http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/05/world/asia/05kashmiri.html?ref=world
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/05/world/asia/05kashmiri.html?ref=world&page
wanted=print> &pagewanted=print

 


Pakistani Militant Leader Reported Killed by U.S. Strike


By CARLOTTA GALL
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/carlotta_gall/
index.html?inline=nyt-per> 


Published: June 4, 2011 


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - One of
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/pa
kistan/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> Pakistan's most wanted militant
commanders, Ilyas Kashmiri, was killed in an American
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/u/unmanned_aer
ial_vehicles/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> drone strike in the tribal
territory of South Waziristan, residents and a militant active in the area
said Saturday. But Pakistani and American officials cautioned that they had
not been able to confirm his death. 

 
<javascript:pop_me_up2('http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2011/06/05/world/0
5kashmiri.html','05kashmiri_html','width=420,height=630,scrollbars=yes,toolb
ars=no,resizable=yes')> Enlarge This Image

 
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5kashmiri.html','05kashmiri_html','width=420,height=630,scrollbars=yes,toolb
ars=no,resizable=yes')>
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/06/05/world/05kashmiri/05kashmiri-a
rticleInline.jpg


Mian Khursheed/Reuters


Ilyas Kashmiri spoke at a news conference in Islamabad in this July 11, 2001
file photo. 

Mr. Kashmiri is considered one of the most dangerous and highly trained
Pakistani militants allied with Al Qaeda. A former member of Pakistan's
special forces, the Special Services Group, Mr. Kashmiri was suspected of
being behind several attacks, including the May 22 battle at the Mehran
naval base in the southern port city of Karachi that deeply embarrassed
Pakistani officials. He has also been implicated in the terrorist attack on
Mumbai, India, in 2008, in which at least 163 people were killed, including
some American citizens. 

He was reported to have been killed Friday in a strike on a compound in
Laman, near Wana, the main town of South Waziristan. Atifur Rehman, a senior
government official in Wana, said the strike killed nine people. Mr. Rehman
said there had been reports that Mr. Kashmiri had recently set up operations
in Laman, and that a sharp increase in drone flights over the area had been
noticed in the past few days. 

A known Taliban militant in Wana contacted by telephone confirmed that Mr.
Kashmiri had been killed. But an intelligence official in the capital,
Islamabad, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he had not received any
independent confirmations of the report. And American officials - who
cautioned that previous reports of Mr. Kashmiri's death had turned out to be
false, including a Pakistani claim he had died in a drone strike in
September 2009 - said they were trying to confirm the new reports on
Saturday morning. 

Mr. Kashmiri's death would certainly be welcomed by both American and
Pakistani intelligence agencies, and could go some way to alleviating the
strained relations between the two countries that have developed in recent
months, in particular since the May 2 raid that killed Osama bin Laden 75
miles from Islamabad. Pakistan has accused the United States of pursuing its
own agenda in Pakistan without coordinating with Pakistani security forces,
running its own intelligence agents and conducting unilateral strikes that
ride roughshod over Pakistan's sovereignty. 

The United States has sent three high-level delegations to Islamabad in
recent weeks, the last one led by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton,
to try to repair relations. Ms. Clinton said the United States was looking
for specific actions from Pakistan in coming days and weeks, including
intelligence sharing, which had all but broken down. 

Mr. Kashmiri was wanted by both countries and could have been a good target
for renewed intelligence sharing. He is reported to lead a unit called the
313 brigade, and belongs to the group Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami, which is
suspected of a number of high-profile attacks, including an attack against
the army headquarters in Rawalpindi, the garrison city next to Islamabad. 

The attack on the navy base in Karachi, conducted by half a dozen commando
militants, lasted 16 hours before security forces regained control of the
base. 

Mr. Kashmiri, 45, has a long history of waging guerrilla operations. As a
Pakistani Army trainer of Afghan mujahedeen fighters, he lost an eye
battling Russian forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Later, while working
with Kashmiri militants attacking India, Pakistan's archrival, he earned
renown in Pakistan after escaping from an Indian jail where he had been
imprisoned for two years. But he turned against the state when President
Pervez Musharraf banned his group after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. He
was arrested four years later in connection with an attempted assassination
of Mr. Musharraf in December 2003, but released because of a lack of
evidence. 

Mr. Kashmiri was indicted in 2009 along with two Chicago men accused of
plotting an attack against a Danish newspaper that had printed a cartoon of
the Prophet Muhammad. One of the men, David Coleman Headley, testified this
week at the Chicago trial of the other man, Tahawwur Rana, that Mr.
Kashmiri, angered by the American campaign of drone strikes, had asked him
to research possibilities for attacking the defense contractor Lockheed
Martin in retaliation. 

After the Pakistani government laid siege to Islamic militants in the Red
Mosque in Islamabad in July 2007, Mr. Kashmiri moved his operations to North
Waziristan and took up arms with Al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban there.
He is listed as the fourth most wanted man by the Interior Ministry,
according to Pakistani media reports. 

American intelligence and counterterrorism officials say Mr. Kashmiri is
among the most dangerous militant leaders in Pakistan today because of his
training skills, commando experience and strategic vision to carry out
attacks against Western targets

 



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