar. In fact, several US presidents visited Pakistan in the 1950's and 60's including Eisenhower and Johnson Musharraf was the first to open talks with India after decades in 2004 and Bush visited him in 2006..

It is only when "democracy" came to power that we have seen deteriorating relationships with pretty much everyone... :facepalm:
 
Mattis underlines US role in eliminating Fazlullah

WASHINGTON: US Def*ence Secretary James Mattis has underlined the role that American forces played in removing Pakistan’s most wanted terrorist, as Wash*ington sends a senior envoy to Islamabad for peace talks.

“The forces engaged against the terrorists basically killed Fazlullah, the head of the Pakistan Taliban (TTP),” said Mr Mattis while talking to Pentagon journalists in Alaska.

This is a rare confirmation of a terrorist’s elimination by a senior US official and comes amid renewed efforts for restoring peace in Afghan*istan where the United States has been engaged in an apparently unending military campaign since 2001.

Usually, US officials do not talk about targeted attacks, particularly when it involves a drone, as it was a US drone that killed Fazlullah. While the US continues to use drones to eliminate terrorists, it prefers not to confirm or deny such attacks. Senior US officials are particularly careful because it’s often difficult to confirm the kill.

Secretary Mattis, however, not only confirmed Fazlul*lah’s elimination but also explained why it was important to do so. Diplomatic observers in Washington see this as a reminder to Pakistan that the US did them a favour by removing their most wanted terrorist. Now, they need to return the favour by cooperating with the United States in its efforts to jumpstart the Afghan peace talks.

The Trump administration is sending a senior envoy — Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Alice G. Wells — to Islamabad next week to explore the possibility of a permanent peace in Afghanistan.

A transcript released by his office on Wednesday shows Mr Mattis identifying Fazlullah as a terrorist leader “well known” for ordering the 2014 Peshawar School Massacre.

On Dec 16, 2014, six TTP gunmen attacked the Army Public School in Peshawar and killed 149 people, including 132 schoolchildren. It was the world’s fourth deadliest school massacre.

Secretary Mattis noted that Fazlullah’s men killed the “school-going children and teachers” and unleashed a reign of terror in Swat.

“I’ve been to Swat … one of the most stunningly beautiful places you’ll ever go on earth, I’ll tell you.

“If you’ve — for those of you who ever get there, for a good trekking opportunity,” said the US defence secretary while explaining how Fazlullah turned a heaven into a hell.

“There, his reign was known until the Pakistan military threw him out, for the beheadings he was able to carry out there to impose his will, which didn’t last long but was certainly murderous while he was there.”

Secretary Mattis noted that Fazlullah also ordered the murder of Malala Yousafzai, the teenage girl who “strongly represented education for children”.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1416537/mattis-underlines-us-role-in-eliminating-fazlullah
 
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