Pakistan says the military is in the final phase
of its campaign to expel Taliban militants from northwestern Swat Valley and
surrounding areas. But, there are no reports that government forces have killed
or captured top Taliban leaders in the region.
The Pakistani army says
all main areas in the region occupied by the militants have been cleared.
Army spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas also told reporters Monday
that Taliban command structures have been dismantled and their training centers
and ammunition dumps have been destroyed. In addition, Abbas says government
forces have reopened and secured strategic highway links between the northern
part of Swat Valley and the west and have discovered a huge cache of arms and
ammunition in the region.
But Abbas stopped short of declaring total
victory in the nearly two month campaign against Taliban fighters in the area,
saying some small areas of resistance remain. When a Pakistani journalist
pointed out that the military has been reporting pockets of resistance in Swat
Valley for the past month, Major-General Abbas sought to explain why:
"Please realize that the counter-insurgency operation - where you have
to enforce the writ of the government - what was the extent of the writ lost by
the government in that area," said General Abbas. "Please keep that in mind. We
are getting into an area which, in our view, the government had completely lost
the writ of authority. And therefore the operations sometimes in some areas is
painfully slow. Because of the terrain, because of the resistance, because of a
lack of support and because of the lack of information."
Abbas also asked
reporters to remember how many soldiers had lost their lives and how many had
been wounded, saying that is the proof of progress.
The government
also predicted that within a week, some of the estimated 2.5 million people
displaced by the conflict will be able to return in large numbers. And the
government says it is taking care of these people, having already distributed
millions of dollars in cash payments to those who were forced to flee.
Monday's progress report did not include the announcement of the capture
or killing of any top Taliban leaders such as Sufi Mohammed, the radical cleric
who negotiated the failed deal to impose strict Islamic law in Swat Valley. Nor
was there news of the capture of killing of his son-in-law, Maulana Fazllulah,
whose followers have fought fierce battles against the army in the region.
A former army lieutenant general and defense analyst, Talat Masood, says
until the military eliminates the Taliban leadership in Swat Valley, success
against extremists will be elusive.
"That is really the heart of the
problem because they can always regroup and come back and keep on motivating
people from the outside and be quite dangerous, in fact," said Talat Masood.
"You know, directing it from different places. So we have get a hold of the
leadership. It's very important."
In the meantime, the army is also
pounding targets in nearby South Waziristan in preparation for a full-fledged
assault on Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud and his forces. And on Sunday, troops
faced a flare up of militant violence in North Waziristan. The army says
militants unleashed a flurry of gunfire - followed by the detonation of
improvised explosive devices - on a convoy of security forces. The army says 16
soldiers, including three officers, were killed along with 10 militants.