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Mohammad Omar KIA

tomahawk6

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7692373.stm

A suspected US missile strike has killed 20 people, including a top Taleban commander, in north-west Pakistan, witnesses and officials say.

Mohammad Omar was among the dead when the missile, reportedly fired by a pilotless US drone, hit a compound owned by him in South Waziristan.

Omar fought with the Taleban in Afghanistan in the late 1990s.

The US has launched many missile strikes from Afghanistan against suspected militant targets recently.

The latest strike on Sunday night was launched at a compound owned by Mohammad Omar in Mandatta village in the troubled region of South Waziristan.

Mohammad Omar was a close associate of the dead Taleban commander Nek Mohammed, who was killed in a suspected US strike in the area four years ago.

Witnesses said that the missile strike completely destroyed Mohammed Omar's house, and partially damaged two neighbouring houses.

Panic

They said locals rushed to the targeted compounds to rescue the people inside and there was panic in the area after the attack.

Local officials confirmed that 20 bodies had been dug up from the debris of the compound.

Two others are reported to have been injured in the attack, they said.

The US has made no comment.

The attack comes three days after a missile attack in Dande Darpakhel area of North Waziristan area killed seven students of a religious school.

Over a month ago, US troops conducted a ground operation in the Musa Nikah area of South Waziristan area in which more than 15 people were killed.

In recent weeks the United States has launched many missile strikes against suspected militant targets in the Afghan border region.

Washington says the strikes are used against militant targets, but correspondents say that intelligence failures have sometimes led to civilian casualties.

Figures compiled by the BBC Urdu service show that some 80 people have been killed in a number of suspected US missile strikes in South and North Waziristan region over the past month.

The United States rarely confirms or denies such attacks.

Tensions between the US and Pakistan have increased over the issue of cross-border incursions against militants by American forces based in Afghanistan.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has said he will not tolerate violations of his country's territory.

The US state department has affirmed "its support for Pakistan's sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity".
 
Funny that Canadian Press isn't saying that Mohammad Omar was killed...

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/10/27/pakistan.html

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20081027/air_strike_081027/20081027?hub=World



 
Thank you very much. I will wait for confirmation for this "man's" death before I celebrate too much.
 
Here's the latest from the Long War Journal. Mullah Omar's death is unconfirmed, but it looks like they got another guy, Haji Omar Khan.

http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2008/10/senior_taliban_comma.php

A senior Taliban commander has been reported to have been killed in Sunday's airstrike in South Waziristan.

Haji Omar Khan, a senior Taliban leader in South Waziristan who strong ties to Mullah Omar, is said to have been killed in the strike that is believed to have killed an estimated 16 to 20 people, including "foreigners." Omar's death has not been confirmed, and the Taliban have yet to release any statement acknowledging his death.

"The death toll has gone up to 16 as six more bodies have been recovered from the site," Mawaz Khan, a local administration official in the Shakai region told AFP. "Senior Taliban commander Haji Omar died in the strike."

The attack, carried out by US unmanned Predator aircraft, occurred in the Shakai region in South Waziristan on Oct. 26. Shakai is a stronghold of Haji Omar. The attack is said to have struck a compound run by Omar. Pakistani intelligence officials described it as a "facility."

US intelligence officials contacted by The Long War Journal would not comment on Omar's death but said they were aware of the reports and are looking to confirm or deny.

The US has stepped up attacks inside Pakistan’s tribal areas this year in an attempt to disrupt al Qaeda’s network. US intelligence believes the next attack launched against the West will originate from Pakistan's tribal areas, where al Qaeda operates 157 known training camps. The Pakistani government has protested the attacks.

There have been 25 recorded cross-border attacks and attempts in Pakistan in 2008, compared to 10 strikes during 2006 and 2007 combined. Eighteen of these attacks have occurred since Aug. 31.

A long-time Taliban leader

Omar was born in the town South Waziristan. Like many Taliban leaders, he earned his stripes by battling against the Soviet Red Army in Bagram and Kabul, Afghanistan during the 1980s. He was wounded several times but continued to return to the fight.

After the Soviets withdrawal, Omar left Afghanistan as the Afghan warlords battled for power. He returned after Mullah Omar, the leader of the Afghan Taliban, took power in 1996.

Haji Omar forged close links with Mullah Omar while serving as one of his senior lieutenants. He lived in Kandahar and took an Afghan wife. After the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, Omar fled to his base in South Waziristan. From there he carved out his enclave and worked to build the Pakistani Taliban as a formidable fighting force. His fighters cross the border to fight US and allied forces in Afghanistan.

Omar's goal is the establishment of a Taliban Islamic sharia state in Pakistan's tribal areas as well as in Afghanistan. To accomplish his goal in South Waziristan, Omar admitted his forces target and “slaughter” opposing tribal leaders which he labels as US spies.

"Yes, we treat all American allies as enemy," he told the BBC in 2006. "We have caught many people who were trying to help the Americans, either directly or through Pakistan. We do not waste our bullets on them. We slaughter them."

Omar has strong ties to Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud as well as the powerful Haqqani family, which is run by Jalaluddin and Siraj Haqqani. He served as a member of a so-called tribal peace committee to negotiate peace accords with the Pakistani government from 2004 to 2006.

Haji Omar still maintains close links with Mullah Omar, and is also linked to al Qaeda. His tribal areas serve as a safe haven for al Qaeda leaders and fighters. His brother, Noor Islam Khan, is also a Taliban leader with close ties to Arab and Uzbek al Qaeda members. In an interview with the BBC in 2006, Omar denied he had links to "the Arabs."


For more information on Haji Omar, see Meeting Pakistan's Taliban chief, a report from the BBC in April 2006.
 
Good. Go get some more. Thanks to whoever fired the missile that got this S0B.
 
OldSolduer said:
Good. Go get some more. Thanks to whoever fired the missile that got this S0B.
Amen to that! Good job folks! Let's go get some more of these scum bags.


Beav
 
Sorry for the tangent, but this question is itching me.  What's the difference between Taliban and Taleban.  Just a different way of writing it or is there a difference (meaning or grammatical)?
 
Max, to me a terrorist is a terrorist. Spelling don't matter......kill them, and convert the hangarounds.
 
Taliban and Taleban - spelling differences. 

Origin: "Talib" meaning, "one who seeks something".  Most commonly used as the definition of "student" because a student seeks knowledge.

"Taliban" means two students.  In technical grammatical terms, it is the dual nominative form of the noun.

"two students" (Taliban): Comes from the story of two students from a Madrasah (which means "place of study" in Arabic) who took revenge on a local warlord for allegedly sexually molesting a local girl by hanging him publicly.

The "Taliban" as a group then swept to power in 1995.
 
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