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UPDATE:  Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has backtracked on his earlier comments.  Click here for the story.

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Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani says the military operation targeting Taliban militants in the South Wazirstan tribal region is over.

Pahari Sahib, Wikimedia Commons

Pahari Sahib, Wikimedia Commons

Mr. Gilani told reporters that Pakistan’s military is now focusing on the Orakzai tribal region in an effort to chase the Pakistani Taliban leadership that is believed to have fled there from South Waziristan.  Once fully launched, the operation in Orakzai will be the third major offensive against the Pakistani Taliban this year.

Here is a breakdown of the situation:

Part 1 –  How has Pakistan’s offensive against the Taliban evolved in 2009?

Part 2 — How successful has the military been?

Part 3 — How have the militants responded?

Part 4 — How is the public responding to the offensive?

U.S. officials have commended the Pakistani government for launching the South Waziristan operation.  But as the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan strengthens, Washington continues to urge Islamabad to expand its operations to take on the Afghan Taliban and al-Qaida agents believed to be based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal region.

The former security chief of the tribal regions, retired Brigadier-General Mahmood Shah, tells me that the United States’ priorities are very different than Pakistan’s.  The United States wants Pakistan to focus on militants that are part of a global network of terrorists.  But Shah says Pakistan wants to focus on its immediate threat: militants it believes have launched a series of high-profile attacks across the country.  Since the beginning of October, these attacks have killed more than 500 people.

If you click the map above, you can see that North Waziristan is between South Waziristan and the Orakzai tribal regions.  I told Shah it appears the militants escaped from South Waziristan through its northern neighbor — where the United States wants Pakistan to focus its forces.

Shah says the militants Pakistan is targeting have always had a presence in Orakzai.  He says the military chose to attack the Pakistani Taliban’s base in South Waziristan before broadening its campaign.  He says that he believes his country will be in a better position to help the United States and its allies once it takes care of its domestic insurgency.

Click here for the story.

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Pakistani officials say gunmen attacked three law enforcement buildings in the eastern city of Lahore Thursday. Earlier, a suicide car bomber hit a police station in the northwest.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-10-15-voa8.cfm

http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-10-15-voa8.cfm

Click here for VOA’s News Now segment.

Late Thursday, a bomb blast hit a government residential area in Peshawar.

Click here for the story.

There have been nine attacks in Pakistan in the last 10 days.  In that time, we’ve seen attacks on the army’s headquarters, security checkpoints, police training stations and the country’s equivalent of the FBI.

Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik says it appears the militants are focusing their sights on symbols of the country’s security.  But Malik vowed that these attacks will not deter the government from pursuing the militants.

Looking at the local media, it appears the government is on the defensive.  Sure you hear about the daily skirmish in the country’s northwest between the military and militants, but in terms of shock value, the militants are winning the PR war.

Several Pakistanis have told me that the situation has come to the point where there isn’t a target that could shock them now.

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In the last eight days, more than 100 people have died in terror attacks across Pakistan.  The latest violence was Monday’s suicide bombing near Swat Valley that killed more than 40 people.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-10-12-voa8.cfm

http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-10-12-voa8.cfm

Click here for the story.

The militants have shown their reach, whether it is in Pakistan’s northwest, a high-security area of the capital or one of the most unthinkable targets in the country: the army headquarters.

The interesting thing about the attack on the army HQ (known as the GHQ) is that not all the militants involved in the fighting were from South Waziristan.

Several were from Punjab province, and army spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas, said the sole militant captured in the attack also was involved in the assault on Sri Lanka’s cricket team earlier this year.

The attack on the cricket team in Lahore was one of several operations that analysts believe are relatively new collaborations among Pakistani Taliban from the tribal areas and outlawed militant groups such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.

Overall though, Abbas said the militants in South Waziristan are responsible for more than 80 percent of all terror attacks inside Pakistan.

I spoke to the former security chief of Pakistan’s tribal regions, Mahmood Shah, and he repeated his insistence that the military needs to tackle militants based in the tribal region soon.

In the meantime, the militants have vowed more attacks.  The question is: Where will they strike next?

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