Sunday, May 16, 2010

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The government in Islamabad is perplexedi like my life lasting forever with my heart free
and angry at Washington's statements and threats about Shahzad links with the Pakistani Taliban, officials said. Officials said they suspected that the Obama administration was exploiting the issue to apply pressure for a new military offensive in Pakistan's tribal border area with Afghanistan , in the North Waziristansomething will happen region, where Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, as well as al Qaida , are holed up."There are no roots to the case, so how can we trace something back?" the security official asked.U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said over the weekend that the Pakistani Taliban wereIt's just some guy I work with "intimately involved" in the attempted blast. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Pakistan of "dire consequences" if a plot that originated in Pakistan succeededsomething will happen
in the U.S.Holder stuck to his words Tuesday. "We stand by the statement of the attorney general and John Brennan ," the White House counter-terrorism adviser, said spokesman Dean Boyd .
Some days earlier, Gen. David Petraeus , who oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East and Central Asia , said Shahzad was a "lone wolf" who was "inspired by militants in Pakistan but didn't have direct contact with them."McClatchy reported last week that six U.S. officials had said there was no credible evidence that Shahzad received serious terrorist training from the Pakistani Taliban or another radical Islamic group.be nice
"There is a disconnect between the Pentagon and the (Obama) administration," said a senior Pakistani government official, who also asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue. "The Pentagon gets it that more open pressure on Pakistan is not helpful."
The case of the botched May 1 Times Square attack again put the spotlight on Pakistan as a magnet for jihadists from all over the world, and the allegations about the Pakistani Taliban have called attention to the Taliban's close relationship with al Qaida .The international news media seized on the dramatic arrest of Rehan as he emerged from praying in the Batkha mosque in north Karachi as evidence of Shahzad's involvement with Pakistani militant groups. Investigators learned that Rehan and Shahzad had taken a 1,000-mile road trip together last year from Karachi to Peshawar , on the edge of Pakistan's extremist-plagued tribal area, raising further suspicions. Pakistani investigators now think that the trip to Peshawar , during Shahzad's visit to Pakistan last year, wasn't suspicious. The Pakistani probe found that Rehan wasn't a very active member of Jaish-e-Mohammad, a violent group that's organized attacks on India and has no history of global activities. Rehan knew Shahzad because he's related to Shahzad's wife. Shahzad, a naturalized American citizen of Pakistani origin, reportedly has told U.S. interrogators that he trained in Waziristan, according to U.S. charges against him. The Pakistani Taliban also released a video in which Qari Hussain seemed to claim responsibility for the U.S. bombing attempt. The video said nothing specifically about New York , Shahzad or a car bomb, however. The Pakistani Taliban's official spokesman, Azam Tariq , has denied that his group was involved with Shahzad. The inept construction of the failed bomb also raised doubts over whether the Pakistani Taliban could have trained Shahzad. They have expertise in explosives and were connected to the devastating strike on a CIA base in Afghanistan at the end of last year. The Pakistani Taliban also favor suicide attacks. Without a track record as a militant, Shahzad would be viewed as a likely spy by the Pakistani Taliban, which are under attack by U.S. and Pakistani forces. Shahzad had left Pakistan when he was 19. "The lack of tradecraft in Shahzad's device is compelling evidence that whatever 'contacts' or 'training' he might have received in northern Pakistan was largely confined to physical training and weapons handling, not the far more sophisticated skill set of fashioning improvised explosive devices," said a report Tuesday from Stratfor, a private U.S. intelligence firm. The U.S. focus on Pakistan's tribal area continued Tuesday with another missile strike from an American drone aircraft, the third such attack since the failed Times Square bombing.
The strike, in North Waziristan, reportedly killed at least 14 suspected militants. The Obama administration has unleashed an intensive campaign of drone attacks in Pakistan , targeting extremist hideouts in the tribal
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