Pak gunship helicopters kill 6 extremists in Orakzai AgencySeptember 8th, 2009 PESHAWAR - Six extremists were killed in the shelling by Pakistani gunship helicopters in various areas of Orakzai Agency. According to the sources, gunship helicopters pounded extremists' hideouts in Atmankhel, Satorikhel and Firozkhel areas of Orakzai Agency.
Drone attack kills 12 extremists in South WaziristanAugust 11th, 2009 WANA - At least 12 extremists were killed in US surveillance plane attack in South Waziristan Agency. According to sources, US drone fired missiles at a training camp of extremists established at a house of Zangikhel in Kani Karam area of SWA.
Pak Interior Minister says Baitullah killed on Aug 5-6 attackAugust 10th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan's Interior Minister Rehman Malik said two sources have confirmed the death of Tehreek-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud. The Interior Minister said he did not blow any trumpet of anything; an attack on Mehsud was conducted in the night falling between August 5 and 6, adding intelligence sources confirmed his death.
Pakistan not providing any terror safe havens to extremists: QureshiJuly 26th, 2009 LONDON - Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that his country is not providing any terror safe havens to terror groups. Qureshi said Islamabad does not want the country's soil to be used for carrying out nefarious activities against any other nation.
US should worry about lost weapons in Afghanistan, not about Pak nukes: ISPRMay 30th, 2009 LAHORE - Dismissing America's fears about Pakistan nukes falling into the Taliban's hands, the Pakistan Army has asked the United States to focus more on the weapons that the allied forces have lost in the war against terror in Afghanistan. In an interview to a private television channel, the ISPR spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said that a large quantity of the arms and ammunition being used by the Taliban in the country are coming from Afghanistan, and the United States should pay attention to this rather than expressing concerns over the safety of Pakistan's nuclear assets.
Fears about Pak nukes falling into extremists hands 'unfounded': General MajidMay 27th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee Chairman General Tariq Majid has said that the country's nuclear weapons are in safe custody and the world wide concerns about it being falling into the Taliban's hands are 'unfounded'. General Majid assured a US delegation here that Pakistan's nukes were absolutely safe and that there is an immaculate multilayered security arrangement guarding the country's nuclear assets.
Malik to world: Place Pak on equal footing with IndiaMay 25th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - The Interior Adviser to the Pakistan Prime Minister, Rehman Malik has urged the international community to treat Pakistan like India, and not overtly worry about his country's nuclear arsenal. Talking to a private TV channel on Sunday, The Nation quoted Malik as saying that Pakistan's nukes are in safe hands and would not fell into wrong hands.
Pak ready to phase out nuclear weapons if India does too: HaqqaniMay 23rd, 2009 WASHINGTON - Pakistan has said that it is ready to phase out its nuclear weapons if India too agrees to do the same. Terming Pakistan's nuclear arsenal as a 'deterrent' against India, Pakistan's Ambassador to the United States, Hussain Haqqani said Islamabad is willing to ink an accord with New Delhi in order to destroy the nukes possessed by the two neighboring countries.
Radical insiders, not Taliban real threat to Pak nukes: ExpertsMay 16th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - There has been a persistent tension in the international community regarding the safety of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, and fears about it falling into the hands of the Taliban and other extremists has kept the world on tenterhooks. If concerns of experts are anything to go by, the real danger to Pakistan's nuclear establishments does not comes from extremists but from radical insiders within the government.
US has special crack squad in place to secure Pak nukes at short noticeMay 15th, 2009 LONDON - The United States has in place a detailed emergency plan to secure Pakistan's mobile arsenal of nuclear warheads, in case the nukes are in danger of falling into the hands of the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and other extremist groups. According to the US intelligence sources, the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the super-secret commando unit headquartered at Fort Bragg, has been given orders to remain prepared for action at short notice.
Luger asks Obama to "woo" Zardari to share secrets, ensure safety of Pak nukesMay 7th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Concerned by reports of an imminent threat to Pakistan's nuclear arsenal from the Taliban, US Senator Richard Luger has asked President Obama to force Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari to ensure the safety of the nukes. According to The Nation, Senate foreign committee member, Luga,r urged Obama to ask Zardari to step up security for Pakistan's nuclear facilities.
Pak has not shared info with US about its nukesMay 7th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - The Pakistan Foreign Office on Thursday rubbished reports that Islamabad has shared information about its nukes with US authorities. Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit told reporters here that information about Pakistan's nukes is sacrosanct and could not be shared with any other country.
Nukes safe as long as military exists in Pak: ZardariMay 6th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Dispelling fears about the safety of the nuclear arsenal of the country, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has said that the country's nuclear weapons are in safe custody. In an interview with a US television channel, Zardari ruled out threats posed by the militants to the nuclear weapons, as long as the military exists in the country.
President 'gravely concerned' about Pakistani stability; calls Pakistan's gov't 'very fragile'April 30th, 2009 Obama: Militants unlikely to get Pakistan's nukesWASHINGTON — President Barack Obama says he is confident Pakistan's nuclear arsenal will stay out of militants' hands. But he said he is "gravely concerned" about that nation's stability.
Pak unlikely to ever act against terrorists on its soil: US SenatorApril 8th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Raising questions over Pakistan's will to act against extremists, the Democrat Senator from Michigan and head of the Armed Services Committee, Carl Levin has said that it is unlikely that Islamabad would ever act against terrorists based on its soil. "The evidence is mixed as to whether or not the government in Pakistan is going to take on the religious extremists," The Daily Times quoted Levin, as saying.