Details Emerge of Deadly Raid on Pakistani Base

Details Emerge of Deadly Raid on Pakistani Base

The military policeman tightly clasps his weapon. His eyes, though wearied by an obvious lack of sleep, still dart around intently. Standing guard on the edge of Karachi’s Mehran naval base, he and others have been positioned to maintain a firm security cordon. With a mere tilt of his gun, he quickly dissuades anyone tempted to draw nearer to the base. But as even the policeman concedes, this new vigilance has come too late.

For the previous 17 hours, the base had been besieged by a group of extremist fighters that now turns out to have numbered as few as six — initial reports had put the number of attackers at 15. They had slipped into the base undetected, opened fire inside a hangar damaging two expensive and recently modified aircraft, killed ten members of the security forces and wounded 15. Those carrying out the brazen and carefully organized attack had seemed prepared to lose their lives. Three of the attackers were killed by the security forces; one blew himself up; and the other two escaped.

The horrors of the night before have largely disappeared from view as buses of commandos continue to arrive, their purpose now simply to relieve others on duty. But the scars of the attack will be keenly felt for some time. “I went inside at 4 a.m.,” the military policeman says, on condition of anonymity. “There was total chaos.”

As beads of sweat trickle down from a beret bearing the navy’s insignia and disappear into this neatly trimmed beard, he speaks with admiration of his colleagues’ heroism. One name has been constantly mentioned: Lieut. Yasir Abbas, 26, who intercepted the attackers with his rapid response team on the scene. Before he was killed, the officer managed to stop attackers from causing greater damage, Interior Minister Rehman Malik later told reporters.

The loss of life could have also been worse. “We made sure that the foreigners who were inside were removed immediately,” the military policeman says. Seventeen foreign nationals had been trapped by the raid, including 11 Chinese engineers and six American contractors. They were there to help maintain the fleet of naval aircraft. The military policeman says that there was a tense standoff when the security forces arrived in the part of the base where the foreigners had been sheltering.

“At first, they didn’t know if our guys were coming to attack them or rescue them,” the policeman explains. After establishing their bona fides, the security forces moved the expats to a safe compound inside the base from which they were eventually driven away. “It’s good that they were taken in bulletproof cars because there was shooting,” the military policeman says. Once the foreigners were safe, intelligence chiefs back in Islamabad sighed with relief — this time, there would be no repeat of the headlines about foreigners killed that they saw in 2002, when 11 French engineers were slain here, in Karachi.
See pictures of a twin suicide bombing in Pakistan.

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