Taliban claim responsibility for attack on Pakistan Army Headquarters

A Taliban faction called the Amjad Farooqi Group has claimed responsibility for the military assault on an Army checkpoint outside the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi.

The late morning assault, which was conducted by a squad of terrorists dressed in Pakistani Army camouflage, has resulted in the deaths of six Pakistani Army personnel, including a brigadier general and a lieutenant colonel, and five Taliban fighters.

Between three to four fighters are thought to have escaped the clash and have holed up in a nearby building after taking 15 military personnel hostage. Commandos from Pakistan’s Special Services Group have surrounded the building and are said to be preparing an assault.

“Five terrorists, one of whom was a suicide bomber, were killed in the ensuing gunbattle,” Major General Athar Abbas, the chief military spokesman, told Daily Times. “Three to four accomplices of the terrorists, however, managed to cross over the grassy grounds unnoticed during the shootout.”

The Taliban fighters entered a building outside the Army headquarters and took hostages, but Abbas denied that senior officers were among those taken captive.

“No senior military or intelligence officials are among those being held hostage by the terrorists,” Abbas said. The two senior officers killed were identified as Brigadier Anwar and Lieutenant Colonel Wasim.

The military may launch an assault to free the hostages, perhaps by morning. “We are trying to finish the stand-off as early as possible,” Abbas said, noting that power in the area was shut off.

Security forces have also raided a home in nearby Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, where the Taliban fighters plotted and launched today’s attack. The owner of the home was arrested. It is thought the Taliban fighters lived in the home for three to four months. “Security uniforms, shoes, badges, documents, diaries and detonators have been recovered from the house,” Geo News reported.

Today’s attack is the third major strike in Pakistan this week. On Oct. 5, a suicide bomber killed five UN workers in an attack at the World Food Program office in Islamabad. On Oct. 9, a suicide bomber killed 49 civilians in an attack at a bazaar in Peshawar.

The Amjad Farooqi Group issued demands

The Amjad Farooqi Group has issued a list of demands to the government, a spokesman told a local Pakistani television station.

The Amjad Farooqi Group said the Pakistani government must halt all operations in Pakistan’s northwest, Online News reported. The group also made the following additional demands: the US must remove all military and intelligence bases from Pakistan; all non-government organizations must cease activities in Pakistan; the private security company Blackwater (now Xe) should not be allowed to operate in the country; al Qaeda operative and Pakistani national Aafia Siddiqui should be released from the US; all Taliban fighters and al Qaeda operatives should be released from prison; and former President Pervez Musharraf should face trial.

The spokesman threatened more attacks if the demands are not met.

Amjad Hussain Farooqi, the inspiration for the Amjad Farooqi Group

The Amjad Farooqi Group is named after Amjad Hussain Farooqi, a jihadi who was allied with al Qaeda and who was behind two assassination attempts against Musharraf in 2003 and suspected of being involved in other terror attacks as well. Farooqi was killed by Pakistani security forces on Sept. 26, 2004.

According to terrorism analyst B. Raman, Farooqi had a long pedigree in jihadi circles. He served in the anti-Shia Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan in Kabul and led an assault to take over Herat in 1992 after being noticed by Mullah Omar. Farooqi then joined the Harkat-ul-Ansar (which later became the Harakat-ul-Mujahideen) and joined the jihad against India in Kashmir.

Farooqi served as a close aide to Qari Saifullah Akhtar, the leader of the Harakat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami. He also served as the group’s representative to al Qaeda’s International Islamic Front. He is thought to have been involved in the Indian airliner hijacking that led to the release of both Maulana Masood Azhar, the future leader of the Jaish-e-Mohammed, and Sheikh Omar Saeed, a senior al Qaeda and Jaish-e-Mohammed operative involved in the death of US journalist Daniel Pearl.

After the US invasion of Afghanistan, Farooqi led thousands of Harakat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami fighters to battle US forces.

After returning from Afghanistan, Farooqi is said to have become closely allied with Abu Faraj al Libi, the former operations chief for al Qaeda. Al Libi is said to have convinced Farooqi to conduct the assassination attempts against Musharraf. Al Libi was captured by Pakistani security forces and is now in US custody.

The Amjad Farooqi Group lived on after its leader was killed in the summer of 2004. Its operatives are routinely picked up, and the group was thought to be behind a suicide bombing at the Islamabad airport that targeted former Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal.

Tags:

7 Comments

  • Spooky says:

    Those are some bold demands. Either they’re fools, or they have some very potent secondary and retaliatory operations that they can pull off….
    I think these guys want to provoke the Army into going ahad with the invasion, since its only a month left until winter, which will screw over the Army more than the terrorists. And even if the Army show restraint, the terrorists win because then it makes Kiyani and the Army look weak, which doesn’t bode well for obvious political reasons.
    The terrorists got themselves another golden goose.

  • Tyler says:

    Looks like this may backfire in a big way on the jihadists (and their enablers-in-uniform.) A daring, brave, and largely successful operation to save the hostages. Putting some steel into the Army as it now gets ready to take the fight to the terrorists’ doorstep.

  • Spooky says:

    One has to wonder…
    If they’re this successful with the GHQ, the most heavily defended military institution in Pakistan, what about the main regional bases? Like Quetta or Peshawar?

  • My2Cents says:

    In any negotiation situation expect at least one side, and usually both, to initially include a number of unreasonable demands. The unreasonable demands are then gradually dropped during the negotiations so that the side can claim that they are showing a willingness to compromise while leaving the core demands intact. The core demand here is probably the one to cease military operations in the tribal areas.
    The military has the capability to inflict a significant defeat on the militants any time they decide to get serious, and it looks like the time may be now. Both sides are looking to the onset of winter to stop the fighting and seal their victory in place for a few months, the trick is in the timing. The military needs enough time enough time before winter to achieve it’s objectives, but not enough time for the tribes to isolate and besiege the troops until they run out of supplies and ammunition. The militants need to delay the army’s victory until the winter makes it impossible, there is not enough time left before winter for any other option.

  • Civy says:

    It will be hard for the Paki Army to smugly assert that they are the protectors of Pakistan, and its civilian government, and therefore reject any strings attached to the US aid package now!
    This is a huge strategic blunder, and one must wonder if this action was sanctioned or if the Taliban are indeed losing control of themselves.
    If they take on the Taliban in winter, AND allow the US to provide logistical support, this could end the Taliban by mid-summer. Just take control of the food supply and, like the plains Indians here 150 yrs ago, they will starve this winter.

  • ratee says:

    The main leader of this gang though he wanted to blow himself up but failed. He is the only survivor in this attack and has been caught and has disclosed so much information. It has lead to arrest of around 60 other terrorists in various locations and also two ladies who used to help transfer explosives to various regions.
    This is certainly helping in getting hold of one major Taliban/Al-Qaida group that will help saving many lives.

  • Civy says:

    It looks to me like every Tom, Dick and Taliban was given the go-ahead to run his own pet operation over the last 4-5 weeks – probably as a concession by the new head of the Taliban (who is it today again?) to help gain support for his “leadership”.
    In the last week they have taken 60%+ casualties in a meaningless “victory” in Nuristan, infuriated and humiliated the Paki Army who will now hunt them mercilessly, and destroyed that same Army’s basis for putting any limitations on US aid – like requiring it be spent to hunt the Taliban instead of making nukes. Good going you idiot pukes!
    I hope we can look forward to much more of this kind of “leadership”.

Iraq

Islamic state

Syria

Aqap

Al shabaab

Boko Haram

Isis