Taliban raid on Kamra air base thwarted

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A group of Taliban militants armed with Rocket-Propelled Grenades (RPGs) and wearing military uniforms stormed the major Pakistan Air Force base ‘Minhas’ early on Thursday morning, sparking a deadly clash with the security forces that left a security official and nine militants dead.
Kamra is around 60kms away from Islamabad and houses the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex that builds fighter jets, including the Mirage, and JF-17s fighter planes with Chinese assistance.
Some western media reports also linked the ‘Minhas’ base to Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, but a PAF spokesman strongly denied the reports, saying no Pakistani base was used for the storage of nuclear weapons or in any way linked to the country’s nuclear program. A senior military official, asking not to be named, also rejected the reports that Kamra air complex housed nuclear weapons. “This is an absolutely absurd assumption…most western news reports about Pakistan are mere speculation completely devoid of facts.
“The security forces’ immediate response to the attack is testament to the Pakistan Air Force’s preparedness. The heavily-armed terrorists were eliminated by the first layer of security… Our allies in the West should not doubt our resolve in fighting the menace of terrorism,” he said. As many as nine militants, some of them wearing explosives jackets, attacked the PAF base at around 2am.
“They were armed with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades,” PAF spokesman Group Captain Tariq Mahmood said. He said at least one of the rockets hit a hangar that was holding some aircraft. The rocket pierced the hangar wall and shrapnel from the explosion damaged one of the aircraft inside. The spokesman did not mention the type of aircraft that was damaged in the attack, but another security official,

seeking anonymity, said it was a SAAB-2000 Early Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft that was being used for the reconnaissance missions.
Group Captain Tariq said after the rocket barrage, the attackers scaled the wall surrounding the air base. The militants also cut the three-feet-high barbed wire fence before scaling the nine-foot-high wall of the base. The spokesman said the guards present inside the base opened fire on the militants that led to an intense gun battle. “In the initial exchange of fire, soldier Muhammad Asif was martyred,” he said.
Mahmood said the security forces, backed by a team of Special Services Group (SSG) commandos, fought the militants for around two hours after which they were killed and the base was secured. In the brazen militant attack, nine militants were killed, while Base Commander Air Commodore Muhammad Azam, who was leading the team fighting the militants, was injured in the fight. The spokesman said eight militants were killed inside the base territory while the body of the ninth was found outside the base where he blew himself up. The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility of the attack on PAF Minhas base, saying it was done to avenge the death of TTP leader Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan back in 2009.
TTP spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan said that the attack on the base was an act of revenge for the death of al Qaida chief Osama bin Laden. “The attack was carried out by four suicide bombers,” he said contesting the air force’s statement that nine militants took part in the assault. The security forces, including PAF and army personnel, completed a search operation in the area around noon on Thursday. “The security forces found and destroyed two IEDs,” Group Captain Tariq said. It was not the first such attack on a military installation by terrorists, as around six Taliban militants assaulted the Mehran naval base in Karachi in May 2011, killing around 10 people and destroying two surveillance planes.
In 2009, militants dressed in military fatigues attacked the General Headquarters (GHQ) of Pakistan Army in Rawalpindi and took 30 people hostage. Army commandos were able to take out four militants after a 22-hour battle. The PAF Minhas had also come under attacks in the past. In 2009, a suicide bomber riding a bicycle blew himself up on a road leading to the base, killing seven people.
In 2008, three rockets were fired at an area near the base, but no one was hurt. In 2007, a suicide car bomber injured five children on a PAF bus carrying them to school that was located near the Minhas Base. Defence Minister Naveed Qamar said the death toll of the militants and the minimal damage caused to the base was a clear proof of the level of alertness and preparedness of the security forces. Talking to reporters, he said, “The base’s security was at alert to retaliate in case of a possible attack and they did their job well. The security forces challenged the militants on different parameters, in which one of our soldiers posted at the security tower was martyred,” he said.
He said the militants had suicide vests strapped around them and they were carrying heavy weapons. “Moreover, they had attacked the base with an intention of a ‘do or die battle’. Nonetheless, with minimum damage caused to the base, with only one plane destroyed, the security forces were able to eliminate the terrorists,” he said. To a question on a possible intelligence failure that led to the attack, Qamar said such attacks could only be defended to a certain extent and that the base was located in an urban residential area which always posed a threat of possible infiltration. He said it was not easy to move such big complexes that were built with massive investments, but still the idea of shifting the complex would be looked into. Top PAF commanders went into a huddle soon after they received the information about the terrorist attack. A high-level meeting chaired by Air Chief Marshal Tahir Rafique Butt discussed the attack in detail and formed a four-member inquiry committee led by Air Marshal Syed Athar Hussain Bukhari to probe the incident.
In their separate statements, President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf strongly condemned the terrorists attack at Kamra Air Force Base and expressed the government’s resolve not to be deterred by such dastardly acts. They said the government was determined to eliminate terrorism and stood firm on this stance.

9 COMMENTS

  1. This attack exposes the weakness of the security system, because of emergence of residential and commercial activity around the base, which should never have been allowed. There should be no construction within 10Km for any purpose, including residence for armed forces projects under Army Welfare or Shaheen Welfare projects. Unfortunately this welfare is now compromising the very safety of our defence installtions.

  2. This is what was bound to happen when thugs like Riaz Malik have access to top brass of our khaki establishment and commercial projects benefitting few override security concerns.

  3. these guys deobandi all foot print goes tablig jammat there behind attock on karchi air base deobandi tablig jammat

  4. What has Imran Khan the great defender of these terrorists got to say on this, or will Sh Rasheed of the Difa e Pakistan Council express his regets, although in actual fact he has indirectly supported these activities by supporting these so called taliban, who are paid assasins.

  5. The biggest question is the safe custody of our non nuclear strategic assets,after mehran base attack.why our awacs were not safely protected.keeping in view that Pakistan is in state of war and the enemy is unseen first of all we should have taken the care of P-3C crafts considering them rare and precious but if once the mistake was done why such mistake was repeated and plz awacs were not heavily guarded.
    According to an ex general awacs system has worth of 2.5 billion us dollars,so why such aircraft were not placed in bombproof hangers, just an RPG has done the damage whether big or small.
    the next point is how did they know about the presence,location are the shortest distance of this strategic assert,definitely it cannot be done without the help of any one who has the best knowledge,if it was any insider then he should be probed and should be punished,and also should be made public. if it was any ex insider then also it has to be properly searched out and should be made example for those who may dare to do any miss-adventure in future.
    A complete and merciless investigation can avoid any such event in future

  6. It appears that surveillance plane(s) SAAB-2000 with AWACS were the target of this attack.. Just like the P-3 Orion planes with AWACS on Mehran base in Karachi attack.. SAAB-2000 might be used for reconnaissance on TTP strong holds but I still wonder what TTP gained from destroying P-3 Orion maritime surveillance planes in Mehran base used for anti-submarine reconnaissance.. connecting dots spawns some really twisted conspiracy theories; "someone" is tactically ripping us off of these advanced surveillance technologies.. and citing threats to our Nukes at the same time.. big game going on here..

  7. Kiayani should be fired. I am starting to believe he is involved, somehow, in all these attacks that have been happening under his watch and yet he is able to keep his job. Makes a person wonder why has he been allowed to stay in his job when Abbottabad was attacked, GHQ was attacked, Mehran Air Base was attacked, 3 start General was killed, numerous soldiers have died at the hands of terrorist and the list goes on and on. An honorable General would have resigned for failing so badly but I guess kiayani has no "honor".

    • Pakistan destroyed by four Kanas
      1. KANA Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani
      2. KANA Zial ul Haq
      3. KANA Mullah Omar
      4. KANA Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry
      God bless Pakistan
      If you do not send this message to 100 people, your legs will be torn apart by angels on Qiamat

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