April 29, 2009 6:35 AM

Pakistani Troops Push Back Against Taliban

(CBS/AP)  Helicopter-borne commandos took back a key town from the Taliban on Wednesday as warplanes pounded militants to halt their advance toward the Pakistani capital, the army said.

Pakistan is acting under intense U.S. pressure to take a tougher line against Islamist militants expanding from strongholds along the Afghan border, where al Qaeda leaders including Osama bin Laden may also be hiding.

In recent days, government forces have begun trying to drive the Taliban back into the Swat Valley, from where they had pushed out under cover of a creaking peace pact struck in February.

Helicopters dropped troops near Daggar, the main town in the Buner district, and in neighboring areas early on Wednesday morning, an army statement said.

The commandos secured the town and were linking up with police and paramilitary troops already in the area, the statement said.

It didn't say how many troops were involved or whether they clashed with militants who overran the district earlier this month.

However, a Pakistani military official said army jets and helicopters had attacked militant positions in the area as part of the move to take Daggar.

The official asked for anonymity because he was not authorized to release the details. He had no word on any casualties from Wednesday's operation.

The Taliban advance into Buner brought them to within 60 miles of the capital, Islamabad. The army also says troops have killed scores of militants in recent fighting in Lower Dir, another area neighboring Swat.

Both Buner and Lower Dir lie within Malakand, the region covered by the government's much-criticized peace deal. Officials agreed to impose Islamic law in return for peace in a region devastated by two years of bloody fighting.

Pakistani officials said the Islamic law concession robbed the militants of any justification for retaining their arms and have insisted they were ready to use force against militants who defy the government.

But officials in Washington, which is propping up Pakistan's army and government with billions of dollars, have slammed the pact as a surrender and welcomed the resumption of military action.

The army offensives are "exactly the appropriate response" to the Taliban advance, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said Tuesday.

"We are hopeful and encouraging of the Pakistani military that they are able to sustain these operations against the militants and to stem this encroachment on the more populated areas of Pakistan."

CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan reported that, according to America's top military commander, defeating the militants in Pakistan is critical to U.S. success in Afghanistan.

"There is a direct relationship," Admiral Michael Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CBS News from his plane as he flew back from the region to the U.S.

That's why the recent show of strength by Taliban militants in Dir and the neighboring Swat Valley is so worrying to U.S. officials. Nuclear-armed Pakistan falling to extremists is Adm. Mullen's "worst case scenario", reported Logan.

"Obviously, I've got thousands of troops in Afghanistan," he said, "and the combination of continued deterioration in Pakistan to what could be a worst case scenario, almost makes Afghanistan impossible to turn around."

The Obama administration has an opportunity to reiterate its demand for action when Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari joins his Afghan counterpart in Washington for talks next week.

Pakistan has waged several offensives in the border region since the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the United States.

The operations have resulted in the deaths of hundreds of civilians and the flight of hundreds of thousands of people from their homes, but have been punctuated by ill-fated peace agreements from which the militants emerged stronger than before.

Amnesty International estimated on Wednesday that at least 33,000 civilians have fled their homes to avoid the recent clashes in Lower Dir. Witnesses told of bodies left lying in the fields because residents were too scared to move them, the rights groups said. At least five civilians died, it said.

"Pakistan is now facing a serious displacement crisis," said Sam Zarifi Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific director. "While the politicians in Islamabad and Washington talk about geopolitics, people in these quiet villages have their lives shattered."

Pakistan army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said Tuesday that troops faced an estimated 450-500 militants in Buner and forecast that the operation to drive them out would take about a week.

He dismissed fears that the capital Islamabad, separated from Buner by the Indus River and the Margalla Hills, was under any threat of a militant takeover.

"I see this as a completely false alarm," he said. "I think we are 170 million people with a huge military. God willing, they (the militants) will be taken care off."

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by Oregon_State_OSU April 30, 2009 3:56 PM EDT
Its probably not very hard for Pakistani Troops Push Back Against Taliban.

All they need is Bar Soap, Shampoo, some Cologne and an electric trimmer and the Taliban run for the hills.

Oh Clean clothes that smell like Gain Scare them also.
Reply to this comment
by hamiltongrad April 30, 2009 2:02 AM EDT
It's amazing to me that a country will only protect itself because they are urged by others to do so. They seem to be willing to give their country away. It's only a matter of time before that country is taken over.
Posted by lobo62740 at 6:24 AM : Apr 29, 2009


Arn't you against violence ?
Reply to this comment
by billpl-2009 April 30, 2009 12:00 AM EDT
...'bout time
Reply to this comment
by thetrajectory April 29, 2009 12:29 PM EDT
But why the Taliban allowed to take over these towns in the first place? Why was the inward movement of the Taliban not checked by the Pakistani forces? Is this a play enacted for the global audience where the Taliban and Pakistani government are co-actors?
http://thetrajectory.com
Reply to this comment
by hotpaulie April 29, 2009 11:28 AM EDT
good point lobo...pakistan seems willing to give themselves away to the highest bidder and so far the U.S. is winning...but for how long?
Reply to this comment
by lobo62740 April 29, 2009 9:24 AM EDT
It's amazing to me that a country will only protect itself because they are urged by others to do so. They seem to be willing to give their country away. It's only a matter of time before that country is taken over.
Reply to this comment
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