Retaliatory UAV and air-strikes After the attack, the combined
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and air-strikes on TTP members were geared up, and the
Pakistan Air Force (PAF) intensified efforts to locate
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief
Mullah Fazlullah, who narrowly escaped a UAV strike on 25 November. On 17 December, the PAF's
F-16s and
JF-17s jets engaged in bombings against TTP positions in the
Tirah Valley, close to the
Afghan-Pakistani border targeting 57 TTP members. Twenty additional aerial bombing missions were carried out using dynamic targeting. On 16 December, a United States
CIA UAV strike killed four TTP members in eastern
Afghanistan. On 20 December, another UAV strike targeted and killed five suspected TTP members in
North Waziristan, and according to officials the death toll was expected to rise. During the same time, around 21 TTP members were reportedly killed by PAF strikes in
Khyber Agency as they attempted to escape to Afghanistan. On 20 December 2014, an unconfirmed media report stated that
Fazlullah was killed by PAF air-strikes in Afghanistan.
Air Intelligence and the
Ministry of Defence (MoD) have not commented on the report; no official response was given by
Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) over the reports.
Targeted killings of Tehrik-i-Taliban members Reports were circulating widely in televised news media about
law enforcement agencies tracking down the militants and targeting
TTP operatives in a series of
police encounters taking place in all over the country. After the school attack,
Pakistani intelligence agencies chased down and apprehended four TTP terrorists in
Quetta, before they could make their escape to Afghanistan. In a
police encounter with
Karachi Metro Police and the
Crime Investigation Department (CID), the TTP leader, Abid Muchar, was chased and gunned down along with his three associates in
Musharraf Colony. In a separate action in
Karachi, the CID teams, in a
high-speed chase in
Hawke's Bay Beach, pursued and apprehended five members of
Al-Qaeda's
South Asian chapter who are suspected of planning an attack on
Karachi Naval Dockyard in September. On 20 December, a team of
Pakistan Rangers personnel raided a
safe house in
Manghopir area of Karachi and killed five members of the TTP in a shootout. During the afternoon of 20 December, the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Police (KP Police) and the special agents of the
Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) raided a safe house in Shabqadar, a town located north of Peshawar. In an exchange of fire at the safe house, the KPK police and other law enforcement agencies gunned down the six TTP fighters, including their commander and two other high-value targets who assisted in the school attack. Acting on
Pakistani Military Intelligence information,
Special Service Group Navy (SSGN) teams were inserted into the secret hideout in Khyber Agency and stalked the six terrorists led by Saddam Jan — the mastermind of the Army Public School attack. In a late night operation, the SSGN teams reportedly killed Jan along with his six militants. An unnamed senior
Pakistan Government official confirmed the report. In another separate midnight action in
Lahore, teams of FIA agents, assisted by the
Punjab Police, raided a house located in Burki Road.
Communications with Afghanistan and ISAF On 17 December, Pakistan's
Chief of Army Staff General
Raheel Sharif, accompanied by the Director General of the
Inter-Services Intelligence, Lieutenant-General
Rizwan Akhtar, went to Kabul to meet with Afghan President
Ashraf Ghani and General
John F. Campbell, the commander of American and
NATO forces in
Afghanistan. According to news sources in Pakistan, General Raheel asked for the handover of the TTP leadership and asked the Afghan government to act against hideouts of the Taliban operatives in its territory. At the meeting with Afghan officials, General Raheel delivered a message to
Afghan National Army's Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General
Sher Mohammad Karimi, "to take decisive action against sanctuaries of the TTP or else Pakistan would go for a
hot pursuit." In a media report published in
The Nation, Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan released a separate statement to Afghan president on a "hot pursuit" and has sent a message to Kabul reportedly stressing: "Wipe out Taliban or we will." The Pakistani military went into active pursuit in the form of manhunt missions after the attack. In the assault, there were reports that some Taliban militants had fled and had left behind the bodies of their dead– photos of which circulated on social media. On 9 July 2016, the mastermind of the attack Khalid Khurasani was confirmed dead in a U.S. drone strike in
Nangarhar, Afghanistan.
21st Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan On 6 January 2015, both houses of the
Parliament of Pakistan unanimously passed the "Constitution (Twenty-First Amendment) Act 2015", which was signed into law by the President on 7 January 2015. The Amendment provided a constitutional cover to the military courts that were established in the country for speedy trials of those involved in the attack. The Amendment contained a "
sunset" clause and ceased to be part of the Constitution after two years on 7 January 2017. == In popular culture ==