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In April, the military launched a three-month offensive in the Swat Valley and largely cleared the region of the thousands of Taliban reportedly based there. That operation followed an August 2008 offensive in the semiautonomous Bajur tribal area along the Afghan border that ended six months later with the army declaring success. The militants have fought back with scores of suicide attacks. For months, officials have been hinting at a new operation in South Waziristan, blockading roads there and carrying out targeted airstrikes as thousands of civilians fled the area. But until Malik's comments Friday, no Pakistani official had publicly declared the military was preparing a full offensive. Malik did not give a timeline for an offensive that is likely to be far fiercer than the Swat and Bajur battles. The army has launched three operations in South Waziristan since 2001 but each time has been forced to abandon the push and sign peace deals with the militants.
The region is considered the epicenter of militant resistance in the country, and new Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud, who pledged to repel any attack, is reported to have 10,000 guerrilla fighters on his side. An Associated Press reporter visiting the area this week saw Taliban taking up key vantage points, and residents said fighters were digging trenches along routes the military was expected to traverse. The area is filled with independent, heavily armed Pashtun tribes hostile to outsiders
-- including the Pakistani army -- and any offensive that led to high civilian casualties could spark a quick public backlash and bolster the Taliban.
[Associated
Press;
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