
There is a sense of siege here, as the Islamic insurgency pours out of the adjacent tribal region into this city, one of Pakistan’s largest, and its surrounding districts.
The Taliban and their militant sympathisers now hold strategic pockets on the city’s outskirts, the police say, from where they strike at the military and the police, order schoolgirls to wear burqas and blow up stores selling DVDs, among other acts of violence.
Suicide bombings, other bombings and missile attacks occurred on an average of once a week here in 2007, according to a tally by the city’s police department. In 2006, while there were occasional grenade attacks and explosions, the authorities did not record a single suicide bombing or rocket attack inside the city.
Though few here believe that the Taliban will rule anytime soon, the police and residents say that by the standards of counterinsurgency warfare, the extremists are doing well. They have undermined public faith in the government, sown distrust and made the police fearful for their lives. The extremists have selected the police and the army, two important pillars of the Pakistani state, as particular targets.
At the core of the troubles here, many say, lie demands by the US that the Pakistani military, generously financed by Washington, join in its campaign against terrorism, which means killing fellow Pakistanis in the tribal areas. Even if those Pakistanis are extremists, the people here say, they do not like a policy of killing fellow tribesmen, and fellow countrymen, particularly if it is on behalf of the US.
The Bush administration is convinced that the al-Qaeda and the Taliban have gained new strength in the past two years, particularly in the tribal region districts of North and South Waziristan and Bajaur. It has said it is considering sending American forces to help the...


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